US man faces jail time for attempting to forcefully remove Muslim woman's veil
50 replies, posted
[QUOTE=rewkasu;45647732]He just really needed to see her face
"You have seen mine and now i have the right to see yours"[/QUOTE]
do people actually believe this
do you realize how fucking delusional you sound?
[QUOTE=rewkasu;45647732]He just really needed to see her face
"You have seen mine and now i have the right to see yours"[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://gifrific.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/gumby-blocks-basketball-shot.gif[/IMG]
So what about Gumby here? Does he need his costume torn off?
[QUOTE=thelurker1234;45648139]Hard to predict fashion in a few centuries, this minority's clothing could become popular spontaneously among non-muslims, doubt it, but who knows.[/QUOTE]
In 2214, everyone will wear Tripps, camouflage trench coats, and gas masks.
[QUOTE=Paramud;45649183]In 2214, everyone will wear Tripps, camouflage trench coats, and gas masks.[/QUOTE]
I guess Fallout got it pretty close, then
The other guys should be charged as well. They assaulted a woman as a group, and intimidated her and her child.
Is the removal of the abaya the key crime here? Is that why only one man is being charged?
[QUOTE=Bat-shit;45647674]I've heard many Arabic women like wearing these, and I can certainly see why. They're pretty rad.[/QUOTE]
I find those veils in OP somewhat attractive.
[QUOTE=Antlerp;45648123]yeah veils and headscarfs are just an outdated thing not really a muslim thing, give em a few centuries and they'll grow out of it too[/QUOTE]
How are headscarfs outdated
Some women can pull it off really well, even if it stops being attributed to religion people are still gonna wear them because it looks good on some people.
[QUOTE=Gentry;45648599]so like a male western shirt then?
plus
[url]https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=different+styles+of+hijab&es_sm=93&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=BIbnU7LtO6PX7Aat2YHwDQ&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1856&bih=995[/url][/QUOTE]
Of course if you search for "different styles of hijab" you're gonna get different kinds of hijabs. Of course this is mere analogy, but most hijabs are a single solid colour, most commonly red or black in my experience.
Also, this is just plain disgusting.
[QUOTE=GoDong-DK;45649497]Of course if you search for "different styles of hijab" you're gonna get different kinds of hijabs. Of course this is mere analogy, but most hijabs are a single solid colour, most commonly red or black in my experience.[/QUOTE]
most shirts are white
[QUOTE=Riller;45647779]God damn brilliant. Clothing really is where western society draw the short straw. Whose idea was pants?![/QUOTE]
Genghis Khan's. He is probably your great-great-great grandfather, so blame him all you like!
[QUOTE=Gentry;45649514]most shirts are white[/QUOTE]
Personally I have one white shirt, most of them have some sort of multi colour pattern. And you're kinda assuming I said it was a bad thing? There's nothing wrong with plain clothes, and I don't think of them as being a uniform. I just don't want to entertain the notion that every Muslim woman wearing a hijab is a flower power explosion of colours.
[QUOTE=Mbbird;45648665]do people actually believe this
do you realize how fucking delusional you sound?[/QUOTE]
Holy shit i was joking
[QUOTE=ilikecorn;45649570]I don't understand the issue, who gives a flying fuck what they're wearing? Are they harming you? No? Then get the fuck over it you fucking manchild.[/QUOTE]
There are many people here in the US that believe that "if you're in our country you adopt our culture," despite the fact that this country is built on immigrants of different religions and ethnicities, and take efforts to try and force people into conformity whether they want to or not.
I'll sound like attention whore, but I can somewhat sympathize.
My eyes are incredibly sensitive to sunlight and bright lights in general, alongside being very nearsighted, so a lot of the time when I'm outdoors and even in certain indoor places that have a lot of windows or overly bright lights I wear my sunglasses out of necessity to avoid squinting constantly and being unable to see where I'm going.
The relevance of this and why I can sympathize with this woman is that a lot of the time when I'm wearing them in bright indoor places people tend to think I've got something to hide and make snidey or insulting comments toward me for it, and more than a couple of times people have actually tried to grab my sunglasses and take them off forcibly so they can see my eyes for absolutely no reason. I don't understand it myself, I mean, what are you going to hide with sunglasses or, to the point, a veil? It's just arseholery for the sake of being an arsehole. People can wear what the fuck they want, man.
she was literally surrounded by 3 dudes but only one of them is getting charged?? yeah ok that's still bullshit and she was even with her child
Yep definitely assault. When someone walks out of their house dressed in a certain way, they're usually doing that by choice. They don't need some idiot to re-arrange their clothing for them.
The only Muslim dress I don't like is the burqa because I can't see the wearer's eyes. Apart from that, all other traditional forms of dress for any culture I've seen has never been a problem for me. In fact I'd encourage people to display their heritage if they're comfortable doing so, the differences are really cool.
[editline]11th August 2014[/editline]
[QUOTE=Drsalvador;45653088]I'll sound like attention whore, but I can somewhat sympathize.
My eyes are incredibly sensitive to sunlight and bright lights in general, alongside being very nearsighted, so a lot of the time when I'm outdoors and even in certain indoor places that have a lot of windows or overly bright lights I wear my sunglasses out of necessity to avoid squinting constantly and being unable to see where I'm going.
[/QUOTE]
Second this. I've got very sensitive vision as well and am literally superglued to sunglasses when outside in the summer. Don't have it as bad as you as I can take them off indoors.
[QUOTE=Drsalvador;45653088]I'll sound like attention whore, but I can somewhat sympathize.
My eyes are incredibly sensitive to sunlight and bright lights in general, alongside being very nearsighted, so a lot of the time when I'm outdoors and even in certain indoor places that have a lot of windows or overly bright lights I wear my sunglasses out of necessity to avoid squinting constantly and being unable to see where I'm going.
The relevance of this and why I can sympathize with this woman is that a lot of the time when I'm wearing them in bright indoor places people tend to think I've got something to hide and make snidey or insulting comments toward me for it, and more than a couple of times[B] people have actually tried to grab my sunglasses and take them off forcibly[/B] so they can see my eyes for absolutely no reason. I don't understand it myself, I mean, what are you going to hide with sunglasses or, to the point, a veil? It's just arseholery for the sake of being an arsehole. People can wear what the fuck they want, man.[/QUOTE]
This is when you deck the motherfucker.
[QUOTE=UberMensch;45655564]
Second this. I've got very sensitive vision as well and am literally superglued to sunglasses when outside in the summer. Don't have it as bad as you as I can take them off indoors.[/QUOTE]
I can take them off indoors a lot of the time, it's just bright glaring lights (like in a stadium) that really, really hurt my eyes. Camera flashes literally make my eyes water in agony.
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