So we can all get memberships at Curves now right?
The question that needs to be answered is..........In Human Rights Court poker......Does a "Gay Straight" (pun intended) beat a "Muslim Flush"
So we can all get memberships at Curves now right?
"Memberships" as the term implies means that the club can exclude non-members. But you knew that didn't you?
So far as I know the barbershop in question was not a private club.
The curves case went to court and it was found to be justified. Reason, some men can be pigs around women.
How will you ever get rid of those saddlebags?Women think we are all pigs anyway. Still doesn't excuse discrimination based on sex.
I didn`t know a barber actually had to touch a head in order to cut hair off it. But anyway, I`d have just gone to a different barber. Whatta beetch.A request for a lunch-hour haircut has turned into a battle over human rights, pitting freedom of religion against a woman’s right not to be denied service based on her gender.
Faith McGregor walked into the Terminal Barber Shop on Bay St. in June to get a haircut — the “businessman,” short on the sides, tapered, trim the top. The shop, like many barbers in Toronto, doesn’t do women’s haircuts. But McGregor, 35, said she wanted a men’s cut.
Shop co-owner Omar Mahrouk told her his Muslim faith prohibits him from touching a woman who is not a member of his family. All the other barbers said the same thing.
“For me it was just a haircut and started out about me being a woman. Now we’re talking about religion versus gender versus human rights and businesses in Ontario,” said McGregor.
She filed a complaint with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario almost immediately, saying she felt like a “second-class citizen.”
more about this whining
Woman denied haircut goes to Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario - thestar.com
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So you think men's barbershops should require memberships?
btw, what I just did there is redundant, as it's pretty socially accepted that barbershops are for men.
I get so tired of the notion that equality and freedom mean all people get treated the same 100% of the time.
You can't force someone to be comfortable working on the opposite sex. To give men a very clear illustration of the fact that men and women do not receive the same treatment everywhere and all the time, due to cultural and religious reasons, I challenge every male here to head down to their local salon, and ask the esthetician for a Brazilian wax.
And please, take a video camera with you!![]()
Didn't say anything about barbershops requiring memberships. What I said was that in Canada women should be free of the restrictions applied to them in many Muslim nations. So far as I am concerned this is what this issue is all about - namely a misogynistic culture attempting to impose its values on Canada.
Didn't say anything about barbershops requiring memberships. What I said was that in Canada women should be free of the restrictions applied to them in many Muslim nations. So far as I am concerned this is what this issue is all about - namely a misogynistic culture attempting to impose its values on Canada.
Should a kosher or halal butcher be forced to cut and sell pork because Canadian bacon is part of our culinary culture?
Didn't say anything about barbershops requiring memberships. What I said was that in Canada women should be free of the restrictions applied to them in many Muslim nations. So far as I am concerned this is what this issue is all about - namely a misogynistic culture attempting to impose its values on Canada.
Didn't say anything about barbershops requiring memberships. What I said was that in Canada women should be free of the restrictions applied to them in many Muslim nations. So far as I am concerned this is what this issue is all about - namely a misogynistic culture attempting to impose its values on Canada.
Taking religion out of the equation, pretend he'd never said that, do barber shops have to accomodate women? It makes no sense to me that they should have to.
And how is it misogynistic to say that strangers shouldn't touch one another? The cultural taboo applies equally to both genders.
Seems the opposite to me. She's trying to impose her values on him. Now while he may be Muslim, this doesn't have to be a Muslim matter. Again, I ask, should a woman be allowed to specialize as a masseuse for women only, or a man as a masseur for men only, especially if the masseur or masseuse in question is married and just feels uncomfortable massaging a person of the opposite sex no matter how innocent and legitimate the massage may be?
And where do we draw the line between massage and a haircut? Granted a haircut involves minimal physical contact, but it still does, so the concept is the same albeit to a lesser degree.