Stephen Harper waging phony jihad on the niqab

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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misogynist is a fine word although xenophobic has it beat hands down as a word that will impress upon others how smart ye be.



Actually, I posted my "opinion" in the a.m. and on my way to work I was thinking about it and thought - DUMMY - it's actually the left that are the misogynists!! They obviously want to encourage the women who want to hide behind their masks rather than free them and they think they are being "tolerant" and oh so kind!


I'm sorry, but piece of material or not, I want to see a FACE!! If they can't "drop the veil" to swear an oath, then they can't SERIOUSLY believe in what they're saying and what Canada stands for because its more important for them to hide then reveal. Its a spurious argument to say its a "piece of cloth" - its what it stands for whether the women believe it or not.


If we allow this to happen, it reverses what women have fought for - equal rights. As a women, I'm appalled and ashamed that the courts have ruled accordingly. Good on Quebec - for once I agree with them.


JMHO

You're veering away from the subject now.

Conbot logic.



Absolutely as the left obviously doesn't see the logic. Both contend religious reasons so its a logical comparison.


Oh, I know - it's only logical if it involves the left.


Got it now!!


JMHO


PS gave you a green in error - oops!

I always find that for sheer intimidation value, floccinaucinihilipilification is the way to go.



ha ha ha ha - too funny

Cliffy - for whatever reason (likely the pics) I couldn't give a "full reply" to your post. But it is a good example of left logic - compare women to arms; compare wearing a veil to missing women. One has nothing to do with the other but its certainly revealing to me, a conservative individual, about how the left thinks.


Selling arms to the Saudi's, if occurring, is not something I support so I agree with you there. Saudi Arabia bans women from driving and makes them wear the veil and I don't support that either but its a sovereign country and we don't need to encourage the same thing here. That's what this whole discussion is about!


As for missing women, there's a thread already about that (I can meet you there and we can discuss) but again, it has nothing to do with women covering up their faces, so lets stick to what this thread is about.


So, in closing, you're argument is disingenuous and "not logical".


JMHO
 

Stop The Bus

Time Out
Oct 4, 2015
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And that is all this issue is, a distraction from the real issues. Harpo is playing on emotion to win this election and his fanboys and girls are eating it up like the good little sheeple they are.


Thank you for a good laugh. I needed this. Really, who gives a rats *** waht women wear or don't wear on their head? Religious tolerance is a trademeark feature of Canadian democracy remember? Does Harper want to rewrite our constitution as well?
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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Thank you for a good laugh. I needed this. Really, who gives a rats *** waht women wear or don't wear on their head? Religious tolerance is a trademeark feature of Canadian democracy remember? Does Harper want to rewrite our constitution as well?

it's not religious stupid.

p.s. wtf is a trademeark?
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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And that is all this issue is, a distraction from the real issues. Harpo is playing on emotion to win this election and his fanboys and girls are eating it up like the good little sheeple they are.


The nation’s unemployed are pleased to hear that the main topic of political conversation will be about whether a very small minority of women have a religious right to cover their faces with a religious garb during a citizenship ceremony for yet another time.

“This will definitely determine who I vote for,” said Serge Dumont, an out-of-work aerospace engineer who has been looking for work for the past 3 months. “It’s important that this issue be brought up again and again until my EI runs out.”

Katie Duprée, a recent master’s graduate and single mother who has not been able to find a stable job, was enthused politicians and online commentators, have been arguing about a topic that hasn’t affected her in the slightest.

“I used to be really angry and sad about the struggles to pay for groceries to feed my children,” explained Duprée. “But the niqab has given me something else to be sad and angry about.”

The unemployed were not the only ones glad to hear the leaders talk about a wedge issue they haven’t even heard of until last week.

“I sure hope this debate will go on forever,” said Julie St-Henri, a senior who can’t afford her prescription drugs.

According to sources, many First Nations communities are no longer concerned about access to clean drinking water and instead have focused all of their attention on a woman’s right to wear a piece of fabric while pledging allegiance to the Queen who lives in England.


Unemployed Canadians so happy to see politicians addressing the niqab again - The Beaverton - North America's Trusted Source of News
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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If a PM puts Israel and his religious zelot base before the country he is elected to lead as Harper appears to,
it natuarally follows he must demonstrate this to his money bags, and vote fixers
hopefully without alienating the opposite vote too..

you don't need a microscope to see a Hajib like you do the Canadian dollar

as was pointed out upthread:
there is a Selection on the threshold...

and the mounties with turbans are explained how?

"In a research study done in Quebec, political scientists Brenda O'Neill, Elisabeth Gidengil, Catherine Côté and Lisa Young found that a majority of women do view the niqab as a symbol of oppression for women. But many of these same women believe that freedom of religion means that women have a right to wear the head covering...

... In the case of the RCMP, there was opposition to changing the RCMP uniform to incorporate the Sikh turban. At that time, the Reform Party policy chief called it a needless concession to a Canadian minority. That policy chief's name? Stephen Harper. We now have Sikh turbans in the RCMP "
Harper's hypocrisy and the niqab - Winnipeg Free Press

the country the PM puts above his own hates Muslims so I have to hate Muslims in the country famous for tolerance and freedom?
pppffft!!!


I didn't know that turbans wrapped around the face! I thought it just wrapped around the hair! Huh - who knew!

misogynist is a fine word although xenophobic has it beat hands down as a word that will impress upon others how smart ye be.



or not! Don't be so silly. That's not what's at issue here and you know it!
 

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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Under the charter it can be considered a religious garment as the term also encompasses cultural identity.


so maybe can your green lantern costume but I assume you're not forced to wear it.

'bout time for your nap I think. :lol:
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,575
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113
Edmonton
The nation’s unemployed are pleased to hear that the main topic of political conversation will be about whether a very small minority of women have a religious right to cover their faces with a religious garb during a citizenship ceremony for yet another time.

“This will definitely determine who I vote for,” said Serge Dumont, an out-of-work aerospace engineer who has been looking for work for the past 3 months. “It’s important that this issue be brought up again and again until my EI runs out.”

Katie Duprée, a recent master’s graduate and single mother who has not been able to find a stable job, was enthused politicians and online commentators, have been arguing about a topic that hasn’t affected her in the slightest.

“I used to be really angry and sad about the struggles to pay for groceries to feed my children,” explained Duprée. “But the niqab has given me something else to be sad and angry about.”

The unemployed were not the only ones glad to hear the leaders talk about a wedge issue they haven’t even heard of until last week.

“I sure hope this debate will go on forever,” said Julie St-Henri, a senior who can’t afford her prescription drugs.

According to sources, many First Nations communities are no longer concerned about access to clean drinking water and instead have focused all of their attention on a woman’s right to wear a piece of fabric while pledging allegiance to the Queen who lives in England.


Unemployed Canadians so happy to see politicians addressing the niqab again - The Beaverton - North America's Trusted Source of News



While the wearing of a religious garb has been discussed, (particularly in Quebec) it hasn't (to me anyway) been the one and only topic discussed by the leaders - in fact it's one of many. If that's the impression these people have, then they haven't been paying attention nor have they been listening! The parties have spoken about the economy, foreign affairs and taxes among other things. This thread is specifically about wearing the niqab thus the discussion.


I suspect the question asked of these people had to go something like this......


What do you have to say to the politicians in this election, particularly the conservatives, who are only talking about the niqab. Do you think that's what's important to Canadians? I would think it's a CBC-type question which has no basis on realitiy.


Thus the answers elicited as above.


JMHO
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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I heard something the other day on the radio which I did not if it was a fact or not but apparently it is.

The woman who is the center of the Niqab issue gave her photos to take the test BUT does not want he photo taken with the Niqab off during the Swearing in Ceremony.

The testing and swearing in ceremony can be 6 months or more apart.

She provided the pictures and took off the Niqab to do the Test.

She just doesn't want to appear in public without her face covered, which I don't understand.

I was also under the impression that no one knew what she really looked like.

I also see through my searching that you have to provide fingerprints.

What steps come after I submit my fingerprints?


To take the test you must provide a picture showing who you are;

The photographs must be identical and taken within the last six months. They may be either black and white or colour.
The photographs must be clear, well defined and taken against a plain white or light-coloured background.
If the photographs are digital, they must not be altered in any way.
Your face must be square to the camera with a neutral expression, neither frowning nor smiling, and with your mouth closed.
You may wear non-tinted prescription glasses as long as your eyes are clearly visible. Make sure that the frame does not cover any part of your eyes. Sunglasses are not acceptable.
A hairpiece or other cosmetic accessory is acceptable if it does not disguise your normal appearance.
If you must wear a head covering for religious reasons, make sure your full facial features are not obscured.

https://asktheexpert.welcomebc.ca/knowledgebase.php?article=11


The case started with a lawsuit from Zunera Ishaq, a devout Muslim who moved to Ontario from Pakistan in 2008 to join her husband. Ishaq agreed to remove her niqab for an official before writing and passing her citizenship test two years ago, but she objects to unveiling in public at the oath-taking ceremony.


Niqab ban at citizenship ceremonies unlawful, as Ottawa loses appeal - Politics - CBC News
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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Under the charter it can be considered a religious garment as the term also encompasses cultural identity.


As per an article that YOU posted. For her, this is neither cultural OR religious.

Why I intend to wear a niqab at my citizenship ceremony

Zunera Ishaq, the woman at the centre of a debate over whether the niqab should be allowed at citizenship ceremonies, explains why she wears one, regardless of what Stephen Harper think

I am Zunera Ishaq. I am a mother. I am university educated. I believe that the environment needs saving and I try to do my part by joining campaigns to plant trees. Chasing my boys in the snow is one of the things I love most about winter. I believe we should strive to give back to others, and for me that means volunteering: at women’s shelters, for political candidates or at schools.

I also wear a niqab. And according to my prime minister, that is all you need to know about me to know that I am oppressed.

It’s precisely because I won’t listen to how other people want me to live my life that I wear a niqab. Some of my own family members have asked me to remove it. I have told them that I prefer to think for myself.

My desire to live on my own terms is also why I have chosen to challenge the government’s decision to deny me citizenship unless I take off my niqab at my oath ceremony. I have taken my niqab off for security and identity reasons in every case where that’s been required of me, such as when I have taken a driver’s license photo or gone through airport security.

I will take my niqab off again before the oath ceremony without protest so I can be properly identified. I will not take my niqab off at that same ceremony for the sole reason that someone else doesn’t like it, even if that person happens to be Stephen Harper.

I am not looking for Mr. Harper to approve my life choices or dress. I am certainly not looking for him to speak on my behalf and “save” me from oppression, without even ever having bothered to reach out to me and speak with me.

And by the way, if he had bothered to ask me why I wear a niqab instead of making assumptions, I would have told him that it was a decision I took very seriously after I had looked into the matter thoroughly. I would tell him that aside from the religious aspect, I like how it makes me feel: like people have to look beyond what I look like to get to know me. That I don’t have to worry about my physical appearance and can concentrate on my inner self. That it empowers me in this regard.

While I recognize that it’s not for everyone, it is for me. To me, the most important Canadian value is the freedom to be the person of my own choosing. To me, that’s more indicative of what it means to be Canadian than what I wear.

I am looking, however, for Mr. Harper to govern according to the law of Canada and not according his own personal preference. That is why I was very happy when the Federal Court ruled in my favour and found that the policy was not in line with the government’s own Citizenship Act.

And now that Mr. Harper is so busy speaking about me in public, I am looking for him to include me in the discussion.

Zunera Ishaq has been a permanent resident of Canada since 2008. She has put her citizenship ceremony on hold since last year, in order to ask the Federal Court to judge the legality of the 2012 Conservative policy requiring her to remove her niqab for that purpose. The Federal Court found that the policy was illegal and ordered that it be struck down.

http://m.thestar.com/#/article/opin...qab-at-my-citizenship-ceremony.html?referrer=
 

Locutus

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Lorrie Goldstein Verified account ‏@sunlorrie

Arguing most Canadians are bigots on the niqab issue is like arguing most Canadians are drug addicts on the marijuana issue. It's stupid.


well...unless it's a habit for some poor schmuck or two.





Manny Montenegrino ‏@manny_ottawa

If only @pmharper supported Niqab. Traditional liberals, media would be strongly against importation of oppressive mysgonist practices


(also relates to someone in here asking when the cbc - or media in general - had become a political party)
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Lorrie Goldstein Verified account ‏@sunlorrie

Arguing most Canadians are bigots on the niqab issue is like arguing most Canadians are drug addicts on the marijuana issue. It's stupid.


well...unless it's a habit for some poor schmuck or two

(also relates to someone in here asking when the cbc - or media in general - had become a political party)[/QUOTE

Here's a more detailed and accurate/honest response to Lorrie's tweet.....

It seems quaint now that in mid-September, there was a debate about whether Stephen Harper’s off-hand use of the term “old-stock Canadians” was an example of him blowing a racial “dog-whistle.” Two weeks later, any imperceptibly high-pitched whistles the Conservatives might be using have been drowned out by the cacophony of their constant cranking of the barking dog siren. It’s an ugly sound, an anti-Muslim alarm. And it’s all the uglier because of its apparent effectiveness.

Consider Friday’s announcement of an RCMP tip line to report “Barbaric Cultural Practices Against Women and Girls.” If you think for a moment they are talking about taking action on the many hundreds of missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada that organizations, including Amnesty International, have been reporting on this year, or perhaps the vulnerability of rural Canadian women to sexual violence highlighted at last month’s premier’s Roundtable on Violence Against Women, then you haven’t been paying attention.

But if you have been paying attention, it’s obvious enough that when Team Harper refers to “barbaric culture” it means Islam.

When Stephen Harper refers to “barbaric culture,� he means Islam — an anti-Muslim alarm that’s ugly and effective because it gets votes: Edward Keenan | Toronto Star
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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I have to say I am quite proud for any party that would take a hit for justice.

If people changed their position on this issue what would Harper do then?