abdulbarijan
PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
- Joined
- May 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,251
- Reaction score
- 31
-I don't need to because, I never even contested any of those points ... e.g. I never said women shouldn't be allowed to drive. I never said that there won't be any repercussions for dressing provocatively, I never stated that all women who wear the burqa wear it by choice etc.Could you please just answer the questions , they're all i have left because my arguement is based on double standards and iv pretty much exposed it all myself.
-The points I made were specifically about how being a hijabi does not equal being oppressed, that there are certain pro's to being one and the double standards of how we interpret oppression while we define empowerment as choice ( you yourself did), but we turn a blind eye to the societal expectations and their negative effects on women in the west. The lack of their choices in terms of determining a role for themselves as begotten by such societal expectations and economic terms i.e. cost of living and peer pressure. The hardships they have to face as a result of again, societal expectations, the standards of beauty and the begotten ills because if it (depression, eating disorders etc.). You like to pretend that you have a case, by always trying to change the discussion usually by asking unrelated questions which you frame in a certain way, but you simply forgot to give any evidence for your own claims. Your yourself seem to forget that your own narrative is exactly what I use to make my point. You seem to forget that intellectual consistency is a thing, but if you debate me I'll just keep reminding you of your double standards while you make futile attempts to drag the argument on points which were never originally argued.
Well your a false flagger too then lol! ... I assumed you were a Pakistani which is why I argued the said point.Because I am Saudi as well. This is why I think i pretty much do have say for what i want in my homeland.