Thoughts on the Burkini Ban

Topic by Uintatherium

Uintatherium

Home Forums MGTOW Central Thoughts on the Burkini Ban

This topic contains 12 replies, has 11 voices, and was last updated by  Anonymous 3 years, 5 months ago.

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  • #292001
    +3
    Uintatherium
    Uintatherium
    Participant
    1861

    Hi Broz.

    Here’s something that happened recently: The burkini was banned in France but then the ban was overturned.

    Some people here might say that the Burkini should have stayed banned. I think that banning the burkini was bad. I’m glad the ban was overturned.

    Maybe you like Islam and maybe you hate it. Let’s focus on the burkini. What does it represent? Does it represent suicide bombing? Does it represent halal slaughter? Does it represent beheading?

    F~~~ no.

    The burkini represents female chastity and modesty. Some “Muslim feminists” claim that Islamic modesty exists to protect women from “body shaming”. Anyone who has read the Quran knows that this is a monumental pile of s~~~. The Muslim holy books clearly state that a woman must be modest for her husband’s sake. Islamic women’s clothing symbolically represents male power. Women in Muslin countries stay covered so that they won’t attract the attention of other men. This prevents adultery.

    Women who wear Muslim female clothing are saying “I’m not a cheap whore. I am a proper lady and I deeply respect the man I married.”

    I don’t think that Islam is totally good or bad. Every religion has its positive and negative aspects. Even if you hate Islam, you shouldn’t punish them when they actually do something right.

    MGTOW: because you can (and should) say anything about a woman as long as she isn't within earshot

    #292019
    +3
    ScarberianMPTGL
    ScarberianMPTGL
    Participant
    3286

    I honestly think politics and religion shouldn’t be anywhere near each other, personally, but what better way to distract the people that you’re screwing over at every opportunity from what you’re doing? As for the burkini, honestly, who the f~~~ is it hurting? No one, that’s who. At least, it shouldn’t be.

    I, Lelouch Vi Britannia, command you, all of you, to Go Your Own Way!!

    #292029
    +1

    Anonymous
    24

    Yea, it’s a silly idea to want to ban it. Women dressing modestly while swimming out of respect for their husbands, oh the horror… This is something that should not even be a topic of discussion in a free society.

    #292030
    +2
    Joey Alfio
    Joey Alfio
    Participant

    When you migrate to another country for a better life and opportunity maybe it’s also best to integrate and follow the customs and culture of that said country. But I am aware that women who wear the burkini or burka in western societies are forced to do so by their husbands, brothers, etc so they’re not entirely to blame.

    Δεν υπάρχει τίποτε αδύνατο γι’ αυτόν που θα προσπαθήσει. - Μέγας Αλέξανδρος

    #292032
    +4
    Raindog
    raindog
    Participant
    313

    Banning something as inconsequential as a burkini just shows how inept and totally f~~~ing useless government officials are. It’s embarrassing to see cops walk up to somebody on a beach and tell them to take their clothes off. Get real.

    "Free your mind and your ass will follow. The kingdom of heaven is within." -Funkadelic

    #292034
    +1
    Chir
    chir
    Participant

    Ban on Burkini is ridiculous and irrelevant.

    A ban on the burqa is more appropriate. Woman or man wearing burqa can pack a lot of explosives under the covering. If women want to wear the hijab, fine I don’t give a f~~~ even if they wear a veil with it.

    Oh Chir your an Islamophobic. No I don’t give a f~~~ if you are Muslim or christian or atheist. If Christians and Jews were blowing themselves up to kill as many innocent bystanders then I would say f~~~ no to monks robes or nuns habit. Sorry. I do profile when a certain segment of the population wants to kill me by exploding themselves.

    My case in f~~~ing point.

    Or this s~~~.

    It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion, it is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shaking, the shaking becomes a warning; it is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion.

    #292046
    +1
    Big Boss
    Big Boss
    Participant
    4496

    The burkini was banned in France but then the ban was overturned.

    If baguettes want to put down their traditional white flag and instead prefer to remove kebab, that’s fine by me.

    If they don’t, well I wouldn’t care either way. I’m putting all my chips in on based Vladmir Putin to a-bomb us back into sanity.

    #292082
    +1

    Anonymous
    22

    I’m also glad the ban was overturned. Telling those muslim women what to wear would be the same thing than telling a white man or woman to wear certain type of clothes when visiting some countries in the Middle East.

    Ridiculous.

    #292210
    +1
    Chir
    chir
    Participant

    Star trek Feringy law…no clothes for women. Ha

    Um. I will let you be the first one to disrobe a western woman in her Moo-Moo dress. Have the eye-bleach handy.

    It is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion, it is by the beans of Java that thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shaking, the shaking becomes a warning; it is by caffeine alone I set my mind in motion.

    #292299
    Eric Lauder
    Eric Lauder
    Participant
    12053

    Let’s talk straight: there’s a clear advantage for western men having SOME muslims around (not a majority, the ideal would be between 10% and 20%). It make lower the standards we are supposed to follow while dealing with western women. Have you ever read “Against Our Will” by Susan Brownmiller? I did, and she have some good points: she’s a misandrist, inflating many things and blaming all men for crimes committed by few men. Still, it’s true that there can be benefits arising from certain attitudes: the fact is that such benefits aren’t for all men as she said, but for the few who knows how the gender war really works and its rules.
    Practical example: having a number of burkinis around means less western women able to successfully complaining about western men staring at them – do you really think that the police would take seriously complains about “the male gaze” while there are hundreds women sexually assaulted in public places like it happened in Cologne? Feminists would be silenced about “manspreading”, and many other minor issues.

    “UBI MAIOR, MINOR CESSAT”

    said the ancient Romans…

    Meaning: “in the presence of a more relevant issue, the less important issue loses its relevance”

    Feminists have played this game, using “ubi maior, minor cessat” for years, by inflating women’s issues in order to make invisible the problems that men are facing. Feminists even managed to erase the idea of men victims of domestic violence, even if men victims of DV are at least a third of the total (more likely more than 40%).

    SUPREME LEADER KIM JONG-UN'S FASHION STYLIST - if you want a new look or if you're a very beautiful trans you can call me, phone number +85079255312 / mobile 01921421211. The worth of a man isn't the usefulness that women get from him. Avoiding living with a woman, a man isn't rejecting a lot of sex: he's rejecting sexual starvation. MGTOW IS TACKLING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE IN COMPLIANCE WITH CONVENTION OF ISTANBUL: http://www.coe.int/en/web/conventions/full-list/-/conventions/rms/090000168008482e --- Article 4, Section 4 "Special measures that are necessary to prevent and protect women from gender-based violence shall not be considered discrimination under the terms of this Convention". WHAT I LEARNT FROM A GENDER STUDIES CLASS IN LUND, SWEDEN: every time feminists accuses men of doing something, odds are likely either them or persons associated with them are doing the exact same thing but a lot worse. WHO I'M RIGHT NOW https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1okpAj7Fhw Basically my former life have been a conflict between this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yz_RQVkvke4 and this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFIMeyTK-sU That's, more or less, all about me.

    #292314

    Anonymous
    3

    I didn’t know this thing existed, but my sentiments echo others. It’s so ridiculously blue pill to demand women dress immodestly, and make it illegal to dress modestly. That’s why the West is such a joke.

    A masculine culture comes along, the blue pill men’s panties get in a twist, and they make stupid laws. They thing everyone else will be too stupid to get how bad their laws are, and drool over exposed female flesh.

    And yes effeminate men probably would justify it while slobbering about how they respect women, but that type of crap doesn’t go anywhere on here.

    The people in charge are afraid of MGTOW because they are afraid of masculinity. We have the traditional restraint and intelligence of men of past eras. We are objective, we are fair, we don’t let emotion or lust rule us idiotically.

    #292319
    +1

    Anonymous
    3

    Our society imposes “social justice” concepts as a norm, without considering what is human nature.

    It is considered normal that any foreigner living in our countries continues to follow its own culture. Who is to say anything against this? Only xenophobes.

    What is not considered are the particular implications of this general rule.

    Many cultures are in conflict with each other, and the native population will not be comfortable in many situations. However they not allowed to say anything about it, so it fosters resentment.

    Anytime a small issue happens the popular response is disproportionate. And some politicians will try to capitalize on this general resentment.

    So, the burkini issue is the reflection of a clash of cultures that is being building up and possible artificially inflated. It will not end well.

    #292324

    Anonymous
    3

    It’s so ridiculously blue pill to demand women dress immodestly, and make it illegal to dress modestly.

    I am not one to defend the burkini ban, but there history behind it is not about modesty but plain public order:

    About a dozen teenagers from the village were at the beach on Saturday, along with three Muslim families. Witnesses told newspaper Le Monde that a father from one of the families complained about someone taking a photograph of his wife. An altercation took place and the teenagers called their parents.

    The local deputy prosecutor said four people, including a pregnant woman, were taken to hospital for treatment, while bottles and stones were thrown, and three cars were set alight. About 100 police officers attended the scene. Le Monde reported that a police cordon was set up to protect the Muslim families.

    Tense scenes followed on Sunday as a large crowd gathered in the town of Bastia, about 12 miles (19km) away, seeking to enter the Lupino district, which is home to a large North African community. “We’re going up there because this is our home,” people in the crowd shouted. Police blocked them from entering.

    Gilles Simeoni, the head of the Corsican executive, said the island had to avoid a spiral of skirmishes and scapegoating. “We must not confuse certain people who behave badly with the near whole of the North African population, who live in Corsica in a calm and harmonious way,” he said.

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