Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Another Vile Practice Brought Here ...
96 Answers
I hope this is dealt with more successfully than FGM has been.
https:/ /www.th eguardi an.com/ global- develop ment/20 19/jan/ 26/reve aled-do zens-of -girls- subject ed-to-b reast-i roning- in-uk
How can people think this is ever OK especially in 2019?
https:/
How can people think this is ever OK especially in 2019?
Answers
I favour mod sabre- rattling over editorial revision. Ahem, I digress... The civilised world needs to make a united stand against this medieval practice, even the grovelling apologists need to see it for what it is. To speak out against such a cruel and barbaric practice is not racist, it is in the interest of humanity.
13:04 Sun 27th Jan 2019
I only wish I were clever enough to formulate and get out a plan of education to all concerned, young and old that however longstanding these practices are - A)They don't work and B) They are harmful, even deadly and could result in prosecution and a total breakdown in their families.
Also give girls and young women somewhere to voice their concerns.
Also give girls and young women somewhere to voice their concerns.
// now entire cultures, even those wholly unconnected with this atrocity, are being implicated//
Not an unreasonable extension of the OP, is it, Jim? Cultures affect behaviour, someone told me recently.
If your culture teaches you that FGM is an honourable practice, or that rape (even of children) is under certain conditions religiously, and therefore morally permissible, then you're not going to change your mind[i simply because you've moved from Lahore or Mogadishu to Manchester or Luton. Are you?
The point and question (implicit in the OP) is to what extent these contributors to diversity are likely to change their [i]behaviour]. Assuming, of course, that in today's multicultural Britain you think they should.
Not an unreasonable extension of the OP, is it, Jim? Cultures affect behaviour, someone told me recently.
If your culture teaches you that FGM is an honourable practice, or that rape (even of children) is under certain conditions religiously, and therefore morally permissible, then you're not going to change your mind[i simply because you've moved from Lahore or Mogadishu to Manchester or Luton. Are you?
The point and question (implicit in the OP) is to what extent these contributors to diversity are likely to change their [i]behaviour]. Assuming, of course, that in today's multicultural Britain you think they should.
Old practices handed down aren't specific to foreign lands, though not all are as harmful as others.
My Grandmother (Born 1890s in County Durham) was brought up believing that piercing the ears of newborns improved sight and helped prevent drowning.
Ludicrous of course and she never did it with her many babies.
My Grandmother (Born 1890s in County Durham) was brought up believing that piercing the ears of newborns improved sight and helped prevent drowning.
Ludicrous of course and she never did it with her many babies.
//I only wish I were clever enough to formulate and get out a plan of education to all concerned....//
Neither you, nor anyone else, Mamya. I refer you to the Birmingham school thread on the LGBT propaganda programme. The personable and articulate Ms Shah who was fronting the protests is not going to change her religious beliefs and moral values because you tell her to, or even if you threaten her with legal sanction. Far less the scarved women she's speaking for many of whom don't speak English.
Neither you, nor anyone else, Mamya. I refer you to the Birmingham school thread on the LGBT propaganda programme. The personable and articulate Ms Shah who was fronting the protests is not going to change her religious beliefs and moral values because you tell her to, or even if you threaten her with legal sanction. Far less the scarved women she's speaking for many of whom don't speak English.
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