And this stupid Muslim woman is living in the UK where she is free to say and do whatever she likes, unlike her persecuted sisters in Iran.
Reader Interactions
Comments
Linda Riverasays
Rest in eternal peace with God’s Holy Angels, innocent, murdered child.
The heroines of Iran are the spiritual descendants of Persia’s (Iran’s) world famous kings recorded in the Bible.
The wonderful Persian kings honoured and obeyed the ONE TRUE God of the Universe. The Righteous HOLY ONE, our Glorious, Majestic, Awesome Creator, Pure, Holy and Absolutely Good who dwells in unapproachable light.
You are so right Mahyar,those women over here in the west criticizing those very very brave women an men in Iran protesting against brutal Islamic rule here safe in the west,go to Iran an talk shit like you are doing over here,keep your fat mouths shut an let those very brave people protest against the brutal Islamic Goverment…
When it comes to the Hijab, I’m against both the banning of Hijabs and the forced wearing of the Hijab at a governmental level.
I’ve always believed in liberty of conscience and Church-State separation, and banning the Hijab and mandating the wearing of the Hijab both violate liberty of conscience and Church-State separation.
That is just my personal view, and I try to be consistent.
I do believe in Christian woman dressing modestly, but I don’t believe in forcing my standards upon non-Christians.
I don’t agree with France or Quebec banning the Hijab.
I don’t agree with Iran mandating the Hijab.
You are so firmly inthe fence it’s halfway up your backside.
The hijab is a symbol of female oppression.
Idiotic women who choose to wear it i a free society are already subjugated by an oppressive female hating dictatorial religion.
You don’t have any opinion about this because you are so liberal you will accept any belief or practice just to demonstrate how woke you are.
No, it’s because I don’t believe in the government controlling what women wear. Authoritarianism is never the answer for the problem of Islam.
I’m a Baptist, and my Baptist ancestors stood for liberty of conscience and total separation of Church and State, and banning the Hijab is a violation of both (and mandating the Hijab is also a violation of both).
I’m not pro-Islam by any long shot, but giving the government that kind of power will never end well.
I believe in limited government, and I’m completely anti-authoritarian.
That fence must be really hurting by now.
Everything you said confirmed everything I said.
Cohesion in society is dependent on denying some rights to the few for the better of all.
Liberty of conscience is part of what built America. Giving the government that kind of power never ends well. Again, I’m not pro-Islam by any long shot, but banning Muslim women from wearing the Hijab is equally as bad as forcing them to wear it, since the government is still controlling what they wear or don’t wear.
Authoritarianism is never an answer.
Same with the so-called “Patriot Act” as a result of 9/11, it gives the government way to much power and doesn’t end well.
It all goes back to the idea that if you are willing to give up liberty and freedom for “security” than you don’t deserve either.
Liberty of conscience is more important then so-called “security” or “denying some rights to the few for the better of all” (in fact that is completely antithetical to how a constitutional republic functions, and reeks of socialism/communism/fascism).
If anything, as a Canadian, I actually view my own politicians as a bigger threat to my personal freedom and liberty of conscience than any Muslim.
Rest in eternal peace with God’s Holy Angels, innocent, murdered child.
The heroines of Iran are the spiritual descendants of Persia’s (Iran’s) world famous kings recorded in the Bible.
The wonderful Persian kings honoured and obeyed the ONE TRUE God of the Universe. The Righteous HOLY ONE, our Glorious, Majestic, Awesome Creator, Pure, Holy and Absolutely Good who dwells in unapproachable light.
The Muslim woman whiner and her family and relatives most likely live on permanent welfare benefits.
She may be female but she is a WOMAN HATER.
The courageous Iranian women and girls are HEROINES. Something the Muslim woman knows nothing about.
You can’t make up the stupidity of millions of mudslime women who see themselves as lower than dogs on the moozlim ladder.
We are having trouble clicking on the youtube link it doesnt load.
Try from this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGw_aJF8L8o&t=1s
You are so right Mahyar,those women over here in the west criticizing those very very brave women an men in Iran protesting against brutal Islamic rule here safe in the west,go to Iran an talk shit like you are doing over here,keep your fat mouths shut an let those very brave people protest against the brutal Islamic Goverment…
When it comes to the Hijab, I’m against both the banning of Hijabs and the forced wearing of the Hijab at a governmental level.
I’ve always believed in liberty of conscience and Church-State separation, and banning the Hijab and mandating the wearing of the Hijab both violate liberty of conscience and Church-State separation.
That is just my personal view, and I try to be consistent.
I do believe in Christian woman dressing modestly, but I don’t believe in forcing my standards upon non-Christians.
I don’t agree with France or Quebec banning the Hijab.
I don’t agree with Iran mandating the Hijab.
Just some food for thought.
You are so firmly inthe fence it’s halfway up your backside.
The hijab is a symbol of female oppression.
Idiotic women who choose to wear it i a free society are already subjugated by an oppressive female hating dictatorial religion.
You don’t have any opinion about this because you are so liberal you will accept any belief or practice just to demonstrate how woke you are.
No, it’s because I don’t believe in the government controlling what women wear. Authoritarianism is never the answer for the problem of Islam.
I’m a Baptist, and my Baptist ancestors stood for liberty of conscience and total separation of Church and State, and banning the Hijab is a violation of both (and mandating the Hijab is also a violation of both).
I’m not pro-Islam by any long shot, but giving the government that kind of power will never end well.
I believe in limited government, and I’m completely anti-authoritarian.
That fence must be really hurting by now.
Everything you said confirmed everything I said.
Cohesion in society is dependent on denying some rights to the few for the better of all.
Liberty of conscience is part of what built America. Giving the government that kind of power never ends well. Again, I’m not pro-Islam by any long shot, but banning Muslim women from wearing the Hijab is equally as bad as forcing them to wear it, since the government is still controlling what they wear or don’t wear.
Authoritarianism is never an answer.
Same with the so-called “Patriot Act” as a result of 9/11, it gives the government way to much power and doesn’t end well.
It all goes back to the idea that if you are willing to give up liberty and freedom for “security” than you don’t deserve either.
Liberty of conscience is more important then so-called “security” or “denying some rights to the few for the better of all” (in fact that is completely antithetical to how a constitutional republic functions, and reeks of socialism/communism/fascism).
If anything, as a Canadian, I actually view my own politicians as a bigger threat to my personal freedom and liberty of conscience than any Muslim.
Mahyr Tousi, He’s as rare as rocking horse shit.
If only more were like him.
There are, “Apostate Prophet” Youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=apostate+prophet+videos