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Chess Champion would rather be dead than live in an Obama muslim utopia


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2016 Oct 1, 12:32pm   13,342 views  53 comments

by Tenpoundbass   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/10/01/us-chess-champion-id-rather-sacrifice-my-career-than-be-forced-to-wear-hijab.html

The best-ranked female chess player in the United States has said she would rather sacrifice her career than submit to demands to wear a hijab at the next world championship. Nazi Paikidze, the reigning US Womens Chess Champion, swore to boycott the 2017 contest, which is being held in Iran and will have an enforced Islamic dress code. Paikidze admitted that the decision will harm her career, but said that doing the bidding of an oppressive regime in order to compete is not a price worth paying. In an interview with the founder of My Stealthy Freedom, a campaign against...

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29   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 7:49am  

Rashomon says

She is free to make her own choices. If she doesn't want to respect the norms of that society, then she doesn't have to visit. Simple. You don't want Muslims imposing their beliefs and lifestyle on you in the West and rage against it all the time, and yet you seem utterly incapable of seeing it from the other perspective. What a surprise.

The truth is, Islamic dress codes are a symbol of human rights abuse. That is the problem we have, and that is why many want to see the Burkha banned.

30   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 7:57am  

Strategist says

The truth is, Islamic dress codes are a symbol of human rights abuse. That is the problem we have, and that is why many want to see the Burkha banned.

There is no such thing as an Islamic dress code. It's a specific culture's interpretation of a reference to modesty. If you actually knew much about the societies you spend so much time attacking on here, then you'd know there is enormous diversity among countries and within many countries in the manner of dress. Look at Iran - a great many of the women in that country dress in a Western style in many ways. So they wear a headscarf. Big deal. That's a cultural norm - not a human rights abuse.

31   Tenpoundbass   2016 Oct 2, 8:02am  

Rashomon says

There is no such thing as an Islamic dress code. It's a specific culture's interpretation of a reference to modesty.

Is there a school Obama trains you guys, or do they just have you wing it?

Shria law has a distinct dress code. You don't hear about it, until you've got a Muslim majority, they inact secret Shria law whether you're down with it or not.
Then you AND Your wife will get acid thrown in your face for wearing shorts in public. Then if we get anyting like Germany. The Police will show up and arrest bloggers for reporting it, when the state sponsored Jihad Media wont.

Go sell your bullshit somewhere else Tarzan this is America, we'll John Wayne those motherfuckers berfore we allow anyone like Angle Merkle to Cuckle America.

32   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:06am  

Tenpoundbass says

Shria law has a distinct dress code. You don't hear about it, until you've got a Muslim majority, they inact secret Shria law whether you're down with it or not.

Then you AND Your wife will get acid thrown in your face for wearing shorts in public. Then if we get anyting like Germany. The Police will show up and arrest bloggers for reporting it, when the state sponsored Jihad Media wont.

Typical garbled nonsense from you, TPB. Anyone who has been to Muslim majority countries knows that there isn't a distinct dress code common to those countries. Most have widely divergent takes on what is or isn't deemed acceptable. Even Strat would have to acknowledge that seeing as he claims he's been to Dubai.

33   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 8:10am  

Rashomon says

Strategist says

The truth is, Islamic dress codes are a symbol of human rights abuse. That is the problem we have, and that is why many want to see the Burkha banned.

There is no such thing as an Islamic dress code. It's a specific culture's interpretation of a reference to modesty. If you actually knew much about the societies you spend so much time attacking on here, then you'd know there is enormous diversity among countries and within many countries in the manner of dress.

Are you kidding me. The Burkha clad women all claim their religion demands the Burkha dress code, when arguing against any Burkha ban. Maybe you should have a conversation with them.

34   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:12am  

Strategist says

Are you kidding me. The Burkha clad women all claim their religion demands the Burkha dress code, when arguing against any Burkha ban. Maybe you should have a conversation with them.

Spoken to many burkha clad women, have you? There is nothing in the Qu'ran that states the requirement to wear a burkha.

35   lostand confused   2016 Oct 2, 8:15am  

Rashomon says

Feel free to explain how I'm forcing anyone to do anything.

You are supporting Iran forcing women to dress in stone age code of dress.Rashomon says

ou bigoted fools hold your hands up in celebration when a supposedly liberal democratic society imposes a dress code on its population, but when a Muslim country does it, then it becomes an opportunity to try and make commonality with stoning, etc. etc. I guess it's idiot right logic.

That is you. See above.Rashomon says

And surprisingly enough, I'm not forcing her to wear a hijab. If she doesn't want to, then she doesn't have to go to Iran. See how it works? What I did say is that we live in a world of different cultures and beliefs, and having to wear a headscarf if you visit one of those cultures isn't actually a big deal in the grand scheme of things.

She does not want to. But the civilized world is holding the world chess championship there and therefore forcing all their participants to behave like that and accepting of the hijab rule. if they wanted to hold it there-they should have negotiated in advance that such bigotry is not acceptable-but leftie logic never works. They care about manspreading.

36   Tenpoundbass   2016 Oct 2, 8:15am  

Rashomon says

Anyone who has been to Muslim majority countries knows that there isn't a distinct dress code common to those countries.

I was told by the Muslim Doorman in Malysia that I should not wear shorts. At first I thoght he was giving me fasion tips. But the increasing anger in his voice made it clear. He was serious as a heart attack.

37   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 8:16am  

Rashomon says

Typical garbled nonsense from you, TPB. Anyone who has been to Muslim majority countries knows that there isn't a distinct dress code common to those countries. Most have widely divergent takes on what is or isn't deemed acceptable. Even Strat would have to acknowledge that seeing as he claims he's been to Dubai.

I was in Dubai back in January, and there was no dress code requirement. However, many Muslim men demand their wives strictly adhere to the Islamic dress code.
I loved the "Desert Safari" we took in Dubai. They had Heineken beer. I even brought back the head gear men wear from the safari as a souvenir.

38   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 8:22am  

Rashomon says

Strategist says

Are you kidding me. The Burkha clad women all claim their religion demands the Burkha dress code, when arguing against any Burkha ban. Maybe you should have a conversation with them.

Spoken to many burkha clad women, have you? There is nothing in the Qu'ran that states the requirement to wear a burkha.

I have never ever spoken to any Burkha clad women. But they were on TV clearly stating the Burkha was required by their religion. You should be trying to convince them that the Koran says nothing about the dress code, not me.

39   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:27am  

lostand confused says

You are supporting Iran forcing women to dress in stone age code of dress.

I'm not supporting anything. I'm acknowledging that different cultures have different perspectives on what is deemed appropriate dress. Most non-Western societies have a rather different perspective on what is appropriate to wear (including for men), and that isn't solely the preserve of Muslim countries. In fact, plenty of the elderly I know find the type of clothes that the young waltz around in nowadays pretty shocking. You just need to compare dress today with what it was just a few decades ago - how shocking the mini skirt was in the 60s for example.

lostand confused says

She does not want to. But the civilized world is holding the world chess championship there and therefore forcing all their participants to behave like that and accepting of the hijab rule. if they wanted to hold it there-they should have negotiated in advance that such bigotry is not acceptable-but leftie logic never works. They care about manspreading.

And they're free not to participate if they find the idea of wearing a headscarf so problematic. Like I said, I don't see what the problem is - when you go to a new country, especially one with as rich a culture as Iran, why would you not be willing to be a little accommodating to what is culturally acceptable there? You take your shoes off when you enter a house in Japan, don't you? Slurp ramen. Pour drinks for your fellow guests, etc. etc. It's all part of life's rich diversity.

40   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:30am  

Strategist says

I have never ever spoken to any Burkha clad women. But they were on TV clearly stating the Burkha was required by their religion. You should be trying to convince them that the Koran says nothing about the dress code, not me.

I don't need to convince anyone of anything. The Qu'ran has no passages in it that state a burkha must be worn. That is simply a fact.

41   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:33am  

Tenpoundbass says

I was told by the Muslim Doorman in Malysia that I should not wear shorts. At first I thoght he was giving me fasion tips. But the increasing anger in his voice made it clear. He was serious as a heart attack.

Hilarious. You can go around any number of clubs in the West and find plenty that would stop you from entering if you had shorts/trainers/whatever on.

42   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 8:37am  

Rashomon says

Strategist says

I have never ever spoken to any Burkha clad women. But they were on TV clearly stating the Burkha was required by their religion. You should be trying to convince them that the Koran says nothing about the dress code, not me.

I don't need to convince anyone of anything. The Qu'ran has no passages in it that state a burkha must be worn. That is simply a fact.

You will find this interesting.
https://proud-a.blogspot.com/2014/03/IWD2014.html

43   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:42am  

Strategist says

You will find this interesting.

https://proud-a.blogspot.com/2014/03/IWD2014.html

Why's that interesting? The world is a big place full of often very strange and very different people. What those women did is not normal behavior pretty much anywhere on this planet. They wanted to shock. Good for them. Conversely, I'm quite sure that you could find plenty of (Iranian) women who would be appalled by that behaviour, so what's your point?

44   Strategist   2016 Oct 2, 8:46am  

Rashomon says

Why's that interesting? The world is a big place full of often very strange and very different people. What those women did is not normal behavior pretty much anywhere on this planet. They wanted to shock. Good for them. Conversely, I'm quite sure that you could find plenty of Iranian women who would be appalled by that, so what's your point?

They were the ones making a point. I believe it was against the suppression of women that is enforced in Islamic countries.

45   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:49am  

Strategist says

They were the ones making a point. I believe it was against the suppression of women that is enforced in Islamic countries.

Which is a perfectly valid point in some instances, but isn't a product of women wearing a headscarf.

46   Tenpoundbass   2016 Oct 2, 8:50am  

Rashomon says

Hilarious. You can go around any number of clubs in the West and find plenty that would stop you from entering if you had shorts/trainers/whatever on.

This was a hotel door entrance to a 98 degree sunny day you dink. In a tropical equatorial country you applogist fool.

47   OneTwo   2016 Oct 2, 8:55am  

Tenpoundbass says

This was a hotel door entrance to a 98 degree sunny day you dink. In a tropical equatorial country you applogist fool.

You utter plum, so the hotel had a dress code as well. Big deal. I've been to Malaysia before - there's no ban on wearing shorts in that country, but that doesn't mean every private business has to allow you to wear them within their establishment. If you are saying that he was trying to prevent you from going out in shorts, then I call utter bullshit on you unless you were wearing some hideously dodgy pair of white trash shorts. That's it, isn't it?

48   HEY YOU   2016 Oct 2, 10:12am  

Without chess the global economy would collapse,yesterday.

49   MMR   2016 Oct 2, 10:28am  

Rashomon says

Yeah, because that's obviously the same as being required to wear a headscarf when visiting Iran

Why is it ok to demand wearing a headscarf in Iran when it is not ok to demand that the face not be covered, "as a matter of public safety" in France?

Again France and other countries fucked up by letting so many people with zero interest in assimilation and/or capacity and willingness to produce.

50   MMR   2016 Oct 2, 10:30am  

Rashomon says

Conversely, I'm quite sure that you could find plenty of (Iranian) women who would be appalled by that, so what's your poin

Appalled enough to actually do something about it? Hardly

51   MMR   2016 Oct 2, 10:33am  

Rashomon says

The Qu'ran has no passages in it that state a burkha must be worn. That is simply a fact.

Why aren't they called out on it to the point that they stop repeating such falsehoods? Particularly in Europe and/or the US

52   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2016 Oct 2, 11:00am  

Iran can make women hide themselves in public. The rest of the world should shun this behavior. Any world organization who holds tournaments and meetings in Iran should be shunned if an exception of not made, and if it is broadcast, people should boycott the station. The world doesn't have to accept forcing women to wear a burka, or similarly hide their faces in public.

53   Tenpoundbass   2016 Oct 2, 11:21am  

Rashomon says

You utter plum, so the hotel had a dress code as well.

It was not! Quit spinning shit you rag head. No Sharia No Sale not on American soil and not on our watch.

We'll fedex all of you bloody savages back to the fucking stone age.

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