Posted on 12/29/2024 5:18:07 PM PST by george76
The Taliban has decreed that Afghan women are forbidden to:
Go to high school or university.
Work in the civil service.
Attend a protest.
Go abroad.
Drive a car.
Travel alone.
Ride in a taxi.
Speak in public.
Speak loudly inside your house.
Sing.
Read the Quran aloud in public.
Speak to a male doctor.
Play sport.
Go to the gym.
Go to the park.
Wear bright clothes.
Wear high heels.
Look at men they don’t know.
Show their faces in public.
Own a smartphone.
...
Some pictures of the golden age in Afghanistan.
...
Ivy League campuses and the progressives led by the Squad support these terrorists.
$Trillion down the toilet (don’t get me started on the blood lost).
The UN is a war crime
I’d be okay if the u.n. passed........
The UN is about as useful as teats on a boar.
If women can’t speak to a male doctor, presumably, they must see a female doctor; however, if women are not allowed to attend high school or university, just where pray tell, are the women doctors supposed to come from?
Obviously, they're a bit primitive. And there's a lack of scientific advances in an Islamic Society.
But the Western World as it is at this moment is not sustainable.
All of this is proving my point. We are not hearing a word out of feminists in the U.N. regarding the Taliban in Afghanistan. They do not literally give a **** that Afghan women are getting their rights taken away after 20 year of relative liberty under the previous government with American backing.
Of the worst kind.
Exactly.
Um, who issues resolutions? The UNSC. Who has the catbird seat on the UNSC? Hints: Perm Fiver with veto power that goes by the initials of USA. You think the Biden administration is going to call attention to the mess it left there and is sending our tax dollars to by introducing a resolution?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.