It’s super-easy to feel “empowered” when you have the luxury of choosing not to participate, when there’s no risk and no repercussions.
“I remember when I was too ASHAMED to admit that I was being **FORCED** to put on a niqab/burqa in a westren country! I'd mumble:" oh it's MY CHOICE" & die inside a thousand times.. Wasn't my choice !!! Thanks to the laws that liberated me #FreeFromHijab” - @vicky93951
It’s gross how little they care about people who want the same luxury. Especially when they cloak themselves in false virtue, while fetishizing what the helpless despise.
Make no mistake, Islam’s reach already extends well into the borders of western, liberal societies. Having secured the complicity of governments in the name of “cultural sensitivity,” it manages to trample its Sharia boot over rights afforded to other citizens, enforced with the shrill scolding and social blackmail of even non-adherents in the name of “diversity,” with the vacuous accusation of “Islamophobia.” Its victims find their plight grossly mocked and trivialized in intolerant displays of performative tolerance designed solely to signal virtues in the performer.
If someone, without duress, wants to live that way, they should be allowed to. But if they don’t, and if, once all coercion is silenced and their courage can be summoned to admit they want to leave, then every effort should be made to help them. Were it any other abusive relationship, the scolds would be fervently on the side of the leaver, rather than lecturing them on how intolerant they are about their own abuse.
When someone wants to escape a cult, we don’t force them to stay in it because their family and the cult leader insist. And we don’t mock cult members who are stuck, unable to leave by holding public parades where non-cultists cosplay as cult members and say how fun and rewarding it is.
But hey, your (haram) rainbow hijab and your hashtag sure are cute, right?