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حکایت جنوں
Guest
Lolzzz you have put all your efforts to prove my point. I said in my earlier comment that capitalism made prostitution a sex industry and this is how this social ill gets connected with economics. In fact you are fond of answering without reading carefully. By using this term I meant how you have just described modern day prostitution industry. But even if it is true that a significant amount of sex workers now adopt prostitution to gain easy money, still the majority of prostitutes come from lower strata of the societies.You are fond of telling people they don't know anything, aren't you? Your analysis is so divorced from reality that it is embarrassing to read it. Countries like Cuba were and continue to be sex tourism countries.
Furthermore, contrary to the popular belief, women or even men don't always pursue prostitution because of purely economic reasons. Your analysis stands true only in certain societies and regions where poverty is found at obscene levels and women are treated as inferiors (that is, they can't get a decent job). However, your analysis fails miserably in societies which support the poor and the weak. For example, in Canada there is an appropriate welfare system for the economically weak people to get by financially. Even the refugees (non-citizens) in Canada can get free housing and monthly cash support. A person pursues prostitution in Canada not to survive economically but to finance their expensive hobbies (drugs, expensive cars, expensive handbags, HD Tvs, SmartPhones, etc.). Needless to say, some people pursue prostitution because it is a very efficient way to make a lot of money. These people don't want to work the boring nine to five jobs and make only one-tenth of what they can make by only working three hours a day. Majority of them are not uneducated either.
In Pakistan as well, there are prostitutes who drive very expensive cars.
The bottom-line is that these people don't have the leaned skills to make as much money as they want and therefore they choose the profession of prostitution. It's not a survival battle. Hence, it is even more important that people should not stay at home after education. Instead they should contribute to the society by working and should continue the process of personal development.
Furthermore, it's a myth that only the poor immigrants are involved in prostitution. This image is portrayed by the racist media. Got to Las Vegas, you will find more american born and bred prostitutes than the immigrants. The immigrants are an easy target for criticism because they are easy to isolate visually. Also, the immigrants don't have that many acquaintances in the new country therefore they do it openly. Meanwhile, people who are born in a country do it in a more discreet way.
How the hell is woman a commodity if she is reducing a morality rate by helping a pregnant woman in a village? You know that a pregnant woman with complication can die if there is only a male doctor in the village, if her husband is a conservative guy? The problem with this argument between you and I is that you have forcibly involved capitalism in it. This is exactly why I asked you to start a new thread.
No, Hijab was never a product of economics. Yes, women were considered a property and were often abducted in the past. However, the issue was the same in the Mongol society but there was no significant Hijab there.
Hijab is a function of lack of trust. Lack of trust in women who are considered inferior, can't protect themselves and can't control their lust. Lack of trust in men who can't control their animal urges and instincts.
You are right about recent Cuba. However, the point I was making was different. Communist regimes like USSR and Cuba tried to curb prostitution (because for them it was against the dignity of human being) as profession and were succeeded. After the fall of USSR and the strict economic sanction on Cuba made communist regime of Cuba to close their eyes on this social ill and accepted capitalist hegemony partially. And thus unfortunately, prostitution became a sex industry in Cuba illegally.
Last, it is your interpretation on Hijab but there could be other interpretations too. I am more interested in the interpretation of the women who practice Hijab. :) The great majority of these women consider it either their religious duty or a cultural function to take hijab. So there is an element of sacredness and cultural aesthetics in taking Hijab. So, I take your and their view points about Hijab as two interpretations showing two mind sets, one is religio-cultural and the other is extreme capitalist (I am saying it extreme capitalist because the utilitarianism which is one of the philosophical basis of capitalism has compelled the capitalists to accept Hijab and even appropriate it if it helps them to gain money. Your extreme view point is actually out dated)
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