Feminist activist sent to prison for 'Allah is lesbian' T-shirt

31 pointsposted 3 days ago
by fodmap

15 Comments

ozgrakkurt

2 days ago

Blasphemy being a legal charge gives a perspective on the state of the muslim countries

Schweigerose

2 days ago

Don't worry. You don't have to look at "muslim countries". Blasphemy is a valid and actively weaponized legal charge in the German legal system [0] and as such hampers any discussion on religion and its influence and ubiquitous presence in German politics [1]. It goes so far as to enforcing the presentation of crucifixes in Bavarian class rooms and government agencies even though the German Federal Constitutional Court declared it illegal back in 1995. Way to go, Germany!!

[0]https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beschimpfung_von_Bekenntnissen...

[1]https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staatskirchenvertrag

[2]https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruzifix-Beschluss

P.S. Sorry for the links to German wikipedia. These articles describe the German situation in Germany and as such are not available in English. May be deepl.com can help.

krapp

2 days ago

The US has blasphemy laws still on the books in a few states, although broadly speaking such things are unconstitutional (for now...)

And the US is trying to make it illegal to burn the flag, which is blasphemy against civic religion. And you can be arrested for blasphemy against Zionism and the American military industrial complex by protesting Israeli genocide and America's complicity in it.

I also consider laws banning abortion to be anti-blasphemy laws since Christian doctrine is the basis for those laws.

And as far as crosses go, numerous US states now require the posting of the Ten Commandments and incorporating the Bible into the curriculum, thanks to the Supreme Court essentially repealing the separation of church and state.

Not to say the US is at the point of sending someone to prison for a "blasphemous" t-shirt, but let's not pretend America isn't headed gleefully in that direction. It's bad when it's Islam but OK when it's Christianity.

Moomoomoo309

2 days ago

Read the flag burning executive order - it's a nothingburger. It's been extremely misrepresented in the media. It makes nothing previously legal illegal and makes nothing previously illegal legal.

krapp

2 days ago

It is still clearly an attempt to sidestep the first amendment and make something that is established legal free expression a de facto crime.

iLemming

2 days ago

"Religion's greatest trick wasn't convincing someone there was a God who was all powerful. It was convincing someone else that you couldn't ridicule the idea" R.Gervais

nasmorn

2 days ago

The existence of religion in law as a separate category from other evidence less beliefs is truly wild. Even a lot of secular countries give it very special treatment. You can probably legally discriminate against someone professing their belief in lizard men during a job interview but would not be allowed to do so on religious beliefs.

AnimalMuppet

2 days ago

Morocco doesn't have US-style free speech. Film at 11.

danhau

2 days ago

[flagged]

pcf

2 days ago

Resisting monotheistic religion isn't "stupid". These activists are fighting for a very important cause that people should know about.

dttze

2 days ago

Gonna take a guess and say you don’t care about resisting Christianity or Judaism.

burnt-resistor

2 days ago

Please don't flame bait, especially about religions. Religions are all equally magical thinking nonsense with a kernel of prosocial aspirations, but that's okay so long as no one in particular is officially protected or endorsed as political [religion]. Separation between church and state (and wealth and journalism) is essential.

dttze

2 days ago

What are you talking about? The person posted for a political reason.

Here he is asking why a story about the IDF slaughtering civilians is on HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44675134

But hey, this one is perfectly fine. Good even.

Now, ask yourself: whats the difference between the two?

user

2 days ago

[deleted]