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Many nowadays say that the exposure of the female skins provokes lust and rapes. Would it be a different case if women were forced to dress-up in a burqa?

2007-11-10 07:54:58 · 26 answers · asked by yo man 1 in Social Science Gender Studies

26 answers

Speaking as someone who has spent time in the gulf, NO IT WOULD NOT!

1) It shifts the blame to the victim. Even head-to-toe one can ALWAYS make excuses that the girl was not being modest enough.

2) However much feminists like to sprout their party line that rape has nothing to do with sex, all reliable studies have shown that the more sexually repressive a society is, the larger the frequency of rapes. The "many" you talk about are simply WRONG. The more socially acceptable outlets for sexuality there are, the less rapes will happen in a society.

Personally speaking, not seeing something as trivial as a woman's hair for weeks at a time really messes you up. It makes men starved of femininity, STUNTS them, not to mention that in such society a genuine interaction with females is severely lacking and more or less prohibited. Returning to Europe was like a breath of fresh air for me.

2007-11-10 09:42:36 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

It's hard to say, but I'll say it anyway. It's unlikely that the wearing of burqa would reduce the number of rapes; in fact, I think there would be an increase. The male beast is more turned on by what he doesn't see than what he does. In days of yore, when to even reveal an ankle signified you were a whore (I'm referred to women now, not men) and almost everything was left to the imagination, wives and girlfriends and strangers were regularly raped. Mind you, this was not brought to the public's attention by the media. On the other hand, I think if all women dressed in burqa there'd be less jealousies because of difficulty in identifying who is who. It's complicated, and I'm not explaining myself very well.

2007-11-10 08:15:06 · answer #2 · answered by FRANsuFU 3 · 0 0

it relatively is tricky to assert, in spite of the undeniable fact that i pass to assert it besides. it relatively is not going that the wearing of burqa could cut back the form of rapes; certainly, I evaluate there would desire to be an advance. The male beast is greater became on by employing way of what he would not see than what he does. In days of yore, while to even divulge an ankle signified you have been a whore (i'm observed women persons now, now no longer adult adult males) and on the factor of the completed factor was left to the mind's eye, greater valuable halves and girlfriends and strangers were generally raped. mind you, this replaced into now no longer dropped on the regularly occurring public's understanding for the duration of the media. even with the certainty that, i think of if all females wearing burqa there'd be much less jealousies as a results of fact of subject in determining on who's who. it relatively is complicated, and that i'm no longer explaining myself o.k..

2016-10-16 01:05:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Burqas for women would not becuase rape is about power and forcing women to cover to that extreme creates a power imbalance. Developing a culture asking both men and women to cover from knee to collarbone in modest clothing might or might not but that would have to be the test group in an experiment about clothing and rapes in order to remove variables of power.

2007-11-10 08:40:24 · answer #4 · answered by Maverick 5 · 2 0

I don't think so at all. Rape would happen more often because men would become frustrated at wanting to be able to see what was under all that fabric.

I would consider being made to wear a burqa punishment. Punishing women for the deeds men might do is ridiculous.

How about severely punishing (I can't write what I'm thinking here without getting in trouble....) men who have commited rape? That would cut down on it, don't you think? :)

2007-11-10 08:03:41 · answer #5 · answered by Darksuns 6 · 7 0

No. Research has proven that rape is an issue of control and power over another human being - and hate for one self. It has nothing to do with the way a woman might dress. And that's why you've heard stories about elderly women being raped. It would be better if women learned self-defense.

2007-11-10 08:04:10 · answer #6 · answered by mJc 7 · 7 0

i actually don't really think so. men will be that way no matter what, and i think with the burqas, they'll be more provoked to rape them because they have no idea of their body shape and whatnot, you know?

also, i think the burqas make women look more weak & vulnerable than actual clothing, don't you? women and girls get raped all the time in the middle east, and they're not strutting around in bikinis, are they?

a more logical solution would be for men to control their raging hormones and keep off (:

2007-11-10 08:01:14 · answer #7 · answered by sweet dude. 1 · 7 1

women who were burqas still get raped. and men get away with it. in some countries, they need to have 4 male witnesses to prove a rape. if the woman cannot prove the rape, she is jailed for adultery. pakistan just recently overturned this law.

why don't you join the taliban?

you guys have a lot in common.

2007-11-10 10:43:44 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Rape has nothing to do with the way women dress. It is a power trip and is an act of violence.

2007-11-10 08:10:12 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Would forcing all men to wear blindfolds when in public to reduce rapes? Or arming all women with sharp knives? Maybe the idea that MORE men should control themselves is the answer. Why should I have to walk around wrapped in a blanket........

2007-11-10 08:07:00 · answer #10 · answered by professorc 7 · 9 1

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