Trailblazer
Veteran Member
It matters as soon as you CLAIM that the restriction is based upon prejudice, stereotyping, or discrimination.You think that matters?
That is a bald assertion if there are no facts in evidence.
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It matters as soon as you CLAIM that the restriction is based upon prejudice, stereotyping, or discrimination.You think that matters?
Disruption in society is not an excuse to shun universal suffrage. That is one of the arguments against abolition, womens' suffrage, civil rights, marriage equality and trans rights. Society will adjust.Getting pregnant and having to care for a baby. Given the importance the Baha'i Faith places on child-rearing and family as the most vital unit in society, having to do both, if it was even possible, would create a conflict.
Do you know any men who can get pregnant?
If you do not know what those duties are and why they cannot be disrupted you are shooting in the dark.
What females have been on the Supreme Court?
The United States Supreme Court is the highest level of the judiciary branch. Out of 115 justices that have served on the court, only five have been women. Three are currently serving: Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Amy Coney Barrett. Did you know?
Supreme Court - RepresentWomen
Is the Supreme Court sexist, or might there be another reason it has almost always been men serving?
No women on the Supreme Court have ever been of childbearing age. Since the UHJ is democratically elected, not appointed, how could it be ensured that a woman of childbearing age was not elected?
I am just guessing why women are not allowed to serve on the UHJ, only Baha'u'llah knew the reason since it was His stipulation.
I don't know. Catholicism is not my religion.
But the difference between me and you and Policy and KWED is that I am not jumping to conclusions.Nor do you. Therefore, you are committing the fallacy of jumping to conclusions when you jump to conclusions without facts.
Here's a Baha'i reference to firesides...CG, you have mentioned this 'fireside' before. What is it?
That was a red herring. We are not discussing universal suffrage and we are not talking about society adjusting, we are talking about one specific instance of exclusion.Disruption in society is not an excuse to shun universal suffrage. That is one of the arguments against abolition, womens' suffrage, civil rights, marriage equality and trans rights. Society will adjust.
But I didn't claim that, dear. I didn't address the reason behind the policy at all. I said you have a sexist system. And I told you why it's sexist. You simply choose ignore what I said so that you can gripe about what you want me to have said. Try addressing my actual words rather than what you want my actual words to be.It matters as soon as you CLAIM that the restriction is based upon prejudice, stereotyping, or discrimination.
That is a bald assertion if there are no facts in evidence.
A sexist system simply because women cannot serve on ONE Baha'i institution?But I didn't claim that, dear. I didn't address the reason behind the policy at all. I said you have a sexist system. And I told you why it's sexist.
Yes you did claim that, as soon as you called it sexism.But I didn't claim that, dear.
Nope. As I said, you are bending over backwards to gripe about what you want my words to be, rather than what I actually said. No surprise as there is no defence. Certainly no moral defense.A sexist system simply because women cannot serve on ONE Baha'i institution?
Okay then, you do not think it is a sexist system simply because women cannot serve on ONE Baha'i institution. You cannot have it both ways.Nope.
Ooooh. Lame try at a linguistic contortion. Do t try to be clever. You can escape if you simply don't respond.Okay then, you do not think it is a sexist system simply because women cannot serve on ONE Baha'i institution. You cannot have it both ways.
I thought I quoted some stuff about that? Even the modern movement had some French guy talking about way before the Bab. But what if we did an experiment. We create a small nation made up of nothing but Baha'is and let them follow everything that Baha'u'llah said to do and see if it works? At the top we'll need 9 men to rule. We'll have arson investigators just to make sure none of the Baha'is play with matches. We'll have to have therapists to try and "fix" any gay Baha'is and get them straightened out. Oh, person in charge of collecting the fines of any Baha'i committing adultery or fornication. Then it will be interesting to see how their economic system works. It ought to be great. Probably they'll use clean energy sources. They won't pollute the land or the water. They'll probably make great products that are made of the best materials, so they last and last. Wages will be awesome. There will be no poor people or homeless people. And no super rich people either.The Enlightenment, Industrial Revolution and the beginnings of socialism happened before Bab was born.
You have both lost touch with reality.
I did respond.Ooooh. Lame try at a linguistic contortion. Do t try to be clever. You can escape if you simply don't respond.
But these laws are for Baha'is, right? So where is the peace and unity if Baha'is are going to be setting fires and committing murder and other crimes? So a person should be killed by the same method that they used to commit their crime?These are also Maximum Penalties. The Universal House of Justice has the mandate to set other penalties and fines. The maximum penalty does not have to be given.
I also see a time when people will accept that a Maximum penalty is fair and just.
If you have intentionality killed people by fire, then by loosing your life to fire, is not unjust. The Writings say the punishment is an atonement for the crime.
Regards Tony
I wonder how many women work under them and for them and probably do most of the work? But to actually be a member of the UHJ? It has to be a man?What could possibly be the reason for a woman disrupting duties? Would they arouse so much passion in the men that they (the men) could not think straight? Are they reluctant to provide a women's restroom? Do they fear that women will display the common sense they lack?
Even if all members of the UHJ were women, it would only be 9 people. Why not make it 5 men and 4 women? That way men could still have the tie breaking vote? Oh, and you might know, how many women work at the Baha'i world headquarters? Do they do their word there, then go off to their other job of teaching children? Oh, and men can't do as good a job of teaching children as women?That is because there is no individual position's of power and authority in the Baha'i Faith, there are just opportunities to serve.
One of those Opportunities is on the Universal House of Justice. Personally I see it is a bounty Women have been exempted from this service, as it allows them to serve in a capacity that will be of a great benefit to humanity. That is the education of the children and youth that build our future.
We do know that in the future it will be obvious, but the most obvious reason for me is that it is submission to the Will of God and the laws of this age. That is the greatest bounty any soul can have, finding peace in submission.
Regards Tony
But these laws are for Baha'is, right? So where is the peace and unity if Baha'is are going to be setting fires and committing murder and other crimes? So a person should be killed by the same method that they used to commit their crime?
Even if all members of the UHJ were women, it would only be 9 people. Why not make it 5 men and 4 women? That way men could still have the tie breaking vote? Oh, and you might know, how many women work at the Baha'i world headquarters? Do they do their word there, then go off to their other job of teaching children? Oh, and men can't do as good a job of teaching children as women?
I wonder how many women would under them and for them and probably do most of the work? But to actually be a member of the UHJ? It has to be a man?