Please don't insult the intelligence of the people responding to this article.
I find it quite ironic when you lecture a poster about how he should reply to some "valid points" the OP made, while failing to bring up a single solitary valid point from the article yourself ...
Oh well, I'll entertain the thought anyways ... Let's see these "valid points" ..
1. Pakistan has had female fighter pilots. That's as frontline as it gets. In addition, qualitative standards need to be met.
In the US marines for example standards for qualification for women were dropped when women weren't able to pass the set fitness examination. Do we want incompetent defense or your feel good inclusion ?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...uirement-wont-three-pull-ups-pass-muster.html
2. Baloney. Such
"wage gaps" have been debunked countless times. There is an entire book available regarding the subject by Dr. William Farrel who debunks the entire "discrimination theory" behind the wage gap.
3. There is this thing called
"ghar damad".
4. Again horse $hit, he doesn't have any proof to back up his claim, when you look at formal and informal structures of power,
you find that women make decisions too. Heck, women even make decisions for men. There was a white feather campaign by the brits in the great war, where women shamed men as young as 16 to sign up for the army by giving them a white feather.
5.
Gender roles are enforced on BOTH MEN and women. It's not a one way street. And btw, its a system that actually works. Just look up crime statistics in the US of kids that are born out of wed-lock or belong to a single parent family.
6. Yeah, we literally tell our children
" Maa ke kadmon tale jannat hai" ... I really wonder who they respect more.
7. Similarly, when kids are taught ... hit back if someone hits you.
The one exception is .... If it's a girl that hits you, don't hit back. Whose subservient to who .. is a whole debate that one can't simply justify with an anecdote.
8. Yeah, and it was opposed by EVERYBODY.
9. One constant though, the man is always supposed to work. The woman has the option, if she chooses to, the families can work it out.
How many times do we have the conversation if the son is supposed to work or not?
10. Nope,
the point of education is to equip yourself with different view points, to educate yourself to be a better human being and view the world differently. Education for the sake of getting a job is the last thing on the list of what education should be about.
11. Again BS argument. The religious rules apply on both men and women. This isn't oppression olympics, if it were .. people like the OP should visit suicide statistics, violent crime victim statistics, on the job injury and death statistics etc.
12. Yet
we conveniently have a man imposing his views of "freedom of women" down another society's throat. Quite ironic indeed.
13.
The only difference, our society actually reacted and there is no such thing as a hijab for 5 marks in our system, while there is a burqa ban in france.
14.
Many women actually do support their husbands who are ill and can't work. Our society, at least myself as an individual look at them as hero's as they didn't whine and cry about their tough situation, instead they opted to do something about it.