Author Topic: Dress decolonization  (Read 5921 times)

Avena_sativa

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Re: Dress decolonization
« Reply #30 on: July 25, 2021, 01:54:06 pm »
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Islamic dress codes try to reduce women's visible sexual dimorphism as opposed to Western dress codes which try to increase women's visible sexual dimorphism. It is incredible that I even need to explain this
I actually think that this needs to be explained further, especially when we consider that many False Leftists who receive our propaganda share similar positions (often in agreement) with Rightists on the topic of Mohammedanism. Generally, False Leftists who hold some form of anti-colonial/anti-western/anti-“white” beliefs already agree that Islamic dress codes are at least superior to Western dress codes. However, explicit discussions of sexual dimorphism being the reason for this superiority may result in the more idealistically-motivated False Leftists (especially ones who claim to be anti-traditionalist) seeing contemporary Islamic dress codes as visually sexually dimorphic in their own right on account of such codes employing different articles of clothing for men than for women and on account of the perception that those dress codes reduce the visual sexual dimorphism of women without simultaneously reducing the visual sexual dimorphism of men to the same degree.

This may produce positive results, such as the motivation to improve existing Islamic dress codes. It also could produce negative results, such as False Leftists drawing an incorrect conclusion that Mohammedanism views women as more sexually dimorphic than men. I believe this potential confusion could be proactively prevented if we are able to communicate an idealized version of the Islamic dress code according to Mohammedan standards to the audience receiving our message. What might such a dress code look like relative to the existing ones?
« Last Edit: July 25, 2021, 02:06:33 pm by Avena_sativa »