|
|
|---|
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Much kudos to the Telegraph for actually printing this, quoting them verbatim from their article on Council of Europe plans to forbid parents from being told the sex of their unborn children :
"Midwives in several hospitals in Hertfordshire and parts of London have told mothers-to-be that they are not allowed to disclose the sex of the foetus."
"Some said their policies were drawn up because of concerns that boys, especially firstborn sons, were more dt foetuesired [sic, ed : desired?] than girls in some Muslim communities."
That's integration is it, when entire hospitals are suddenly not informing parents to be the sex of their children because of "some Muslim communities" attitudes?
And daft politicians like dhimmi Dave and the rest of the establishment think that there's any chance of these communities embracing the ideals of equality between genders?
Far from being integration, it is a clear sign of how entire areas of society are transformed to pander to a foreign populations needs and problems, changed beyond recognition in the name of accommodating the coloniser and of meeting the additional problems which the coloniser brings.
Why should Brit parents be denied knowledge of the sex of their baby because of the actions of "some Muslim communities"?
Of course, it would be against discrimination laws to forbid specific communities from learning the sex of their unborn child, so instead all communities are banned.
All peoples pay the price for the prejudices a single community, lowest common denominator equality in action.
As a society we insist on equality, yet foolishly attempt to mix together cultures with vastly different ideas and standards of equality.
Since in most cases there is no give in those cultures, who have after all held the same beliefs - which, to many of us in the West may be barbaric and medieval - for centuries, we end up meeting at the lowest common denominator in order to preserve some illusion of equality and to avoid having to face up to the essential incompatibility of some cultures with our own.
Our system and services become influenced, and in some cases denied to us, by the encroach of an alien culture which brings with it a vastly different attitude towards the genders than the equality upon which Britain prides itself.
Whereas the indigenous parent may rejoice at their child whatever its gender, and knowing the sex solely helps in preparation for its birth, they already are being denied that knowledge in some hospitals within the UK.
Should the Council of Europe legislation become law then they will be denied it in all hospitals.
There could not be a clearer example of one section of the populace being penalised largely as a result of the actions and prejudices of another, outside community.
