GAY AFRICA TAKE OVER: Botswana decriminalises homosexuality

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Botswana's High Court has ruled in favour of decriminalising homosexuality in a landmark decision for campaigners.

Angola, Mozambique and the Seychelles have all scrapped anti-homosexuality laws in recent years.
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IF Ethiopia Takes over Somalia we will be Gay Country By 2025
:fittytousand:

WE SHOULD BAN VASELINE ASAP!!!
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
Botswana's High Court has ruled in favour of decriminalising homosexuality in a landmark decision for campaigners.

Angola, Mozambique and the Seychelles have all scrapped anti-homosexuality laws in recent years.
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IF Ethiopia Takes over Somalia we will be Gay Country By 2025
:fittytousand:



tenor.gif
 

psyche

To each their own
I am okay with this.

Personally I think that this isn't really siginificant and that they should be focusing on other matters of importance but hey I ain't an expert so don't take my word for it.

And just to remind people here Botswana isn't a Muslim Country, so there is incentative needed to be outraged by this development.
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
@Whimsical fanatic

of all the people, u should know, that anti homosexuality is not unique to Islam or Muslims only. It is unique to ALL Abrahamic religions of faith.
 
@Whimsical fanatic

of all the people, u should know, that anti homosexuality is not unique to Islam or Muslims only. It is unique to ALL Abrahamic religions of faith.

Not even that, it is part and parcel of patriarchal cultures that rely on misogyny to justify and maintain the subjugation and mistreatment of women and the exalted status of men.

This very misogyny is used against queer men in particular since they upset the socially constructed natural order and continuing that proud tradition is the likes of you perhaps hoping to leverage homophobic conformity to receiver benevolent sexist that favors thee.
 
Not even that, it is part and parcel of patriarchal cultures that rely on misogyny to justify and maintain the .

I am a male, biologically speaking, but in the name of absurdity, I identified as a girl near the beginning of this sentence, then a boy near the end. Why? Because I feel like it. It’s called gender fluidity.

If a short person thinks they were tall, they're wrong. If a colourblind person thinks they can see colour, they're wrong. So when a male feels like they're female, and it's pretty clear that all empirical evidence concludes they're male, then they're wrong. Sorry, it's just a fact.

We could talk about intersex people. Yes, a very small number of people, on the surface, blur the line between male and female. However, for the vast majority of people, it's clear that they're either male or female.

“But Jay,” a person would object, “gender and sex are two different things.” And my response to that is, it isn’t.

Gender is not something we cannot deduce or quantify. There’s a reason why the majority of people don’t identify as one of the over sixty genders that exist out there, from “two-spirited” to “genderqueer.”

Which leads me to the last, but perhaps, the most central point:

The way we’re deluding ourselves.

 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
Not even that, it is part and parcel of patriarchal cultures that rely on misogyny to justify and maintain the subjugation and mistreatment of women and the exalted status of men.

This very misogyny is used against queer men in particular since they upset the socially constructed natural order and continuing that proud tradition is the likes of you perhaps hoping to leverage homophobic conformity to receiver benevolent sexist that favors thee.


Huh???
 
lets discuss this traditional fabric. Is it an aphrodisiac for u?

3108.jpg

Lool, yes let’s.


'In 1330, the Arab traveler Ibn Battuta wrote of Somalia's thriving cloth industry: "In this place [Benaadir] are manufactured the unequalled woven fabrics named after it, which are exported from there to Egypt and elsewhere." A crossroads between Africa and the Middle East, Somalia was a pivot-point of trade, linking ports from Egypt to India. Her capital of Mogadishu sits on the Indian Ocean, 1,300 kilometers (800 miles) from the Gulf of Aden and equidistant from Cairo, Baghdad and the trading cities of India's southwestern coast. It was once a major entrepôt of the trade in spices, aromatic gums, ivory and textiles... The fields of the Jubaland Plain were polka-dotted with cotton plants, and Somalis produced over 350,000 pieces of cloth annually from the fertile ground...


Using locally grown vegetable dyes such as saffron and imported dyed yarns from India and Pakistan, Somali weavers began in the late 1950's to weave brilliant reds, blues, yellows, blacks, and purples into their futas and guntinos, giving their people traditional cloths to use for marriages, funerals, furniture, war dancing, and everyday farming. Weavers invented dozens of patterns with names like "teeth" and "goats in the sand dunes" that have become standards and today are worn in major ceremonies and the religious festivities that keep the national spirit of this Islamic stronghold alive...


The weaver first takes the dyed yarn in 24 batches of eight-meter (26-foot) lengths, each tied together and marked with spittle and kohl. He dunks them into a sizing of flour and water to make the fibers stiff and strong. Then, in a stretching method called darisi, the threads are wrapped from one strategically placed vertical stick in the building to another, and left to dry like a long L-shaped blanket. When the yarn has dried, it is wound onto a wooden spindle called the furfure, then unwound and tied into the heddle loops, following the color pattern indicated by loose strings on the bamboo heddle. The weaver affixes the heddle to the loom and stretches the threads of the new warp out behind the loom to a single iron hook set in the floor seven and a half to eight meters (24 to 26 feet) away. There all the warp threads are gathered into one fat knot, tied to a length of rope, and attached to the hook. The other end of the rope is led back to the weaver's seat. As weaving progresses and cloth is wound onto the cloth beam, the warp is fed toward the loom, anchoring it to the hook each time with a new knot farther down the rope... To meet the challenge of changing fashion they are helping to change the way women wear their cloth... Steadfast and adaptable, he shuttles weft into warp with whatever thread he has available, and keeps his feet firmly in the pit beneath his loom, whether it is in his own house or in a cooperative workshop. The thread does come, alham-dulillah - praise God. His loom remains full and his family fed...


"It would probably not be entirely inappropriate to repeat earlier concerns that the weavers of futa Benaadiri face an uncertain future. Futa Benaadiri is no longer an inexpensive alternative to imported cloths and as a prestige textile it faces competition from Tanzanian kitenge and similar stuffs. [But] its ability to endure for more than seven centuries, and particularly to make radical adjustments that historical circumstances have forced upon it over the past century, suggest strongly that it will continue to survive.' | An excerpt | © Pages 8-11 of the September/October 1989 print edition of SAW.


"Cotton cloth yardage, known as Benaadir cloth... It is cut into lengths for the traditional men's wrapped (futa) and shorter shawl-like cover (Go), and for the woman's wrapper (Guntino). Formerly women spun the thread, and although now imported thread is commonly used, it is often still locally dyed. Benaadir cloth weaving is a survival from a cloth industry that was florishing in the early 14th century, exporting to Egypt and elsewhere..."


https://www.somalispot.com/threads/the-history-of-somali-allindi-fabric.27839/

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