Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 20:34:24 GMT -8
As is known, a gazpacho is a grinding process of several ingredients that are melted in such a way that, except for the dominant color of one of them, the rest is indistinguishable. Regarding the Afghan conflict, which has been presented to us in the middle of the heatwave, everything seems similar to this culinary preparation. Because a lot of tomato and not a little garlic is at the heart of the matter. And everything that makes it up is poorly distinguished. They are mixed in the media, as in the universal Andalusian product, and offer a single image that is served cold: the terrible oppression of Afghan women. As if that were the only possible element of indignity and rejection. And European and Spanish public opinion focuses on it as if it were only a gender issue, only expressed in one country, Afghanistan, and only carried out by Islamic radicals, the Taliban. A negotiation that began three years ago in Oslo, and that has many multifaceted angles, participants and interests of all kinds, is presented as a surprising, unpredictable and mere departure of international troops directed and sponsored by the USA All as a consequence of a supposed Taliban victory surprise at night and without firing a shot.
The main victims of this disaster are women, they say, in the height of obviousness. As if they had not already been for many decades before and, of course, in a much broader area than Afghanistan. As if at some point in the Muslim world the role of women was not subordinated, limited or simply excluded from political, economic and social life. Are the Taliban those who practice gender violence every day, for example in Spain, the essence of which the VOX Taliban deny in our country? Is there any difference between Qatar, other Australia Phone Number Islamic states and various countries in that environment? Do the rest of those women in those countries have more rights than the Afghan women? Are the Taliban the only radicals who subjugate women in the Muslim world? Are the Taliban those who practice gender violence every day, for example in Spain, the essence of which the VOX Taliban deny in our country? Unifying a universal drama to a single color, world territory and Muslim fundamentalists is, at the very least, a simplistic reduction to which current media dynamics accustom us.
When not a full-blown whitewashing of our own intolerable shame. So that regardless of the necessary and urgent solidarity, first with the evacuation of the female and male population from this social, cultural, political, human and gender drama; and, later, with the foreseeable humanitarian and geopolitical crisis that this withdrawal pact generates, it seems urgent to confront the global dimension of social violence against women in the much more general area of authentic European co-responsibility. Because the way in which this Afghan drama is presented seems more like a smokescreen, which whitens, I insist, not a little the rest of the countries where women are subjected to the greatest political and social humiliation and are excluded from their ability to intervene. freely as human beings. The second ingredient that this collage of media impacts suggests to me leads me to sport. While this horror is happening, several elite athletes, with all their families, women and children, are living this very summer a multimillion-dollar experience in their professions, financed by states that subject women to these opprobriums. There is no “me toos” for that it seems.
The main victims of this disaster are women, they say, in the height of obviousness. As if they had not already been for many decades before and, of course, in a much broader area than Afghanistan. As if at some point in the Muslim world the role of women was not subordinated, limited or simply excluded from political, economic and social life. Are the Taliban those who practice gender violence every day, for example in Spain, the essence of which the VOX Taliban deny in our country? Is there any difference between Qatar, other Australia Phone Number Islamic states and various countries in that environment? Do the rest of those women in those countries have more rights than the Afghan women? Are the Taliban the only radicals who subjugate women in the Muslim world? Are the Taliban those who practice gender violence every day, for example in Spain, the essence of which the VOX Taliban deny in our country? Unifying a universal drama to a single color, world territory and Muslim fundamentalists is, at the very least, a simplistic reduction to which current media dynamics accustom us.
When not a full-blown whitewashing of our own intolerable shame. So that regardless of the necessary and urgent solidarity, first with the evacuation of the female and male population from this social, cultural, political, human and gender drama; and, later, with the foreseeable humanitarian and geopolitical crisis that this withdrawal pact generates, it seems urgent to confront the global dimension of social violence against women in the much more general area of authentic European co-responsibility. Because the way in which this Afghan drama is presented seems more like a smokescreen, which whitens, I insist, not a little the rest of the countries where women are subjected to the greatest political and social humiliation and are excluded from their ability to intervene. freely as human beings. The second ingredient that this collage of media impacts suggests to me leads me to sport. While this horror is happening, several elite athletes, with all their families, women and children, are living this very summer a multimillion-dollar experience in their professions, financed by states that subject women to these opprobriums. There is no “me toos” for that it seems.