In hopeful moments, I think that there have been changes even in the period of time I've lived here. The NHRC didn't used to be in the news on a daily basis, and now it is. The government didn't used to ask imams to preach about the immorality of abusing your maids, and now it does.
Even if no practical changes are made in the near future, I think this document shows that ideas are emerging in the Qatari noosphere that I, at least, had not seen there before. The committee completely buys into the specific human rights delineated in the UN Declaration of Human Rights, which I think is a huge step. It points out that many of Qatar's laws are blatantly unconstitutional, and idea I had never seen discussed before. It assumes that rehabilitation is the proper goal of incarceration, an idea Bilal Philips actively argues against, and it argues against gender inequality in custody disputes, which is based on sharia. I think that these things are significant
( ... )
I ran across a website that creates personalized forms for overseas voters to request an absentee ballot. I'm going to guess that you already get your absentee ballot, responsible and social-conscious person that you are (witness the above links :) but feel free to pass it on to anyone you think could use it. Vote early, vote often! ;)
We usually get a big stack of absentee ballots sent over here. It was problematic two years ago, though. For some stupid reason, Allegheny County decided not to send out ANY absentee ballots until the deadline for requesting them had passed, which was perilously close to election day. I'm sure it worked out fine for people having them mailed within the U.S., but since the mail to Qatar takes a couple weeks round trip, it left some of us voting at the very last minute. I'm still not totally sure if all our votes were counted (but isn't that always true?).
The Filipina maid depressed me. She has twin girls, 11 years old, and a son 13. She worked in Hong Kong for 10 years, with no complaints,to support them back home. Now she is in Qatar and not even getting paid. I get mad at the kids' dad, if alive, the good employers, the bad employers and the whole rotten sysytem of financial slavery world wide that splits up families. (And then I think of Mexico). Could I have left my kids? Could I see them starve? Could I see them grow up to live the life of this maid as their best option?
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Do you think anything will change?
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Even if no practical changes are made in the near future, I think this document shows that ideas are emerging in the Qatari noosphere that I, at least, had not seen there before. The committee completely buys into the specific human rights delineated in the UN Declaration of Human Rights, which I think is a huge step. It points out that many of Qatar's laws are blatantly unconstitutional, and idea I had never seen discussed before. It assumes that rehabilitation is the proper goal of incarceration, an idea Bilal Philips actively argues against, and it argues against gender inequality in custody disputes, which is based on sharia. I think that these things are significant ( ... )
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Vote from abroad.
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We usually get a big stack of absentee ballots sent over here. It was problematic two years ago, though. For some stupid reason, Allegheny County decided not to send out ANY absentee ballots until the deadline for requesting them had passed, which was perilously close to election day. I'm sure it worked out fine for people having them mailed within the U.S., but since the mail to Qatar takes a couple weeks round trip, it left some of us voting at the very last minute. I'm still not totally sure if all our votes were counted (but isn't that always true?).
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