Comments by "Angry Kittens" (@AngryKittens) on "Yes Theory"
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@alfalasi2114 Yet Middle Eastern governments execute people (usually by very brutal methods like hanging, stoning, or beheading) for things like "witchcraft" (Saudi Arabia), being gay (almost all Middle Eastern countries), apostasy (almost all Middle Eastern countries), blasphemy (almost all Middle Eastern countries), drinking alcohol (Iran), protesting against the government (Saudi Arabia, Iran), premarital sex or adultery (even victims of r4p3). And even if the government doesn't kill them, someone else will. Vigilantes, ISIS, honor killings. None of them are doing anything different from what Middle Eastern governments do, they just do it more. They kill people using the same reasons. You're probably used to it, but this isn't normal for any other country in the world. Killing is so normalized in Middle Eastern cultures that you even let murderers go if they pay blood money.
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@royalpillows7716 The same index that puts Saudi Arabia at #36 where women can't even drive until less than 3 years ago? LOL. I trust Khaleeji Times. I don't trust the GII.
The UNDP Gender Inequality Index (GII) is a joke because it actually isn't about gender inequality, ironically enough. Instead it's actually a Human Development Index (HDI) list, as it doesn't measure women's issues. Instead it's a mishmash of women's issues and women vs. men issues, like pregnancy survival, women in politics and literacy, and women in the workforce. It's improperly weighted and thus as long as you have a high GDP and have state-of the-art medical facilities you will always top the list, even if you beat women up every day in your country. It's an experimental ranking, as the previous UNDP Gender Development Index (GDI) also had the same problems of inaccuracy, where the wealth of a country skewed the results so badly that the richest countries were always at the top of the list (hence why countries Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Brunei, Bahrain are at the top of the GII list, despite them clearly being not even remotely close to feminist-friendly).
Read:
Permanyer, Iñaki (2013). "A Critical Assessment of the UNDP’s Gender Inequality Index." Feminist Economics. 19 (2). pp 1-32. doi: 10.1080/13545701.2013.769687
https://paa2013.princeton.edu/papers/130872
If you want a more accurate and more respected index, go see the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Report instead: http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_GGGR_2020.pdf
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