Frosty we've posted on the same boards for a long timeFrank Black wrote:i dont play well wiv others either...
Seriously do you think I do?
Frosty we've posted on the same boards for a long timeFrank Black wrote:i dont play well wiv others either...
Frank Black wrote:does the pope shit in the woods bro....
Frank Black wrote:Babycheeks wrote:Frank Black wrote:no like after communism..duh
remind me again whos smokin the waccy baccy here..
ur still free to be a commy have commy beleifs
etc...
How is your Utopia different to communism?
it would have capitalism..
just not rampant capitalism
but realistic growth capitalism..
it would have laws much the same
only based in common sense and harm criteria
not on dogma...
Cactus Jack wrote:Point of Information Amy - As Ireland is a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights multiple religiously solemnised marriages have a measure of recognition as they do in any other European country - although only one marriage is recognised as granting each partner the rights normally accorded to a single spouse.Not in Ireland they can't!
I see, I see. I can see the Maths.
No - as everywhere else marriage can have two components, a state recognised and a religiously recognised. The state must recognise the religious component but it need not be a legal marriage.Babycheeks wrote:Isn't it classed as bigamy?Cactus Jack wrote:Point of Information Amy - As Ireland is a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights multiple religiously solemnised marriages have a measure of recognition as they do in any other European country - although only one marriage is recognised as granting each partner the rights normally accorded to a single spouse.Not in Ireland they can't!
I see, I see. I can see the Maths.
Cactus Jack wrote:No - as everywhere else marriage can have two components, a state recognised and a religiously recognised. The state must recognise the religious component but it need not be a legal marriage.Babycheeks wrote:Isn't it classed as bigamy?Cactus Jack wrote:Point of Information Amy - As Ireland is a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights multiple religiously solemnised marriages have a measure of recognition as they do in any other European country - although only one marriage is recognised as granting each partner the rights normally accorded to a single spouse.Not in Ireland they can't!
I see, I see. I can see the Maths.
A 2nd, 3rd or 4th wife of a Muslim man has the same status as a so-called common law wife, which is to say next to none.
A Sharia Court in the Ireland may, under some very limited circumstances and with the consent of all parties, act as an arbiter in settling claims rival wives may have against each other but their decisions are not binding in law and can be overturned by any Irish court. Much the same as in the UK really.
Blunder wrote:Cactus Jack wrote:No - as everywhere else marriage can have two components, a state recognised and a religiously recognised. The state must recognise the religious component but it need not be a legal marriage.Babycheeks wrote:Isn't it classed as bigamy?Cactus Jack wrote:Point of Information Amy - As Ireland is a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights multiple religiously solemnised marriages have a measure of recognition as they do in any other European country - although only one marriage is recognised as granting each partner the rights normally accorded to a single spouse.Not in Ireland they can't!
I see, I see. I can see the Maths.
A 2nd, 3rd or 4th wife of a Muslim man has the same status as a so-called common law wife, which is to say next to none.
A Sharia Court in the Ireland may, under some very limited circumstances and with the consent of all parties, act as an arbiter in settling claims rival wives may have against each other but their decisions are not binding in law and can be overturned by any Irish court. Much the same as in the UK really.
I think the term you are looking for is 'natural justice',, we all have a right to natural justice.
But the problem with Sharia courts is that they are bias against women from the off. The judges there believe that Gods Law is above man-made law, and sadly, so do many who agree to participate in them.
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