No, it wouldn’t. Did you think I was saying it would?
sondervalsays
@Ophelia
I honestly have no idea how you look like, and I don’t think it is important – I like your blog, you write great articles, that’s what counts for me. I was (and still am) puzzled why her looking angelic was something you wanted to stress, since remarking on the looks of someone when this is not at all related to their topic at hand is usually considered as wrong here at FTB. I’m trying to understand why this is not the case here, that’s why I wrote that I am probably missing something.
I apologise if this sounded like an attack, it was not meant as such.
Mimmothsays
She looks lovely. Her message would, in my opinion, be correct however she looked, but it may be of practical use that she looks lovely–people are influenced by that. So I’m glad that she looks lovely and glad that she is speaking sense at the same time.
Ok sonderval, sorry I was snippy. I’ll try to explain.
Mostly it was just a comment on the fact that she does look “angelic” (like angels in paintings etc) and that’s amusing given the quotation.
The rest was just a jokey little comment about the way Taslima combines warmth and ferocity. I’ve spent a little time in her company in real life and we’re friends (and she’s a blog colleague!) and that is what she’s like.
It was much more about her expression than about her appearance as such.
sondervalsays
@Ophelia
Thanks for the explanation, that makes much sense.
Gordon Willissays
She’s beautiful. She is also right. Religion actively prevents women living like human beings. It also actively discourages men from living like human beings. In fact, it’s antihuman, impossible to live, morally destructive and greedy for human minds. All while being infinitely better than sliced bread (though of course we wouldn’t have sliced bread or any other human amenity if it were not for religion — as is proved by countless transcendently visited pieces of toast).
Al Dente says
That was written while butter wasn’t melting in Ophelia’s mouth
rq says
I think there’s enough butter to go around.
Very well said!
sonderval says
Probably I’m missing something.
Yes she does, but would her message be any less correct or important if she were 90 years old, wrinkled and unkempt?
Ophelia Benson says
If she looked like me, you mean?
No, it wouldn’t. Did you think I was saying it would?
sonderval says
@Ophelia
I honestly have no idea how you look like, and I don’t think it is important – I like your blog, you write great articles, that’s what counts for me. I was (and still am) puzzled why her looking angelic was something you wanted to stress, since remarking on the looks of someone when this is not at all related to their topic at hand is usually considered as wrong here at FTB. I’m trying to understand why this is not the case here, that’s why I wrote that I am probably missing something.
I apologise if this sounded like an attack, it was not meant as such.
Mimmoth says
She looks lovely. Her message would, in my opinion, be correct however she looked, but it may be of practical use that she looks lovely–people are influenced by that. So I’m glad that she looks lovely and glad that she is speaking sense at the same time.
Ophelia Benson says
Ok sonderval, sorry I was snippy. I’ll try to explain.
Mostly it was just a comment on the fact that she does look “angelic” (like angels in paintings etc) and that’s amusing given the quotation.
The rest was just a jokey little comment about the way Taslima combines warmth and ferocity. I’ve spent a little time in her company in real life and we’re friends (and she’s a blog colleague!) and that is what she’s like.
It was much more about her expression than about her appearance as such.
sonderval says
@Ophelia
Thanks for the explanation, that makes much sense.
Gordon Willis says
She’s beautiful. She is also right. Religion actively prevents women living like human beings. It also actively discourages men from living like human beings. In fact, it’s antihuman, impossible to live, morally destructive and greedy for human minds. All while being infinitely better than sliced bread (though of course we wouldn’t have sliced bread or any other human amenity if it were not for religion — as is proved by countless transcendently visited pieces of toast).