Equal resentment can be found from the Left who argues that such legislation will nurture an already prevalent hostile climate and cause further secessionism within the French society. Instead, they advocate full integration policy, to unite and not separate. But it does not get any more concrete than that.
Even so, advising nothing is always better than suggesting trampling on the fundamental principles of the Declaration of Human Rights of 1789, as France’s far-right representatives seem to do. Indeed, the National Rally party thinks the bill is too weak in preventing what Marine Le Pen, head of the Party, calls "Islamist ideologies."
But all little to avail. Despite all the aforementioned critics, the law has in fact not proved that controversial in France. There was in fine no real political divide at the French National Assembly. On February 16, politics rallied, and the bill passed handily, by a vote of 347 to 151. Why? Because the bill was adamant to uphold France’s core republican principles. It first - paradoxically - aims to be universal. Its purpose is to regulate all religions alike: Judaism, Protestantism, Christianism and (many) others are concerned. It follows that the only relatively sound argument against the bill - the Islamophobic rhetoric - does not really stand.
Although some have spoken out against the potentially discriminatory nature of these legal shifts, France’s new bill was generally assented.
Copyright: Ludovic MARIN / POOL / AFP
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