We don’t want to prevent it
No, actually, we approve of violence against women.
Poland is to withdraw from a European treaty aimed at preventing violence against women, the country’s justice minister announced on Saturday.
Zbigniew Ziobro said the document, known as the Istanbul Convention, was “harmful” because it required schools to teach children about gender.
Meaning what? That there are two sexes? That one of the sexes is on average bigger and stronger than the other? That the stronger one has historically dominated the other one? That it takes one of each to make a baby? Aren’t they going to learn all that in any case?
He added that reforms introduced in the country in recent years provided sufficient protection for women.
Easy for him to say.
Mr Ziobro said the government would formally begin the process of withdrawing from the treaty, which was ratified in 2015, on Monday.
He argued that the convention violated the rights of parents and “contains elements of an ideological nature”.
The ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party and its coalition partners are closely aligned to the Catholic Church, and the government has promised to promote traditional family values.
Traditional family values like men dominating women? Like enforcing the dominance with violence? Those traditional family values?
Thousands of people, mostly women, took to the streets of the capital Warsaw on Friday to campaign against the withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention.
“The aim is to legalise domestic violence,” Marta Lempart, an organiser of a march in the city, told Reuters news agency.
Trad fam vals, you know.