harmony wrote:Daniel Peterson wrote:Prejudice against women's education is present in rural villages in Afghanistan, but not in the government at Kabul.
So if I was to believe that, I'd have to think that the 13% (sorry, bad math) of women who are literate all live in one city, Kabul? And that the 30% of girls who go to school all live in that one city? And that only rural women carry the burden of illiteracy, because their more fortunate urban sisters are all educated, thanks to the modern (as opposed to backward) male leaders in Kabul?
Those women aren't all in rural villages, Daniel. That's beyond the realm of possibility.
Prejudice against women in rural areas doesn't mean that absolutely no women receive any education at all in those areas. And the fact that the central government in Kabul believes in the education of women doesn't mean that all women in Kabul receive educations. I don't believe in such a black-and-white absurdity, and asserted no such thing. Besides which, I've been around the Third World enough to know what government schools tend to be like even in the capital city.
Incidentally, in your earlier post you said that
23% of Afghan women are literate. Please decide which it is.
harmony wrote:What they have in common isn't their geographic location, it's their poverty and their religion
Both their poverty and their religion are factors, of course. But so is their geographical location. Rural schools are almost certainly far more poorly funded and far more sparse than are schools in the capital city, near the Ministry of Education. Urban dwellers are far less likely to be traditionally patriarchal than are those who live in remote mountain valleys. And so on and so forth. And, of course, if these Muslim women lived in Kuwait, say, or in Brunei, or under the Palestinian Authority, or in Jordan, or in Indonesia, or in Turkey, or in Qatar, or in Malaysia, or in Bahrain, or in Libya, or in Saudi Arabia, or in Iran, or in the United Arab Emirates, or even in Egypt, their chances of being literate would be several times higher than in Afghanistan. Yet all of those countries are overwhelmingly Muslim.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_co ... eracy_rateharmony wrote:Did I mention that I wasn't born yesterday?
Yes, as a matter of fact. If I'm not mistaken, you've indicated that you're really, really
old.