DanishDynamite
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2001
- Messages
- 10,752
So you admit that you do actually see. Good.i see a disconnect in your reasoning.
So you admit that you do actually see. Good.i see a disconnect in your reasoning.
So you admit that you do actually see. Good.
I see that you are a troll. Do you?i see the disconnect in your reasoning...do you?
So the fact that hospitals in Switzerland serve kosher but not halal food is evidence of a double standard? Seems like kind of a weak point to argue. Do you have evidence that there is demand for halal food in Swiss hospitals?
sounds like democracy. with 10 times the numbers, they deserve more consideration from the government.
isn't that what democracy is all about?
I see that you are a troll. Do you?
Either make your argument or get of the crapper.
Having any type of special food available should be up to the market. If the firm running the canteen at a Swiss hospital sees a market in having special "Allah blessed" meals, they should of course be free to provide such meals. As they should be free to provide "smokers only" areas for those so inclined.A simpler explanation is that, for all culinary intents and purposes, Halal is "kosher light": I am quite sure everything that is kosher is also Halal, but not vise-versa (e.g., it is Halal to have meat with cheese). So it's pointless to have kosher and halal while having kosher is also halal by default.
I responded to that argument. If you have a counter-argument more potent than "this response is asinine in the extreme...." please provide it. Otherwise get off the crapper.i made my argument in this post^^^^
get off the crapper??...........really....
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Having any type of special food available should be up to the market. If the firm running the canteen at a Swiss hospital sees a market in having special "Allah blessed" meals, they should of course be free to provide such meals. As they should be free to provide "smokers only" areas for those so inclined.
I responded to that argument. If you have a counter-argument more potent than "this response is asinine in the extreme...." please provide it. Otherwise get off the crapper.

Case closed.dude....the 'crapper' is a flush toilet.
i don't have running water.![]()
At least according to this website:A simpler explanation is that, for all culinary intents and purposes, Halal is "kosher light": I am quite sure everything that is kosher is also Halal, but not vise-versa (e.g., it is Halal to have meat with cheese). So it's pointless to have kosher and halal while having kosher is also halal by default.
At least according to this website:
http://www.soundvision.com/info/halalhealthy/halal.kosher.asp
it's not exactly true. But I doubt many hospitals serve pig cheese. Yogurt on the other hand...
I guess the big one according to this website is not culinary, but religious, as kosher slaughter does not involve mentioning God over the animal, whereas halal slaughter requires Allah be uttered over the animal.
cbc radio did an interview with a halal butcher from toronto a few weeks ago.
the ritual is very specific. the animal must not be slaughtered within sight of his fellows and the killing is done with great reverence and prayer.
So the fact that hospitals in Switzerland serve kosher but not halal food is evidence of a double standard? Seems like kind of a weak point to argue. Do you have evidence that there is demand for halal food in Swiss hospitals?
I guess another question would be, how available are kosher vs. halal products in Switzerland? I don't imagine that hospitals house a kosher slaughterhouse in their basements; they buy what's available to them.
I there was a law banning halal food, that would be an issue. If the point is that there simply isn't halal food, it's a non-issue: I suggest waiting. If there will be a market for it, someone will open a store selling it.
no my point was, that for 0.2% of the population, public hospitals are serving Kosher food. That is good. i mean they believe they have to eat it out of religious resons, i see no problem with that being respected.
But then we have 6% Moslems, they are not getting their religious food wishes fullfilled.
Did anybody actually ask the hospitals to serve Halal food? Any official petition from the Muslim community? I'm not against it, it's just that not every lack of X in institute Y is evidence of some "lack of respect". Again it seems a matter of time: surely hospitals in Switzerland serve kosher food not because of pressure from the Jewish community but because they did it for many years already.
Sure everyone has the right to advocate for their own interests, I never denied that. As to playing the victim card, I alluded to this kind of statements: