Hey, they just let Iran on the UN group for women's rights. Apparently women have the right to be stoned to death for adultery.Doesn't the UN have freedom of speech and freedom of religion in its charter? How would something like this reconcile with that?
Quite simple,what standing, if any, such a global 'law' would have I don't know, nor how it would be enforced.
Surely the entire holy book of one religion is just one big work of blasphemy when viewed from the standpoint of a different religion?
Hey, they just let Iran on the UN group for women's rights. Apparently women have the right to be stoned to death for adultery.

My thoughts exactly: you can't have blasphemy laws and freedom of religion.
For example: Catholicism is quite blasphemous to Mormonism and vice versa.
Depends. What do like to do to sheep?
I thought for a second the UN actually had standards, then I read that Saudi Arabia was allowed to be a member of that agency.You really must try and keep up. Irans' membership was voted down in the UN.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...rom-un-board-on-womens-rights/article1793523/
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/10/iran-saudi-arabia-win-seats-womens-board/![]()
Sounds like the article was written by a fear-monger who doesn't understand international law.
Here's how international law works:
1) Countries decide they agree with the agreement in principle and sign it, becoming signatories to it
2) Signatories incorporate the agreement into their own laws, thus ratifying the law
3) Sufficient signatories ratify the agreement and it becomes international law
It's fairly common for countries to sign international laws but not ratify them. There is nothing any country can do to make another country ratify an international agreement.
An international agreement will only become international law when sufficient signatories have ratified it - for example the two covenants of the International Bill of Rights were signed in 1966, but not made part of international law until ten years later when sufficient signatories had ratified it.
As an example, New Zealand didn't ratify the covenants until 1990 because they conflicted with some of our existing laws (such as compulsory unions).