https://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/...ok-remarks-about-halal-meat-for-a4215746.html
I accept that I'm on the losing side of the cultural war in terms of rejecting the semantically ludicrous idea that criticising Islam or aspects of it is "racist". I accept that in this situation, an appeal of an awful decision resulted in the right outcome eventually.
But how did we get to this place in the West? I'm not a vegetarian or vegan, yet I oppose halal meat. I support the meat industry having humane standards. Halal meat makes the standards less humane than they could be. And of course all consumers of halal product pay the price for certification, whether they support it or not.
(I am not a libertarian and this post is not about my freedom to source only non-halal meat. My point is that religious strictures like halal meat are idiotic and the world would be better off if these idiotic strictures did not exist).
A student was disqualified from her GCSE exam after she was accused of making “obscene racial comments” by criticising halal meat.
Abigail Ward, 16, a strict vegetarian, wrote during a Religious Studies exam in June that she found the idea of halal meat "absolutely disgusting".
The exam board OCR later disqualified Miss Ward from the exam, accusing her of making "obscene racial comments".
The decision was only overturned when her school, Gildredge House in Eastbourne, appealed the decision, insisting Miss Ward had been expressing her distaste for halal butchers and was not making any comment about Muslims.
The school added that no other comments made in the paper could be construed as racist.
The exam board upheld the appeal and later apologised for the “upset and stress” they caused Miss Ward, the Telegraph reported.
It also accepted that the board's original letter "describing the frequency and severity of the comments" was "inaccurate".
...In a statement, OCR said: "OCR takes all incidence of suspected offensive material against a religious group in exams very seriously and must apply rules which are set out for all exam boards in such cases.
"We accept that initially we did not reach the right conclusion and were too harsh."
I accept that I'm on the losing side of the cultural war in terms of rejecting the semantically ludicrous idea that criticising Islam or aspects of it is "racist". I accept that in this situation, an appeal of an awful decision resulted in the right outcome eventually.
But how did we get to this place in the West? I'm not a vegetarian or vegan, yet I oppose halal meat. I support the meat industry having humane standards. Halal meat makes the standards less humane than they could be. And of course all consumers of halal product pay the price for certification, whether they support it or not.
(I am not a libertarian and this post is not about my freedom to source only non-halal meat. My point is that religious strictures like halal meat are idiotic and the world would be better off if these idiotic strictures did not exist).