Anne Rosselot of Concord, New Hampshire, self-identifies as follows:
I am a woman, a feminist, a Democrat, an enthusiastic Hillary Clinton
supporter, the proud mother of a lesbian, a progressive Christian, a
supporter of civil rights, a believer that Black Lives Matter, and a
welcomer of refugees and other immigrants.
Yet because I oppose the wearing of the full Muslim veil in public,
which functions as a face mask, [the New York Times] would label me a bigot [“Veiled Bigotry in Germany” (editorial, Dec. 8)].
People
may feel that masked people in public are vaguely sinister and
threatening; one instinctively looks at a person’s face to see whether
this is a friend or a foe. It isn’t bigotry.
While
the wearing of the veil may be protected speech here, it is not
unreasonable to ask people who want to live in open societies to show
their faces to the community. This is not bigotry.
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