You're not Loki. Stop writing essays.
you are still not getting it!!! Like Jinfah said, it is all about perspective. When muslims look at western society, they see a society that has become too liberal and lacking morals to the point where right has become wrong and wrong has become right. So, now it is not acceptable for women to cover up themselves? They all have to live by western standards, wear miniskirts, thongs and tank tops? Is that your view of how a woman should be liberated?
I actually don't think there's anything moral about telling a woman what to wear. And there's nothing immoral about the human form.
You are setting up a false dilemma where the only two options are burkas or miniskirts. Those are not the only two options, and they’re not options that men should dictate through the use of archaic religious dress codes.
Do you honestly think that all these women who wear hijabs and niqabs are doing it because they are being forced to? Some of them do because of their ignorant families, but many of them choose to do it because they view it as a way to show their devotion to God and they view it as dignifying. You said that there is nothing dignifying about it because a made up religion told them to do it. This is according to you, a non muslim. Well guess what?? These women are muslim and they obviously don't think their religion is made up, so who are you to say that they are wong and you are right?
As I said earlier, there often doesn't even have to be outright force. If it's what's expected by a woman's religion, friends, parents, and society, how much choice does she have?
Are you saying that a non-religious person cannot examine the claims of a religion? Or examine its ethics which treat women unequally?
When these muslim women look at western women they feel sorry for them because the western society places so much pressure on women to look "hot" and "sexy" and nothing but eye candy.
Nothing but eye-candy? This is a straw man of Western society. Yes women are often judged by their looks (so I guess the solution is to cover them from head to toe), but society is becoming less sexist. The majority of college students, for example are female, and probably half my law class is female. Are Islamic countries better? I mean, by your logic they should have just as many women in colleges and universities. They're not treated like eye-candy? So they must be judged on their character and intellect.

they don't see anything dignifying about wearing miniskirts, bikinis, getting their legs waxed every other week, spending hours putting on makeup and fixing their hair so that they can get a date, or even a one night stand. These muslim women chose to wear hijab/niqab because they feel that islam liberates women from all these pressures of having to always look good in order to be a trophy wife or some guy's fantasy.
Again, that's a choice in the West. Not all women spend a lot of time grooming or working out.
But anyway, I spend too much time studying for law school (okay let's pretend I do), going to school (let's pretend I do) attending classes (let's pretend I do), studying in the library (again, let's pretend I do). Wouldn't it be liberating if I was barred from law school. Think of all the time I'd save.
If your claims that burkas and niqabs were freeing were was true, then wouldn't non-religious Western women start wearing them? "Fuck it's so awesome and freeing."
You are talking about the lack of dignity in muslim women, please tell me what is dignifying about having a guy pressuring a girl to have sex at 14?
Are we talking about Muhammad?
What is so dignifying about being in the porn industry?
Yes, parents, schools, our social institutions really pressure their daughters to go into the porn industry
You are talking about unequal treatment between sexes, yet you are ignoring the fact that women in western society are unfortunately currently being treated as nothing but sex objects.
This is false.
So please, before you talk about women in other cultures and criticizing the way they live and trying to "liberate" them, look at the way your own culture treats women and fix your own problems first.
No country is free of sexism; there are varying levels of sexism within every culture and nation. But I don't see how the sexism within my own society prevents me from commenting on an obviously sexist religious dress code.