Parastoo Ahmadi sang without a hijab. For that, an Iranian court has reportedly sentenced her to seventy-four lashes, along with a two-year travel ban and a ban on artistic work.

Eight members of her musical and production team reportedly face the same punishment.

The ruling may still be appealed. That matters legally. It does not rescue the moral situation. A state has looked at a woman singing in an online performance and answered with the threat of the lash.

The official language is familiar: public decency, immoral content, religious propriety, social order. There is always a phrase ready when power wants to punish disobedience. But the facts remain plain enough. Ahmadi performed without submitting to Iran’s compulsory hijab laws, accompanied by male musicians, in a concert released online. The court treated the performance not as art, but as contamination.

That is what theocratic rule does. It turns a woman’s hair, voice, clothing, movement, and public presence into political territory.

A hijab freely chosen may be an act of faith, modesty, identity, or personal conviction. A hijab enforced by courts and police is something else. It becomes a sign of state power. Once punishment enters the picture, the language of choice disappears.

Western societies often become nervous when speaking about this. Ordinary Muslims in Canada, Britain, France, or the United States are not responsible for the crimes of the Islamic Republic. Many Muslims reject this kind of rule entirely. Many Iranian women resisting the regime come from Muslim families and communities themselves.

But that distinction cannot become an excuse for silence.

Islam as private belief is one thing. Islam as state power is another. When religious law governs women’s dress, restricts women’s voices, polices women’s bodies, and punishes public disobedience, it stands in direct conflict with the liberal inheritance the West should still be willing to defend: freedom of conscience, freedom of expression, equality before the law, and the right of the individual to live without clerical supervision.

Those values are not always honoured here. The West fails them often enough. But their failures do not make them false. Their absence is visible in places where a woman can be dragged through courts for singing.

Ahmadi’s alleged offence was not violence. It was not theft. It was not corruption. It was a performance. The regime’s response reveals the insecurity beneath the theology. A system confident in its moral authority would not need to threaten artists with flogging. A faith secure in itself would not require police, courts, and punishment to preserve public obedience.

“A hijab freely chosen belongs to the woman. A hijab enforced by courts and police belongs to the state.”

This is where polite multicultural language often fails. Respect for persons does not require respect for the laws that crush them. We can defend the dignity of peaceful Muslims while saying plainly that theocratic rule in Iran is oppressive, anti-liberal, and especially brutal toward women.

Sweeping that conflict under the multicultural rug does nothing for women like Ahmadi. It only protects the comfort of people far away from the consequences. The women living under these laws do not get the luxury of abstraction. They live with patrols, summonses, bans, fear, and the knowledge that a song can become evidence.

The phrase “Women, Life, Freedom” became powerful because it named what the regime fears most: women living as full human beings rather than managed subjects. Ahmadi’s performance belongs to that same moral territory. Under a regime like Iran’s, a woman singing uncovered is not merely performing. She is refusing.

And for that refusal, the state reaches for the lash.

Parastoo Ahmadi should be free to sing. Iranian women should be free to uncover their hair, make art, criticize their rulers, choose their faith, reject faith, and live without being disciplined by men who mistake control for morality.

A society that must threaten to whip women into obedience has already lost the argument.

 

Seventy-four lashes for a song — the price of a woman’s uncovered voice in Iran.”

References

The Guardian. “Iranian star Parastoo Ahmadi reportedly sentenced to 74 lashes for singing without hijab.” June 18, 2026.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/18/iran-parastoo-ahmadi-74-lashes-singing-without-hijab

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. “74 Lashes For A Song: Iranian Artist Sentenced For Virtual Concert.” June 2026.
https://www.rferl.org/a/iran-singer-sentence-flogging-morality-police-ban-women-life-freedom-hijab-concert-youtube/33783873.html

IranWire. “Caravanserai Concert Staff Sentenced to Flogging and Artistic Bans.” June 2026.
https://iranwire.com/en/news/153871-caravanserai-concert-staff-sentenced-to-flogging-and-artistic-bans/

Amnesty International. “Iran: New compulsory veiling law intensifies oppression of women and girls.” December 10, 2024.
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2024/12/iran-new-compulsory-veiling-law-intensifies-oppression-of-women-and-girls/

One key idea behind activist-left identity politics is the ladder of oppression: the more marginalized identity categories a person can claim, the more moral and political weight their speech is assumed to carry.

The theory has an old philosophical root. In the master/slave dialectic, the subordinate person is said to understand both worlds: his own condition and the world of the master who rules over him. The master, by contrast, often knows only his own comfort, his own assumptions, and the social order that flatters him. From this comes the later activist claim that oppressed people possess a clearer or “truer” insight into reality because they see power from below.

There is a partial truth here. People who live under a system often notice things the comfortable miss. A disabled person may see barriers others walk past. A woman may notice male behaviour men excuse or ignore. A racial minority may recognize social patterns the majority experiences only as normal background noise. Lived experience can expose blind spots.

The problem comes when this insight hardens into hierarchy.

Instead of treating experience as evidence to consider, activist politics often treats identity as authority. The more oppression factors a person can claim — race, sex, gender identity, sexuality, disability, poverty, colonial history — the higher they stand on the moral ladder. Their narrative is then “centred,” while those lower on the ladder are expected to listen, defer, apologize, or stay quiet.

At that point, argument has been replaced by ranking. A weak claim from the approved identity can be protected from criticism, while a strong claim from the wrong identity can be dismissed as privilege, fragility, or harm.

Lived experience matters, but it does not make someone automatically right. Suffering can reveal truths, but it can also narrow vision, sharpen resentment, or turn personal pain into bad policy.

A serious society listens to experience without making identity a substitute for reason. The question still has to be: is the claim true?

Bach’s Gigue from Partita No. 2 in D minor, BWV 1004 is fleet, poised, and quietly relentless — a dance movement full of forward motion, but shadowed by the darker gravity of the larger partita. On guitar, the piece loses some of the violin’s biting edge and gains warmth, intimacy, and a more lute-like clarity. The result is Bach as elegant architecture in motion: precise, dancing, inward, and beautifully restrained. 🎸

I have been called “Maple MAGA.”

It is a silly phrase, but not an innocent one. Imported American static with a Canadian toque pulled over it, the label works less as description than as sorting device: once attached, it tells the room what to do with the person before anyone has to answer what he said. That is its usefulness.

The charge, as far as I can tell, is not that I am secretly American, or that I want Donald Trump to annex the Prairies, or that I am pining for red hats on Parliament Hill. It is not that I support theocracy, oppose women’s education, or want priests running the courts.

The charge is simpler. I keep saying things that no longer sit comfortably inside the approved progressive frame.

I defend freedom of expression, especially when the expression is rude, inconvenient, unfashionable, or badly timed. I think women and girls have sex-based rights that cannot be wished away by therapeutic language. I think female prisons should be for female prisoners. I think children should not be hurried into irreversible medical pathways to satisfy adult ideology. I think citizens should be free to read, think, doubt, argue, dissent, and change their minds without the state, the school board, the professional college, or the HR department treating their inner life as a compliance problem.

Apparently, this is enough now: not enough to make one wrong, which would require an argument; not enough to make one dangerous, which would require evidence; but enough to make one “far right,” “MAGA,” “reactionary,” “unsafe,” or whatever label is currently doing the work reasons used to do.

The insult is the visible part. Underneath it sits the relocation of the acceptable centre.

Cultures move. Language changes. Laws change. Public taste changes. Some changes are good and overdue; some are foolish; some begin as compassion and harden into coercion. There is nothing sacred about yesterday’s vocabulary merely because it is yesterday’s vocabulary, but cultural movement does not move reality.

That distinction is now being blurred. It is one thing for a society to change how it talks about sex, gender, identity, offence, harm, safety, and inclusion. It is another thing to pretend the underlying truths have changed because the approved language has changed.

A male body in a female prison does not become a female body because a policy manual has been updated. A teenage girl’s distress about her body does not become simple proof of a medical destiny because a professional association has learned a new script. A citizen’s refusal to repeat an ideological formula does not become hatred because an HR department calls the formula kindness.

The culture can change what is rewarded, what is punished, who gets invited to speak, who gets reported, who gets promoted, who gets quietly avoided, and who gets labelled a problem; it cannot change the truth.

Female prisons make the point concrete because, for most of living memory, saying that female prisons should be for female prisoners was not a right-wing position. It was barely a position at all. It sat in the background with other obvious assumptions: women’s shelters are for women, women’s sports are for women, and sex matters most in the places where privacy, vulnerability, male violence, and bodily difference are not abstractions.

“There is nothing sacred about yesterday’s vocabulary merely because it is yesterday’s vocabulary, but cultural movement does not move reality.”

Prisons are coercive institutions. Women inside them cannot simply leave, choose their neighbours, or opt out of policy experiments designed by people outside the walls. The state therefore has a heightened duty of care. Sex matters there; it matters when privacy is stripped away, when physical power is uneven, when trauma is common, and when the people affected have no meaningful escape route.

Yet once the vocabulary changes, the old safeguarding claim can be redescribed as extremism. Not because women became less vulnerable in prison, male-pattern violence disappeared, or sex stopped mattering in confined spaces; the argument is recoded because the permitted moral language changed around it.

This is the trick: move the official language, then treat unchanged reality as if it has been morally superseded.

The same pattern appears elsewhere. Free expression becomes “harm.” Privacy becomes “suspicion.” Doubt becomes “denial.” Genuine distress in young people is real, and compassion for it is necessary; but caution in youth medicine is not cruelty, and weak evidence does not become strong because the approved language insists it must. Refusing compelled belief becomes bigotry. The old liberal question — “Is this true, and may I say so?” — is replaced by a managerial one: “Does this comply with the approved moral vocabulary?”

There is a Gramscian flavour here. Gramsci understood something real about modern power: it does not operate only through police, courts, elections, and parliaments. It operates through culture; through schools, media, churches, universities, publishers, artists, professional bodies, and the people who teach society what respectable people are supposed to think.

Durable victory requires more than capturing the state; it requires shaping common sense. That is the part that feels familiar now: a workshop here, a policy update there, a glossary, a training module, a revised professional standard, a grant condition, a reputational warning. No jackboots required. Just enough pressure to teach ordinary people which sentences now come with consequences.

Most people understand the lesson. They have jobs, families, colleagues, reputations, mortgages, volunteer roles, and professional obligations. They do not want to be called hateful, unsafe, extremist, bigoted, MAGA, or far right; they do not want to become the example everyone else is warned about. So they move, or they fall silent.

Then comes the strange inversion. People who have not changed their minds are told they have moved to the far right. The old centre is renamed after the fact; positions that were once liberal, feminist, or civil-libertarian are reclassified as dangerous because the institutions around them have adopted a new script. The people did not move so much as find the centre moved around them.

That is why “Maple MAGA” is such a convenient little insult. It imports the emotional charge of American polarization and drops it onto Canadian disagreement. It lets the speaker skip the local argument: no need to examine the claim, no need to ask whether an older feminist concern might still be true, no need to wonder whether a civil-libertarian objection might have merit. The label supplies the answer before the question is allowed to form.

“Once that habit takes hold, precision disappears. These words become atmospheric; they create suspicion, not understanding, and suspicion is often all that is needed.”

This is especially poisonous in Canada, where we already borrow too many American reflexes. We take American slogans, American moral panics, American partisan categories, American racial scripts, American activist vocabulary, and American media obsessions, then pretend they map cleanly onto Canadian life. Usually they do not; but they are emotionally efficient, and that is often enough.

Once that habit takes hold, precision disappears. “MAGA” no longer means a specific American political movement. “Far right” no longer means a coherent political position. “Unsafe” no longer means a demonstrated danger. These words become atmospheric; they create suspicion, not understanding, and suspicion is often all that is needed.

A person does not have to be refuted if he has already been made socially radioactive. His argument does not have to be answered if the room has been taught to flinch before hearing it. That is the quiet power of these labels: they replace disagreement with contamination.

A free society cannot keep doing that and remain free in any serious sense. It cannot function if disagreement is treated as pollution, cannot remain liberal if every objection is recoded as harm, and cannot reason together if words are used to end thought rather than sharpen it.

Some people really are extremists. Some movements really are dangerous. Some ideas really do deserve fierce opposition; there is no virtue in pretending otherwise. But when the label comes before the argument, the argument never happens. Civic life begins to rot not when people disagree, but when they lose the habit of believing disagreement deserves an answer.

So no, I am not especially interested in proving that I am not “Maple MAGA.” The phrase is too silly to deserve that much respect. I am interested in why so many people now reach for labels instead of reasons: how free expression became suspect, how female rights became reactionary, how cognitive liberty became dangerous, and how ordinary citizens were told that standing still meant they had somehow moved to the far right.

The institutions moved the language, then pretended they had moved reality.

That is the lie at the centre of the whole exercise.

References / Further Reading

Correctional Service Canada — Commissioner’s Directive 100: Gender Diverse Offenders
Canada’s federal correctional policy on gender-diverse offenders, including placement according to gender identity or expression.

UK Ministry of Justice — New Transgender Prisoner Policy Comes Into Force
The 2023 England and Wales policy restricting placement of some transgender-identifying males in women’s prisons.

The Cass Review — Final Report
The 2024 independent review of gender identity services for children and young people in England, especially useful for the essay’s caution-in-youth-medicine point.

Ipsos Canada — Strong Majority of Canadians Continue to Support 2SLGBT+ Rights and Visibility
Useful public-opinion context showing broad support for LGBT rights alongside lower support for gender-identity-based rules in women’s sport.

Intersectionality was supposed to widen moral vision. It was supposed to help us notice people whom ordinary politics missed: the poor, the powerless, the socially disposable, the ones institutions found easy to ignore. In the UK grooming-gang scandals, fashionable activism too often managed the reverse. It did not merely fail to see vulnerable girls clearly. It helped teach institutions which facts were too dangerous to see.

“The answer is equality under reality. No exemptions. No euphemisms. No protected categories of fact.”

That failure has affected women and girls in the UK directly, and it still has to be discussed.

This is not a claim that every feminist organization said nothing. Some did necessary frontline work. Some supported survivors. Some backed reinvestigations, better data collection, and reforms to the criminal justice system. But institutional service provision is not the same thing as public moral leadership. When thousands of girls were exploited, trafficked, raped, dismissed, and disbelieved, the response from much of fashionable feminism was nowhere near equal to the horror. There was no great reckoning. No sustained mass campaign. No “believe these girls” moment of the kind the activist class knows perfectly well how to create when the story fits its preferred map.

And that is the point. The facts crossed the wrong political wires.

Many of the victims were poor, working-class girls. Some were in care. Many had already been written off as difficult, damaged, promiscuous, unreliable, or not worth the trouble. They were exactly the kind of girls feminism should have defended without hesitation. But in several major local scandals, the perpetrators did not fit the easier script. Naming patterns around ethnicity, culture, community silence, misogyny, and institutional cowardice risked giving ammunition to the wrong people. So the moral machinery jammed.

The official record is blunt enough. In Rotherham, the Jay report estimated that around 1,400 children were sexually exploited between 1997 and 2013. It described girls raped by multiple perpetrators, trafficked between towns, threatened with guns, beaten, intimidated, and treated with contempt by police and other adults who should have protected them. The report also recorded institutional nervousness around naming perpetrators’ ethnic origins, including concern that doing so would be seen as racist or damage community cohesion.

A decade later, the Casey audit found that the problem had not been honestly mastered. Ethnicity was still not recorded for two-thirds of perpetrators in the national data. National evidence remained too poor to support simple claims, but local evidence from several force areas showed enough disproportionality involving Asian and Pakistani-heritage men to require further examination. Casey’s point was not racial blame. It was moral adulthood: refusing to examine these questions fails victims and leaves the field open to political extremists.

This is the coalition-protection filter in bureaucratic form. Under it, facts are no longer first tested by whether they are true. They are tested by whether they protect the approved political coalition. Will this strengthen the anti-racist narrative? Will it risk “Islamophobia”? Will the far right use it? Will it embarrass multicultural institutions? Will it complicate the story activists prefer to tell about power?

Those concerns are not invented from nothing. Bad actors do exploit real suffering for ugly ends. Racists have used these scandals to smear entire communities, and that should be rejected plainly. But the existence of bad actors cannot become a veto over truth. A fact does not stop being true because a deplorable notices it. A victim does not become less abused because her testimony is politically inconvenient. When that becomes difficult to say, fashionable intersectionality has moved from caution into moral irresponsibility.

At its best, intersectionality noticed that vulnerability is not always single-file. A poor girl in care is not simply “female.” She is female, poor, young, institutionally dependent, socially disposable, and already mistrusted by the adults around her. A serious intersectional feminism should have seen these girls with devastating clarity.

Too often, activist intersectionality became something else: an oppression-ranking system that sorted people into moral categories before listening to them. It encouraged activists to ask not “What happened?” but “Which group has more structural power?” Some vulnerabilities became politically legible; others became inconvenient noise. When the victim map and perpetrator map did not align cleanly, the abused girls were pushed behind the narrative.

That is an evasive machine, built to blur moral accountability and weaken allegiance to truth.

Oppression-based claims become dangerous distortions of reality when they stop being tested as claims and start being treated as moral credentials. They are not insight by default. They are not evidence by default. They are not compassion by default. A theory of power that cannot survive contact with awkward facts is not a serious moral framework. It is a shield.

In the grooming-gang scandals, the cost of that distortion was not academic. Girls paid when police treated them as troublemakers. They paid when social services minimized what was happening. They paid when officials avoided naming patterns for fear of racism accusations. They paid when public institutions became more anxious about community cohesion than child protection. And they continue to pay when debate is still diverted away from truth and toward reputation management.

The answer is not racial blame, collective guilt, or the lie that all abuse belongs to one community, one religion, or one ethnicity. That would be false and unjust.

The answer is equality under reality.

“Oppression-based claims become dangerous distortions of reality when they stop being tested as claims and start being treated as moral credentials.”

If white men offend, name it. If Pakistani-heritage men offend, name it. If institutions fail because of sexism, say so. If they fail because of class contempt, say so. If they fail because officials are frightened of being called racist, say so. If cultural attitudes toward women, outsiders, shame, honour, or sexual entitlement play a role in a specific pattern of offending, investigate it honestly. No exemptions. No euphemisms. No protected categories of fact.

Truth-based analysis is not cruelty. It is the minimum requirement for justice.

The girls failed by these scandals did not need a theory that arranged them neatly inside an activist diagram. They needed adults who could see them, believe them, protect them, and tell the truth about what had been done to them.

Intersectionality promised to see the overlooked.

These girls were overlooked anyway.

That should shame everyone who claims to care about women.

Public institutions should be careful with the symbols they elevate.

A government building, school, courthouse, legislature, or public office does not belong to one faction of the public. It belongs to the whole public. That is why its official symbols should remain broad, civic, and restrained. In Canada, that means the Canadian flag and the official provincial or territorial flag.

Those flags are imperfect because the country is imperfect. No national symbol can carry every wound, achievement, grievance, regional difference, or private identity without strain. But an official flag is not supposed to say everything. It marks the common civic space where citizens disagree, argue, vote, work, worship, protest, and live together.

Supporters of additional flags often argue that these displays are not partisan. A Pride flag, for example, may be understood as a message of welcome rather than a political demand. That argument should not be mocked. Many people look to public institutions for reassurance that they belong.

But belonging cannot depend on seeing one’s preferred symbol raised by the state.

Once public institutions begin flying non-official flags, even for sympathetic reasons, they move away from neutrality. The question is no longer whether a particular cause is worthy. Many causes are worthy. The question is whether public authority should place its symbolic weight behind some identities, causes, or movements while declining others.

That creates a problem no institution can manage fairly for long. A flag raised for one group becomes a precedent. A refusal becomes a statement. A commemoration becomes an expectation. The flagpole slowly turns from a civic symbol into a contested notice board.

Canada does not need public institutions sorting citizens by official recognition. It needs shared civic ground.

This does not prevent citizens or private organizations from displaying the symbols that matter to them. A free society should leave people room to speak, assemble, advocate, celebrate, mourn, and disagree. Civil society can be expressive because it is plural. Public institutions should be restrained because they serve everyone.

Institutional neutrality is not indifference. It is a way of keeping public authority from being captured by the pressures of the moment. It tells citizens they do not need to belong to the favoured cause of the day in order to belong in the country.

The Canadian flag and official provincial flags are broad enough for that purpose. They do not erase difference, but they refuse to make difference the first fact of public life.

Let citizens bring their arguments. Let institutions hold the common ground.

 

Maps like this disturb a comfortable habit in Western public life: colonialism is often discussed as though Europeans invented it, monopolized it, and uniquely embodied it.

They did not.

That does not make Western colonialism imaginary, minor, or excusable. European empires conquered, extracted, enslaved, displaced, racialized, governed, converted, and reordered huge parts of the world. The moral seriousness of that history remains. But if colonialism is part of the larger family of empire, conquest, domination, hierarchy, and the subordination of one people by another, then Western colonialism is not the whole category. It is one chapter in a much older human pattern.

The early Islamic conquests were not merely a spiritual awakening spreading through gentle persuasion. They were also military and imperial events. Arab Muslim armies and later Islamic-ruled polities expanded across the Levant, Egypt, North Africa, Persia, parts of Central Asia, and Iberia. These conquests changed political loyalties, tax systems, religious hierarchies, legal status, languages, and civilizational boundaries.

This does not reduce Islamic civilization to conquest. It would be foolish to ignore its achievements in philosophy, mathematics, architecture, medicine, poetry, trade, law, and scholarship. Many conquered peoples also helped build those achievements. Greeks, Persians, Jews, Christians, Indians, Arabs, Berbers, and others all contributed to what later gets remembered as Islamic civilization.

But that is exactly why the moral accounting should be honest. Conquest can produce synthesis. It can also produce subordination. Empire can preserve knowledge. It can also reorder peoples against their will. Complexity is real, but it cannot be used as a shield only for some civilizations.

The same selective memory appears around slavery and other imperial systems, but even staying with conquest alone, the pattern is clear: Western empire is treated as the moral template, while non-Western empire is often softened into “expansion,” “civilization,” “trade,” or “complexity.”

So why the imbalance?

Partly because Western colonialism is closer to us. Its archives, borders, museums, laws, churches, universities, racial categories, and economic consequences are still visible inside Western societies. Canadians, Americans, Britons, French, Belgians, Australians, and others are arguing inside institutional houses their own histories helped build. That proximity matters.

Partly because Western civilization developed powerful habits of self-criticism. Christianity, liberalism, socialism, abolitionism, human rights language, and modern academia all helped create tools by which the West could put itself on trial. That is not a weakness. In many ways, it is one of the West’s better inheritances.

But a virtue can decay into a ritual. Self-criticism can become selective prosecution. Once “colonialism” becomes a moral drama with fixed roles — guilty West, innocent rest — history gives way to theatre. The question stops being “Who conquered whom, and at what cost?” and becomes “Which story serves the approved politics?”

There is another reason for the imbalance. In contemporary Western politics, criticizing European empire is safe, rewarded, and institutionally familiar. Criticizing Islamic empire, Ottoman domination, Arabization, or other non-Western conquests is more dangerous. It risks being heard not as historical analysis, but as bigotry. So the subject is softened, avoided, or buried under the word “complexity.”

But all empire is complex. That cannot be a permission slip handed out selectively.

A serious anti-colonialism would not ask first whether the conqueror was European. It would ask: Who ruled? Who paid? Who was displaced? Who was taxed differently? Who was converted under pressure? Who lost language, land, status, sovereignty, or memory? Who was later told to be grateful for the civilization that absorbed them?

By that standard, Western colonialism remains morally serious. But it is not uniquely Western. It belongs to the larger human history of empire, conquest, slavery, hierarchy, and domination.

The point is not to excuse Europe. The point is to stop pretending that conquest only becomes colonialism when Europeans do it.

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