(September 15, 2016 at 2:06 am)Excited Penguin Wrote:(September 14, 2016 at 10:09 am)Losty Wrote: If you're in a building of worship? Do you think both women should be treated equally even though one is disrespecting the religious values of a place people may consider to be sacred?
What if you're in a stuck elevator and your police scanner announces that there may be an armed suspected murderer stuck in the elevator?
What if youre at a nude water park?
What if you the naked lady is brushing her boobs against you every time she walks by?
What if the burka lady is doing the funky chicken?
We treat people differently for different reasons all the time. The question in the OP is poorly worded at best.
No, we shouldn't treat them differently based on their clothing. Context and mannerisms have nothing to do with clothing.
People who will be attracted to said woman when she's naked might get horny and such, but they shouldn't treat her differently. They might act differently around her, but they shouldn't make a point of treating her differently.
Nor should they if they see her in a burka, clearly. They might think she's a Muslim, though, and indulge in a couple of preconceptions about her. They shouldn't strive to let her know it, though. That's the whole point.
I don't agree that clothing doesn't matter. If I see a guy dressed as a proselytizing Mormon, I will not make any cringeworthy perv jokes to him. If I see a naked girl, I will not try to recruit her to my purity club, if I see a man in a business suit I will not offer him half of my sandwich unless he actually mentions being hungry, if I see a woman in a burqa I will not invite her to my skinny dipping party.
Clothes do not determine a person's value or worth. They are a factor in determining how I will treat a person though. People can deny it if they want to seem PC but everyone knows it's true.