Posted on 11/08/2010 2:02:07 PM PST by george76
We have discussed the phenomenon of hymen restoration surgery for Muslim women to appear more like virgins for their wedding night, and how it is illegal in many Arab countries. But since it can save the lives of many women who might be murdered by their new husbands, the procedure is even covered by British national health insurance.
But now, there is a cheaper method.
...
This capsule is similar to a Chinese device ... that performed the same function, when an Egyptian cleric demanded that any bride found to be using it should get the death penalty.
(Excerpt) Read more at elderofziyon.blogspot.com ...
Oh for gosh sakes! We should be trying to cure cancer and medical money is spent on crap like this!
It would be MUCH cheaper just to kill the Muslim men who threaten their wives.
That would solve the problem and we can’t have THAT.
With the feminists running everything, well, that won’t happen.
Tax payer money at work.
Muslim brides becoming virgins again with hymen replacement operations on the NHS.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2561464/posts
I am laughing so hard right now because this is nothing new. Hundreds of years ago in Europe women took a vile of chicken blood to their wedding bed.
Will they be able to buy it in Oklahoma soon?
/s
Or a vial.
okay okay, some one private msg, about it! I have not had my coffee yet! I am working on just half a brain.
What do the men offer as proof that they are virgins, too?
Strive to be premature.
WTF?
“appear more like virgins”
Perhaps there is a discount if the doctor gets a quickie in before the surgery?
An older (as in, centures) version of this was a pigeon’s egg, emptied of the egg and filled with blood, inserted in ... ahem, the correct place. There is nothing new under the sun. (Or the sheets!)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.