Wearing the veil supports the false statement that men are dangerous and women have to become invisible to be safe in their company. Isn't that essentially supporting the misogynist notion that women are se.x objects and must make themselves invisible in order for men to behave themselves and women to protect their honour and virtue?
I'm thinking back to my time in Dubai and travelling across the Emirates, and I don't recall meeting any veiled women in office or work settings. Most women were wearing an abaya and hijab. Does that mean that veiled women choose not to work or are not being hired for jobs in mixed gender settings or settings involved with interfacing with the public?
Shaf, are you saying that your sister-in-law would wear a veil and work on projects with male co-workers without any problems? What happens if she spends time talking with a male co-worker and he's really nice, and she can see he is attractive because he isn't wearing the niqab. What if over the course of their work projects they fall in love? It has happened to many co-workers before. Do you really think her wearing a niqab would stop that from happening? Her co-worker can desire her based on her personality and even admire her beautiful eyes. Once again, one's conduct is important, not what one is wearing.
Are Muslim women who live in the West unfit to speak about Muslim women elsewhere, lest those women be made to look like victims that need rescuing by the West? I certainly think that marrying women off to their rapists, marrying young girls off as soon as they hit puberty, arresting protesting women and forcibly checking that their hymens are intact, and jailing women who want to drive their own car, are all worthy causes that any woman, Muslim or not, should speak up about. I think that any society that does those things to their women must view women in a negative light to restrict their freedoms and mistreat them so badly, all in the name of honour.
tnc123, you are right, there are misogynistic men in many other countries who speak in horrible ways about women, and mistreat the women in their lives. Women (and men!) have made a lot of progress against that though, thanks to feminism (yes, there are male feminists too). I am glad that I live in this day in age and not in the centuries past. As a Western woman I have many rights and freedoms that I appreciate greatly and I would never let anyone take those rights away in my society again.