In defence of selfies

When taking photographs on my travels, I am inevitably confronted with people obscuring famous landmarks by standing in front of them taking selfies. They appear to suffer from the conceit that a grinning visage is of more interest than a 1000 year old cathedral. Consequently, I have developed an intense dislike of selfies. Until now, that is; a Muslim cleric wants to ban selfies. What more incentive do we need to start taking them?

From here:

A Muslim cleric has drawn ire after saying “stop, let me ban selfies.”

Indonesian cleric Felix Siauw took to Twitter to call selfies “shameless” and “unpure”.

“These days many Muslim women take selfies without shame. There are usually nine frames in one photo with facial poses that are just – My Goodness – where’s the purity in women?” he said.

3 thoughts on “In defence of selfies

  1. Interesting perspective; had it not been for Ayatollah Kakamamie’s fatwa against Salman Rushdie, I never would have wasted my time and dime on his crappy novel. I can’t help but wonder if Rushdie didn’t agree to sign over some profits from the book for the former’s ad campaign.

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