that's because I didn't major in political science, silly. It's useless.

I thought you said you "studied" it in university. Okay. Cause I took human biology, but I didn't "study" it. You slept in polisci. I Googled in human bio. Fair enough!
are you sure about that?
what about for Muslim women who felt their rights were being infringed upon by their male family members? and that's in France....
What rights? If the men in France break laws, the women have recourse. Did you post a law that prohibits forcing a woman to wear a niqab? I support that.
No, no. I specifically avoided commenting on the original issue because I've not given it enough thought to have a coherent opinion on the issue. I was merely pointing out why I could see people having an issue with you conflating "religion" with "other, non-chosen protected classes". That's all.
:ty for clarification
Factually correct. Declaration of a concept by a group doesn't alter factual information. It is a fact that someone is deaf, hard of hearing or hearing at birth. It is a fact that someone is male or female at birth. (Well, okay, both of these can be vague, but you understand what I'm trying to say, I assume.)
Okay, but...if Jews get to say who is a Jew, who are you to say who is not a Jew? I mean, I'm talking about Jewish law. There is a thing that is called Jewish law that largely governs the way Jewish people live. It exists and is practiced. It is a fact. It doesn't mean that all Jewish law is factually true...I was just pointing out that I can be a non practicing Jew and still Jewish...for reasons explained in a moment...
It is not a fact that a child has a religion at birth. Religion is dictated by what you believe. If you believe the precepts of the Christian religion, then you're a Christian. If you believe the precepts of the Islamic religion, then you're a Muslim.
Religion is dictated by what you believe or what you
practice. Not all theistic religions require a belief in God. Judaism does not require a belief in God. It is possible to be religious and ascribe to a religion without believing in certain tenants, even if they think you're an infidel. Judaism is probably the most forgiving on this. However, a Christian would never call me a Christian. I don't believe in Jesus. The religious body does have a say in "who" belongs to their religion. It's kind of an agreement between you and that religion and what you are comfortable with.
A child "believes" nothing at birth, because the synaptic connections that represent "faith" or "belief" or even "understanding" or "symbolic concepts" simply don't exist yet.
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Absolutely. This is why most religions have ceremonies like a bar mitzvah, a confirmation, declaration of adulthood, etc. I was just pointing out that you can be born into a Muslim or Jewish family and also be born into an
ethnicity.
on to the how you can be a non practicing Jew and still a member of an ethnic group...
Your last paragraph also implicitly conflates "religious beliefs" with "genetic race/ethnicity", which does little but make the entire discussion more confusing. (That may likely have been unintentional, since members of the Jewish faith are far more apt to do that than members of any other faith, for some reason.)
Oh no. Jews are the
least likely to say that they are a genetic race. They will say that they are a
people, which is another way of saying
ethnic group. While many Jews do share DNA markers because of lack of interfaith marriages until modern times, Jews do NOT call themselves a race. That area is for Mengele, eugenicists, the KKK, and Nazis.
Ethnic group is not = race.
Here's a wiki quote which sums it up pretty well:
An ethnic group (or ethnicity) is a group of people whose members identify with each other, through a common heritage, often consisting of a common language, a common culture (often including a shared religion) and an ideology that stresses common ancestry or endogamy.[1][2] ,[3] "...in general it is a highly biologically self-perpetuating group sharing an interest in a homeland connected with a specific geographical area, a common language and traditions, including food preferences, and a common religious faith".[4]
"Endogamy" is why many Jews share common genetic markers. (Cohen gene and breast cancer gene in some Ashkenazim women)
I was just posting that so you knew
I was making a clear difference between the two. Both Jews and Muslims fall in that category of "ethnic" group...with some pockets of Middle Eastern Muslims sharing the same unique genetic markers as their Jewish counterparts.

Yet the cultural and ethnic differences between the two groups are huge!
All that being said, I just want to stress that Jews are
not a race. (I don't even believe in the concept of race anyway, but that's another thread!) When I joked about "mitochondrial DNA", it was because of Jewish law - a Jewish child is born only to a Jewish mother. (Since motherhood was the only definite science proving parentage thousands of years ago, that's just how it went. Clans were paternal.)