00:00The way that this culture and the society has been upended is a cautionary tale for the rest of the world.
00:10In the 70s, most of the civil servants
00:14were women, over half the teachers, doctors,
00:18there were women jurists, lawyers,
00:21in every profession, and then the world upended.
00:26And today, in Kabul, a female cat has more freedoms than a woman.
00:33A cat may go sit on her front stoop and feel the sun on her face.
00:40She may chase a squirrel into the park.
00:44A squirrel has more rights than a girl in Afghanistan today because the public parks have been closed to women and girls
00:52by the Taliban.
00:55A bird may sing in Kabul,
00:59but a girl may not, and a woman may not in public.
01:03This is extraordinary. This is a suppression of the natural law.
01:09This is odd.
01:15I feel that the Taliban, since they've issued over a hundred edicts in Afghanistan,
01:21stripping women and girls of their education and employment, their freedom of expression and movement,
01:27they have effectively incarcerated half their population.
01:32And the international community, I believe,
01:36because the Taliban call themselves, I believe, Sunni, yes, the Sunni
01:42community has a special responsibility to, in some way,
01:48intervene on behalf
01:51of their women and girls.
01:56I feel that the international community as a whole, if they came together,
02:03could affect change in Afghanistan and
02:07stop the slow suffocation of an entire, half the population, who are incarcerated.
02:20You
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