Sexism is wrong, absolutely, and there's no excuse for it. That's all true, but it's also true that two wrongs don't make a right, and that doesn't make denying citizenship the right way to address the situation. Especially when it does nothing to actually challenge or alter the behavior in any way, and she's still being allowed to stay in France as a resident to my understanding, just as a non-citizen resident. So what does denying her citizenship actually change? What's it accomplish at all, and how's it actually address the situation or problem at all, if sexism is the problem here?
That's what I mean by two wrongs don't make a right. That of course sexism is wrong, but denying citizenship while nonetheless allowing her to remain in France doesn't actually do anything to address that problem at all. So that being the case,,why is that the answer? Why is that the solution? It's not. It's just another wrong, it's using the wrong tool in the toolbox and they should choose a more appropriate tool instead, if that's their aim. That's all I'm getting at anyway. That it's definitely something that needs attention, certainly, but this isn't the way to do it since it doesn't actually do anything to address the supposed problem or change it any way whatsoever, and that's something that I could only imagine that those who agree that sexism is a huge issue that needs to be addressed would agree on. That the solution or punishment or whatever needs to be something that in some way at least has a chance of somewhat getting to the root of it and addressing it in at least a slight fashion at the very least, and do something about it, right?
That's all I'm getting at--that this particular solution does nothing whatsoever to address that or change anything about the apparent problem at all, and thus, as things stand, it's just a case of two wrongs not making a right as far as I can see it, acting like they did something without actually really doing anything at all, or at least that's how I feel about the situation at the very least.