WTF, Egypt? W...T...F?!

What is this…I don’t even…

Discuss…

(Mods: feel free to move this, I just figured “necrophilia” belongs in The Pit.)

Well, they are keeping it under 8 hours, right? Cause that would be wrong.

That’s all the ick I need for today, thanks.

I’m just glad everybody in Egypt is worrying about the important stuff.

Why are women fighting this? Jealousy?

Talk about your sex with no possibility of procreation!

So, is there any possible reason for this other than a nation of people who want to have sex legally with recently deceased women?

“Goodbye my love. Hey, loosen up a little!”

Guys, this story is fake. Fake, fake, fake. There is no such law.

Story not fake.

You know, I don’t care if a guy fucks his dead wife (and neither does his dead wife) but one certainly has to wonder exactly how this became a subject of national discussion. Can’t a guy fuck his dead wife discreetly, for fuck’s sake?

Story fake

Timing is crucial, otherwise she won’t know if she’s coming or going…

At this point, unless I see a source with a quote from a proponent of the law or a quote from the draft legislation (both of which Czarcasm’s moronic cite is missing), I’m going to assume story is fake.

Not having read the articles here at work, are we certain that they mean six hours after the wife’s death?

Do not approach the “white light” at the end of the “tunnel” (you’ll put your eternal eye out!).

I typed “Egypt sex after death law” into Google and got multitudes of positive hits, including the major news services, but only one saying it is a fake story. Are there more sites saying it is a fake story that I missed, because I’m willing to change my mind if evidence pops up.

Mummy
I’d
Like to
Fuck

I’m guessing a lot of Egyptian men have mummy issues.

Yes, but what is the origin of the story? The “story is fake” guy says that it started as an opinion piece from a guy who was a Mubarak supporter (and who therefore might have an axe to grind about the moronitude of the Egyptian legislature). This is at least plausible.

I don’t think you can judge anything from the number of hits on Google about a story, especially in the first few hours while the original (possibly unchecked) story goes viral.

And if you google “Egypt necrophilia law fake”, you will get several more hits on the “fake story” side.

For me, I suspend judgment until the smoke clears.

In fact, read the lead paragraph for the DailyMail article, full of no facts:

Roddy