Cited to claim the Quran gives legal recognition to marriages/divorce involving girls who have not yet menstruated, and therefore underwrites child-marriage ethics.
quran
4 As for your women who have despaired of further menstruating, if you are in doubt, their period shall be three months; and those who have not menstruated as yet. And those who are with child, their term is when they bring forth their burden. Whoso fears God, God will appoint for him, of His command, easiness.
Invoked in an audience question as a verse about divorce after consummated prepubescent marriage, which Nadir rejects as an encouragement of child marriage.
Used as the central Quran text in the child-marriage argument, to say the Quran gives a waiting period for girls who have not menstruated.
Cited by the Shia guest to reinterpret Quran 65:4 as referring to women of menstrual age whose periods are delayed, not prepubescent girls.
This verse was used to argue that the Quran permits divorce regulations for females who have not yet menstruated, which the speakers treated as evidence that child marriage is allowed in Islamic law.