Islam isn't a race, so it's not racism to discriminate against them.
Islam isn't a race, so it's not racism to discriminate against them.
wikipedia said:Race is classification of humans into large and distinct populations or groups by factors such as heritable phenotypic characteristics or geographic ancestry, but also often influenced by and correlated with traits such as appearance, culture, ethnicity, and socio-economic status.
Religion isn't on that list, but culture is.. Close enough, I say. Race isn't really a very well defined concept, so..
Then you'd have to go with Arabs, Turks, Persians, Indonesians, and I don't even know how many others. Islam is the dominant religion of many ethnic groups.
More religious buildings (anywhere) = bad; more Islamic religious buildings = very bad; more Islamic religious buildings anywhere in the general vicinity of the hole in the ground that used to be the WTC = insanity.
Did they open the gay club next to it? I heard someone was planning to do that, if it wasn't just a rumour.
Riiight... I wonder if a more useful building wouldn't be a better use of the space.
Funnily enough, "we Christians" did that. After the Reconquista, the Spanish reconsecrated one particular mosque as a cathedral and carried on using it, leading to the bizarre fusion of Christian and Islamic religious architecture.
True, true.. I don't think it's a stretch to call someone who is bigoted against a religious group a racist, though.
You say that like that makes it okay.
So after having a year to cool down, does anybody still think this is a victory mosque, an affront to America, or an insensitive place for Muslims to congregate?
A Czech doesn't, but an Australian does?You don't really get New York, do you?
No, I just get annoyed when people say crap that doesn't actually make sense.
And opposing this particular community center isn't necessarily bigotry.
Still think it's tacky, but I really don't care anymore.
Never forget 9/11 when a mosque was attacked!!!!Technically true but there is a mosque in it, so I don't see any real reason to not call it a mosque, nor do I see it as offensive to call it a mosque.
It turns out there was a Muslim prayer room on the 17th floor of the south tower of the World Trade Center, where Americans and other traveling Muslims prayed every day.
On September 11th, 2001, when a handful of terrorists flew planes into the towers, some of the folks who used the room evacuated in time. Others probably didn't.
In other words, there already was a "ground zero mosque"--used by Muslim Americans who were murdered just like everyone else.
So isn't it time we stopped framing this discussion as "us versus them"?
Ever heard of a thing we call Google? I heard you can do searches on it. Link for those who don't use it.
We called that "Operation Iraqi Freedom".I wonder how they would feel if a Christian terrorist killed three thousand people somewhere in the Middle East
It sure is.It's a hideous building.
It sure is and was.This mosque is small potatoes at best, and always was really.
I think they couldn't have chosen a better spot really. The only way you can accuse them of choosing a poor spot if you suspect them to be supportive of the 9/11 attacks. Otherwise you just want to protect those who believe this. I noticed last time around everyone was so offended on behalf of other people, while not actually being offended themselves. It boils down to:They really could have chosen a better spot
That figure comes from places like this that I linked earlier:70% of America, huh? That's a hell of a number to throw out there with no corroboration. I don't remember that question on the census. Or did we vote on it? Or are you referencing some random poll you saw some time? Because I'm betting that number, which has appeared about 1000 times on this page, is meaningless.
But as I pointed out earlier, the same poll also reported this:Opponents of the planned Islamic community center and mosque near Ground Zero in lower Manhattan have public opinion firmly in their corner. According to a new TIME poll, 61% of respondents oppose the construction of the Park51/Cordoba House project, compared with 26% who support it. More than 70% concur with the premise that proceeding with the plan would be an insult to the victims of the attacks on the World Trade Center. Opposition to the project appears to derive largely from the conviction that the proposed site of the project — just two blocks from Ground Zero, in a building that formerly housed a Burlington Coat Factory outlet — is so close to "hallowed ground," as President Obama put it.
Once again, if the opinion is based on fear, lack of facts, and propagandizing how relevant is it compared to direct violation of the First Amendment of the Constitution.Yet the survey also revealed that many Americans harbor lingering animosity toward Muslims. Twenty-eight percent of voters do not believe Muslims should be eligible to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court. Nearly one-third of the country thinks adherents of Islam should be barred from running for President — a slightly higher percentage than the 24% who mistakenly believe the current occupant of the Oval Office is himself a Muslim. In all, just 47% of respondents believe Obama is a Christian; 24% declined to respond to the question or said they were unsure, and 5% believe he is neither Christian nor Muslim.
Interestingly, Stewart unearthed a clip to start the segment of Laura Ingraham essentially endorsing the project on Fox News back in December, before the politicization really heated up. Then he used Fox Business anchor Eric Bolling‘s recent appearance on Fox & Friends to make two points. First, as Bolling talked about the emotion behind 9/11, Stewart said:
You feel there should not be a Mosque down there, at least symbolically it doesn’t well with you, and I can accept that. I can accept that argument, I can respect that argument. Here’s where you lose me.
In “a dangerous game of guilt by association you could play with almost anybody,” Bolling laid out how the Imam behind the Mosque may possibly be raising money or potentially supporting issues that could loosely be tied to terrorism. So with that in mind, Stewart laid out how News Corp.’s and Rupert Murdoch‘s Saudi connections could make the same point. “Is Fox News a terrorist command center?” asked Stewart, rhetorically. “I don’t know! I’m just saying you could draw this up.”