J
jjdrury81
Guest
This has all got out of hand. I care not if a mosque is built near ‘ground zero’. It is beyond my comprehension to understand why others do.
Absolutely, I agree people have the right to criticize it.They absolutely have a right to the mosque there just as we absolutely have a right to vehemently criticize it.
But in the end it is really a property rights issue. Does a landowner have the right to build whatever he wants on his property or does the government have the right to limit those rights. In my opinion there is no legitimate use of government police power here. Sure it is offensive, but in a free society people have the right to be offensive.This is not about freedom of religion, rather it is about conflicting views as to what constitutes fostering understanding and tolerance.
And those legal tactics are an improper violation of property rights in each case. If we had a Supreme Court with backbone both the mosque builder and Walmart should be entitled to compensation if their property rights are taken away through such government regulation.The legal tactics used to try and stop the building this mosque are no different than the legal strategies used to try to keep Wal-Mart out of supposedly progressive communities.
I am so sick of this moral swamp that you people drag us into. This is absolutely the worst reasoning I have ever seen, and people actually buy it.How comfortable would you be if someone were to judge your religion based on, say, the crusades, the inquisition, or even St Bartholomew Days Massacre. What if someone said: “Catholics have a long history of intolerance, just look at how they forced people to convert during the Inquisition, and where do you think the phrase ‘kill them all and let God sort them out’ comes from? A monk in the Crusades.”
You would say: those actions were based on bad interpretations of Catholicism, and took place hundreds of years ago! But why should they listen to you, you are an intolerant Catholic.
This is what you are doing to the Muslims. Refusing to listen to what they say just because they are Muslim.
Please travel in an Muslim-majority country or neighborhood and find out why, then.This has all got out of hand. I care not if a mosque is built near ‘ground zero’. It is beyond my comprehension to understand why others do.
Been in plenty of neighborhoods. Never a country. Not sure how that is relevant.Please travel in an Muslim-majority country or neighborhood and find out why, then.
Or possibly there’s an important principle at stake here?This has seemed exceptionally “tone deaf” to me, politically. However, Obama may figure the Muslims (and they do raise political campaign money) will not forget his position by 2012, while the rest of us will.
And he might be right.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim_population_growthChristopherBJ5,
You are correct in saying that Islam is dying. It is under assault from the modern world. Every year, 6 million Muslims convert into Christianity and countless others become atheist.
…If you had donated money to fund the Cordoba House’s construction, would you want your name out there?Its not that we do know, its that we can’t know.
newsmax.com/Newsfront/ground-zero-mosque-funding-sponsors-landmark/2010/08/05/id/366712
Though I suppose you believe that good, American, ‘moderate’ mom-and-pop Muslims donated the one-hundred-million-American dollars during this RECESSION to fund a 13-story Islamic obscenity.
If it is an upstanding institution dedicated to mutual-understanding, tolerance, and reparations for the violence wreaked by radical Islam… uh, yeah.…If you had donated money to fund the Cordoba House’s construction, would you want your name out there?
Yeah, I’m not sure what that guy was talking about. I never said that it was dying, only that it should die. :\en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muslim_population_growth
Islam is growing- particularly because Muslims have a great deal of children.
What would that be, and how did his statement serve it?Or possibly there’s an important principle at stake here?
Apparently this country no longer believes in the 14th Amendment. I find it un-American and un-Christian to deny some one the right to assemble and to practice their religion.I guess for some that would make 7 out of 10 Americans nothing more than anti-Muslim bigots.
It is indeed sad times when all legitimate dissent is mischaracterized as bigotry. I oppose the proposed casino in Gettysburg Pennsylvania. That does not mean I oppose gambling or that I hate Casino owners-it just means I don’t think it’s appropriate place for it to be built, it is interesting that in my opposition to the casino no one calls me a bigot or claims I’m trying to overturn the 14th amendment. Charges of racism and bigotry are nothing more than a futile attempt to shut the discussion down.Apparently this country no longer believes in the 14th Amendment. I find it un-American and un-Christian to deny some one the right to assemble and to practice their religion.
Furthermore, in my opinion, anyone who divides Mulism and Christians, supports bin Laden’s goal to divide Muslims and Christians.
These are truly sad times in the U.S.
Agreed!It is indeed sad times when all legitimate dissent is mischaracterized as bigotry. I oppose the proposed casino in Gettysburg Pennsylvania. That does not mean I oppose gambling or that I hate Casino owners-it just means I don’t think it’s appropriate place for it to be built, it is interesting that in my opposition to the casino no one calls me a bigot or claims I’m trying to overturn the 14th amendment. Charges of racism and bigotry are nothing more than a futile attempt to shut the discussion down.