>>Im not sure you can say the Mosque IS built by radicals Kemp, one sentence from one man does not make the group radicals.<<
This is one of those things that has been firmly established and I'm not interested in trying to convince you of. You could bury your head in the sand and tell yourself that the 9/11 hijackers weren't radicals either, and I wouldn't bother arguing with you about it. I started to list all of the reasons this is silly to discuss and realized how silly it was to repeat them all again. There's no law against trolling either, but I still say it's undesirable.
>>To me it shows that America is not a bigoted judgemental country, it can discern between the minority terrorists who claim to be Muslim and the actual Muslims practicing the faith. It sends a clear message that the country is not anti Islamic but anti terror.<<
I understand your point and I don't brush it off at all, let alone lightly. But America has no need to show that it is not a bigoted and judgemental country. Name me a Muslim nation (nation predominantly Muslim or a Muslim theocracy) where, in their wildest dreams, they can imagine having our freedoms in their country. I won't hold my breath. The danger here lies in our enemies perceiving us as weak--And they do. With our democratic principles and ignorant/irresponsible leaders who don't hesitate to lie in the interest of extending/securing their power, our enemies see all of our infighting as weakness. And, indeed, it often is, when it results in us acting against our own interests because some politician figured it in his interest to please some fringe group who wants daily spa treatment and X-Box for detainees who want to murder American civilians in the name of Allah.
>>It is almost an extension of the "non negotiation with terrorists" policy. Al Quieda are not capable of dictating American policy - they tried to cause a division between Christian and Islamic Americans and look, working in harmony to spread understanding near the 11/9 site.<<
But they don't perceive it this way. And that's not my novice opinion; they say it openly, all over the place. We're not fighting with someone who could gain support by portraying us as bigoted: our enemies are infinitely more bigoted than US policy or US public sentiment could be remotely compared to since slavery was legal. Such as Imam Rauf, who wants to see America more Sharia-compliant. The proposed mosque will have the opposite effect of promoting harmony. And it's not a secret. And it's hardly debatable. If understanding and harmony were the goals, they wouldn't have chosen this site. They wouldn't have chosen to continue in their quest for funding despite the protests of the victims of the 9/11 attacks.
>>It also provides a victory for the moderates over the radicals, they are not being treated the same by the Obama administration, the distinction is clearly there - the evil Imams that exist to convert people to radicalism can hardly say look at how America treats us when this Mosque is built.<<
First, radical Imams don't give a damn what the USA does. They'll rant and rave against the USA, the great satan, regardless of US actions. It's in their interest. It's good for maintaining their influence, relevance, and power. Why the US continues its massive aid to middle-eastern nations is a testament to political corruption, ignorance, and apathy on a scale I'd rather not think about.
Second, you're proposing that some of the biggest bigots on the globe wouldn't be able to call us bigots if we allow the mosque. They don't support what you're prosing we do to make ourselves look good to them. If they did they'd be busy fighting for those rights in the middle east and wouldn't have time to propose a mosque nobody's paid for here. We should worry that they might call us bigots? They're openly bigger bigots than we'd be if we stoned junkies and cut off pieces of women. You're talking about our need to espouse a value that they don't have in order to appease them. We already own tolerance and nonviolence. We have nothing to prove to Rauf or any supporter of Sharia on the planet.
>>Nor is it disrespectful to the victims, the Muslims building and praying in the Mosque did not support nor take part in the terror attack, they had no links and will not be glorifying it, the fact they are Muslim does not matter, it would be like war veterens protesting outside Sony America saying that having a Japanese business in America is disgraceful and disrespects the war dead.<<
We are no longer at war with Japan. There aren't countless radical religious fanatics in Japan who openly boast that Sony America is a monument to Japan's biggest triumph in centuries. So I disagree. It would not be like that at all.
Do you know the history of Cordoba? I'm still having trouble believing that you honestly think anyone who supports this mosque supports it in the name of tolerance and harmony. Even the name rubs it in everyone's faces. Some people choose to put their heads in the sand, not learn their history, and help their enemies mock them while their enemies cheer and laugh at their childlike ignorance. Read up on Cordoba (I can't imagine that you have any knowledge of it) and, in light of what you learn, please explain how the Cordoba House is a fitting name for a project about understanding, tolerance, and harmony. It's obviously not, and anyone who tells you otherwise chooses to remain ignorant or is lying.
Sharia violates every value America stands for. This Imam who supports it doesn't support it and embrace American values. To claim such doesn't even make any sense. They're incompatible. It's incoherent.
This selection of location pleases radicals and offends victims of the attacks. How does either aid in understanding or harmony? Knowingly pleasing radical murderous militants and offending victims (regardless of whether or not the perceived offense is in bad faith or not) seems to me to be about as far from understanding as one could get.
This isn't about Islam. This is about not aiding our enemies openly mocking us while a minority in our country side with our enemies over their own nation (giving them the benefit of the doubt, most are just disgustingly willfully ignorant). They call us weak for our democratic principles and open dissension. They call us ignorant heathens. The last thing we need in our struggle against people who hate freedom, women's rights, and all kinds of other things that we in civilization have agreed upon beyond discussion is for large numbers of us to support them in their open slap to our face to prove they were right. No moderate Muslim wants that either.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]