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And no, the left in the EU isn't the reverse of our Right. You're just confusing parliamentary parties in the UK. -spence |
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Victims of what? |
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-spence |
I would suggest Rauf sit down with the Muslim moderates and watch
"The Day The Towers Fell." As a religious people they should be able to see why the area around the 16 acres destroyed is sacred ground and how their building would adversely affect the families,friends and citizens of our country. It's a no brain-er for a people who do care about others. |
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the Swiss banned the minarets because they didn't want those islamic missiles dotting their pristine countryside...have you see a picture of those things? I told you NASA should build the GZ Mosque..right up their alley... |
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Caldwell: There is no welfare state on the scale of that in Europe, and I think welfare states are a bad fit for large-scale immigration. In an ethnically diverse society, people are less familiar with each other, and they are correspondingly less willing to pay taxes for social benefits. Two-thirds of the imams in France are on welfare. There is nothing wrong with being an imam. But I don't think the French are very happy about paying what is effectively a state subsidy for religion in that way. Interview conducted by Mathieu von Rohr pretty good interview from der spiegel Christopher Caldwell on Muslim Integration: 'It's Much Better If Things Are Discussed Openly' - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International |
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I don't think any of this is really debatable, it all adds to the formula and little of it is driven by the Muslims themselves... Or are you asserting that European actions over the past two centuries haven't contributed to the situation? Quote:
-spence |
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If it's Islam that offends the sanctity of the location, shouldn't we also prohibit Muslims, or at least traditional Islamic dress visible to others? You do know the planned location is already used as a mosque today. Should we have this shut down immediately? -spence |
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This has nothing to do with what bars, strip clubs, Mosques or garbs that were there before the attack. It has to do with the sesnsitivity for the families and friends of the victims after an insane attack against innocent people. Any religion should take that sesnitivity into consideration. |
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If the 9/11 families and friends (i.e. most all of America) have a problem with Islam, that is the white elephant in the room that should be discussed. Not turn the presence of a mosque, that already exists (I believe it opened after 9/11), into a political circus. If the objective is sensitivity, then the most vocal critics certainly have failed miserably. The rallies today protesting both sides of the mosque issue are a perfect example. -spence |
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Hey he does have a THRONE to sit on right? :grins:
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Lol. And a sacred scroll
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yup...
The Washington Examiner reveals some creative tax filing by Imam Rauf and reveals who is funding him.. Feisal Abdul Rauf, the New York imam and State Department envoy who wants to build a controversial new mosque at Ground Zero, applied for - and received - tax-exempt status from the IRS in 1998 for another mosque about 10 blocks from the Ground Zero site, stating that he was already holding prayer services there for up to 500 daily worshippers. But when the Investigative Project on Terrorism checked out the information Rauf provided to the government on his IRS 1023 form, they discovered that 201 W. 85th Street was a 17-story Manhattan apartment building with no public spaces large enough to accommodate 500 daily worshippers. And Apartment 10 E was a one-bedroom, 800-square-foot unit that would have trouble holding even 50. In their 1998 tax filing, Rauf and his wife, Daisy Khan, former director of the American Sufi Muslim Association, said that they wanted to build "a large scale prayer center in New York City...The center will include a mosque (prayer place) where every Friday and daily large congregation prayers and meditation centers will be held." However, IPT says, "ASMA records don't indicate that the center was ever built."[snip] A recent financial statement by ASMA reported donations from the United Nations Population Fund, the Dutch government, MDG3 Fund, the Hunt Alternatives Fund, Carnegie Corp., the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and the Qatar government. |
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Are you serious? The man and his wife sound like they're cleaner than most members of Congress.
The funding is definitely suspicious though. CarnegieCorp? Rockefeller Fund? The Dutch Government??? I did have to look up the MGD3 Fund. Here's what found on the homepage. Quote:
What was your point again? -spence |
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the more you look, the more he looks like, Sharpton, Jackson and the nut in Florida |
Good lord I agree with Scott Must be the Newport water I have been drinking all summer
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Now that the Koran was not burnt, that there will be no more killing of American troops.
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I'm penning a letter to the UN right now requesting funding through the MDG3 Fund for our mosque based on the fact that we will be promoting gender equality because in our mosque everyone will be worshipping in the basement...not just the women, children and livestock...but EVERYONE...I can't guarantee I'll be able to add a missile to my roof however, my neighbors will NOT be down with that...and they aren't even Swiss... I just got something in that you are really going to like, "EBEN" I've had a lot of historical and non-historical items with various names over the last 20+ years but this is the first time I've had or even seen a piece of early pottery with the name EBEN |
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Spence, my original post has nothing to do with the questions you posted about it. It's self explanatory, and has to do with Islam being at heart a peaceful religion, with teachings of religious tolerance and respect for others. Therefore imo, they should be understanding of the feelings of the ones whose lives were forever affected by the evil act by a radical group of their religion. |
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New York is a very diverse city, and Muslims already live, work and pray in the shadow of the twin towers. Muslims (no, not the hijackers smartass) were killed in the attacks. To say that a cultural center intended to promote interfaith communication (and equal rights for women, perhaps one of the central issues within Islam today) is not sensitive because of a shared faith with Bin Laden doesn't make any sense to me. Just because they both call it Islam they clearly don't really share the same faith. Given the large amount of mistrust of Islam in this country I can see how some might feel offended regardless. That being said, a solution based on fear doesn't seem logical if the objective really is peace. As I've mentioned earlier, this issue seems to have always been about the (partially manufactured) controversy, and not really about the actual center itself and Imam and his wife. -spence |
Welcome to the thread.
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But your comment makes me think...Is a poor, uneducated teenager in Afghanistan who perhaps doesn't even have a choice to participate in a protest against Americans burning the Koran...the ENEMY? I guess he is if you want to make it be. Note to all: A very good book -> http://www.amazon.com/Way-World-Stor.../dp/0061430625 Quote:
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-spence |
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your stuff must be strong! it is making you a bit paranoid though.... :smash: |
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"...in the spring of 1972, at Tulane University...students asked Alinsky to help plan a protest of a scheduled speech by George H. W. Bush, then U.S. representative to the United Nations - a speech likely to include a defense of the Nixon administration's Vietnam War policies. The students told Alinsky they were thinking about picketing or disrupting Bush's address. That's the wrong approach, he rejoined, not very creative - and besides causing a disruption might get them thrown out of school. He told them, instead, to go to hear the speech dressed as members of the Ku Klux Klan, and whenever Bush said something in defense of the Vietnam War, they should cheer and wave placards reading, ‘The KKK supports Bush.' And that is what they did, with very successful, attention-getting results." Planting major falsehoods has been a favorite Alinsky strategy from the start. His acolyte, Barack Obama, learned his Industrial Areas Foundation lessons on deceiving for power while on a side trip during his Harvard years, then taught the Alinsky power tactics at the University of Chicago. |
Spence, I have never condemned or ever will condemn the mainline Muslim Faith for 9/11.That was the act of a radical group.
I have always admired the many Muslims I have known for their strong allegiance to their families, and would think they would have feelings for all families as well.. For the last time, as my original post said, I am suggesting that the mainline Muslim faith, as a religion, should understand how putting their building so close to the 9/11 site would adversely affect the feelings of the families and friends of the victims and simply move their building to a different location. BTW- no need for name calling. :) |
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