It is a Community Center that has a couple of floors dedicated to prayer 2 blocks from Ground Zero! IT IS NOT ON Ground Zero. Get over it.
No fear or hate? Then maybe ignorance or unwillingness to research and seek higher knowledge?
If two blocks from Ground Zero is too close, how many blocks is acceptable?Five, ten, twenty blocks from Ground Zero?
The Fourteenth AmendmentThe Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the religious civil rights.[8] Whereas the First Amendment secures the free exercise of religion, section one of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits discrimination, including on the basis of religion, by securing "the equal protection of the laws" for every person:“ All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.This is about freedom of religion. NOT freedom of your religion. My son put it best: If you are against this being built then you are NOT a good American.
but is it a good idea? Just because something is legal to do- does not make it a wise choice. If they are going to try to build bridges with people who are not muslims- then why do something that alienates so many? And where is the public outcry from muslims when extremeists do something? Why is it okay for the mass majority of muslims who you say are peaceful- to say/do nothing?
It was fortunate that in 1941, after Hitler had waged war for a couple of years, America decided it would no longer tolerate Nazis.
It is irrelevant whether or not a church is allowed to be built in Mecca. This is not Saudi Arabia, rather, this is America, and to compare our tradition of religious tolerance to theirs of the exact opposite is pointless and even offensive.
Oh, and we all know that Catholics are intolerant of women, too. Why do some Christians allow women to teach men but Catholics do not? This new church is just going to become yet another hotbed of anti-women practices...
No religion commits honor killings. Those atrocities are committed by cultures, not by religions. Islam encompasses many different cultures, and the same can be said about Hinduism and Christianity and Judaism. The way that Christianity is practiced in Alabama is very different than the way it is practiced in, say, Mexico. Unfortunately, there are many cultures that practice abominable behaviour toward women. Where have I "defended" any religion? In my mind, religion is different from faith. "Religion" is a manmade construct. Of all the "Christian" cultures, only the US condones and actively pursues capital punishment. How does the American Christian defend this practice to, day, a European Christian? You see, these things are often CULTURALLY driven.
I still maintain that it is irrelevant what happens in Saudi Arabia. I don't care that they are intolerant. But it is illogical to extrapolate that because Wahabism is practiced by Muslims in one country, it is practiced by all Muslims in America and ergo all Muslims are intolerant. Such sweeping generalizations are worrisome and do not show Americans in a good light. Instead of caring so much about how Saudis don't like churches, maybe we should concentrate on maintaining our own American traditions of religious tolerance.
I wonder how many British yoofs even know the origins of that particular "celebration".