Some of our Indian Interlocutors have now outed themselves and revealed that their personal ideology, their bias forms the substance of their otherwise informed opinion - they now claim they are more catholic than the pope and hide their bias behind "American" - They seek to conflate Ethnicity and Religion and they are determined that Muslims are not to be thought of as Americans - yet, if they imagine that this attitude will not harm Indians and Hindus and Sikhs, they are mistaken, Diaperheads and Monkey god, these are just the starters are instore for them - Such indians are not thinkng about what the issues are in this made for politics controversy and how much they have ot lose in it, if the constitutional rights of any one group is successfully challeneged in the US, no group, read, Hindus, Sikh, and Jews, in fact no minority that can be successfully villified, will be safe, Do Hindus and Jews imagine that they will be dsafe if Muslim sare no safe? Will their constitutional rights be preseved if tose of Muslims are not?:
Obama speaks out for mosque complex
By Washington Post
Saturday, August 14, 2010
WASHINGTON -- President Obama on Friday forcefully joined the national debate over construction of an Islamic complex near New York's ground zero, telling guests at a White House dinner marking the holy month of Ramadan that opposing the project is at odds with American values.
"Let me be clear: As a citizen, and as president, I believe that Muslims have the same right to practice their religion as anyone else in this country," Obama said, according to prepared remarks at a White House iftar, the traditional breaking of the daily Ramadan fast.
"That includes the right to build a place of worship and a community center on private property in Lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and ordinances," he continued. "This is America, and our commitment to religious freedom must be unshakeable."
Obama expressed sympathy for the families of those killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks by al-Qaida terrorists purporting to act in the name of Islam. But he told the gathering, which included Muslim and other religious leaders, that blocking the mosque -- as some leading Republicans have angrily demanded -- would undermine the country's claim to respect the free practice of religious expression.
The president's statement puts him once again at the center of a cultural clash just as his party enters the final stretch of a difficult congressional campaign. Polls suggest that most Americans disagree with his position; a recent CNN poll found 68 percent opposed to building a mosque near the Sept. 11 site.
Obama, who has made repairing strained U.S. relations with the Islamic world a centerpiece of his presidency, had remained silent for months about the proposal to build the Muslim cultural complex in Lower Manhattan.
As proposed, the Islamic center, formally known as the Cordoba House, would rise 13 stories on land two blocks from the World Trade Center site. It would include a prayer room -- the mosque component of the project -- and "a Sept. 11 memorial and contemplation space." The nonprofit Cordoba Initiative bought the property for $4 million and plans to spend $100 million on the complex.
A New York City planning commission unanimously struck down the final barrier to the project on Aug. 3 by refusing to grant the building that now stands on the site protection as a historic landmark. The existing structure was damaged by debris in the Sept. 11 attacks.
But what began as a local zoning dispute evolved into a raucous national discussion.
A number of prominent Republicans joined some of the families of those killed on Sept. 11 in opposing the mosque, saying it would inappropriately celebrate the religion that al-Qaida leaders say inspired the terrorist attacks.
Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin asked the mosque's supporters in her Twitter feed last month: "Doesn't it stab you in the heart, as it does ours throughout the heartland?" Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in July called the mosque proposal a "test of the timidity, passivity and historic ignorance of American elites."
But Feisal Abdul Rauf, the imam who is the project's sponsor, has promoted the center as a place to foster religious tolerance, Islamic heritage and healing. Rauf has been vilified by some GOP opponents of the mosque, but he was one of the loudest Muslim voices condemning the Sept. 11 attacks and was a frequent guest and adviser to former President George W. Bush.
Those in favor of the complex received support from New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who in an emotional speech after the commission vote said that denying the mosque would leave Americans "untrue to the best part of ourselves." Speaking of the firefighters and police officers killed in the World Trade Center, Bloomberg added, "We do not honor their lives by denying the very constitutional rights they died protecting."
In a statement, Bloomberg applauded Obama's remarks, calling them a "clarion defense of the freedom of religion."