Really? Sensitivity, basic decency and respect are canards? The Pentagon is 'Ground Zero' for the American military and there is a mosque --
IN THE PENTAGON -- managed by Chaplain Lt. Cmd. Abuhena M. Saifulislam.
USMilitary.com - Headline News
Don't distort my comments - I did not call the 'virtues' canards, I called your attempt to suggest the proposed construction of the NYC mosque a 'violation of those virtues' a canard. Yours is a disingenuous argument based around a strawman, that seeks to irrationally vilify a community on the issue of constructing a house of worship, and on the other hand makes the community accept culpability in a terrorist attack that they had no hand in if they accept your argument.
Your example of the mosque in the Pentagon in fact justifies my position, that the presence of a mosque near ground zero is nothing that you claim it is.
But the civilians will remember and will see this as a sign that among the American muslim community, it is virtuous to take advantage of the infidels whenever an opportunity presented itself. That 'slippery slope' you speculated was reached long ago among the European countries and without their versions of 9/11. The construction of this mosque so close to Ground Zero WILL be a move towards that 'slippery slope' in America.
The 'slippery slope' will always be something bigots and hatemongers will seek to advance, the construction of a mosque will have little to do with it. If not the NYC mosque, it will be something else, as has been the case in Europe, with one country banning minarets out of the blue.
In fact your entire argument hear is a pathetic attempt at a 'threatening' Muslims, by suggesting that if they dare to practice their religion freely, Americans will treat them with extreme prejudice.
Really? It is precisely because Americans never gave much thought to Islam that we now put Islam under the same social scrutiny as we have done for decades to Christianity. So yes...Our deliberate ignorance before is justification for that examination. Any negative opinions about this community is part of that examination, so are any counter arguments.
America has not put Christianity or Christians under social scrutiny, it has put certain schools of Christian thought and certain Churches preaching a perceived extremist message under 'some' scrutiny. On the other hand the approach by people like you towards Muslims and Islam is to put the entire faith and the entire community under scrutiny, regardless of their theological interpretations and actions.
Your attitude and that of those opposing the proposed NYC mosque is a perfect example of that. The 'scrutiny' of this mosque and Muslims is not because the Imam suggested 'Katrina occurred because of Homosexuality' or because his disciples 'rape children' or because a significant number of his congregants have 'trained to become terrorists', but only because the Mosque represents the presence of Islam and Muslims.
So your sudden 'focus' on Islam and Muslims has nothing in common with this so called 'scrutiny of Christians by Americans'. Scrutiny must be based on actual deeds and words, not on derogatory generalizations and stereotypes that feed your insecurity and prejudices against a particular community.
The issue here is Islam and how much of the religion motivated and justified any action by any member of the religion. When a muslim does a 'good' deed, does the community disavow his 'good' deed the way you disavow OBL just now? Many muslims, inside and outside of America, do consider the 9/11 attacks as 'good' deeds done by 'good' muslims. Who are you to speak on their behalf?
The religion motivated no one - extremists choose to distort it to justify their political and social goals. Most mosques in the US that largely preach the opposite are in fact the counter argument. I certainly don't go around claiming the good deeds of all Muslims, and who are you to decide how many Muslims did what and that the majority in the US, or even a significant minority, support what happened on 9/11?
You have constructed yet another dishonest statement about the attitudes and opinions of Muslims in the US. At the least one would expect you to provide some empirical evidence to substantiate a claim that ANY number of American Muslims support XYZ issue, especially slanderous claims such as supporting terrorism.
Muslims are no different than any other believers of any other religion in that the 'good' deed should be and was done under the command of his religion. It was Muhammad, not Jesus and certainly not from any Jewish figure, that set the example for so-and-so action. If a country has a 'foreign policy', meaning on how to deal with those with different ideological and political inclinations, so does any religion to have a 'non-believer policy', meaning how to deal with someone who may toss you to the lions for his entertainment or treat you to a fine homecook meal while he entertain you. Osama bin Laden took justifications for his 'non-believer policy', not from the Christian Bible or from the Egyptian Book of the Dead or from the Kama Sutra, but from the Quran and Islamic thought processes. State sponsored 'foreign policy' can change from one regime to the next and those changes are accepted as normal. God sponsored 'non-believer policy', aka religious laws, are supposed to be immune from the vagaries of human desires, no?
Most religions claim 'good deeds' because that is what the purported aim of religion is. That in fact validates my point about Islam and Muslims having no responsibility for AQ or OBL's actions since those actions reflect nothing of what the Islam we believe in preaches.
If some loony reads Dr. Seus and goes out to commit mass murder, books the 'grinch told him so' that does not make Seus culpable.
Absent a figure who can speak for the muslim community worldwide, anyone can claim to act on behalf of Islam and the muslim community and there is NOTHING you can do to prevent him from taking that authority. Like I pointed out earlier, bin Laden did not act on behalf of Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia but on defense of 'the muslims'. He care for Afghanistan only to the extent that the land offer him a base from which he can live and fight for 'the muslims'. If not this Osama bin Laden, then it WILL be another like him. He has followers willing to die for him and that degree of devotion give him the moral authority to act as as long as there are followers.
Absent a global Islamic leader, individual Islamic organizations, mosques, scholars and individuals speak for themselves, and in the US that message is clear except for those who cannot see beyond their prejudice. If a nut case wants to distort the religion and blow himself up, that is not my responsibility, nor of all Muslims and Islam. We have no control over an individual's mind.
Bottom line is this: If America's ideology, politics and economic interests form the foundation for US foreign policy that create consequences, then for the sake of intellectual honesty, we cannot dismiss Islam and the Quran as the motivations and justifications for any action and if said action create consequences.
American policy is for the most part clear and unambiguous - you choose to go to war, you choose to support occupation, dislocation of millions and ambivalence towards settlements. There is little to quibble about. Religion however, for most of us who do not subscribe to terrorism and extremism, is clear in that attacks on civilians and oppression are not acceptable. When an individual choose to distort religion and do the opposite of what many Muslims believe, it is not our responsibility - we certainly never promoted that interpretation of Islam or authorized those actions, and we do not have control over the minds of every individual out there.
Oh yes you do. More than you like. Ever used or read of the phrase 'the Ugly American'?
Yes - it is a generalization and a stereotype, largely based on global perceptions of US foreign policy, a tool to advance US interests deliberately formulated by the State. It impacts all Americans, Muslims and non-Muslim, because of their citizenship and the unambiguous policies of their nation. There are many Americans who are strong critics of American policy, and they too are lumped in with the rest, which is wrong.
One wrong does not justify another - you apparently revel in that sort of pejudice and stereotyping since you choose to apply the same to another community after 'suffering' through it yourself.
The whole Catholic clergy class suffered that shared shame even though only one or a few of them are legally convicted of moral outrages against children.
They suffered because they are part of an institution, and because of the perceptions that the Catholic Church was covering up, and because of the number of people in similar positions within that institution committing reprehensible acts.
The difference here is that morally wayward priests know they are in the wrong, hence none ever glorified their actions. For the 9/11 terrorists, they do not believe they were in the wrong. They glorified Allah in the same way you would when they attacked US and many muslims exalted their deeds. Shared beliefs equal to shared glory, no?
Yes, and mainstream Islam and Muslims do not condone or interpret their faith like OBL and AQ, and therefore have no responsibility for them.
We are Muslims - they are Al Qaeda and terrorists.