So what are the non-bigoted reasons against the mosque?I can understand being like, "Hmmm, given people's attitudes, that's kinda a funny spot to put a mosque." Or, "Man, I bet there's gonna be a bit of a brouhaha outside that mosque for a while."But I can't think of any reason or concern that would actually make me oppose somebody's right to build their mosque where they want. So what are the reasons?
8/26/2010 1:09:01 AM
And obviously I'm looking for serious reasons related to this particular mosque.Not hypothetical ones about it possibly being an underground terrorist bootcamp that's cloning Justin Beiber or something.
8/26/2010 2:16:46 AM
8/26/2010 3:05:02 AM
8/26/2010 3:07:46 AM
I continue to want a figure for how far away it is acceptable to put a Mosque. Apparently two blocks isn't far enough. How about 3? 4? 12? Does it have to be far enough away that you can't see the (still hypothetical) new tower from the mosque?
8/26/2010 4:02:56 AM
10,486 miles.
8/26/2010 8:57:19 AM
Man held without bail in NYC cab driver stabbing
8/26/2010 9:21:42 AM
8/26/2010 11:04:31 AM
Non-bigoted reasons for opposing the mosque:-concerns about the code-worthiness of the planned renovations-traffic and noise-effect on property values-discovery of an ancient Indian burial-ground beneath the plot...oh, and unilaterally opposing any and all forms of spirituality
8/26/2010 11:18:59 AM
^Yeah, I agree the first three items are things to be concerned about with any construction project. The last one obviously doesn't fly--religious freedom is extraordinarily important to all of us (especially the non-religious).This is a dirty business we're talking about...city zoning/construction permits/whatnot...so I can see some compelling, juicy details coming out there. But it isn't apparent to me yet that those concerns are great enough/evidenced enough to put a stop to this particular project.And, given the dirtiness of this business, I don't know how we can reasonably apply precedent to this mosque. For instance, I bet I could find a wealthy, politically connected neighborhood that got construction on a huge mega church shut down based on traffic/noise concerns. But that doesn't mean we can shut down this mosque.We gotta weigh it all out...and what has now become a symbol of a number of our freedoms is more important than any construction/development politics.
8/26/2010 12:21:06 PM
8/26/2010 12:25:12 PM
What's the problem?I thought I did alright with that post.
8/26/2010 12:34:11 PM
Religious freedom includes our right to oppose religion. When you ask "what are non-bigoted reasons against this mosque?" you didn't ask, "what are non-bigoted reasons to prevent by force of law the building of this mosque?". You can oppose the mosque without opposing their right to exist. Even a lot of the Christians who are against this mosque don't oppose their right to exist, only that they ought not to build there. Of course some are Christians who think all Muslims are terrorists.As an aside about "religious freedom", it's past the time where we should stop respecting mysticism at any rate. Why does religion get a pass but Astrology, fairies, moon landing conspiracies, etc. get their deserved ridicule? It's certainly not because religion is less damaging to society than any of the listed beliefs that don't stand up to skepticism.
8/26/2010 12:45:57 PM
nm, misread[Edited on August 26, 2010 at 12:57 PM. Reason : .]
8/26/2010 12:56:19 PM
8/26/2010 1:26:37 PM
"The Christian Right & the Rise of American Fascism" by BridgetSPK
8/26/2010 2:39:17 PM
Awww, I'm offended that I didn't make that list.I agree with all of the above sentiments and they all easily extend to every other practiced organized religion of the world.
8/26/2010 2:50:01 PM
hrm, i have to disagree with a lot of what i posted here 4 years ago. or at least the inflammatory and sloppy manner which it was expressed. it was a reactionary movement against what was an almost hostile takeover of this forum by religious zealots and other assorted nutjobs at that time.Look... in and of itself, Christianity is a valid expression of religious belief. as is Islam, Judaism, etc., etc. Now I'm not religious, but i don't have problem with people's personal choices. It's their business to worship/think/speak as they like. They're enjoying their 1st Amendment right to free expression . But when one group begins to force THEIR beliefs on OTHERS, a huge problem occurs. They are now violating the 1st Amendment prohibition against interfering with others' right to free expression.and there IS significant and well-documented examples of the so-called Christian Right, attempting to undermine our country's Constitutional principles and lay the foundation for a theocratic government according to their particular flavor of biblical beliefs and interpretations.this is a fact. And the parallels between fundamentalist rightwing Christians and fundamentalist Islamic zealots is disturbing. they are both working for the same cause.[Edited on August 26, 2010 at 3:08 PM. Reason : ]
8/26/2010 2:59:07 PM
AHA, I didn't get any actual quotes listed cause it was just me being sassy/dumb and getting pwned.But I am very much troubled by Christianity's influence on American politics. And there are things that bother me about Islam and Judaism, too.The poll results you posted, hooksaw, are heartening!
8/26/2010 4:00:49 PM
^ If you had taken the time to check, you would have seen that the poll results concerning developers having the right to build the mosque in question have been consistent from the beginning of this controversy, Christophobe. And please stop using the word "sassy."
8/26/2010 4:06:27 PM
8/26/2010 4:07:21 PM
^^Instead of checking poll results, I prefer to read arguments about the validity/relevance of Miss USA's faith on TWW.
8/26/2010 4:11:24 PM
i too am encouraged that a 2/3 majority at least recognizes they have the right to build that mosque.that at least offsets the at the 70% who think there's some kind of "appropriateness test" regarding where a fucking place of worship/activity center can or can't be built.As if average American Muslims working in those buildings didn't die there too.As if a Burlington Coat Factory is somehow an appropriate expression on so-called sanctified ground. [Edited on August 26, 2010 at 4:20 PM. Reason : ]
8/26/2010 4:12:02 PM
8/26/2010 4:18:08 PM
^^^ No, you should be checking polls. As I indicated, the poll results concerning developers having the right to build the mosque in question have been consistent from the very beginning of this controversy, Christophobe--despite some demagogues here and elsewhere spreading lies.^^ And many "average" Muslims also oppose the proposed mosque near Ground Zero. But you and others conveniently ignore that and prefer to guffaw about Miss USA and question her faith.The building in question was hit by wreckage on 9/11--it was a point of attack, for goodness' sake! Why can't/won't some of you grasp this? [Edited on August 26, 2010 at 4:22 PM. Reason : Why?]
8/26/2010 4:21:45 PM
^^the instant they vote, they're part of the problem. But then that's an action.
8/26/2010 4:31:12 PM
^^Nah, I think I'm gonna stick to lookin at half-naked ladies with pretty drawings on they backs.But feel free to repeat yourself a third time.And I think we all understand that the Burlington Coat Factory was damaged in 9/11. We grasp it. But we don't want to legally prevent the construction of a mosque there. You don't want to either, do you? I mean, we are in agreement on that one point, right?[Edited on August 26, 2010 at 4:38 PM. Reason : ]
8/26/2010 4:31:48 PM
^ It's painfully clear that I and most others don't want to "legally prevent" developers from exercising their right to build the mosque in question. I have said from the outset that I would simply ask them, "Please don't." [Edited on August 26, 2010 at 4:53 PM. Reason : MUST SHIFT FOCUS TO BEAUTY QUEEN! ]
8/26/2010 4:35:40 PM
Whether or not you recognize the mosques right to exist: if you have the notion that it's insensitive, you're still a bigot. Associating this mosque with the terrorist acts is the bigotry that is happening across America.
8/26/2010 4:36:12 PM
Oh snaps! Lumex wins.And I admit I mentally associated the two.
8/26/2010 4:42:09 PM
^^ Total baloney.Moderate Muslims oppose location of Cordoba Mosque — on religious groundsAugust 18, 2010
8/26/2010 4:48:07 PM
You're taking some amped up dickhole as you're example, ffs dude, you can find those type of people for any given cause. Abortion (both sides), immigration (both sides), furries (well, maybe just one side). As far as tolerant goes, he was still pushing the message that those on the right are against freedom. The holocause survivor said he'd lay in front of the bulldozers and die before this mosque is built. I mean, the lefty was a complete fuckface about it...but the guy on the right validated his point.
8/26/2010 5:06:48 PM
8/26/2010 5:15:24 PM
I don't see why there's so much disagreement in this thread when even those against the mosque are acknowledging their right to build it.Unless of course there's someone in this thread saying that the construction should be prevented by law and/or force, and I'm just not seeing that. I'm sure some of those people are there in the polling data, but there doesn't appear to be any of them in this thread.Hell, hooksaw, wouldn't you agree that anyone saying that the government ought to block the mosque construction is being un-American by wanting to deny those Muslims their first amendment rights?
8/26/2010 5:32:06 PM
@hooksaw:the few muslims who "speak against" the mosque's placement are against it because they know that it's going to rile up anti-Islamic religious/patriotic sentiment within the average provincial americans. which is a very dangerous situation for them. it's like gays who were against gay marriage activism because they feared it was "too soon" and expected backlash from the majority homophobes running the various state legislatures.neither group is against their respective issues in principle, they are cautioning restraint in pursuing what ought to be their inalienable right under the US Constitution, merely because they fear the timing is against them and they are in danger of being targeted by bigots.and please just stop with the [sic]s and the incessant spell checking. the dude obviously missed one letter, put an ending 'e' instead of a 't', letters which happen to be very close to each other on the keyboard. Jesuschristalready, and you talk about misdirection attempts. What that is, is nothing more than an intellectual/elitist attempt at making covert ad hominem attacks on a poster's credibility. Perhaps here you can stick to the substance of the argument, and the you can redline all you want when you get that job as a high school english teacher, okay?or do you really want to do ad hominem? we can inspect your news links that you hide in tiny URLs: "The Daily Caller." rightwing blog that features scathing attacks on democrats combined with breaking news how Bristol Palin is going to join Dancing with the Stars, and Susan Boyle is going to sing for the Pope. Quality stuff. Is it kind of hard to take seriously someone who gets their news from a right-wing attempt at their own Huffington Post? and the HotAir (lol) link? that one merely cuts and pastes directly from David Horowitz. Surely there's no agenda there. David Horowitz never seeks out the one lone anti-semitic asshole in a crowd to use to paint an entire group as being in lockstep with. Come on, man. I mean really. [Edited on August 26, 2010 at 6:13 PM. Reason : ]
8/26/2010 5:54:43 PM
^^ There are legitimate reasons that the government could block the building of the mosque at issue. But if your meaning is that the government should deny the very right of those to build the mosque, then, no, I don't agree with that--and those who take that position are wrong. ^ I will use sic as I please--and you did a bit of ad hom in that post yourself, didn't you? And I honestly don't care what you or others think of my post quality--examine your own. As to sources, I find the info where I can--I didn't see it available on CNN or MSNBC. Every thread must be infected with hooksaw derangement syndrome. It simply must.
8/26/2010 6:18:57 PM
8/26/2010 6:32:21 PM
8/26/2010 7:06:30 PM
^I assume he meant things like breaking building codes and ordinances and whatnot... ya know, same things that every other building has to deal with to be allowed to build. But maybe not.[Edited on August 26, 2010 at 7:08 PM. Reason : .]
8/26/2010 7:08:29 PM
8/26/2010 7:28:08 PM
Are you prepared to allow the terrorists to win by becoming more like them? Yes or no?1. hooksaw: Yes.2. TreeTwista: Yes.3. bigun20: Yes.4. Kris: No.5. theDuke866: No.6. BridgetSPK: No.7. indy: No.8. Imam Feisal: No.9. Miss USA: No.10. McDanger: No.[Edited on August 26, 2010 at 7:42 PM. Reason : ]
8/26/2010 7:42:22 PM
you forgot to include me.
8/26/2010 8:06:49 PM
8/26/2010 8:12:01 PM
this is not a worthy adversary . . .
8/26/2010 8:14:43 PM
Dude, you came into a thread and starting shouting down everyone that disagreed because they don't have a background in mathematics and statistics, as if that was any kind of argument. I don't need to know a god damn thing about either in order to form a valid opinion on this mosque issue. I know that quantitative methods have value in economics and political science. That was never the argument. The debate was whether or not one needs to have a background in mathematics, statistics, computers, or empirical methods in order to come to a reasonable conclusion about the rightness or wrongness of a certain act or behavior. Certainly, having data that shows the effects of a policy or action will be a great way to support your argument, but if your entire argument is, "you don't have the prerequisite knowledge to offer up an opinion on this," then my response is going to be "fuck off." Really though, feel free to offer up some data that supports your position on this. I'm sure it exists, but you're not even trying to provide that.
8/26/2010 8:21:00 PM
8/26/2010 8:56:45 PM
Haha, got it. We were really talking about the climate change thread this whole time. I think we're done here.
8/26/2010 9:04:53 PM
8/26/2010 9:22:34 PM
Right, but you're different.
8/26/2010 9:27:38 PM
Actually I know about what I post about, so that does make me different. You won't see me posting in a lot of threads and it's because I don't think my opinion in those areas is worth anything
8/26/2010 9:29:51 PM