BigAppleBuckeye;455064 wrote:Ahhh, the classic "Two Wrongs Make a Right" stance. They also don't eat pork there: should be start banning barbecue joints?
Ahhh, the classic "missed the point of my post and didn't refute anything I said". It's not "wrong" for the NYC city council, or zoning board, or whatever, to restrict that site for something else (historical monument, perhaps) other than a mosque/ community center that will raise American eyebrows and open old sensitivities and wounds.
I still say it's hypocritical for Rauf and other Muslims to lecture us about tolerance and religious freedom, when the most Muslim-populated countries (Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Iran, Indonesia, etc. etc.) set the bar pretty high for intolerance and religious bigotry.
I think Obama thinks Obama is a Muslim:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKGdkqfBICw
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/sep/07/obama-verbal-slip-fuels-his-critics/?page=2
"Let's not play games," he said. "What I was suggesting -- you're absolutely right that John McCain has not talked about my Muslim faith. And you're absolutely right that that has not come."
Mr. Stephanopoulos interrupted with, "Christian faith."
"My Christian faith," Mr. Obama said quickly. "Well, what I'm saying is that he hasn't suggested that I'm a Muslim. And I think that his campaign's upper echelons have not, either.
LOL at Stephanopoulos correcting him. Yeah, I forget which religion I adhere to all the time. And the article says people take the quote out of context, but if you fit "Christian" into Obama's "slip of the tongue", it doesn't make sense. Why would John McCain talk about his
Christian faith? That quote, along with several of Mr. Obama's actions, gives people reasons to wonder.