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36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00039-000
2010 US bank tax will kill jobs created/fostered by banks
Massachusetts state senator and US Senate candidate Scott Brown told the Wall Street Journal on January 15, 2010 in response to the bank tax: "opposed to higher taxes, especially in the midst of a severe recession. [...] Raising taxes will kill jobs."[5]
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00024-000
Bank tax recoups profits made on backs of taxpayers
Simon Nixon. "Windfalls Show That Bonus Tax Makes Sense." Wall Street Journal. October 20, 2009: "A windfall tax is blunt, arbitrary and something supporters of free markets usually instinctively avoid. Even so, following news that Goldman Sachs Group has already set aside a $16.7 billion bonus pool for 2009, the case for windfall taxes on banks that pay giant bonuses is becoming unanswerable. [...] This year's bank profits are windfalls in the purest sense. They aren't the due rewards for exceptional skill but gifts from taxpayers. Many banks are earning huge, risk-free profits borrowing from central banks at ultralow interest rates and lending back to governments at much-higher rates. If this giant, hidden subsidy was being used to support new lending, fair enough. Instead, it looks destined for bankers' pockets."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00009-000
2010 US bank tax
Bank tax is too small to impact deficit
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00028-000
Bailout benefited taxpayers; repayment unnecessary
Holman W. Jenkins. "Bashing Bankers Is a Political Duty." Wall Street Journal. January 13, 2010: "didn't taxpayers bail out the financial system, so don't taxpayers deserve the bonuses? No. Taxpayers (aka voters) were acting in their own interests in bailing out the system. They weren't doing anybody a favor."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00013-000
2010 US bank tax
Bailout was a mistake, so should not be repaid
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00032-000
2010 bank tax will raise less revenue due to evasion
Jeffrey Miron. "Bailing out the Banks Was Wrong, but New Tax Won't Make It Right." Investor's Business Daily. January 14, 2010: "The proposed tax will also raise less revenue than promised, again because those subject to the tax will take steps to avoid it. Relocation overseas is one approach; accounting gimmickry is another. The net revenue raised may even be negative because the U.S. will not collect income or payroll taxes from those thrown out of work by an exodus of financial institutions."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00017-000
2010 US bank tax
Banks are unlikely to pass tax on to consumers
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00002-000
2010 US bank tax
AIG bailout benefited banks; bank tax justified
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00036-000
Bank tax will not reduce risk-taking at banks
"Bank tax won't solve problems." Denver Post Editorial. January 14, 2010: "we question whether it will be structured fairly and if it truly will discourage the kinds of risky behavior that led to the financial crisis — and if that's even the proper role of this particular tax [...] Isn't it the role of regulation to expose and even prevent the use of the crazy derivatives that led to the recent credit crisis? It's clear that during this last crisis the markets were incapable of assessing the risk that financial institutions were taking. [...] Greater transparency and reporting requirements would give the markets the ability to analyze risks and set value accordingly. [...] We'd like to see more progress on those fronts rather than assessing taxes that very well could be passed on to consumers and shareholders."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00021-000
2010 US bank tax
It is justified to repay the debt
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00006-000
2010 US bank tax
Bank tax will not reduce risk-taking at banks
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00040-000
AIG bailout benefited banks; bank tax justified
Peter Cohan. "Why Obama's $90 billion bank tax is fair game." Daily Finance. January 17, 2010: "The banks, of course, say 'no fair.' But I disagree. Despite wriggling in front of Congress yesterday, Wall Street is the primary culprit for the financial crisis and should pick up these losses -- especially AIG's. That's because many Wall Street banks got a back door bailout through AIG when the government made good on the credit default swap payments AIG owed the banks but couldn't pay on."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00025-000
Bank tax compensates for damage done by banks
Tracy Corrigan. "Obama's bank tax will only work if there's a master plan in place." Telegraph. January 14, 2010: "In the case of the UK, it now appears highly probable that the Government will eventually recover all the money it injected into individual banks. That is hardly the point. The cost of the banking crisis was much greater than these capital injections. Just look at the size of the national debt."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00010-000
2010 US bank tax
2010 bank tax will raise less revenue due to evasion
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00029-000
Bailout was a mistake, so should not be repaid
Jeffrey Miron. "Bailing out the Banks Was Wrong, but New Tax Won't Make It Right." Investor's Business Daily. January 14, 2010: "The U.S. made a huge mistake in bailing out the financial industry. Bankruptcy would have been the right way to punish the financial sector for its excesses. High profits and large bonuses are perfectly fine — they are the reward for risk-taking — but only if those reaping the rewards in good times actually pay the piper in bad times."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00014-000
2010 US bank tax
Bailout benefited taxpayers; repayment unnecessary
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00033-000
Bank tax is too small to impact deficit
Ezra Klein. "Obama's bank-friendly bank tax." Washington Post. January 15, 2010: "The bigger problem, though, is conceptual: Confining the tax to repayment of TARP when we've got a massive budget deficit and when further stimulus spending is constrained because no one knows how to pay for it is, well, a huge gift to the banks. There's just no other way to put it. [...] it's protecting the banks from a much more punitive tax that isn't limited to money they already have to repay."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00018-000
2010 US bank tax
Bank tax compensates for damage done by banks
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00003-000
2010 US bank tax
2010 US bank tax will kill jobs created/fostered by banks
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00037-000
2010 bank tax puts US banks at disadvantage globally
Republican National Committee Chairman Mel Martinez said after the announcement of the tax in January of 2010: "This is a significant 10-year tax which may put U.S. banks at a very disadvantageous position in terms of world competition. This is not just for the bonuses this year."[4]
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00022-000
It is justified to repay the debt
The U.S government used taxpayer's money to bail out these rampaging banks. Although the banks are vital parts of the U.S economy, they nevertheless needs to repay their debt to the common people, for they owe their very existence as a result of the U.S government bailing them out. Since they borrowed money from the U.S government, it's justified for the U.S government to get that money back, and to give the money to the taxpayers as a show of gratitude.It's that simple.
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00007-000
2010 US bank tax
2010 bank tax will deter future risk-taking by banks
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00041-000
Bank tax unfairly targets biggest 50 banks
Christopher Beam. "Bank Shot." Slate. January 14, 2010: "Nowhere does the [bailout] legislation say that the 50 biggest firms have to pay back the loans. That responsibility could have fallen to any number of financial institutions. It was the Obama administration's idea to focus on the big guys—a decision that's hard to explain entirely in nonpolitical terms."
36fa654a-2019-04-17T11:47:28Z-00026-000
Banks are unlikely to pass tax on to consumers
The argument here is that the 50 largest banks are unlikely to want to raise prices in the faces of competition from smaller banks that are not subject to the tax. An additional argument along these lines is that banks are not going to want to make the politically unpalatable move of raising prices while paying out major bonuses to themselves.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00098-000
Radical Islam was cause of 9/11; ground zero mosque is offensive.
Former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani said in August of 2010: "I mean, they died there because of Islamic extremist terrorism. They are our enemy, we can say that, the world will not end when we say that. And the reality is it will not and should not insult any decent Muslim because decent Muslims should be as opposed to Islamic extremism as you and I are."[15]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00083-000
Name "Cordoba House" indicates nefarious intent of mosque
Newt Gingrich. "No mosque at ground zero." Human Events. July 28th, 2010: "The true intentions of Rauf are also revealed by the name initially proposed for the Ground Zero mosque—“Cordoba House”—which is named for a city in Spain where a conquering Muslim army replaced a church with a mosque. This name is a very direct historical indication that the Ground Zero mosque is all about conquest and thus an assertion of Islamist triumphalism which we should not tolerate."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00068-000
Defending mosque honors constitution first responders were protecting.
New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg said in August of 2010 at the height of the ground zero mosque debate: "On Sept. 11, 2001, thousands of first responders heroically rushed to the scene and saved tens of thousands of lives. More than 400 of those first responders did not make it out alive. In rushing into those burning buildings, not one of them asked, 'What God do you pray to?' (Bloomberg's voice cracks here a little as he gets choked up.) 'What beliefs do you hold? [...] The attack was an act of war, and our first responders defended not only our city, but our country and our constitution. We do not honor their lives by denying the very constitutional rights they died protecting. We honor their lives by defending those rights and the freedoms that the terrorists attacked."[6]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00053-000
Ground zero mosque
Park51 is certainly within broad attack zone of ground zero.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00038-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque is generally offensive to memory of 9/11.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00023-000
Ground zero mosque
Opposing religious buildings is a relic of past eras
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00008-000
Ground zero mosque
Many Muslims supported 9/11; ground zero mosque is offensive
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00099-000
Many Muslims supported 9/11; ground zero mosque is offensive
William Engle Jr. "No mosque near World Trade Center." Baltimore Sun. August 6th, 2010: "I can clearly remember the video coverage coming in from many Muslim countries at the time. There were thousands of persons demonstrating in the streets of major and even small cities in many Islamic countries when the attack and its results were announced. This outpouring of glee over the success of the terrible massacre of thousands of innocents still lingers in my mind. I cannot forget the images of that day. The destruction of the World Trade Center and the deaths of Americans had the effect to cause Muslims to cheer and rally in the streets sickened me and I was disgusted. I am still disgusted. [...] It is a travesty to imply that there is only a tiny group of Muslims that wish to harm our country and its citizens. There are thousands in the Mideast that believe that we should be attacked. [...] That is my reason for wishing and hoping that the Islamic nations of the world, and those that cheered the ugliness of the perpetrators or those that simply gave homage to them silently in their heart, not be rewarded by allowing the construction of a large Islamic center within a few blocks of ground zero."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00084-000
If developers intentions pure, they should be fine finding new site.
Joe Liebarman. "If the people building this large Islamic center are just looking to build a large facility — a house of worship and center — in New York, why so close to 9/11, with all the sensitivity associated with that?"[11]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00069-000
Ground zero mosque disrespects 9/11 victims
One group, 9/11 Families for a Safe & Strong America, calls Cordoba House "a gross insult to the memory of those who were killed on that terrible day."[7]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00054-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque is a discreet 2 blocks from world trade ruins.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00039-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque disrespects 9/11 victims
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00024-000
Ground zero mosque
If developers intentions pure, they should be fine finding new site.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00009-000
Ground zero mosque
Radical Islam was cause of 9/11; ground zero mosque is offensive.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00100-000
Ground zero mosque helps bridge gap between West and Muslims.
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, the head of the Cordoba Institute, which is in charge of the project, insisted that the site would help "bridge the great divide" between Muslims and the rest of America. Catholic priest Kevin Madigan, of St. Peter's Church, which is about a block away, agreed. "I think they need to establish a place such as this for people of goodwill from mainline Christian, Jewish and Muslim faiths so we can come together to talk."[16]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00085-000
Opposing religious buildings is a relic of past eras
NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in an August 2010 speech in defense of the ground zero mosque: "In the mid-1650s, the small Jewish community living in lower Manhattan petitioned Dutch governor Peter Stuyvesant for the right to build a synagogue, and they were turned down. In 1657, when Stuyvesant also prohibited Quakers from holding meetings, a group of non-Quakers in Queens signed the Flushing Remonstrance, a petition in defense of the right of Quakers and others to freely practice their religion. It was perhaps the first formal political petition for religious freedom in the American colonies, and the organizer was thrown in jail and then banished from New Amsterdam. 'In the 1700s, even as religious freedom took hold in America, Catholics in New York were effectively prohibited from practicing their religion, and priests could be arrested. Largely as a result, the first Catholic parish in New York City was not established until the 1780s, St. Peter's on Barclay Street, which still stands just one block north of the World Trade Center site, and one block south of the proposed mosque and community center."[12]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00070-000
Ground zero mosque is generally offensive to memory of 9/11.
Madeline Brooks. "Why the Ground Zero Mosque Must Be Stopped." American Thinker. May 10, 2010: "Planting a mosque just two blocks from where Muslims murdered Americans on 9/11 in the name of Islam is a huge slap in the face. Why shouldn't Muslims be sensitive enough to realize that a huge mosque planted right near the horrific wound to the U.S. created at Ground Zero by Muslims is outrageous to us? They claim a right to be insulted by cartoons mocking their prophet, even to the point of beheading people."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00055-000
Ground zero mosque is a discreet 2 blocks from world trade ruins.
As the satellite image in this article shows, the "ground zero mosque" is not actually on the world trade center ruins, as might be guessed at by the name "Ground zero mosque", but instead a good two blocks north on a smaller street that actually has no direct site to the ground zero ruins. Many scholars have pointed this out. Sharif el-Gamal, the site's lead developer, emphasized "we are not at Ground Zero." Georgetown academic John Esposito informed CNN’s readers that it “is not at Ground Zero but two blocks away.” Huffington Post editor Matt Sledge devoted a rather long essay, complete with maps, to explaining that “it’s not at Ground Zero.” Pundit Matthew Yglesias has asked where the New York City “Mosque Exclusion Zone” should be. All of this dampens the idea that this is actually a "ground zero mosque", or a mosque intended to be plopped down in the middle of the ruins site to enshrine the massacre of 3,000 people.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00040-000
Ground zero mosque
Defending mosque honors constitution first responders were protecting.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00025-000
Ground zero mosque
Name "Cordoba House" indicates nefarious intent of mosque
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00010-000
Ground zero mosque
Islam is a religion of violence and conquest.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00101-000
Opposing ground zero mosque alienates/radicalizes American Muslims
"Build that mosque." The Economist. August 5th 2010: "WHAT makes a Muslim in Britain or America wake up and decide that he is no longer a Briton or American but an Islamic “soldier” fighting a holy war against the infidel? Part of it must be pull: the lure of jihadism. Part is presumably push: a feeling that he no longer belongs to the place where he lives. Either way, the results can be lethal. [...] America is plainly safer if its Muslims feel part of “us” and not, like Mohammad Sidique Khan, part of “them”. And that means reminding Americans of the difference—a real one, by the way, not one fabricated for the purposes of political correctness—between Islam, a religion with a billion adherents, and al-Qaeda, a terrorist outfit that claims to speak in Islam’s name but has absolutely no right or mandate to do so. [...] Why would any responsible American politician want to erase that vital distinction? Good question. Ask Sarah Palin, or Newt Gingrich, or the many others who have lately clambered aboard the offensive campaign to stop Cordoba House [...] Every single argument put forward for blocking this project leans in some way on the misconceived notion that all Muslims, and Islam itself, share the responsibility for, or are tainted by, the atrocities of 9/11."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00086-000
Strip club exists near ground zero; mosque is fine
Steve Chapman. "Ban a ground zero mosque?" Chicago Tribune. July 22nd, 2010: "No one objects to putting up other new buildings in the neighborhood. Nor is anyone trying to close down businesses that seem slightly incompatible with the horror that happened there — including a strip club and an off-track betting parlor. The only objection to the Islamic center is that it is Islamic."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00071-000
Ground zero mosque violates Islamic pledge of sensitivity
Stephen Suleyman Schwartz, a devout Muslim and director of the Center for Islamic Pluralism in Washington. Schwartz noted that the spiritual leader of the Cordoba Initiative, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, describes himself as a Sufi — a Muslim focused on Islamic mysticism and spiritual wisdom. But “building a 15-story Islamic center at ground zero isn’t something a Sufi would do,’’ according to Schwartz, also a practitioner of Sufism. "Sufism is supposed to be based on sensitivity toward others," yet Cordoba House comes across as "grossly insensitive."[8]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00056-000
Park51 is certainly within broad attack zone of ground zero.
The Directors of Red State. "The Ground Zero Mosque Should Be Stopped." August 2nd, 2010: "A primary talking point in defense of the “Ground Zero mosque” these days is that it is not, in fact, at Ground Zero. Sharif el-Gamal, its lead developer, is now giving interviews in which he emphasizes, “We are not at Ground Zero.” Saudi-funded Georgetown academic John Esposito informed CNN’s readers that it “is not at Ground Zero but two blocks away.” [...] To begin with, you have to wonder where some of these people were on September 11, 2001. The entire area east of Broadway, south of Chambers street and north of Wall Street was a front-row seat to mass murder that morning, and much of that area was showered with pulverized debris (mixed among it the bodies of the dead). Few of the national parks and monuments commemorating America’s historic battlefields are so narrowly drawn as the defenders of the mosque would now define “Ground Zero.” Nobody who stood within that area that day would say that 51 Park Place is not within the location of the September 11 attacks."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00041-000
Ground zero mosque
9/11 victims are not entitled to make bigoted demands.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00026-000
Ground zero mosque
Radical views underlie the ground zero mosque
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00011-000
Ground zero mosque
Assoc. ground zero mosque with terror is like assoc. Christians/KKK.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00102-000
Ground zero mosque is a source of moderate Islamic reform.
Fareed Zakaria. "Build the Ground Zero Mosque." Newsweek.com. August 6th, 2010: "The debate over whether an Islamic center should be built a few blocks from the World Trade Center has ignored a fundamental point. If there is going to be a reformist movement in Islam, it is going to emerge from places like the proposed institute. We should be encouraging groups like the one behind this project, not demonizing them. Were this mosque being built in a foreign city, chances are that the U.S. government would be funding it."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00087-000
Rights of American Muslims not subject to tyranny abroad
"Build that mosque." Economist, Lexington. August 5th, 2010: "[New Gingrich said] there should be no mosque near ground zero so long as there are no churches or synagogues in Saudi Arabia”. Come again? Why hold the rights of Americans who happen to be Muslim hostage to the policy of a foreign country that happens also to be Muslim? To Mr Gingrich, it seems, an American Muslim is a Muslim first and an American second. Al-Qaeda would doubtless concur."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00072-000
Park51 only offensive if you think all Muslims responsible for 9/11
"Build that mosque." Economist, Lexington. August 5th, 2010: "True, some relatives of 9/11 victims are hurt by the idea of a mosque going up near the site. But that feeling of hurt makes sense only if they too buy the false idea that Muslims in general were perpetrators of the crime."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00057-000
Just because it isn´t right on ground zero doesn't mean it's good taste.
Building the Islamic mosque is comparable to putting a pro Nazi building in the middle of Israel or building a nuclear plant in the middle of Nagasaki or Hiroshima. All three have terrible taste and why is that? Because of the slaughter at the world trade center, the 6 million Jews killed in camps and the 58,000 killed in one day at Nagasaki. Just because they didn´t take part in the attack doesn´t mean the symbol isn´t still hurting the public. So indirectly you are hurting the victims of each one of the attacks even if you didn´t take part believe in taking part. The symbol alone can cause an unjust amount of pain.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00042-000
Ground zero mosque
Feelings of Muslim 9/11 victims need to be considered as well
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00027-000
Ground zero mosque
Mosque wrongly uses proximity to ground zero to spread Islam
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00012-000
Ground zero mosque
Muslims have peacefully integrated into American society
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00103-000
Ground zero mosque will agitate US-West relations.
Jeff Jacoby. "A mosque at ground zero." Boston Globe. June 6, 2010: "Will a mosque at ground zero make reconciliation more likely? Or will it needlessly rub salt in the unhealed wounds of 9/11?"
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00088-000
Muslims would not tolerate act comparable to ground zero mosque
Madeline Brooks. "Why the Ground Zero Mosque Must Be Stopped." American Thinker. May 10, 2010: "Planting a mosque just two blocks from where Muslims murdered Americans on 9/11 in the name of Islam is a huge slap in the face. Why shouldn't Muslims be sensitive enough to realize that a huge mosque planted right near the horrific wound to the U.S. created at Ground Zero by Muslims is outrageous to us? They claim a right to be insulted by cartoons mocking their prophet, even to the point of beheading people."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00073-000
Mosque is not new in lower Manhattan; it is simply moving.
Gabriel Winant. "Ground zero mosque touches off right-wing panic." Salon.com. May 27th, 2010: "The mosque is already just a few blocks away, in Tribeca, but has overgrown its current space. Rauf says that he hopes that having a moderate mosque so near ground zero can send a message of tolerance and peace." The point here is that this was not a mosque out of nowhere, but rather a mosque that already existed blocks away, and which is merely being moved to a new location, a couple of blocks closed to ground zero, where a new building can fit the growing demand for the mosque.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00058-000
First amendment protects right to build ground zero mosque
New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg said in August of 2010 at the height of the ground zero mosque debate: "The simple fact is, this building is private property, and the owners have a right to use the building as a house of worship, and the government has no right whatsoever to deny that right. And if it were tried, the courts would almost certainly strike it down as a violation of the U.S. Constitution. Whatever you may think of the proposed mosque and community center, lost in the heat of the debate has been a basic question: Should government attempt to deny private citizens the right to build a house of worship on private property based on their particular religion? That may happen in other countries, but we should never allow it to happen here."[1]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00043-000
Ground zero mosque
Feelings of 9/11 victims important, but what about Muslims?
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00028-000
Ground zero mosque
Cordoba House is no act of tolerance, but of excess/arrogance
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00013-000
Ground zero mosque
Islam is a religion of peace.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00104-000
Opposing Cordoba House fosters divisions extremists want
New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg said in August of 2010 at the height of the ground zero mosque debate: "Let us not forget that Muslims were among those murdered on 9/11, and that our Muslim neighbors grieved with us as New Yorkers and as Americans. We would betray our values and play into our enemies' hands if we were to treat Muslims differently than anyone else. In fact, to cave to popular sentiment would be to hand a victory to the terrorists, and we should not stand for that."[17]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00089-000
No mosque at ground zero as long as no churches in Saudi Arabia.
Newt Gingrich. "there should be no mosque near ground zero so long as there are no churches or synagogues in Saudi Arabia."[13]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00074-000
Radical Muslims see ground zero mosque as symbol of victory
Dan Senor. "An Open Letter on the Ground Zero Mosque, the location undermines the goal of interfaith understanding." Wall Street Journal. August 3rd, 2010: "Those attacks, as you well know, were committed in the name of Islam. We applaud and thank every Muslim throughout the world who has rejected and denounced this association. But the fact remains that in the minds of many who are swayed by the most radical interpretations of Islam, the Cordoba House will not be seen as a center for peace and reconciliation. It will rather be celebrated as a Muslim monument erected on the site of a great Muslim ‘military’ victory — a milestone on the path to the further spread of Islam throughout the world.”
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00059-000
Banning ground zero mosque would violate sep of church/state
New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg said in August of 2010 at the height of the ground zero mosque debate: "This nation was founded on the principle that the government must never choose between religions or favor one over another. The World Trade Center site will forever hold a special place in our city, in our hearts. But we would be untrue to the best part of ourselves and who we are as New Yorkers and Americans if we said no to a mosque in lower Manhattan. [...] I believe that this is an important test of the separation of church and state as we may see in our lifetimes, as important a test. And it is critically important that we get it right."[2]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00044-000
Ground zero mosque
Religious buildings cancelled in past due to cultural sensitivities
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00029-000
Ground zero mosque
Park51 is a Muslim community center first; mosque second.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00014-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque has angered and offended many New Yorkers.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00105-000
Opposing ground zero mosque supports message of US at war w/ Islam.
George Bush advisor Mark McKinnon: "Usually Republicans are forthright in defending the Constitution. And here we are, reinforcing al Qaeda’s message that we’re at war with Muslims."[18]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00090-000
Many hypothetical religious sites internationally would be offensive.
The Directors of Red State. "The Ground Zero Mosque Should Be Stopped." August 2nd, 2010: "To grasp exactly why the “Ground Zero mosque” / Cordoba House / Park51 is so objectionable, it is useful to consider a range of hypotheticals, in which a site of an infamous slaughter is appropriated by promoters of the group that perpetrated that slaughter. Ask yourself whether any of the following would be morally acceptable, if not simply rejected by an outraged world: A League of the South monument in Philadelphia, Mississippi. A Turkish-culture office at Deir ez-Zor. A Shinto shrine in Nanjing, China. A Serbian Orthodox Church on the fields outside Srebrenica. Or even, for that matter, a Catholic convent outside Auschwitz. There are undeniably good and laudable things about the cultures and faiths of the Southern United States, Turkey, Japan, Serbia, and European Christianity in general: yet promoting them at the very sites of their historic crimes is rightly repellent. These sites ought to be places of apology and repentance — not promotion."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00075-000
Building mosques is a symbol of Muslim conquest
Islam has built mosques on conquered territory before. Cordoba's mosque in Spain is a good example, where the Moores built a mosque as a sign of victories in Spain in the 11th and 12th centuries. The ground zero mosque is no different.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00060-000
Ground zero mosque might be tasteless, but still must be allowed.
It is irrelevant whether or not the ground zero mosque is considered tasteless. Mini-skirts and tie-die shirts are too. But, nevertheless, it still must be tolerated, and the right of Muslims to build the mosque must be protected.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00045-000
Ground zero mosque
Opponents have a right to protest ground zero mosque vigorously.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00030-000
Ground zero mosque
Name "Cordoba House" is about past period of tolerance
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00015-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque has received support from mainstream groups.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00000-000
Ground zero mosque
Opposing ground zero mosque is part of war on radical Islamism.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00106-000
Opposing ground zero mosque is part of war on radical Islamism.
Newt Gingrich. "No mosque at ground zero." Human Events. July 28th, 2010: "Radical Islamism is more than simply a religious belief. It is a comprehensive political, economic, and religious movement that seeks to impose sharia—Islamic law—upon all aspects of global society. [...] America is experiencing an Islamist cultural-political offensive designed to undermine and destroy our civilization. Sadly, too many of our elites are the willing apologists for those who would destroy them if they could."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00091-000
Ground zero mosque is supported by local residents and board
Steve Chapman. "Ban a ground zero mosque?" Chicago Tribune. July 22nd, 2010: "The people who live in the vicinity don't seem to agree. The local community board voted 29-1 to approve the project, which would include a swimming pool, gym, child-care center, performing arts space and other facilities open to the public."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00076-000
Cordoba House is a place of tolerance and integration
"Build that mosque." Economist, Lexington. August 5th, 2010: "In a tweet last month from Alaska, Ms Palin called on “peaceful Muslims” to “refudiate” the “ground-zero mosque” because it would “stab” American hearts. But why should it? Cordoba House is not being built by al-Qaeda. To the contrary, it is the brainchild of Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, a well-meaning American cleric who has spent years trying to promote interfaith understanding, not an apostle of religious war like Osama bin Laden. He is modelling his project on New York’s 92nd Street Y, a Jewish community centre that reaches out to other religions. The site was selected in part precisely so that it might heal some of the wounds opened by the felling of the twin towers and all that followed."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00061-000
Ban ground zero mosque on grounds it does more harm to victims.
If it is established that the ground zero mosque does more harm to the victims of 9/11, subjecting them to further feelings of resentment etc, then it is possible to ban it or force moving it to another location on the basis of protecting other citizens.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00046-000
Ground zero mosque
Developers have right to build ground zero mosque, but should not
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00031-000
Ground zero mosque
Intentions of ground zero mosque developers are pure.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00016-000
Ground zero mosque
Ground zero mosque is supported by local residents and board
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00001-000
Ground zero mosque
9/11 highlights need for religious tolerance for ground zero mosque
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00092-000
Ground zero mosque has received support from mainstream groups.
Abigail R. Esman. "The Case Against The Ground Zero Mosque." Forbes. July 7th, 2010: "The Center has earned endorsements from New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and prominent rabbis, along with funding from the Hunt Alternative Fund, the Carnegie Foundation, the Rockefeller Fund (whose director of grants programs, Taleb Salhab, founded the Coalition for Peace and Justice in Paltestine and is the former director of the Palestine Aid Society of America) and the government of Qatar."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00077-000
Intentions of ground zero mosque developers are pure.
State Department Spokesman P.J. Crowley said: "We have a long-term relationship with [Imam Faisal Abdul Rauf]. His work on tolerance and religious diversity is well-known and he brings a moderate perspective to foreign audiences on what it's like to be a practicing Muslim in the United States."[9]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00062-000
Ban ground zero mosque on basis of it as terrorist-recruiting threat.
If it is determined that the ground zero mosque is seen as a rallying symbol for terrorists, then it may pose a threat, which could give cause to moving it.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00047-000
Ground zero mosque
Ban ground zero mosque on basis of it as terrorist-recruiting threat.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00032-000
Ground zero mosque
Cordoba House is a place of tolerance and integration
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00017-000
Ground zero mosque
Many hypothetical religious sites internationally would be offensive.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00002-000
Ground zero mosque
Opposing ground zero mosque supports message of US at war w/ Islam.
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00093-000
Ground zero mosque has angered and offended many New Yorkers.
"Ground Zero mosque plan angers New Yorkers." Telegraph. May 17th, 2010: "because of the proposed mosque's location, just around the corner from the gaping Ground Zero hole, the plan has upset some locals. 'The outrage continues,' says website www.nomosquesatgroundzero.wordpress.com under a close-up of the collapsing Twin Towers. The protest site says the centre will 'cast a rude shadow over Ground Zero.' Others compared the idea to building a German cultural centre at Auschwitz. 'Spitting in the Face of Everyone Murdered on 9/11,' writes Blitz, a self-described 'anti-jihadist newspaper.'"
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00078-000
Name "Cordoba House" is about past period of tolerance
"Build that mosque." Economist, Lexington. August 5th, 2010: "Mr Gingrich also objects to the centre’s name. Imam Feisal says he chose “Cordoba” in recollection of a time when the rest of Europe had sunk into the Dark Ages but Muslims, Jews and Christians created an oasis of art, culture and science. Mr Gingrich sees only a “deliberate insult”, a reminder of a period when Muslim conquerors ruled Spain. Like Mr bin Laden, Mr Gingrich is apparently still relitigating the victories and defeats of religious wars fought in Europe and the Middle East centuries ago. He should rejoin the modern world, before he does real harm."
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00063-000
Developers have right to build ground zero mosque, but should not
The Anti-Defamation League: "Proponents of the Islamic Center may have every right to build at this site, and may even have chosen the site to send a positive message about Islam. The bigotry some have expressed in attacking them is unfair, and wrong. But ultimately this is not a question of rights, but a question of what is right. In our judgment, building an Islamic Center in the shadow of the World Trade Center will cause some victims more pain – unnecessarily – and that is not right."[3]
2772ce32-2019-04-17T11:47:25Z-00048-000
Ground zero mosque
Ban ground zero mosque on grounds it does more harm to victims.