RangerDave wrote:
That's just a more extreme example of holding the whole group accountable. If you think Muslims that are completely unrelated to terrorism have a moral obligation to modify their behavior in any way because some other Muslims commit terrorist acts in the name of their religion, then you are, by definition, holding the group accountable for the actions of certain individuals.
Except that no one is asking them to modify their behavior.
They are modifying their behavior by deciding to put a mosque at that particular location, and everyone else is asking "why are you doing that?" It isn't like this site was selected as sheer coincidence.
More to the point, we aren't asking the
whole group to modify their behavior, of the over a billion muslims in the world only a minute faction are involved with this mosque.
This is, again, like a bunch of Serbian Orthodox building a church near the Srebenicia massacre site and then, when Bosnian Muslims get upset asking them "But why are you demanding they change their behavior?"
Quote:
Why do you think it's necessarily/obviously an indication of terrorist sympathies? Their stated intent is precisely the opposite - i.e., to make the point that there is no conflict between the United States and Islam/Muslims generally; that the conflict is between decent people of all faiths and nationalities and those fanatics who support terrorism; that in the "us vs. them" narrative of 9/11, ordinary Muslims are part of the "us". Building a mosque near Ground Zero strikes me as an entirely plausible and, in fact, pretty compelling symbol of that idea, a way of showing that Muslims are not stuck on the outside looking in and that the pursuit/expression of Islamic faith is not incompatible with American/western identity.
I didn't say it was an indication of
terrorist sympathies
per se, but rather sympathy with anti-Western mentalities that are most easily redicalized into terrorists, and who may not approve of terrorism as a method or strategy, but do approve of conflict with "the West."
That said, I believe that they have these sympathies because to beleive that they do not indicates that they are either stupid or ridiculously naive, and I do not think they are stupid people, nor any more naive than anyone else. Regardless of whether its legitimate to resent building a mosque there, there will be people who will resent it, and there are other people who will be suspicious of it. The people building the mosque clearly know that, but again, unless they are almost cartoonishly stupid or naive they cannot possibly think that a mosque will somehow change people's minds. Really, how does a mosque in any way promote healing or understanding? It doesn't.
As for showing that Islam is compatible with American or Western identity, that's a totally separate issue, and really doesn't make them look any better. "We're going to show you that Islam is compatible with Western identity by building a symbol of Islam on the site of the biggest attack ever on Western identity made in the name of Islam". Really, come on. That only works with people who insist on thinking there are a few radical extremists and a whole slew of very moderate or liberal muslims and no one in between. Building a mosque at that place does not symbolize moderates standing against them to the extremists, it symbolizes victory, and the people wishing to build the mosque cannot possibly be unaware of this.
Your entire argument is disingenuous, in fact. We are not lumping muslims" together by opposing this mosque, just the particular muslims who are trying to have it built, and that because they are acting in an offensive manner. Claiming that this somehow extends to all muslims is absurd; no one is objecting to mosques in general anywhere else in America, or even in the city or the state.