Soontir C'boath wrote:You can read the next sentences after it.
Ah. Sorry, I had thought the first sentence conveyed a meaning separate from the ones after it, or was making a specific logical true/false claim about something I said. So when I couldn't parse it as a matter of grammar, I asked for clarification.
No worries, now your meaning is clear.
Yes I would be fine with it, because it was not normal church going Christians who bombed the abortion clinics, but those who took it to the extreme. Just as those who committed the acts during 9/11. You are still blaming the group as a whole on the part of the few.
Uh, who is 'you?'
More generally, okay, great! You're being consistent! Good!
If radical fundamentalist Christians launch a terrorist attack that kills three thousand people, and then other Christians come along and propose to replace one of the buildings damaged in the attack with a thirteen-story megachurch and community center, and people oppose this by calling it 'insensitive' or saying that it will overshadow the memorial(s) at Ground Zero for the attack...
You would call those opponents of the megachurch anti-Christian and, presumably, cowardly.
Just as when radical fundamentalist Muslims launch a terrorist attack that kills three thousand people, and then other Muslims come along and propose to replace one of the buildings damaged in the attack with a thirteen-story mosque and community center, and people oppose this by calling it 'insensitive' or saying that it will overshadow the memorial(s) at Ground Zero for the attack...
You would call those opponents of the megachurch anti-Muslim and, it appears, cowardly.
As long as you are
consistent, I don't have a problem with this.
My problem is that, in a hypothetical parallel universe where Christian fundies had launched a mass-casualty terrorist attack, I can't shake the feeling that in the parallel universe, there'd be this horrified N&P thread about malevolent Christians wanting to wave their religion in front of everyone by building this 150-foot megachurch within 600 feet of the site of the terrorist attacks.
YOU, of course, would be calling people out in this thread for being biased and anti-Christian and cowardly, which is good.
Flagg wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:While my own opinion is that the mosque should have been allowed to be completed on the site, I must point out that it was not a mosque "in lower Manhattan;" it was "six hundred feet from the site of the World Trade Center." And that the mosque in question was to be a
thirteen story building.
Out of curiosity, how would you feel about building a thirteen story megachurch 600 feet from the site of an abortion clinic bombing? What if the bombing had somehow* managed to kill three thousand people?
If survivors of the families of the victims of the bombing start to call in and claim that the construction of the megachurch is "insensitive," I assume you would call them cowardly and anti-Christian, yes? Because I'm quite sure you are a consistent person.
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*Implausible in itself, but try to imagine it...
Umm, are you saying that because the people in question have been traumatized their bigotry is legitimized somehow?
No, I'm saying that you should treat one group of traumatized bigots the same as any other group of traumatized bigots. If you would treat traumatized people who are bigoted against Christians the same way you treat the same way you'd treat traumatized people who are bigoted against Muslims, at least you're being fair and consistent.
If people are turned against an entire religion by a terrorist attack, and start trying to block that religion from creating places of worship near the site of the terrorist attack, either that is
never wrong or
always wrong.
I'm just glad that you assure me (or would assure me, presumably) that you think it is always wrong, and that no amount of narrative framing could persuade you to become an opponent of the hypothetical Ground Zero Megachurch. Which would be built near the site of a mass casualty terrorist attack caused when an abortion clinic bombing 'got out of hand' or whatever.
It's good to know you wouldn't be agreeing with the opponents of building that giant church.
Flagg wrote:Anyway it wasn't a Mosque, it was a community center providing a myriad of different activities, that had a Mosque in it. Just like how the WTC had a Mosque in it.
Does this matter? Don't the Muslims of New York
have a right to put up a thirteen-story mosque within 600 feet of Ground Zero? I think they do. The fact that it's actually, say, ten stories of community center on top of three stories of mosque or whatever is irrelevant.
Channel72 wrote:Dark Hellion wrote:Okay, that joke is out of the way but it is illustrative of the general issue. I don't have any problem with legitimate grievances against the U.S. because god knows there are plenty to be had; the problem I have is that these legitimate grievances are conflated with generic insults against the U.S. and then by inference against Americans as a whole.
Who cares. Unlike Marty McFly, you really don't need to go totally apeshit when some anonymous guy calls you a coward due to shit your government does that you have zero control over.
On the other hand, I also don't have to like it or accept it or meekly submit to being insulted over it.