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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Obama's Comments Take Mosque Story National

President Barack Obama on Saturday sought to defuse the controversy over his remarks on plans to build a mosque near Ground Zero, insisting that he wasn’t endorsing the specific project but making a general plea for religious tolerance toward all.

"In this country we treat everybody equally and in accordance with the law, regardless of race, regardless of religion,” Obama told reporters Saturday when asked about his remarks at a White House dinner marking the start of Ramadan.

“I was not commenting and I will not comment on the wisdom of making the decision to put a mosque there,” Obama continued. “I was commenting very specifically on the right people have that dates back to our founding. That's what our country is about. And I think it's very important as difficult as some of these issues are that we stay focused on who we are as a people and what our values are all about."

But his comments Friday night were widely interpreted as an endorsement of plans to build a mosque a few blocks away from where nearly 3,000 Americans perished at the hands of Islamic terrorists on 9/11 – an interpretation the White House hadn't disputed, up until Obama’s comments in Florida.

Already, though, Obama's comments on the Ground Zero mosque have transformed an emotion-laden local dispute in New York into a nationwide debate overnight, setting nervous Democrats on edge and creating potentially dramatic political implications in the upcoming midterm elections.

Key Republicans had leapt to criticize Obama’s over his comments Friday on the controversial plan, with House Republican leader John Boehner calling them “deeply troubling.”

And Democrats – at least the ones willing to comment at all — could barely contain their frustration over Obama’s remarks Friday night, saying they would further complicate campaign efforts by candidates struggling in an anti-Democratic year, particularly moderates in conservative-leaning districts who already are 2010’s most vulnerable contenders.

“I would prefer the president be a little more of a politician and a little less of a college professor,” former Rep. Martin Frost (D-Tex.), who once ran the House Democratic campaign arm, wrote in POLITICO’s Arena. “While a defensible position, it will not play well in the parts of the country where Democrats need the most help.”

Obama himself had steered clear of the issue for weeks, with his spokesman Robert Gibbs telling reporters that it was primarily a local issue. But at a Friday White House Iftar dinner, Obama said that while he understands Ground Zero is “hallowed ground,” he told a group of Muslims that he believes they have “the same right to practice their religion as everyone else in the country.”

“And that includes the right to build a place of worship and a community center on private property in Lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and ordinances,” he said. “This is America. And our commitment to religious freedom must be unshakeable. The principle that people of all faiths are welcome in this country and that they will not be treated differently by their government is essential to who we are.”

More from Politico

(Additional Reading: Muslims have always built mosques on the sites of their conquests.)

8 comments:

  1. Obama is no leader .

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  2. Well actually he is a leader... a leader to his muslim brotherhood trying to invade OUR country!!!

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  3. I don't like Obama. I don't want a mosque there.

    That said, they have a legal right to build a mosque there.

    Do we ditch the Constitution because we don't want it applying to unpopular people?

    Kind of sounds like Nazi Germany. My great uncle George died fighting that way of thinking.

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  4. conservatives, the so-called preservers of freedom, only like the law and constitution when it fits their view.

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  5. 1:28 We don't have to like it and I reserve the right to protest !

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  6. 1:28, how about this - lets build a monument to the japanese across from the uss arizona at pearl harbor. Hey, it's legal right? Nothing that should prevent that right?

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  7. When Obama said Muslims have a legal right to build the mosque overlooking ground zero, he was correct. However, he should have added that it is MORALLY WRONG for them to do so. Why? Because it will certainly cause pain and suffering and disharmony.

    Flying the Confederate Flag is LEGAL, but most Southerner's don't do it because it too is insensitive. It causes pain. I believe this makes it morally wrong.

    The majority of New Yorkers and Americans have indicated in every poll that they object to the mosque being built overlooking ground zero.
    By not voicing his moral opposition to the project, Obama is clearly siding with Muslims.

    All he had to say was, "It is legal but imprudent."
    But he didn't.

    Wake up America. We haven't elected the enemy, as some say, but we have elected someone who despises the America our fathers died for. Obama envisions an American that would break our fathers' hearts.

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  8. 9:53, the America that our father's fought for is an America that garuntees someones right to build on their property. The president needs to be just as vocal for the rights of Christians when it comes to people wanting to celebrate Jesus on Christmas!

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