August 17, 2010

Burlington Coat Factory Building Damaged By Debris From The 9/11 Airliners That Brought Down The World Trade Center To Be Mosque for NYC Muslims!

Oh WOW! How many of you knew about this information? The proposed Ground Zero Mosque is really an IN YOUR FACE MIDDLE FINGER to ALL Americans! Carefully plotted and being savored by Radical Islam.

I have one word for you: RESPECT! None of you would recognize it!

Hey Radical Imams, America WILL NEVER become Sharia compliant! There are far too many STRONG INDEPENDENT MINDED WOMEN in America and we will NOT put up with your MALE CHAUVINISM. Oh yeah, you better believe that I and MILLIONS of other American women will go head to head with you any day. Because there is NO WAY in hell America will TOLERATE your pathetic excuse for male dominance! All of you are so damn insecure you allow your men to marry and rape little girls LEGALLY in your Islamic countries! You beat women, stone women, hang women, throw ACID on women, force women to live in SHAME for just existing! No NOT on our watch! And as for President Obama giving you special treatment and EXCLUDING ALL MUSLIMS from the health care reform bill to satisfy Sharia Law... well that just gives us MORE ammunition to get that bill ANNULLED! America we NEED to have ZERO TOLERANCE for Sharia Law!

My friend Russ said, "Every time I hear freedom of religion, I feel compelled to share this thought - they cross the line of freedom of religion when they believe that they are supposed to kill you if you refuse to convert to their beliefs - that becomes criminal and should NOT be tolerated in the US!
[NY Post 5/13/10] Plans are under way for a Muslim house of worship, topped by a 13-story cultural center with a swimming pool, in a building damaged by the fuselage of a jet flown by extremists into the World Trade Center.

The opening date shall live in infamy: Sept. 11, 2011. The 10th anniversary of the day a hole was punched in the city's heart.
USA Today
written by Cristian Salazar, The Associated Press
May 7, 2010

NEW YORK — In a building damaged by debris from the Sept. 11 airliners that brought down the World Trade Center and soon to become a 13-story mosque, some see the bridging of a cultural divide and an opportunity to serve a burgeoning, peaceful religious population. Others see a painful reminder of the religious extremism that killed their loved ones.

Two Muslim organizations have partnered to open the mosque and cultural center in lower Manhattan, saying the $100 million project will create a venue for mainstream Islam and a counterbalance to radicalism. It earned a key endorsement this week from influential community leaders.

But some 9/11 victims' families said they were angered that it would be built so close to where their relatives died.

"I don't like it," said Evelyn Pettigano, who lost a sister in the attacks, during a phone interview on Thursday. "I'm not prejudiced. ... It's too close to the area where our family members were murdered."

But the growing number of congregants at the only other nearby mosque, open only one day a week, created a need for an additional space for Muslim prayer in the neighborhood, said Daisy Khan, the executive director of the American Society for Muslim Advancement and a board member of the Cordoba Initiative, the two organizations sponsoring the project.

The history associated with the building, a former Burlington Coat Factory store that closed after being damaged on 9/11, was a reason to pick it for the project, she said.

"We want to create a platform by which the voices of the mainstream and silent majority of Muslims will be amplified. A center of this scale and magnitude will do that," Khan said. "We feel it's an obligation as Muslims and Americans to be part of the rebuilding of downtown Manhattan."

The organizations publicly unveiled the preliminary plan for the project, known as the Cordoba House, on Wednesday at a meeting of the finance committee of the local community board, which is composed of influential stakeholders in lower Manhattan. While the agency has no authority over what can be developed at the site, their support is viewed as key to gaining acceptance from residents.

Edward "Ro" Sheffe, the chairman of the financial district committee for Community Board 1, said the 15 members passed a resolution of support for the project, though he emphasized that the board had no authority to approve or disapprove of a house of worship, per se. Indeed, he said the developers could do whatever they wanted with the building, which they own.

"They came to tell us what they had in mind and see what we felt about it," he said. "The understanding we came away with was that this was an ongoing dialogue."

But the simple idea of a mosque so near ground zero angered those whose family members were killed by adherents to radical Islam.

"I think it's despicable, and I think it's atrocious that anyone would even consider allowing them to build a mosque near the World Trade Center," said Rosemary Cain, whose son, George Cain, a firefighter, died on Sept. 11.

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