Saturday, August 21, 2010

Stolen Content - Written better than me

Okay, part of this idea was fleshed out in the last "Things I think I think" blog, but this is just better, way better

Obama's mosque duty

By Michael Gerson
Monday, August 16, 2010; A13

President Obama has a peculiar talent for enraging his critics while deflating the enthusiasm of his friends, on full display in the Manhattan mosque controversy.

His first intervention, at a White House dinner for Ramadan on Friday, was an unqualified defense of both religious liberty and religious tolerance, implying that opposition to a mosque near Ground Zero violated both. In his second intervention, in an unplanned exchange with a reporter on Saturday, he insisted that he was not commenting "on the wisdom" of building the mosque, merely affirming the right to a construction permit. It was not a contradiction, but it was a marked change in tone. Obama managed to collect all the political damage for taking an unpopular stand without gaining credit for political courage.

But being hapless does not make the president wrong.

Though columnists are loath to admit it, there is a difference between being a commentator and being president. Pundits have every right to raise questions about the construction of an Islamic center near Ground Zero. Where is the funding coming from? What are the motives of its supporters? Is the symbolism insensitive?

But the view from the Oval Office differs from the view from a keyboard. A president does not merely have opinions; he has duties to the Constitution and to the citizens he serves -- including millions of Muslim citizens. His primary concern is not the sifting of sensitivities but the protection of the American people and the vindication of their rights.

By this standard, Obama had no choice but the general path he took. No president, of any party or ideology, could tell millions of Americans that their sacred building desecrates American holy ground. This would understandably be taken as a presidential assault on the deepest beliefs of his fellow citizens. It would be an unprecedented act of sectarianism, alienating an entire faith tradition from the American experiment. If a church or synagogue can be built on a commercial street in Lower Manhattan, declaring a mosque off-limits would officially equate Islam with violence and terrorism. No president would consider making such a statement. And those commentators who urge the president to do so fundamentally misunderstand the presidency itself.

An inclusive rhetoric toward Islam is sometimes dismissed as mere political correctness. Having spent some time crafting such rhetoric for a president, I can attest that it is actually a matter of national interest. It is appropriate -- in my view, required -- for a president to draw a clear line between "us" and "them" in the global conflict with Muslim militants. I wish Obama would do it with more vigor. But it matters greatly where that line is drawn. The militants hope, above all else, to provoke conflict between the West and Islam -- to graft their totalitarian political manias onto a broader movement of Muslim solidarity. America hopes to draw a line that isolates the politically violent and those who tolerate political violence -- creating solidarity with Muslim opponents and victims of radicalism.

How precisely is our cause served by treating the construction of a non-radical mosque in Lower Manhattan as the functional equivalent of defiling a grave? It assumes a civilizational conflict instead of defusing it. Symbolism is indeed important in the war against terrorism. But a mosque that rejects radicalism is not a symbol of the enemy's victory; it is a prerequisite for our own.

The federal government has a response to American mosques taken over by advocates of violence. It investigates them, freezes their assets and charges their leaders. It does not urge zoning decisions that express a general discomfort with Islam itself.

Here again, this debate illustrates a gap in perspective. A commentator can speak with obvious sincerity of preventing American hallowed ground from being overshadowed by a mosque. A president not only serves Muslim citizens, not only commands Muslims in the American military, but also leads a coalition that includes Iraqi and Afghan Muslims who risk death each day fighting Islamic radicalism at our side. How could he possibly tell them that their place of worship inherently symbolizes the triumph of terror?

There are many reasons to criticize Obama's late, vacillating response to the Manhattan mosque, and perhaps even to criticize this particular mosque. But those who want a president to assert that any mosque would defile the neighborhood near Ground Zero are asking him to undermine the war on terrorism. A war on Islam would make a war on terrorism impossible.

michaelgerson@washpost.com


8 comments:

  1. Personally, I don't care. The real estate is NOT ground zero anyway. I get kind of tired of seeing a Church of any kind on every corner. I suppose that is the one business that IS flourishing in this economy. I hope the Unions boycott the construction and they use undocumented scab Middle Eastern Craftsmen shipped in from the land of sand. That would be a hoot!

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  2. ...and Obama... He has no Executive experience and it is obvious. a manager NEVER blames others for problems in his charge. It is his job to formulate and put in place effective countermeasures. He was correct when he simply said it was a local zoning issue. Period. There was No need to elaborate beyond that...but he just couldn't shut up...

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  3. he's a politician, when have they ever been known to shut up?

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  4. A smart one knows when to shut up... The fact is (fill in the blank religion) has the right to build a Church where local zoning allows. In fact, there was a Greek Orthodox Church destroyed 9/11. As Chief Executive, that was all he had to say, game over. but...NO...he had to jump in the frey...

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  5. I think part of his problem is that in trying to appeal to too many people he loses sight of the fundamental issues at stake. What he said at the White House dinner was absolutely correct, but in trying to appeal to others in questioning the wisdom of the building, his defense of freedom of religion looks tepid at best. I can't speak for everyone, but I would rather have someone defending an established principle than pandering to poll numbers.

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  6. It must be a reflex of the politician's autonomic system... It's a political no win for the Prez... His poll numbers could not be improved by getting involved in it... The Republicans are just standing back and watching or fanning the flames of discontent as November fast approaches...

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  7. This phrase could be the best description of Obama's Presidency I have yet read.

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  8. Which is part of the reason I opted to steal it for "Stolen Content'. Sure it would be easy for me to just run out and grab whatever prognosticator that simply fell in line with my way of thinking, it is far harder to find people of nuance, those who may agree with the end game but are far more critical of the path. Personally I would argue they could build 15 mosques at ground zero, because then at least something would be built, as opposed to this media built controversy over a building two blocks away, where Muslims have already been meeting and now we are simply talking about a renovation project that has somehow blown completely out of proportion. But then I am not looking to sell commercial inventory to keep viewers hooked for the next ten minutes, people can avert their eyes at their leisure here, there is no financial gain one way or the other for me.

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