That is unfortunate. I'm not sure what kind of questions you posed that got such quick dismissals as you suggest.
On this forum, I have never participated in any discussion that involve the minutae of Islam and the Quran, such as what verse is
sahih or what is not and so on. I do not intend to get into that here.
What I was specifically talking about is wether mosques in the US are "hotbed of extremism" as you suggested and I am confident that you will that is not the case. Thatswhy I suggested to go incognito to find out what is said on the Friday sermons.
What is a 'virtue'? Strip of the 'good' and 'evil' connotations, a 'virtue' is simply something that is desirable. For a con man, being deft of tongue and hands is desirable, or 'virtuous'. For an auto mechanic, having a good set of tools and being deft with them are virtuous traits. For a religious leader, being well grounded in religious studies and one's sacred texts are virtuous.
America's objections to the construction of this mosque, or at least an Islamic 'community center', are virtue base: sensitivity, basic decency and respect. If anything, just like the Japanese regarding Pearl Harbor, we do not expect to raise any objections at all because we expect the muslims to be virtuous in not even proposing to build anything at all near Ground Zero. The current legal objections going on right now in NYC are essentially 'shocked' response upon seeing the lack of virtues by the muslims who proposed the construction of this mosque and by muslims who loudly proclaim the legality of the proposal to remotely support its construction.
With this mosque, or at least its proposal, we do not need to see open 'hotbed' of Islamic extremism to perceive that muslims do not respect our sensitivity and care not about basic decency. After 9/11, we did not round up muslims and intern them like we did with the Japanese in America back in the 1940s. Instead, our President exercised sensitivity, basic decency and respect, all moral virtues, by publicly standing alongside Islamic religious leaders and exonerate Islam of guilt of 9/11. The US President cannot order the citizenry to change its mind. He can only persuade by making himself and his subordinates examples of the virtues he want the citizenry to emulate, or at least pause and reconsider.
So is it too much to ask of
ANY Islamic religious leader to exercise the same level of sensitivity, basic decency and respect? Apparently it is too much.