I don't see how so. If you're saying that it's OK to keep making cartoons, I don't see why it's not OK to keep making islamic centers.
I have never supported those cartoons - it was a hypothetical situation and I dont see why you would do that either. If we are discussing personal opinions I have no issues with mosque as well, but sometimes it is the views of majority that has to be considered. Specially considering the magnanimity of incident.
I haven't even heard about any of these things except for the cartoons. And if you're going attribute a small issue in which few muslims were involved to all muslims, that's your own problem.
Oh there are many of those mentioned, but quoting source would lead to offtopic discussion. The question is not whether all muslims are involved. However strong the brotherhood might be Muslims have a dual opinion on most issues including this one.
The question is why should we listen only to the muslim voices asking for the mosque to be made - Why dont we listen to who do not want it to be made as well? That might serve the desired objective of increasing communal harmony more.
I don't see how muslims had their way with the cartoons. And I don't see how they they had their way on "most of the issues" anyway. What are the other big issues? Perhaps you could talk about Quran burning - that it didn't talk place - but there were Qurans burnt in other parts of US anyway and plus there was more pressure from within US to not burn the Quran than there was from muslims.
How frequently have the cartoons been published?
A student newspaper editor who published a controversial cartoon depicting the prophet Mohammed is today said to be 'devastated'.
Tom Wellingham, editor of Gair Rhydd, Cardiff's University Students' Union paper, was suspended after publishing the caricature, which sparked protests across the world when it was previously published by a Danish newspaper.
The Gair Rhydd copies were hastily pulled off the news stands over the weekend.
The paper, the winner of the Best Student Newspaper of the Year 2004/2005, is so far the only newspaper in the UK to have published any of the offending cartoons.
Most American news outlets, caught in a dilemma between showing controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad and offending the religious sensibilities of Muslims, have declined to publish the drawings...
How frequently has it been reproduced??? How did muslims lose out on this? Just that it has become an eternal tease for some muslims is another matter.
Nope, not really. Perhaps you're talking about voting and selecting the leadership. But in a democracy, majority cannot impose its' will on a minority. i.e., just because the majority thinks that it's OK to allow slavery of minorities, democratic principles will not allow for that.
I can give an apt example of majority opinion being against constitution, which you support - but again will be off topic.
This is not a call for slavery or an extreme case - it is simply honouring views of the majority population to maintain better relations.
For instance, the argument that 70% of Americans are against the mosque is a weak one since it will not stand the US constitution and basic democratic principles.
But a 75% vote in the parliament can change that very principle. I hope you would not want that happening. What issues like these do is polarization of opinion. The moderates are forced to make a choice and this in turn leads towards fundamentalist tendencies.
Well look whose making it painful. If anything, the hypocrisy of those who criticized muslims for not wanting cartoons to be drawn under the pretext of freedom but then themselves use the sensibilities and sensitivities argument in this case stands exposed.
Look at who is pained. The families and friends of those who lost their lives in terrorist attack, you can not bring them back but at-least make it less painful for them.
In fact I think this is why this project should be cancelled. Because more than anything else, it will reflect the hypocrisy of the infidels (as gambit called them).
I think it can be more amiable than that.