If and when you speak out against the Port Authority and city of NY doing everything they can to block the RE-construction of the Greek Orthodox church in a public place that was destroyed during the events of 911, maybe you can have your anti-religious retoric card back. Or maybe you can look at yourself in the mirror and say with a clear voice, "I am a hypocrit and I don't like other peoples opinions even if they are factually supported."
Originally Posted by DFW5Traveler
I'd never heard of the dispute between the Port Authority and the Greek Orthaodox church until you mentioned it. The article you linked to didn't sound right, so I clicked through to the source they cited, the NYTimes.
Indeed, the link you cited has gross mischaracterizations of fact and flat out lies. (Incidentally, the link appears at fist glance to be a newspaper article. But it is, as best I can tell, a reader commenting in a newspaper under the
nom de plume gold_digger.) I won't take the time to catalog all of the lies and misleading aspects of the article , but the the two most notable ones are in the first sentence:
1. The mosque is not being "fast tracked." As the current furor and delays amply demonstrate, nothing could be further from the truth.
2. Your article states that the "Greek Orthodox church being refused permission to rebuild on its original site." This is simply a lie, as will be illustrated in more detail below. They are only being allowed to rebuild on their own land and original site. And the negotiations that they have entered into for a $20 million subsidy and condemnation payment from the government has broken down.
From what I read in that one article, the negotiations broke down over the terms of a subsidy from the government entity (The Port Authority) to the church. It appears that the subsidy -- $20 million -- was in exchange for some concessions to the church and eminent domain condemnation from the church. In a situation like there, where a church and a government entity are bargaining at arms length over legal matters, I think either side should be free to bargain as hard as they want. And according to the NYTimes, the Port Authority broke off negotiations and after the church arguably rejected a deal that they had previously seemingly agreed to (although this final point is less than crystal clear in the article, hence the word "seemingly").
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/19/ny...urch.html?_r=1
But the bottom line was that the government left the church free to build any building they wanted on their land, but was going to initiate a condemnation suit on the basement.
The authority now says that St. Nicholas is free to rebuild the church on its own parcel at 155 Cedar Street, just east of West Street. The authority will, in turn, use eminent domain to get control of the land beneath that parcel so it can move ahead with building foundation walls and a bomb-screening center for trucks, buses and cars entering the area.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/19/ny...urch.html?_r=1
As to whether church property should be goverened by the same condemnation law that governs other private property, I can envision an argument that it should not, but I find that argument terribly unpersuasive so long as religious institutions are not being singled out for such treatment.
And for what it's worth, the Greek Orthodox Church has taken no position on the building of the mosque.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/24/ny...0Church&st=cse