Obama, Implicitly But Clearly, Says Best Way To Honor The Dead Of 9-11 Is To Build Ground Zero Victory Mosque
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Obama used 9-11 to dismiss the dead as having “lived well”, and to demand the building of a Ground Zero Victory Mosque.
Obama says, implicitly but clearly, that the “best” we can do with today is to build a Ground Zero Victory Mosque: “we must ask ourselves how best to honor them”…
…”How do we preserve their legacy — not just on this day, but every day? We need not look far for our answer….”
We need not look any further than the Ground Zero Mosque, a mere two blocks away, in other words…
“The perpetrators…they attacked…all that we stand for & represent in the world” (Read: our tolerance of Muslims and how we look to them)
“And so the highest honor we can pay those we lost…is stay true to who we are, as Americans” – In the context of the moment, this means:
“Build the Ground Zero Victory Mosque!”
“Build The Ground Zero Victory Mosque”, says Obama, in thinly coded language: “On a day when others sought to destroy, we have chosen to build”
Obama demands we trust Muslims at large, and the builders of the Ground Zero Victory Mosque, in particular: ” we will not hunker down behind walls of suspicion and mistrust.”
Obama counsels surrender to Islam at large, and to the builders of the Ground Zero Victory Mosque, in particular: “For Scripture teaches us to “get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander”
And then the real payoff, a complete lie to discourage resistance and a declaration of full surrender: “They may seek to spark conflict between different faiths…but as Americans we are not –and never will be — at war with Islam.”
At the end, no admonitions to terrorists, no mourning of the dead, no celebration of their lives, no sanctifying of their memory, in fact, no call to remember at all, just “Build the mosque!”, and a sanctification of that mosque, and a reminder that the mosque stands as the final mockery and rebuke of the murdered, whose patriotism and nationality he takes pains to specifically mock: “On this day we choose to stay true to our best selves…this is how we choose to honor the fallen…this is how we will keep alive the legacy of these proud and patriotic Americans.”
All of this was his only message of the day, in fact, his only concern.
For Obama, today was all about Islam, and how we may best serve its interests.
What sympathy of the patriotic, or even just the decent, is left for Barack Obama, after today?
The only sympathy of the good left for Barack Obama is of the same kind reserved for all the psychopathic leaders that have preceded him.
On September 11, 2010, Barack Obama formalized and made public his declaration of war on the United States of America.
Full text of his speech:
9:34 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Secretary Gates. Admiral Mullen and members of the Armed
Forces. My fellow Americans. Most of all, to you — survivors who still carry the scars of tragedy
and destruction; to the families who carry in your hearts the memory of the loved ones you lost
here.
For our nation, this is a day of remembrance, a day of reflection, and — with God’s grace -
- a day of unity and renewal.
We gather to remember, at this sacred hour, on hallowed ground — at places where we
feel such grief and where our healing goes on. We gather here, at the Pentagon, where the
names of the lost are forever etched in stone. We gather in a gentle Pennsylvania field, where a
plane went down and a “tower of voices†will rise and echo through the ages. And we gather
where the Twin Towers fell, a site where the work goes on so that next year, on the 10th
anniversary, the waters will flow in steady tribute to the nearly 3,000 innocent lives.
On this day, it’s perhaps natural to focus on the images of that awful morning — images
that are seared into our souls. It’s tempting to dwell on the final moments of the loved ones
whose lives were taken so cruelly. Yet these memorials, and your presence today, remind us to
remember the fullness of their time on Earth.
They were fathers and mothers, raising their families; brothers and sisters, pursuing their
dreams; sons and daughters, their whole lives before them. They were civilians and service
members. Some never saw the danger coming; others saw the peril and rushed to save others -
- up those stairwells, into the flames, into the cockpit.
They were white and black and brown — men and women and some children made up of all races, many faiths. They were Americans and people from far corners of the world. And they were snatched from us senselessly and much too soon — but they lived well, and they live on in you.
Nine years have now passed. In that time, you have shed more tears than we will ever know. And though it must seem some days as though the world has moved on to other things, I say to you today that your loved ones endure in the heart of our nation, now and forever.
Our remembrance today also requires a certain reflection. As a nation, and as
individuals, we must ask ourselves how best to honor them — those who died, those who
sacrificed. How do we preserve their legacy — not just on this day, but every day?
We need not look far for our answer. The perpetrators of this evil act didn’t simply attack
America; they attacked the very idea of America itself — all that we stand for and represent in the
world. And so the highest honor we can pay those we lost, indeed our greatest weapon in this
ongoing war, is to do what our adversaries fear the most — to stay true to who we are, as
Americans; to renew our sense of common purpose; to say that we define the character of our
country, and we will not let the acts of some small band of murderers who slaughter the innocent
and cower in caves distort who we are.
They doubted our will, but as Americans we persevere. Today, in Afghanistan and
beyond, we have gone on the offensive and struck major blows against al Qaeda and its allies.
We will do what is necessary to protect our country, and we honor all those who serve to keep
us safe.They may seek to strike fear in us, but they are no match for our resilience. We do not
succumb to fear, nor will we squander the optimism that has always defined us as a people. On
a day when others sought to destroy, we have chosen to build, with a National Day of Service
and Remembrance that summons the inherent goodness of the American people.
They may seek to exploit our freedoms, but we will not sacrifice the liberties we cherish or hunker down behind walls of suspicion and mistrust. They may wish to drive us apart, but we will not give in to their hatred and prejudice. For Scripture teaches us to “get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.â€
They may seek to spark conflict between different faiths, but as Americans we are not –
and never will be — at war with Islam. It was not a religion that attacked us that September day –
it was al Qaeda, a sorry band of men which perverts religion. And just as we condemn
intolerance and extremism abroad, so will we stay true to our traditions here at home as a
diverse and tolerant nation. We champion the rights of every American, including the right to
worship as one chooses — as service members and civilians from many faiths do just steps from
here, at the very spot where the terrorists struck this building.
Those who attacked us sought to demoralize us, divide us, to deprive us of the very
unity, the very ideals, that make America America — those qualities that have made us a beacon
of freedom and hope to billions around the world. Today we declare once more we will never
hand them that victory. As Americans, we will keep alive the virtues and values that make us
who we are and who we must always be.
For our cause is just. Our spirit is strong. Our resolve is unwavering. Like generations
before us, let us come together today and all days to affirm certain inalienable rights, to affirm
life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness. On this day and the days to come, we choose to
stay true to our best selves — as one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
This is how we choose to honor the fallen — your families, your friends, your fellow
service members. This is how we will keep alive the legacy of these proud and patriotic
Americans. This is how we will prevail in this great test of our time. This is how we will preserve
and protect the country that we love and pass it — safer and stronger — to future generations.
May God bless you and your families, and may God continue to bless the United States
of America. (Applause.)
END 9:43 A.M. EDT


