Senator in Colorado: plan om bouwen van nieuwe moskeeën te verbieden overwegen waard

Source: G. (Geert) Wilders i, published on Sunday, July 8 2012.

A Colorado state Senator is raising some eyebrows for praising a Dutch lawmaker's anti-Islam crusade, saying in an interview that the lawmaker's proposal to ban the construction of new mosques was worth considering in the United States.

According to the Colorado Statesman, Senator Kevin Grantham attended the Western Conservative Summit in Denver this past week, where Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders delivered a speech calling Islam a "dangerous, totalitarian ideology" and saying that to stop the threat of creeping Sharia law, American legislators should ban the construction of new mosques.

In an interview with the paper after the speech, Grantham said Wilders' fear of an Islam was "warranted", and that his anti-mosque plan was worth hearing out.

Regarding Wilders' suggestion that Western governments ban construction of new mosques, Grantham said it was worth considering.

"You know, we'd have to hear more on that, because, as he said, mosques are not churches like we would think of churches", Grantham said. "They think of mosques more as a foothold into a society, as a foothold into a community, more in the cultural and in the nationalistic sense. Our churches - we don't feel that way, they're places of worship, and mosques are simply not that, and we need to take that into account when approving construction of those".

The idea of banning mosque construction is nothing new. Former Republican presidential contender Herman Cain, who made numerous critical statements about Muslims on the campaign trail, even suggested doing so while on the stump last year.

Mosques elsewhere in the U.S. have also been targeted aiming to prevent their construction. In New York, the so-called Ground Zero mosque, a Muslim community center two blocks from the former site of the World Trade Center, faced vociferous opposition from well-known anti-Muslim crusaders like Pamela Geller until it finally opened last September. And in Tennessee, a judge recently blocked the construction of a mosque in Murfreesboro over a technicality with the mosque's approval process. That mosque had already faced the ire of local conservatives, and it became a national story after the mosque and construction equipment left out to build it were mysteriously damaged in a fire. The Raw Story

HIGHLIGHTS

State Sen. Kevin Lundberg, R-Berthoud, who last week won the GOP nomination for the Second Congressional District seat, had a more skeptical reaction than his Senate colleague.

Wilders, he said, "showed some concern for some issues that have happened in this country, and there are some issues we need to be aware of here, but I'm not ready to endorse what he said".

Asked whether he shared concerns raised during Wilders' talk about a proposed mosque in Larimer County, Lundberg shook his head and quoted the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

"I think immediately of 'Congress shall make no law ...' and that sounds pretty close to that, doesn't it?" he said.

Former Reagan administration official Frank Gaffney - something of a pariah in right-wing circles since he began accusing anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist of helping radical Muslims infiltrate the conservative movement - riled up the crowd immediately before Wilders spoke with a preview of a 10-hour video series called "The Muslim Brotherhood in America". The series charges that a cabal of Muslims is staging a stealthy conquest of the United States by pretending to be moderate while ascending the rungs of power.

Gaffney called on conservatives at the summit to boycott the American Conservative Union's regional Conservative Political Action Conference - known as CPAC - set to take place in Denver on Oct. 4, the day after the first presidential debate at the University of Denver, unless the organization renounces its association with individuals Gaffney claims have ties with the Muslim Brotherhood. Colorado Statesman

KA/DB

Source: Presstv.com