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View Full Version : 6 Days After September 11, 2001: Bush visits mosque




libertybrewcity
09-15-2010, 03:10 PM
I wish this would hit the conservative blogosphere.
Bush visited mosques more than one occasion.
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Bush Marks End of Ramadan, Visits Mosque (Islam brings hope and comfort)

WASHINGTON (AP) - With Muslims worldwide growing more suspicious of the United States, President Bush (news - web sites) marked the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan with a visit Thursday to a mosque.

"The spirit behind this holiday is a reminder that Islam brings hope and comfort to more than 1 billion people worldwide," Bush said. "Islam affirms God's justice and insists on man's moral responsibility."

Bush left his shoes at the door, in keeping with the practice of the Islamic Center of Washington, a national center for Muslim culture and prayer. He also had visited six days after the terrorist attacks last year.

Back then, with a surge in hate crimes against Muslims in the United States, Bush was trying to defuse Americans' anger against Islam. Today, he has a different problem — increased hostility by Muslims around the world against America.

In an international survey released Wednesday, the Pew Global Attitudes Project found the image of the United States is slipping worldwide, and particularly in Middle Eastern countries with large Muslim populations. Large percentages of Muslim respondents in several countries said they believe suicide bomb attacks are a justifiable defense of Islam.

On Wednesday, Bush blamed America's tarnished image among Muslims on "propaganda machines (that) are cranked up in the international community that paints our country in a bad light."

The growing animosity comes at a time when Bush is trying to rally the world against terrorism and gather allies for possible military action against Iraq.

Inside the ornate mosque, Bush offered an explanation of the Muslim feast of Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan, and renewed his defense of Islam.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/801595/posts

nobody's_hero
09-15-2010, 03:36 PM
Back then, with a surge in hate crimes against Muslims in the United States, Bush was trying to defuse Americans' anger against Islam. Today, he has a different problem — increased hostility by Muslims around the world against America.

WTF kind of revisionist crap is this? Bush didn't do anything but feed off of and perpetuate the hatred against Islam while in office. That's how he was able to get away with abusing his powers.

EDIT: Did this even actually happen? It sounds like BS to me.

Liberty Rebellion
09-15-2010, 07:07 PM
http://news.google.com/archivesearch?hl=en&q=bush+visits+mosque+2001&um=1&ie=UTF-8&ncl=0&cid=4403904846495796&ei=nm2RTNOdHoH98AbD36nOBg&sa=X&oi=news_result&ct=more-results&cd=1&resnum=2&ved=0CCwQqgIoADAB

BlackTerrel
09-15-2010, 08:59 PM
Back then, with a surge in hate crimes against Muslims in the United States, Bush was trying to defuse Americans' anger against Islam. Today, he has a different problem — increased hostility by Muslims around the world against America.

WTF kind of revisionist crap is this? Bush didn't do anything but feed off of and perpetuate the hatred against Islam while in office. That's how he was able to get away with abusing his powers.

EDIT: Did this even actually happen? It sounds like BS to me.

Nope. George Bush repeatedly stated that "Islam is peace" and the vast majority of Muslims are good people. Do a YouTube search. In fact Americans had a BETTER impression of Islam after 9/11 than before 9/11 - mainly due to a President with a 90% positive rating repeatedly saying how great Islam was.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68B1O920100912


Some experts say the Democrat can learn from his Republican predecessor President George W. Bush who they credit with improving U.S. attitudes to Muslims after the 2001 attacks.

Alan Cooperman of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life said, "Americans' opinions of Muslims became more positive after 9/11 than they were before 9/11."

Pew polls from 2001 found 59 percent of Americans had a favorable opinion of Muslim Americans two months after the attacks compared to 45 percent in March of that year, and that the biggest improvement was among conservative Republicans.

Cooperman credited the increase to Bush's outreach to show the Muslim community as a religion of peace.