The Atlantic /  July 19, 2010
Sarah Palin and the Ground Zero Mosque
By Chris Good

Sarah Palin, never one to shy away from political  conflict, has come out 
against the mosque and community center being planned  near the former site 
of the World Trade Center in New York, calling on  "peace-seeking Muslims" to 
reject plans for the mosque. Originally, Palin called  on Muslims to 
_"refudiate"_ 
(http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2010/07/19/sarah-palin-wont-refudiate-mosque-comments/)
  the mosque, inventing a word in the process  of making 
this request. After deleting that tweet, here's what she had to say in  two 
subsequent ones. From her Twitter account, _...@sarahpalinusa_ 
(http://twitter.com/sarahpalinusa) :  




Peaceful New Yorkers, pls refute the Ground Zero mosque plan if you  
believe catastrophic pain caused @ Twin Towers site is too raw, too  real



And then:



Peace-seeking Muslims, pls understand, Ground Zero mosque is UNNECESSARY  
provocation; it stabs hearts. Pls reject it in interest of  healing



As _Politico reported_ 
(http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0710/39899.html) , an aide to NYC Mayor 
Michael  Bloomberg tweeted at Palin to tell the 
former governor to "mind your business,"  then asking "whose hearts? Racist 
hearts?" The aide deleted her tweets shortly  after posting them, explaining 
why she wrote them and that she regretted the  "curt response."


This response raises the question: was Palin being racist? Addressing her  
request to "peace-seeking Muslims" sounds mildly unnecessary, as it makes an 
 issue out of peacefulness when it comes to Muslims. Technically speaking  
(and perhaps it's ridiculous to parse the semantics of a tweet that includes 
the  term "refudiate"), this would not be racism, but religious bigotry, if 
that's  what it is. Maybe it reads as if Palin assumes Muslims are not 
peaceful, as a  base-line of how she understands them, and feels the need to 
call out the  peaceful ones as a minority segment of the group. That analysis 
feels like it  imputes a lot, probably too much, about Palin's cultural 
assumptions and what  goes on in her own head.


Given the heated rhetoric over Islamic extremism offered up by Palin and  
countless other GOP voices on national security over the past nine years, are 
 those imputations a stretch? Probably, but it's easy to see why 
"peace-seeking  Muslims" rings a bit funny in ears that are already skeptical 
of what 
Palin  says, and why non-hawks see national security conservatives--some of 
whom  honestly and expliclty see an ideological, religious war between Islam 
and the  Christian or secular West--as entertaining some broad-based 
assumptions about  Islam as a whole.


Aside from the nuances of the "racism" question, what's notable (if  
unsurprising) about Palin's tweets is that, while most politicians would  
approach 
with extreme caution something so hot-buttoned and charged with  religion, 
anger, and fear, Palin dives right in without trepidation, on Twitter  no 
less, not carefully calibrating her words, but just taking a side and  
expressing a stance, controversy be damned. It's the style on which she prides  
herself, and on this matter of controversy in New York, she gives us no  less.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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