|                  The statement       issued by the Center for Inquiry on Friday, August 27 concerning the       Ground Zero controversy was interpreted by some as calling for a       prohibition on the placement of mosques or other houses of worship near       Ground Zero or otherwise speaking out against freedom of religion. That       was not the intent of the statement and we regret  any       misunderstanding. A revised statement that clarifies the Center for       Inquiry's position is set forth below.         -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------               The Center for Inquiry's Statement       on the Ground Zero Controversy                CFI fully supports the free exercise of religion; protecting the rights       of believers and nonbelievers is central to CFI's mission.       Accordingly, CFI endorses President Obama's recent statement       reminding the country that Muslim Americans enjoy the same rights as       other Americans and should not be treated as second-class citizens. There       should be no legal impediment to the placement of an Islamic community       center near Ground Zero, just as there should be no legal impediment to       the placement of a church, temple, or synagogue near Ground Zero.        Further, CFI laments the effort by some to turn       the proposed Islamic center into a political issue. Government officials       and candidates for office should not intervene in disputes over the       alleged offensiveness of a place of worship. Such conduct violates the       spirit, if not the letter, of the Establishment Clause. Government       officials should not be deciding who is a "moderate" Muslim       any more than they should be deciding who is a "moderate"       Christian or Jew.         A number of private individuals have protested       the proposed Islamic center. The tone and substance of these protests       covers a wide range. Some protesting the Islamic center have raised       legitimate questions, but to the extent the objections to the Islamic       center mistakenly equate all Muslims with Muslim extremists, CFI condemns       them.         CFI maintains that an Islamic center, including       a mosque, near Ground Zero, in and of itself, is no different than a       church, temple, or synagogue. It is undeniable that the 9/11 terrorists       were inspired by their understanding of Islam, and that currently there       are far more Islamic terrorists in the world than terrorists of other       faiths, but those facts are not relevant to the location of the Islamic       center, absent evidence that terrorists are involved in this endeavor, and       there is no such evidence.        CFI's unequivocal support for the legal       right of Muslims to place a community center near Ground Zero does not       imply that CFI views the new center as an event to be celebrated.        To the contrary, CFI is committed to the position that reason and       science, not faith, are needed to address and resolve humanity's       problems. All religions share a fundamental flaw: they reflect a mistaken       understanding of reality. On balance, CFI does not consider houses of       worship to be beneficial to humanity, whether they are built at Ground       Zero or elsewhere.                 This       statement supersedes any prior statement issued by CFI regarding the       Ground Zero controversy.        ![]()           |       
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