Tell the moron to google Pearl Harbor sushi.
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
What about five blocks from Pearl Harbor?
Elsie Dinsmore uses the passage "Ephraim is joined to idols: let him alone," to justify the position that grace is time-limited -- if you don't accept Jesus within a certain time frame, then he won't have you anymore. (OK, I don't really have anything useful to add to this conversation, but I'd never seen that interpretation anywhere else, and I asked a few Christian friends, who said they'd never heard it, either.)
His other argument is that this is the same as if a sushi restaurant opened right next to Pearl Harbor, it would be a provocation and disrespectful and should not be allowed.
That one actually kind of makes sense as an analogy, but I don't see why it shouldn't be allowed. It's not like a sushi restaurant is an arm of the WWII-era Japanese government.
Dana, Five blocks would be great, do you have an address?
Ha, no, it was rhetorical. But I'm tempted to google now.
Here, enter this in the Google Maps search box. "sushi loc: Pearl Harbour, HI"
The Pacific Aviation Museum there doesn't have sushi on the menu, but teriaki beef and asian stir fry! Horrors! [link]
I'd be surprised if you couldn't get sushi in the AFB mess hall. Hell, you could get it at Ft. Hood...
ANYWAY. PEOPLE ON THE INTERNET ARE WRONG.
The argument goes something like - sure it's legal but it's disrespectful so it shouldn't be allowed.
Not legally blocked, just the people building the mosque/sushi restaurant shouldn't do it because it's in bad taste and so why it shouldn't be against the law it should be heavily discouraged from happening.
That one actually kind of makes sense as an analogy, but I don't see why it shouldn't be allowed. It's not like a sushi restaurant is an arm of the WWII-era Japanese government.
I think it's a decent analogy, and given the fact that there's absolutely nothing wrong with being able to buy sushi at Pearl Harbour, just highlights for me the baffling nature of arguments against this mosque.
Now I want to know if there's a sushi restaruant at the Pentagon.
Now I want to know if there's a sushi restaruant at the Pentagon.
There's one at the Pentagon City mall. Also a middle eastern restaurant. I've never been to the actual Pentagon.
If it was there before 9/11 it's okay, according to this person.
If it's being built after then it becomes suspect and disrespectful.
I asked if a mile to the Arizona Memorial is too close for sushi.