I don't see anything wrong with the way it's worded, but that type of resolution shouldn't be necessary in a civilized society--especially one that was founded on freedom of/from religion.
localWhich Mosque in which city in which state in which nation?
Trees don't grow on money
For the same reason that it's black lives matter, not all lives matter. Once I start seeing talking heads on the tv saying 'you 'regular' Christians need to take responsibility to denounce the violent ones shooting up abortion clinics and the like if you want us to believe your religion isn't violent,' then we can stop singling out muslims for something like this.
I think we should protect Muslims from discrimination.
I also think that we should retain and protect our rights to criticize bad ideas, many of which are found in Islam and other religions and philosophies.
I don't think this resolution does either.
I think there is a degree to which certain elements have difficulty discriminating between criticism and discrimination. It can be complicated to weigh the conflicting rights of various parties in the real world. Should a Muslim baker refuse an order for a gay wedding, relying on official tolerance for his beliefs?
This kind of resolution is mere feel-good piffle akin to those towns declaring themselves "nuclear free zones".
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