Thursday, September 9, 2010

Chase & First Commercial Banks Give Freebies to Rogers Park Muslims



In light of the proposed Koran burning in Florida, an interfaith group of clerics held a news conference yesterday to warn of a growing "Islamophobia" among the U.S. population.

But that can hardly be thought to be the case in West Rogers Park, where two Western Avenue banks actually lend their facilities to nearby mosques.

The managers the Chase branch at 7015 N. Western Ave. and the First Commercial branch at 7050 N. Western Avenue, have granted free use of their parking lots to the nearby Bosnian Islamic Cultural Center and the Sharia Board of America.

Banks are customarily among the most risk averse of businesses when it comes to controversy.

So tacitly, the managers of these outlets, one Adolfo Sesma at Chase and one Javeria Atcha at First Commercial, seem to be asserting that there is no risk of "Islamophobic" backlash from their West Rogers Park customers.

Interestingly, when a Lutheran Evangelical Church and a Gay United Church of Christ congregation inhabited the same building now used by the Sharia Board of America, the same offer of free parking wasn't proferred.

So not only is West Rogers Park, in the view of Chase Bank and First Commercial Bank not "Islamophobic."

Led by the enlightened multiculturalists, Sesma and Atcha, it's positively "Islamophiliac."

2 comments:

  1. One wonders whether a charge of discrimination ever occurred to them.

    Nope, it's not "Islamophobia." People are just tired of being bullied about it and having it forced down their throats. It's a cult, plain and simple.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I get the feeling that the multiculturalist mavens always give the medieval muslims a pass because they are delightfully anti-American and anti-Western. Where is the feminist outrage over institutionalized Muslim maltreatment of women? They are more critical of the Catholic Church for not allowing women priests than they are over Muslim "honor killings" of Islamic women.

    ReplyDelete

Comments invited, however anonymous commentors had better deal directly with the issues raised and avoid ad hominem drivel. As for Teachers' Union seminar writers -- forget about it.