Pro-Hamas Foreign Students Are About to Be Deported
Oh, So That's Why Dems Aren't Protesting Trump's Anti-DEI Executive Order
Canada's Pierre Poilievre Had the Perfect Response When Asked About This Executive Order...
Why Did Federal Agents Raid an Immigration Lawyer's Office in Providence Yesterday?
Ex-Politico Reporters Lay Into 'Cowardly' Editors for Suffocating Stories About Biden
Oh, So That's Why Bank of America Issued That Tweet About Conservative Customers
Senate Republican Announces Bill to Finish Building Donald Trump's Border Wall
AOC Is Very Worried That High-Profile Americans Aren't Afraid to Associate With Donald...
'Deportation Flights Have Begun': Hundreds of Criminal Aliens Are Already Gone
Education Department Details How It's Tackled Eliminating DEI From the Agency
Massachusetts Governor Says She 'Supports' Trump's Crackdown on Criminal Aliens
Elizabeth Warren Probably Shouldn't Make This Argument Against Hegseth
Another Federal Bureaucrat Outed for Circumventing Trump's Anti-DEI Effort
RFK Jr. Reacts to Trump Declassifying the JFK Assassination Files
Press Victims
Tipsheet

Update: Ground Zero Mosque

As Guy mentioned in his earlier blog post, a top Ground Zero Mosque investor called Donald Trump's offer to buy the property a cheap stunt for publicity. However, yesterday the NYDailyNews reported that top "moneyman" Hisham Elzanaty would be willing to sell the property for "the right price." Trump was simply taking him up on his own offer. So what is the right price when Trump offered 25 percent on top of the previous selling price in one of the worst real estate markets ever? Or is this really about something else?

Advertisement

One of the key moneymen behind the proposed Ground Zero Islamic center said he'd abandon the controversial project and sell the site - if a buyer met his asking price.

Hisham Elzanaty, an Egyptian-born businessman who lives on Long Island, said he provided most of the funding for the two buildings that will house the center, and supports a mosque being built a few blocks north of the former World Trade Center.

But he now says he could sell the buildings - potentially worth millions - if the community doesn't come up with enough cash to build the mosque.

"I'm a businessman. This was a mere business transaction for me," Elzanaty told The Associated Press.

"Develop it, raze it, sell it," he said. "If someone wants to give me 18 or 20 million dollars today, it's all theirs."


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement