Earning applause from the audience inside Manhattan's Ed Sullivan Theater for Wednesday's Late Show, Donald Trump gave David Letterman his take on placing a new mosque near Ground Zero: "I think it's very insensitive to build it there. I think it's not appropriate, a I think it's insensitive and it shouldn't be built there." Letterman frowned, prompting Trump to point out to the audience: "I don't know if he agrees."
Letterman eventually asked "what about the notion" of when the "pilgrims came over...looking for religious expression? And as far as I've always known, that's a fundamental building block of what makes this country great." Trump agreed, but "it's caused such a storm that the people doing it would make so much good will" if they moved it to a different location.
When Trump repeated his point, to more applause, about how "it's very insensitive to build it there and I think they should go someplace else," a befuddled Letterman wondered: "Describe for me what insensitivity is manifested if it's built there?" And Letterman fretted: "Does this suggest that we are in fact officially at war with Muslims?"
To which, Trump observed: "Well, somebody knocked down the World Trade Center."