That's a pretty facile representation. That bit about not changing a word of scripture is pretty much found in the Bible verbatim - "whosoever takes away from these words shall have the kingdom of heaven taken away from them" - so, you must either conclude that Christianity also permits no moderation, or recognise the practical reality that significant variations in interpretation and observance will always exist.stui magpie wrote:The "Islam" practised by most Muslims in Australia is from the Koran of Mecca which Mohammad "wrote" when first starting his cult in Mecca, in a secular area where he and his followers were vastly outnumbered.
Even then, the foundations were clearly evident. The whole world was put into 2 categories, you were either a Muslim or you were Kaffir, irrespective of blood ties.
Mohammad set himself up as the last prophet of Islam and declared that the Koran was the absolute perfect word of god, thereby making it impossible for anyone to later modify, dilute or moderate his teachings. To do so means it's no longer Islam.
The Koran of Medina was written when Mohammad moved to Medina and started his conquest of the Arab world as he had numerical superiority and grew his power. This Koran is what is more typical of what is followed when Islam is dominant in an area.
Bits from each of these two areas frequently contradict each other which is how people are able to pull quotes out of context to say it's a religion of peace or a religion of conquest, when actually it's clear that it's a religion of conquest and subjugation.
Where two passages of the Koran contradict each other, Mohammad declared that whichever was latter is right. Problem is, the Koran isn't structured chronologically but the verses are in order from shortest to longest to aid memorisation so only Koranic scholars can properly interpret it with cross referencing the sira and the hadith.
So the Islam that's practised by most Muslims is not in fact compatible with western values at all. Where they exist in the minority they are taught to practice those things that will allow them to exist without confrontation but they are still taught fundamentally that Islam is the only true religion, Mohammad was the last prophet and that the Koran is the word of god, the foundation which makes radicalisation so comparatively easy.
You want to see how compatible it is, look at any of the areas where Islam is the dominant religion and tell me you'd like to live there.
The theory about two Qurans (one of war and one of peace) is nice but likely a massive oversimplification. Either way, it's hardly relevant because the Bible also preaches war and peace in equal measure. To say Islam is "a religion of conquest and subjugation" is pretty much as meaningless as calling it "a religion of peace". It's neither and both. But I think I've argued that point at enough length elsewhere on here before, perhaps even in this very thread.
On your last point, I would be very happy to live in Albania, or Azerbaijan, or Tunisia, certainly as much as any country at their respective levels of socioeconomic development. I would also love to visit Iran or Morocco, or any number of places where Muslims make up the majority of the population. That's not to say that there aren't things that could be improved in some of these countries (dramatically, in many cases), but progress is inevitable, and it will happen while these countries remain majority Muslim. Professor Richard the Lionheart may not believe that, but he also thinks Islam is going to be finished by 2030, so perhaps he's not the most reliable source on these matters.