Islam is not 'politicised' by some outside agency, turning apolitical Islam somehow into 'politicised' Islam. It is political. Sharia is not just canon law, separate from secular law. It is the law of Islam, inseparable from its 'spiritual' aspects.
Not everyone is evil in a totalitarian system. So you can talk about individual Muslims.
I am, however, talking about Islam, the system that curtails freedoms that to me are more important.
Wherever there is more Islam, there is less personal freedom of every kind.
Wherever there is Western liberal democracy, there is more personal freedom of every kind.
You go somewhere fully Islamic - and they will not be able to tolerate many of your utterances and views. Theocratic dictatorships are still dictatorships.
This just in from the supposedly most secularised countries of islam:
While Australia debates the overhaul of our human rights laws and the extent to which speech should be regulated, in Turkey a famous pianist and composer, Fazıl Say, is facing charges of offending Muslims and insulting Islam for comments he made on Twitter.
As well as being an acclaimed musician, Fazıl Say is a self-declared atheist and opponent of Turkey's elected Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan, who is known for his conservative religious views.
Say sent tweets including an April Fools' joke about a call to prayer that lasted only 22 seconds, and quips about the Islamic prohibition on alcohol.
He faces charges of inciting hatred and public enmity which carry a possible jail sentence. The trial was adjourned last year and it's about to resume in Turkey.
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/drive/turkish-composer-charged-with...Cheers!
(can I say that when discussing Islam?)