Thank you very much for that question. I can't tell you how important that is.
I'll just tell you right off that not being up front, open, and honest with Muslims actually creates more of this—I don't even like the term but—Islamophobia. Phobia is a fear of the unknown. If you don't articulate the problem and address it, you actually fuel a phobia because nobody is addressing it. Furthermore, not addressing it directly is the theocracy and the theocratic movement of the supremacy of Islamic states, not just ISIS or the Islamic State, but all Islamic states of the OIC.
ISIS didn't come out of thin air. It was created in Saudi Arabia. Wahhabi thinking led them to behead 60 people in the last three months. They enact this type of movement and sharia law in Saudi Arabia through Wahhabism.
Muslims have to be held accountable as adults. Otherwise, you're infantilising Muslims and treating us like children. Somehow you don't want to offend us so you enable us and keep us in denial. I find that to be almost a bigotry of low expectations. “Oh, Muslims must be led by the misogynist, by the oppressive theocratic movements because they can't understand modern thinking and we don't even want to offend them. If we do...”. So you see, it's a vicious cycle in the sense that as someone who loves Muslim communities, and I love my family, I love my faith, it's from tough love that I address these things, because I want us to come to terms with modernity. Christians who formed America and rejected the theocrats of the Church of England loved their faith. It is amazing to me that when I've testified on these issues before, people have asked me what my qualifications are, and have said that I don't have the right to talk about these things. I say there's nothing more American, more Canadian, than rejecting theocrats.
Ultimately, I think Muslims are being given a pass. We need to apply tough love and allow them to have a diverse set of opinions, rather than the one monolithic movement that speaks for our community right now, and which is dominated by Islamists who are fed by the Saudi money petro-machine, the Qatar Foundation, the Islamist apologist who want to keep us under their thumb and boots and prevent us from reforming.
The only things which could give us the opportunity to reform are platforms like yours and modern universities in the west that aren't beholden to the petrodollars and ultimately realize that the Islamists and the Muslim Brotherhood movement that Tom described are not the only voices. In fact, we need to marginalize them because there is a connection between political Islam and radical Islam, which is on the same continuum or conveyor belt. They don't want you to see that conveyor belt so they stop you in your tracks by accusing you of Islamophobia. I think it's bigotry not to give us the platform to debate these things.