Recent quotes:

Is Free Speech Good for Muslims? - The New York Times

Most Muslims watching this debate would probably sympathize with Mr. Rose, thinking he was defending them. Mr. Rose, however, was merely defending a liberal principle: freedom for all. It was the very principle that led him to publish the cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad — cartoons seen by many Muslims, including me, as offensive. This is just one of many manifestations of a paradox Muslims, especially those of us living in the West, face in the modern world: They are threatened by Islamophobic forces against which they need the protections offered by liberalism — freedom of speech, freedom of religion, nondiscrimination. But the same liberalism also brings them realities that most of them find un-Islamic — irreverence toward religion, tolerance of L.G.B.T. people, permissive attitudes on sex. They can’t easily decide, therefore, whether liberalism is good or bad for Muslims. Continue reading the main story Mustafa Akyol Religion and politics in Turkey. What Jesus Can Teach Today’s Muslims FEB 13 Why It’s Not Wrong to Wish Muslims Merry Christmas DEC 23 Turkey’s Populists See an Unlikely Ally NOV 16 The Plot Against America or the Plot by America? OCT 28 The Problem With the Islamic Apocalypse OCT 3 See More » The same paradox can also be seen in the debates over female dress. When illiberal secularists in the West interfere regarding the outfits of conservative Muslim women — with bans on the burqa, the “burkini” or even just the head scarf — the defense is found within liberalism: Women have the right to “dress as they please.” This, of course, is a perfectly legitimate argument in a free society.