I agree with you about the ludicrous view of an external culture being imposed on your own, but I'm not at all sure that if islam had been forced on our culture, western capitalist culture would look all that different from the way it looks now. Reading the history of western christianity reveals a state theocracy which is every bit as authoritarian and brutal as the islamic theocratic rulers of Iran and Saudi, so I don't think it would have made a lot of difference. If I were to stick my neck out, I'd say that capitalism would have moulded islam into the vested interest-serving force that christianity became. And probably that would have happened in a relatively short time. I believe that the resistance to theocratic or theocracy-influenced dictatorship in Egypt, Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen and Tunisia are all to do with the rapid development of capitalism within those economies on the last 30 years.charlou wrote: I like Feck's description of christianity as a veneer over the preexisting culture ... made me think of how the aboriginal people of any land must feel about the arrogance of empire building invaders declaring the culture to be christian and imposing that on the original people. How ludicrous the veneer must look when viewed from the underside where the original culture still exists. Imagine, for example, that muslims forced their culture onto us in the same way christianity has been forced onto other cultures, and we have to live under islamic theocracy ... how many generations before we are completely absorbed by the new culture?
Uggg ... that wasn't a pleasant example, just the easiest one to try to convey the point.
So no I don't think islam invading the west would have made much difference to us overall. We'd still have had all the same resistance movements that arise under capitalism: labour rights, trade unions, human rights, women's equality, gay rights. Islam would have had to adapt just as the culture of the inquisitors had to adapt; indeed muslims in the west usually absorb all those values within a generation or two, and even in the middle east those values have made a lot of headway with the development of capitalism and the development of labour that goes with it.