For two years, my mother was married to an Egyptian man. She visited Egypt for a month - this is back in 1984 and of course, things were likely different then. Women being escorted was perceived as a safety issue against rape and violence. Most women were happy to be escorted. A woman's true power, as my mother experienced, was in the home, just as is true worldwide in marriages it seems. She puts on a show out in public and they both know it's but a show for "the guys" but she rules the marriage in the home. This is just a single example of a few families, in a short period of time, in Egypt. They were a very poor family; no roof but since it didnt rain, it didn't matter. The TV at the time was universally funny sitcoms. They were Egyptian comedies, slapstick. They couldn't believe that Mom was laughing at all the right parts but, that's because, it's slapstick; worldwide people understand it. The nagging wife, the long-suffering husband, the smart-mouth kids... same worldwide. The woman is usually the smart one at the end, or the children and the man is usually a little dumb, but he occasionally wins. They were and presumably are still, just regular people. I'm not saying that there aren't people who wave the flag of Islam and say, "WE REPRESENT ISLAM" and cause trouble. Those people need to be dealt with. My thing is this: They DON'T represent Islam, as much as they quote verse and chapter, as much as they say. 1.6 billion muslims and a small amount are troublemakers, and unemployed young people with nothing better to do, join in for brotherhood and acceptance and "something to do". There needs to be a political response but I don't there is anything that is fundamental about Islam the religion itself that is a problem, nor something about "the people" that is wrong. There are extremists that need to be dealt with but as a global community we must be very careful not to stigmatize an entire religion based on these things. 1.6 billion muslims. Even if there were 100,000 terrorists claiming to speak for Islam [I doubt the number is that high, but it *could* be of course) - still that's 0.0000625. Make it a million and it's still NOT statistically significant enough to justify stigmatizing an 1/6th of the entire PLANET's population of people. We have to deal with the troublemakers without ALSO denigrating an entire religion.