Nightclubs are off limit for Muslims, this is a reason why Muslim extremists are targetting them, like in Bali in Indonesia.Misko_Varesanovic wrote:@Yohan
1. Re: Malaysia, the vast, vast majority of Malaysia is not gender segregated. Sure, you may be able to find some examples of gender segregation in provincial areas where the PAS party polls well, but that's not typical. Most urban areas in Malaysia are practically indistinguishable from those in other newly-industrialised countries: metro systems, places of worship, street markets, gaudy nightclubs frequented by the noveaux riche. Don't forget, in 2016 Malaysia hosted 26.8m tourists. Tourists are not going to be going anywhere near a country where gender segregation is at all prevalent.
Malaysia's tourism count is not 26.8 m, as this figure includes more than 13 million visitors from Singapore, who are merely walking or driving over the bridge for short stay, like visiting a park and swimming in a lake, filling up their cars with cheap petrol, doing some shopping, as Singapore is very much more expensive and has no natural greenery anymore, almost all of these visitors are back in Singapore same day. There are also plenty of other foreigners on the other side of Malaysia, entering from Thailand, getting their passport stamped, in and out again in less than one hour. Others passing by merely for transit - breakfast in Hadyai, lunch in K.L. and dinner in Singapore. Or using the ferry to Pulau Langkawi, passport stamped, one night and back to Thailand again... Malaysia has by far not enough accomodation to offer hotel rooms to almost 27 million visitors, totally impossible.
I don't think so, depends on the country, and within the country about which location and living standard, and of course it depends also on the wallet of the individual. - For example much better to be a Muslim in Singapore than to be a Christian in Brunei, better to enjoy your holidays in Pattaya-South as a Muslim than being a Christian in Western Sumatra in Aceh...2. Re: religious freedom in Malaysia for minorities, the situation there is far from perfect, but that's ASEAN - not Islam. The irony is that for all the flaws in the Malaysian and Indonesian systems - and there are many - it is generally far, far better to be a Buddhist (or a Christian) in a Muslim-majority ASEAN country than a Muslim in a Buddhist-majority ASEAN country. The situation of the Muslim minorities in countries such as Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam is internationally recognised as characterised by gross human rights violations.
It remains the fact that only Islam nowadays has laws about blasphemy and apostasy threatening every Muslim who is willing to leave his faith with death, and threatening anybody of other faith who is critical about Islam with death either.3. Your post contained a particularly interesting sentence: 'You never hear about something like that from any other country which is not Muslim......
About Islam as a political system - Islamic Republic - it is indeed more like a political system and not really so much a religion, I do not know anything about any other faith which creates nowadays 'Christian Republics' or 'Buddhist Kingdoms'.