LeveragedBuyout
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That is not true.
Muslim calls for Shariah court typically rely on precedents set by other groups, including Canon law or Jewish law court.
As for Muslim populations in Europe, I already alluded to the complexity of the problem. As you noted, the Muslims in the US are not radicalized.
The fact is that most immigrants to any country like to keep a low profile and focus on economic development. The US has a welcoming culture, for the most part. Europe, by contrast, has a history of racial genocide and a very closed culture. Heck, even Eastern Europeans face discrimination and stereotypes in some Western European countries.
There is a lot of resentment against immigrants in many European countries -- getting worse with worsening economic conditions. Due to political correctness, that resentment gets bottled up except for one case: the media has made it politically acceptable to be bigoted against Muslims. So all the bottled up anger against immigrants in general, and government incompetence, gets channeled to the appointed scapegoat: Muslims.
This has a corresponding effect in the Muslim community, where radicals and hardliners find favor as defenders of the community. This has parallels in other communities around the world: when ethnic communities get ghettoized, gangsters and criminals rule the roost as territorial defenders from rival ethnic groups.
This cycle of intolerance and bigotry on both sides escalates which is what's happening in some parts of Europe. So, yes, there is a 'Muslim problem' in some European countries, but the fault lies on both sides.
I wish this topic had been introduced more broadly as the problem of multiculturalism, because the focus on Muslims is a distraction. There is also a growing xenophobia in Singapore, for example, and it has nothing to do with unemployment rates. Nevertheless, I think the European problem is intractable, and will not be solved until either the Muslims become essentially atheist, like their non-Muslim compatriots, or at least bring religion back into the private sphere and out of the public eye (i.e. assimilate). This kind of solution isn't available in, for example, Egypt, where the Muslim majority persecutes the Copt minority, or Sudan, where the Muslim majority persecutes the Christian minority.