It's easy, when raised in Western society, with Western values, to assume that we have it right and 'they' have it wrong. There are many aspects of more fundamentalist aspects of Islamic society that I don't agree with, the attitude towards Women, certain attitudes towards non-Muslims etc, but then, for example, our attitude towards Women is far from perfect either, we just don't see it because we are living inside it and it seems 'normal' to us, and our attitude towards Muslims can frequently be based on stereotypes as well.
Actually we do see it, because our values do include self-criticism and reflection upon liberal values and egalitarianism. We are
obsessed with giving every possible viewpoint its place on our society. This value system is reflected on your worry, for example. To say that our society doesn't have concerns about these issues is just mind-boggling, have you really checked the past 100 years of our society's history?
You believe Western culture is tolerant and respectful, and that theirs is intolerant and violent
I did not say this. I believe western culture is
striving to be tolerant and respectful and made a great walk.
..., I find myself wondering what someone living in Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia would think of our culture?
This is a good question, ask what a society as the Saudi one, where women aren't even allowed to drive a car, may think of ours. Honestly, I am merely interested in knowing them in detail because of anthropological curiosity, and not for any clues on how to improve ours. And if you really think you can "learn" from them, please then do so. What exactly moral epiphany do these people have that have not penetrated our culture?
And, more interestingly, what their attitudes would be if they were living in Europe and we were the ones living in the Middle East? And what happens when you compare it to people living in Bahrain or Albania? Possibly there's more involved than 'Islam'?
There's a lot involved, but you are the one bringing it up. I did not speak about the religion per se, nor its implications, etc. I was only referring to these moral values that are prima facie ridiculous, that we
know them to be ridiculous because we ourselves
have grown past them ages ago, just like we abolished slavery or peadophilia.
As for me acting as though I am 'morally superior', I think you confuse superior with neutral, it's tempting to jump to conclusions, and yes, I do have opinions regarding certain practices, both in the East and the West, but the true arrogance would be assuming that everyone is 'me' inside a different head, that just isn't the case.
You do not act as if you are morally superior at all, in fact you think you can act as if you can be outside any moral landscape. What you fail to notice is that this activity of yours is an unwelcomed and unfortunate side-effect of a very deep value of western societies, namely
tolerance, and so while you think you are being neutral, in fact what you are doing is trying to do "tolerance" all the way down, even reaching the level where its own contradictions implode the notion itself.