When you are all citizens of the same nation your choice is either that - or leave? I'd prefer you two leave. This isn't the kind of place you can respect. We have - very different values.
Certainly (although the site is private) but you didn't answer the question. Let's say, for example, that a Muslim speaker on the courthouse steps is preaching about how the US should be a Muslim nation under Sharia law and people want to stop him. Do you stop them and defend his right to speak?
Islam has no standing in this country. There is nothing in the United States Constitution or the Bill of Rights that provides for or supports Islamic law much less sharia. You have every right to stick your turban up your ass and walk on your walk around on your elbows if you like and nobody is stopping you. You can wear there as long as you want but subversion is illegal. You are the one that insist on trying to swim up the river that you knew was already there so don't be surprised when the flood gates open and your asses are flooded out to sea.
Islam is a well-established faith here. And you would not defend freedom of speech, as expected.
Muslims, BTW, to don't wear turbans. Those are usually Sikhs.
And religious laws and courts? They have a long tradition here.
How many mosques were in the US in 1930?
"The first known American mosques were established in Biddeford, Maine, in 1915; in Ross, North Dakota, in 1920; in Highland Park, Michigan, in 1923; and in Michigan City, Indiana, in 1925. Declining immigration and rising assimilation eventually caused most of these mosques to close. In 1934, the building now known as “the Mother Mosque of America” was established by a Syrian-Lebanese community in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Fundraising for the mosque included community dinners and appeals to other Muslim communities scattered throughout the U.S., such as Chicago, Toledo, and Detroit. This simple structure, nestled in America’s heartland, is the oldest purpose-built mosque that is still in use today."
Early American Mosques | The Pluralism Project