I heard the interview and admire his readiness to encourage navel gazing within the Muslim flock. Also his metaphor that the House of Islam is on fire echoes the view I support to the effect that out of what is currently going on will come a sort of Reformation of Islam. It will not be of revulsion of the sale of plots in Heaven and general material/gold greed (as in the case of the Catholic Church) but sound rejection of a tendency toward violent expression of a form of religious elitism/prejudice (holier than thou, certainly holier than infidel scum - plots in Paradise). The current problem is that the overwhelming majority of "average" Muslims operate on the widely felt sense that you do not "contradict a man of God" (much like we know the taboo versus "your elders"), i.e. the extremists lay claim to being "correct" and who are the rest to suggest they reign in their fervour. If you have ever lived among Muslims you very soon sense this - it is everywhere in public, but in private it is a different matter. The hotheads intimidate the public, and on occasion radicalise individuals. This fetter will dissolve but only when there are more people like Ed Husein speaking their mind and the flavour of public Muslim discourse changes.