"The one who changes his religion, what are we going to do? We kill him, kill ... "
This is, of course, in direct contradiction to what the Qur'an categorically states, and what we have already discussed about apostasy: that there should be "no compulsion in religion" (2:256).
She goes on: "The judgement about adultery: what is the law? Stone them".
Nowhere in the Qur'an we find anything remotely related to stoning.
"If someone makes themselves like a man, a woman like a man, the punishment is kill, kill them. Throw them from the highest place ... homosexuals".
Once again, this could not be more further from what the Qur'an teaches.
"We have to look for hudd", the Saudi-educated scholar tells her student, "the hudd is to kill them".
As we have already seen, hudd, meaning outer limits or boundary, has nothing to do with punishment and everything to do with establishing the moral tone of the Muslim community. Yet, it is being propagated here as the norm. There seems to be only one rule: kill everybody who disagrees with you, or is seen by you as deviant, or breaks your rules. It is the total antithesis of the spirit of the Qur'an.