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Is Islam best understood as a religion—or does it function as a system of control? 00:00 Introduction 01:12 Rules of Analysis 02:40 Comparing World Religions 04:55 Islam as the Structural Outlier 07:10 Qur’an vs Hadith 09:05 Why the Cult Question Persists 11:30 Final Question — Season One Conclusion In this Season One finale, I bring together manuscript evidence, archaeology, linguistics, and comparative religion to examine how Islam functions in relation to Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, and other major belief systems. This is not theology. It is not apologetics. And it is not an attack on individuals. Using only historical and comparative evidence, this presentation examines entry, exit, authority, law, and identity across world religions—and asks why Islam is structurally different. Across Season One, I have demonstrated: – Early Qur’anic manuscripts written in Hijazi script – Arabic as an evolving, non-standardised language in the 7th century – The absence of an internal Qur’anic narrative of compilation – The late development of the Hadith authority – The distinction between Qur’anic theology and later legal enforcement This final episode asks the unavoidable question that follows from the evidence. I am not asking you to agree with me. I am asking you to compare honestly. This channel examines religions and belief systems through archaeology, manuscripts, linguistics, and critical comparison—never theology or faith claims. Subscribe and become a member to support future seasons exploring Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and other world religions through evidence-based critical analysis.