One thing you seem to forget is that the belief that the Bible is the unerring, divinely-inspired truth isn't exactly uncommon in Christian/Jewish thinking. People cherry-pick from it anyway.
I made the point that less than 0.01% of Christians and Jews think that apostates and heretics should be killed, I used this as a point to illustrate the differing traditions of scriptural interpretation inspired by the Bible's status as an eyewitness account and the Koran's status as the literal, direct word of God transcribed word for word to an illiterate Arabian warlord. You chose to ignore my point, presumably because it suited your prejudices, if you're going to continue being intellectually dishonest I see no reason to continue discussing this matter any further.
I'm not sure what you mean; it seems like you're arguing over petty distinctions here.
I said that Christians and Jews, by and large, do in fact traditionally believe that their holy book is ALSO unerring and unfaltering.
Seriously, if you want to talk about orthodoxy, and what a religion traditionally believes and accepts now as the orthodox truth,
Christians and Jews believe that the Bible is infallible. You will find some who disagree with this, just like you'll find plenty of Muslims who don't think apostates should be beheaded or whatever, but the infallibility of the Bible is a fundamental, orthodox truth of Judaism and Christianity; you can't just go saying "well maybe Moses was, you know, wrong". Well, you could, but you'd be very very unorthodox in doing so.
I made the point that less than 0.01% of Christians and Jews think that apostates and heretics should be killed
I know people who have known Muslims and studied Muslims beliefs, and it does not seem that your average moderate Muslim living in Western society believes such a thing. It also seems to me that the "apostates must die" was more of a political than a religious thing anyway, more akin to treason against a government.
You act like there's some sort of intrinsic difference between Islam and other Abrahamic religion such that Islam simply cannot be or become tolerant and peaceful. This is asinine. If you were to look back in history, you'd see Christians doing the same thing, wiping out heretics because they too think that their bible and the words of their leaders (especially the popes) are the unerring word of an unwavering God. There's nothing magical about Christianity that prevented it from moving away from this, and there's nothing magical about Islam in the same regard.
So really, saying that Muslims can't not execute apostates is like saying that Jews can't not sell their kids into slavery or stone people to death for any number of things. They both may be written into holy books that are deemed infallible holy law, but that doesn't mean they actually get followed in practice.
The ONLY question then, is how many Muslims NOW believe that execution of apostates is a good idea. You said that most mullahs believe it is. Can you back that up at all?
Here is an article discussing the subject from another point of view. It seems to agree with me that execution for apostasy has a more political than religious basis in Islam, stemming from when Islam was an emergent political entity, and that those executed by, say, Muhammad, were executed not simply for converting to another religion or anything silly like that, but for doing things actually harmful to that political entity. Governments
today still execute for treason.