 It's been about a year since I stopped making videos addressing the concerns raised by the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman. The reason is pretty straightforward, mate. He often strays from the religious identity he is supposed to represent, you know. There are loads of reports online detailing statements in actions he is ticking that directly undermine Islam. Shall we talk about the many Imams who have been locked up just for accent him to follow God's way instead of man's? Sheikh Salih al-Talib, who was the previous Imam at the Masjid of Mecca, was arrested and sentenced to 10 years. What did he say that caused him to be arrested? Here is a clip of the sermon. It's been about a year since I stopped making videos addressing the concerns raised by the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia. It's been about a year since I stopped making videos addressing the concerns raised by the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia. Or his habit of bringing western entertainers who end up spouting anti-guards taf that really gets the ummah right up. Actually, there was this recent western entertainer he brought in, and things went south when she ditched her singing gig to preach some neoliberal sermon that got her kicked off the stage. How embarrassing! He's let me down several times, especially considering he's the leader of a country known as the Bethblaze of Islam. What even more disappointing is his obsession with westernizing Saudi Arabia. He seemed to have made some pretty significant concessions that could ultimately undermine the moral authority of the Saudi crown. This transformation seems to be in full swing with new infrastructure, a more modern value system, an economic model and a pseudo-liberal societal leanings that's pretty Europe in style. All thanks to his desire to open up Saudi Arabia and the Middle East to western values, which for him seemed like a better alternative to the more conservative sometimes strict Islamic model. During the G20 meeting in India, the crown prince came up with something that on the surface sounds interesting, that could require significant religious modifications in line with his newfound appetite for western values. He met the following statement, watch. The next five years will be completely different. The Bahrain will be completely different. The Kuwaiti, even Qatar, will be completely different after five years. The Emirates, Oman, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Iraq and Firsia will have them. If we succeed in the next five years, we will have three more countries and will have the next moment in the world in the next 30 years, in the Middle East, God willing. It will be fascinating to see the Middle East take on a new look. This region with its civilization as ancient as a western one should be advanced in technology and all that great things may. It should be as developed as Europe. Most of the ground breaking ideas in Europe today were initially pioneered by Muslim scientists and researchers. We're talking about stuff like flying humans thousands of kilometers, chemistry, physics, algorithm and plenty of other things that shaped the modern world. All Muslims' inventions. So the idea of regaining that position and pushing further into human advancement is something I would love to see happen just like what the UAE and Qatar are doing today. But what I can get behind is a notion of trying to face out the conservative aspect of our Islamic faith in Saudi Arabia, in favour of Western style development. He wasn't exactly clear when he said it will be like Europe, that he meant it will be European in terms of revolutionary ideas in science, technology and innovation. Or did he mean in the sense of Europe turning away from God and his teachings like inviting secular musicians who would corrupt the sanctity of the Middle East or opening the doors to the LGBT agenda or turning this once religious region into a place where everything including anti-God ideas is promoted. I would like to believe the crown prince means the former. That's a process where science and technology and innovation become integral to society, deeply rooted in religion and faith. A combination of innovation and belief in God drives us towards greater progress. Progress that breaches the gap between civilization and God himself. If that's what he means, then I'm all for it. But if this combo doesn't see the light of day, he better think twice about keeping the Middle East and the Muslim ummah united in faith, in Allah. So what's your opinion on the crown prince new mission folks? Don't forget to hit that like share and subscribe button. If you've not done so already, that would help us. Until next time, Asalaamu Alaikum.