@nutbunny
One of the things in recent years that amused me to no end was when I got to know a gal from Saudi Arabia online.
She was fairly religious in her outlook. It cracked me up to no end, however, that her hobbies were playing PS3, eating pizza (halal, of course), watching Japanese and Korean soap operas, and going to the mall. Apart from the fact that she covered herself when she went out (something she defends full-heartedly tooth and nail despite my efforts to dissuade her), she struck me as a liberated, normal 20-something year old female. Nothing immoderate about her... and this is in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, one of the stricter countries.
I think it is normal for people to wish that the rest of the world would see things the way they do. If you believe something is right and a healthy way of seeing the world, it would be rather silly not to want others to see things that way too. I have met quite a few atheists who believe the world should be atheist. A proper understanding of the Eightfold Path being central to properly working out the Four Noble Truths, I'm sure a Buddhist wishes that others were Buddhists as well. And so on and so forth.
The important difference is that moderates are willing to adapt and, more importantly, are willing to tolerate and even embrace differences while they exist. Moderates do not accept the forcing of their beliefs on others under any circumstances.
I guess, when I think about it more and more, what pisses me off about the OP's comment is that he is blaming Muslims for being just like everyone else. It's amazing how "inhuman" we can make even our own qualities look when we point them out in others.