God set up rules, we break that rules we deserve punishment.
Are you telling me that you see disbelief in the God of Abraham (even after learning of the Quran, of the Gospels and of the Torah) is in some sense breaking the rules set up by God?
And that it is so to the point that we must be punished in hell as a direct result of the disbelief or theological disagreement?
It seems to me that either I would know of that or else this God as you are claiming Him to be would be... well, he would not be very admirable even by purely human standards.
And I think we can all agree that such a non-admirable being
can not possibly be the God of Abraham as Judaism teaches Him to be.
Nor would Christianity or Islam fairly propose that God is so petty, I would like to think.
Same like , i tell my son: o son, it u do good i will take u disneyworld. U do evil then house arrest. Is that evil of me? Or the son is evil for disobeying?
I am not sure people can really be evil as such.
But leaving that aside for a moment, it seems to me that you are making the comparison with the assumption that non-monotheists
must be either ill-educated about the God of Abraham or else simply wicked and immoral.
As it happens, I am just in the right position to tell you that you are wrong in doing such an assumption. For whatever reason, people do in fact can and often do become moral beings even while finding out or even deciding actively that they have no ability or perhaps no interest to hold belief in Abraham's God.
I suppose that can be troubling to many Muslims (and Christians) and I would welcome an effort to reach a better understanding with you about the matter. But that can only happen if you understand and accept that I can't be bullied into belief in Abraham's God.
If you can accept that, I am then eager to initiate what can only be a
very worthwhile exchange with you about how come an informed disbeliever can still be somewhat moral and have no reason to fear Hell.
Hell and Paradise is like yingyang, there is balance in everything: death& life, hate & love, hell¶dise, man & woman, good & evil, God & satan.
I find hell to be justice, because why should the disobedient disbeliever and obedient believer be in the same place?
Disbelief is not disobedience, so I am not sure those people you are describing even exist in any way, shape or form.
Atheism is not rebellion against God. If anything, God must feel the need for disbelievers, since he made it so easy and natural to be one of them.
Beyond that... well, it stands to reason that the God of Love would have some ability to inspire moral healing even in those who do not believe in or understand Him, albeit often indirectly by way of the good work of the people He inspires more directly, don't you think?