Some Muslim countries are, some aren't. It really depends on the ideology of the state. The Islamist government's of the Middle East are generally anti-Christian and they stir up hatred which causes civil unrest, the secular government's tend to depend on their Christian minorities for political support so they're nicer to them.
Egypt had a Muslim Brotherhood government which was very bad to Christians and incited violence against them, then there was coup d'état that brought in their current President General Sisi who is much better for Christians although there are still some safety issues and things like having to jump through a lot of humiliating hoops to even get a permit repair a church which means that Christian communities suffer from decay in Egypt. In the Middle East, democracy is generally not good for minorities like Christians because the general population have Islamist tendencies which is why Christians out of self preservation tend to prefer secular authoritarians to democratic Islamism. That's why Syrian Christians are very strongly supportive of Bashar al Assad and Egyptian Christians of General Sisi. In Iraq, Christians were much better off with Saddam in power (and in fact some of the most powerful officials in his government were at least nominally Christian) and they have dropped from 2m persons to less than 300k since he was toppled.
It's far from an ideal life, and I don't know the point that you're trying to make.