That rather depends on how the top is organised, how the people on top got there, and what pressures they face in remaining there. It's all very well for people to claim that an emperor wears no clothes, but it can be very dangerous to assume that power vanishes in the face of laughter alone.
I second the contingency of it all as shown by Maulana toor above. I voted for apostasy, if I'm fully honest, for temperamental reasons. The technicolour or primary colours approach is too optimistic for me to to be true.
In
Heretic, Ayaan Hirsi Ali has engaged in an exercise of self-branding in order for her otherwise valid arguments to be even considered by her intended audience (Muslim people).
How desperate can you get in trying to be heard in your reformative endeavours? And is there not a converse case here with Muhammad getting disheartened about not getting the ear of the great and influential of his day?
إن الذين حقت عليهم كلمة ربك لا يؤمنون ولو جاءتهم كل آية حتى يروا العذاب الآليم -- سورة يونس
This make-believe labeling on her part gets undermined by her repeated appearances on Fox News, amongst other platforms, denouncing Islam in the strongest possible ways she can muster. In Katie Hopkins' words on a similar theme when she was made a columnist on the Daily Mail; "they know what they're getting when they hired me [alright]!"
Ayann is otherwise a heroine of mine but I find her dishonest branding stunt (that she's still a Muslim albeit a heretical one for the purpose of debating Muslims and getting a look in from them) to be a marketing gimmick which is really beneath her.