He understands it better than you. Freedom is not going to be the end result of this. The US exported inflation which is allowing subversive groups to prey on the Egyptian civilians for their own selfish purposes. That's what's happening, not fear mongering. Where is the real story to be found? Should I listen to the people on the streets, who are being used? The Middle East is overrun with official news organs, not really any use reading them. If Al-Jeezera English, or the Guardian, is best we've got, we're not getting the scoop.
Let's see Muburak step down right now, so we can see the "people's" choice for next in line.
OK, I'm gonna try to understand this view.
I remember the days of martial law under Marcos in the Philippines. I remember how Benigno Aquino, the son of one of my friends, was gunned down on the tarmac at MIA. I saw from afar the filipino people taking to the streets to end martial law, and how the Philippine army caved and refused to fire into their friends and neighbors, and Corazon Aquino became an elected President.
Still, the interests went on prospering, and corruption didn't end.
Last June the filipino people elected the son of Corazon and Benigno Aquino as their president.
Democracy isn't perfect, some nations have no experience with it. Neither did we at one time. In the end, people just don't get better government unless they take responsibility for their government and assert their voice in a way that just can't be deflected.
I can understand there is danger things can go wrong in a mob. I don't know anything about Egypt from personal experience. I don't think agenda groups are the best folks to work the crowds.
I just hope the people in the streets can start enforcing some focus on their protest that is to the point of getting redress of their grievances. Say Mubarak announces that he will let the people set up their own candidates for election in two months, and invites the demonstrators to send some representatives, say twenty or so, to come to his office and air their differences. . . .
If Mubarak is our friend in principle why can't he deflect the issue from his dictatorship to helping set up a constitution and free elections like Iraq? He saw what happened there. . .
There might be an answer to that question which we have not discussed in this thread yet.
A lot of people don't understand that the Muslim fundamentalist/extremists government in Iran is not a Persian government at all. The Iranian revolution was not a home-directed popular revolt in one aspect---it was manipulated by foreign, specifically Lebanese extremist, and those are the folks in power today in Iran.
If related elements are indeed working the crowds in Egypt, and if they gain control, the next time the people mass in the streets the soldiers and tanks will open fire, and riot police will fill the concentration camps with dissidents.
The news just came on, Mubarak has announced he will not seek election again. This may be just the thing that can make for positive developments.