Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Jul 01, 2013 5:22 pm

From Egyptian Chronicles, http://egyptianchronicles.blogspot.com/ ... .html#more

#June30 : What I saw
The protests of June 30 were the biggest thing I have seen. It is biggest than the 25 January 2011 and 28 January 2011. It is biggest than any other wave I have seen in Egypt. I saw a cross section from Egyptian society in that big rally or rallies coming from Giza , from Mostafa Mahmoud and trying to cross Al Galaa Bridge to join the rest of the protesters at Tahrir square. Of course they could not join them because the square was full in some historical scene.

Unlike other protests and revolutionary waves , it is no longer a youth movement. It is more varied. I am trying to understand that scene in front of me. Anyhow I could those snap shots below. By the way I am still uploading more photos to the album


Monday, July 1, 2013
Day One After the #June30 Apocalypse : Back to Old Sleepless Days in #Egypt 'Updated'
Things are developing so quickly today in Egypt after the huge protests we saw yesterday. First of I will start from yesterday.
Tamaroud campaign’s 30 June Front issued its first statement last night with the title “Revolution’s First Statement” and it announced that Mohamed Morsi is not longer the President of Egypt on behalf the 22 million citizens who signed Tamaroud petitions to withdraw confidence from him.
The statement gives an ultimate to Morsi to leave by 5 PM on 2 July Tuesday otherwise the revolutionary group will call the general assembly of the Egyptian people “This is the exact wording they used” to mobilize at Egypt’s public square and to start a civil disobedience. It also call the army and police to stand by the side of the public and on the other hand to the people to continue their sits in all over the country.
Tamaroud has not represented the petitions so far to the Supreme constitutional court.
The ministry of health of health announced the latest numbers today : The death toll increased to 1 all over the country and 781 injured all over the country. The clashes in Cairo, Assuit, Fayoum , Bani Sawif and Kafr El Sheik.
One was killed in Kafr El Sheikh ,Alexandria , Fayoum and Bani Sawif while 3 were killed in Assuit and 9 in Cairo including 8 at the MB HQ in MoktamHQ.
There are no MB members killed in yesterday events at Mb HQ. The MB HQ was set on fire and stormed by the people. I think I will have another separate post about it.
There are news that 4 non MB ministers have decided to resign from the cabinet.
Today the Presidency will hold a press conference at 5 PM and the Muslim brotherhood will hold another Press conference.
Still millions of Egyptians will wait another statement , the statement of the Egyptian armed forces.
In those times , I think the best thing to do is to have a storify story as it will be a very long night.
Tamaroud will also hold another presser tonight.

@5:15 PM
The Armed forces have issued a statement aired on Egyptian National TV and other channels. The statement was also published on its Facebook page.

The armed forces have issued a statement from short time ago. It is very strong statement and it says one thing :
The armed forces are giving 48 hours to all political powers to reach for a reconciliation to end the current crisis otherwise it will announce a political roadmap for Egypt
In other words either we will have an early presidential elections or we will have a very soft military coup on popular demand.
You must know the people in Tahrir square and the Presidential Palace are extremely happy with that announcement. Some political forces , from the civilian forces like Tamaroud are welcoming that statement.
On the other hand the the Islamists specifically from the Muslim brotherhood are extremely worried and some of them of angry as they considered it as a coup.
It is actually a soft coup still no one has made us reach to this soft coup except the Muslim brotherhood
@6:26 PM
The Egyptian army is not responsible for the Egyptian TV and Cairo international airport. It is also worth to mention that the army has took control of number of governorates HQs in Delta.
There are army helicopters hovering Cairo's carrying balloons and flags.

Rebel Economy

Cairo Scene
@10:27 PM
Ok the Presidency announced that it has adjourned its presser tomorrow adding that Morsi is discussing with his advisers the latest developments. In other words Morsi and presidency do not know what to say after the army's statement.
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Alice on songs, poetry, and the Egyptian revolution

Postby Allegro » Tue Jul 02, 2013 3:17 am

AlicetheKurious » Wed May 04, 2011 3:49 am wrote:Songs and poetry have been incredibly important to the Egyptian revolution. Some were incorporated into chants, some were played constantly in Tahrir and the other public squares where protesters gathered. Even before Mubarak was removed from power, some were made into ring-tones and posted on Youtube. After February 11, the television and radio airwaves were filled with them. They replaced commercials between programs.

These are the songs that raised people's morale and helped them to keep going even against daunting odds. Today, they serve as a constant reminder of those heady/scary days and of the need to continue what was started. I hope the spirit of the songs shines through the foreign words.

Here is a sampling of my favorites, in no particular order:


"Helwa ya Baladi" ("Beautiful, My Country"), famously sung about Egypt in the early 1970s by the Algerian singer Warda.


"Ya Habibti ya Masr" ("My Beloved Egypt"), written during the late 1970s to celebrate the return of Sinai -- ignore the touristy video, it's a great song.


"Ezzay?" ("How?"), an angry, outraged song bravely written by Mohamed Mounir and performed at the height of the revolution, after the bloody events of January 28th, and circulated on Youtube. After the Mubarak regime fell, it became a staple on television and has been widely adopted as a ring-tone on Egyptian cellphones.


"Bahebek ya Belady" ("I Love You, My Country"), a song originally written during the 1970s, here it was beautifully sung as a lament, and uploaded to Youtube and Facebook during the revolution as a background to photos of Egyptian martyrs. Even though I must have heard it literally hundreds of times, it still has the power to make me cry.

The lyrics:

Oh, my country, oh, my country
I love you, my country.

Tell my mother, "Don't be sad,
for the sake of my soul, don't cry."
Tell her, "It's alright, my mother, if I die,
I die but our country lives."
I want you to kiss her hands
and give my greetings to my country.

Oh, my country, oh, my country
I love you, my country.

In my body are fire and lead and iron,
in my hand is your flag,
and my name is Martyr.
I bid farewell to the world.
Oh, Egypt, so beautiful
and dressed in new clothes.

With my last breath I cry,
"As I die I am filled with love for my country."

Oh, my country, oh, my country
I love you, my country.

Angels are flying all around me,
the moment to leave you is here.
I will go with them,
promising to see you again.

They say to me,
"Let's go to Paradise," and I answer
"Paradise is my country."

Oh, my country, oh, my country
I love you, my country.

Oh, my country, oh, my country
I love you, my country.



"Soat al Horreya" ("The Voice of Freedom"), written and performed by the popular Egyptian group Wust al-Balad (Downtown) just after the fall of Mubarak.

A final note: One of the most important slogans of the Egyptian revolution, quoted constantly throughout, consists of the closing words of the Tunisian national anthem, which were written by the famous Tunisian poet Aboul-Qacem Echebbi:
If, one day, the people will to live,
then Destiny must respond.
the dark night must end
and chains must break.
In Arabic it sounds hypnotic; to me it resonates as a spell. Even prosaic speech is nearly impossible to translate accurately from Arabic to English; how then can the music of poetry be conveyed?

No thread on the Egyptian revolution would be complete without it.
Art will be the last bastion when all else fades away.
~ Timothy White (b 1952), American rock music journalist
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Jul 02, 2013 11:03 pm

Egypt, Brazil, Turkey: without politics, protest is at the mercy of the elites

From Egypt to Brazil, street action is driving change, but organisation is essential if it's not to be hijacked or disarmed


Seumas Milne
The Guardian, Tuesday 2 July 2013 17.30 EDT

A barricade on the Rue Royale in Paris during the 1848 revolution. 'The European revolutions of 1848, which were led by middle class reformers and offered the promise of a democratic spring, had as good as collapsed within a year.' Photograph: Roger-Viollet / Rex Features

Two years after the Arab uprisings fuelled a wave of protests and occupations across the world, mass demonstrations have returned to their crucible in Egypt. Just as millions braved brutal repression in 2011 to topple the western-backed dictator Hosni Mubarak, millions have now taken to the streets of Egyptian cities to demand the ousting of the country's first freely elected president, Mohamed Morsi.

As in 2011, the opposition is a middle-class-dominated alliance of left and right. But this time the Islamists are on the other side while supporters of the Mubarak regime are in the thick of it. The police, who beat and killed protesters two years ago, this week stood aside as demonstrators torched Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood offices. And the army, which backed the dictatorship until the last moment before forming a junta in 2011, has now thrown its weight behind the opposition.

Whether its ultimatum to the president turns into a full-blown coup or a managed change of government, the army – lavishly funded and trained by the US government and in control of extensive commercial interests – is back in the saddle. And many self-proclaimed revolutionaries who previously denounced Morsi for kowtowing to the military are now cheering it on. On past experience, they'll come to regret it.

The protesters have no shortage of grievances against Morsi's year-old government, of course: from the dire state of the economy, constitutional Islamisation and institutional power grabs to its failure to break with Mubarak's neoliberal policies and appeasement of US and Israeli power.

But the reality is, however incompetent Morsi's administration, many key levers of power – from the judiciary and police to the military and media – are effectively still in the hands of the old regime elites. They openly regard the Muslim Brotherhood as illegitimate interlopers, whose leaders should be returned to prison as soon as possible.

Yet these are the people now in alliance with opposition forces who genuinely want to see Egypt's revolution brought at least to a democratic conclusion. If Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood are forced from office, it's hard to see such people breaking with neoliberal orthodoxy or asserting national independence, as most Egyptians want. Instead, the likelihood is that the Islamists, also with mass support, will resist being denied their democratic mandate, plunging Egypt into deeper conflict.

Egypt's latest eruption has immediately followed mass protests in Turkey and Brazil (as well as smaller upheavals in Bulgaria and Indonesia). None has mirrored the all-out struggle for power in Egypt, even if some demonstrators in Turkey called for the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, to go. But there are significant echoes that highlight both the power and weakness of such flash demonstrations of popular anger.

In the case of Turkey, what began as a protest against the redevelopment of Istanbul's Gezi Park mushroomed into mass demonstrations against Erdoğan, 's increasingly assertive Islamist administration, bringing together Turkish and Kurdish nationalists, liberals and leftists, socialists and free-marketeers. The breadth was a strength, but the disparate nature of the protesters' demands is likely to weaken its political impact.

In Brazil, mass demonstrations against bus and train fare increases turned into wider protests about poor public services and the exorbitant cost of next year's World Cup. As in Turkey and Egypt, middle-class and politically footloose youth were at the forefront, and political parties were discouraged from taking part, while rightwing groups and media tried to steer the agenda from inequality to tax cuts and corruption.

Brazil's centre-left government has lifted millions out of poverty, and the protests have been driven by rising expectations. But unlike elsewhere in Latin America, the Lula government never broke with neoliberal orthodoxy or attacked the interests of the rich elite. His successor, Dilma Rousseff – who responded to the protests by pledging huge investments in transport, health and education and a referendum on political reform – now has the chance to change that.

Despite their differences, all three movements have striking common features. They combine widely divergent political groups and contradictory demands, along with the depoliticised, and lack a coherent organisational base. That can be an advantage for single-issue campaigns, but can lead to short-lived shallowness if the aims are more ambitious – which has arguably been the fate of the Occupy movement.

All of them have, of course, been heavily influenced and shaped by social media and the spontaneous networks they foster. But there are plenty of historical precedents for such people power protests – and important lessons about why they are often derailed or lead to very different outcomes from those their protagonists hoped for.

The most obvious are the European revolutions of 1848, which were also led by middle-class reformers and offered the promise of a democratic spring, but had as good as collapsed within a year. The tumultuous Paris upheaval of May 1968 was followed by the electoral victory of the French right. Those who marched for democratic socialism in east Berlin in 1989 ended up with mass privatisation and unemployment. The western-sponsored colour revolutions of the last decade used protesters as a stage army for the transfer of power to favoured oligarchs and elites. The indignados movement against austerity in Spain was powerless to prevent the return of the right and a plunge into even deeper austerity.

In the era of neoliberalism, when the ruling elite has hollowed out democracy and ensured that whoever you vote for you get the same, politically inchoate protest movements are bound to flourish. They have crucial strengths: they can change moods, ditch policies and topple governments. But without socially rooted organisation and clear political agendas, they can flare and fizzle, or be vulnerable to hijacking or diversion by more entrenched and powerful forces.

That also goes for revolutions – and is what appears to be happening in Egypt. Many activists regard traditional political parties and movements as redundant in the internet age. But that's an argument for new forms of political and social organisation. Without it, the elites will keep control – however spectacular the protests.

• Twitter: @SeumasMilne

• The paperback edition of Seumas Milne's book The Revenge of History is available from the Guardian Bookshop
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Jul 02, 2013 11:11 pm


http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/07/0 ... QI20130702

Exclusive: Egypt army plan would scrap constitution, parliament - sources

Tue, Jul 2 2013
By Yasmine Saleh and Asma Alsharif
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's armed forces would suspend the constitution and dissolve an Islamist-dominated parliament under a draft political roadmap to be pursued if Islamist President Mohamed Mursi and his opponents fail to reach a power-sharing agreement by Wednesday, military sources said.
The sources told Reuters the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) was still discussing details of the plan, intended to resolve a political crisis that has brought millions of protesters into the streets. The roadmap could be changed based on political developments and consultations.
Chief-of-staff General Abdel Fattah El-Sisi called in a statement on Monday for Mursi to agree within 48 hours on power-sharing with other political forces, saying the military would otherwise set out its own roadmap for the country's future.
The president rebuffed the ultimatum and the main liberal and leftist opposition alliance has refused to talk to him, demanding along with youth activists that he resign.
The sources said the military intended to install an interim council, composed mainly of civilians from different political groups and experienced technocrats, to run the country until an amended constitution was drafted within months.
That would be followed by a new presidential election, but parliamentary polls would be delayed until strict conditions for selecting candidates were in force, they said.
The armed forces planned to open talks with the main opposition National Salvation Front and other political, religious and youth organisations once a deadline set for Mursi to reach a power-sharing agreement expires on Wednesday.
The sources would not say how the military intended to deal with Mursi if he refused to go quietly.
The emerging roadmap could be amended as a result of those consultations, they said. Among figures being considered as an interim head of state was the new president of the constitutional court, Adli Mansour.
The emerging army blueprint closely resembles proposals for a democratic transition put forward by the NSF, which appointed former U.N. nuclear watchdog Mohamed ElBaradei on Monday to negotiate with the military on the way forward.
The military sources said the new transition arrangements would be entirely different from the military rule that followed the overthrow of autocratic President Hosni Mubarak in a 2011 popular uprising.
Then, the armed forces' council held effective power but was widely criticised by liberal and left-wing politicians for failing to enact vital economic and political reforms, and siding with the Muslim Brotherhood.
(Writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Peter Millership)

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby chump » Wed Jul 03, 2013 10:04 am

Crowds assemble in Cairo's Tahrir square
LIVE VIDEO - http://www.nbcnews.com/video/nbcnews.com/47881385
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby beeline » Wed Jul 03, 2013 11:58 am

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/12624/why-the-western-media-are-getting-egypt-wrong

Why the Western Media are Getting Egypt Wrong

Western media coverage of the massive waves of protests in Egypt over the past two days is revealing of a number of problems that plague knowledge production about the Arab world.

As crowds across the country were just warming up for the historic protests, around midday on 30 June, reports from Cairo appearing on Western broadcast and online news outlets focused on projecting an image of “polarization.” Rallies opposing the Muslim Brotherhood were represented as being balanced out, and in some cases even outnumbered, by the demonstration in favor of President Mohamed Morsi. The likelihood of violent clashes were carefully embedded within the news as a main characteristic of the current political situation in Egypt.

As the day went by, the 30 June anti-Morsi demonstrations turned out to probably be the largest ever in Egyptian history, with Egyptians from all walks of life peacefully, yet audaciously, denouncing the Brotherhood’s rule. In time for the evening news cycle in Europe and morning newscasts in the United States, editors of printed and online news outlets in the West started playing down their initial “polarization” message and began to recognize the size of dissidents as being truly unprecedented and in the millions.

The Egyptian people’s defiance of Brotherhood rule is a serious popular challenge to the most significant strategic reordering of the region perhaps since the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916. Still, there was a clear conservatism when it came to projecting the threat of such show of force on Morsi’s own legitimacy. The 30 June demonstrations were depicted merely as a significant sign of social discontent that would bear few consequences on the Washington-sponsored ruling coalition between the military and the Brotherhood. In other words, media sent a message to Western audiences that whereas the historical protests might look noble and impressive, the only real political players in Egypt (and probably in the Arab world as whole) are military generals and Islamists.

This paradigm, forced through journalistic accounts, has been sponsored by so-called Middle East “experts.” Those experts mold Western perceptions of the Middle East from the comfort of their heftily funded think tanks, and at times of trouble, like 30 June, they embed themselves in London and Washington news studios, where they broadcast their representations of the Middle East. As the Egyptian army stepped up its game midday on Monday, and checkmated Morsi by issuing a forty-eight-hour ultimatum to respond to the people’s demands, these same media circuits started a concerted effort to bring the “coup d’état” discourse, sometimes forcefully, to the forefront of the discussion about events in Egypt.

The failure of Western media and pundits to both recognize and project the nuances of the current conflict in Egypt through their negligence of people’s agency in shaping the political outcomes is both pathetic and shameful. It is pathetic because it indicates the degree to which Western intellectual circles—especially those profiteering from Western policymaking bodies—remain willfully entrapped in an outdated and out-of-touch Orientalist worldview of the region.

It is both ironic and sad that while mediocre analysts, to say the least of their understanding of the changing Middle East, make frequent appearances in two-minute on-air interviews in newsrooms, the voices of other academics and experts with serious research backgrounds and true expertise of the region remain largely unheard. Serious analysts are not in demand, not only because they have long overcome this Orientalist paradigm in analyzing the politics of change in the Middle East, but also because they don’t have the talent of crafting those superficial, short, studio-made answers to questions of news anchors.

The attempt to contain the news discourse about the politics of change in the Middle East over the past two and a half years in general and the unfolding events of the past hours in Egypt specifically, within the ready-made paradigm of military-Islamist turf wars, is also very shameful.

The insistence on ignoring the possibility of there being other factors at play, quite frankly, conceals a deeply embedded fear by Western powers, especially the US and Britain, of the emergence of a true grassroots democratic alternative in the Arab world’s largest country. Such an alternative would most certainly challenge the US hegemony in the region, even if only by beginning to address different possibilities regarding the future of Egypt, its people and its regional state of affairs.

The United States, Britain and many other counterparts have heavily invested in the empowerment of a tamed Islamist rule—spearheaded, of course, by the Muslim Brotherhood—to take over the Middle East from post-colonial populist regimes living long past their expiry dates. American and British ambassadors to the region have been carefully weaving this vision and reporting back home that this is simply the best formula for the protection of their interests in the region.

That such a formula would lend itself to the protraction of another cycle of vicious human rights abuses and continued economic injustices is, naturally, of little concern to them.

The major turn of events that a defiant Egyptian populace led over the past two days interrupts many plans, most especially the Western road map of the region. The Egyptian people’s defiance of Brotherhood rule is a serious popular challenge to the most significant strategic reordering of the region perhaps since the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916.

This is precisely why Western audiences are not being allowed to sympathize with the demonstrations in Egypt demanding Morsi’s ouster in the way they did with protests against former President Hosni Mubarak in January 2011. Amid this grave misrepresentation of the Egyptian revolution, the credibility and true independence of mainstream Western media is being seriously put to question.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Jul 03, 2013 1:13 pm

the coup has begun....full military coup underway
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Jul 03, 2013 3:23 pm

constitution suspended

Morsi out

celebrations in Cario
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby NeonLX » Wed Jul 03, 2013 3:44 pm

seemslikeadream » Wed Jul 03, 2013 12:13 pm wrote:the coup has begun....full military coup underway


Uh-oh...that doesn't sound good; I'm generally biased against military take-overs.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Jul 03, 2013 4:45 pm

THANKS beeline - I was about to post this very same article here!

beeline » Wed Jul 03, 2013 10:58 am wrote:http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/12624/why-the-western-media-are-getting-egypt-wrong

Why the Western Media are Getting Egypt Wrong

Western media coverage of the massive waves of protests in Egypt over the past two days is revealing of a number of problems that plague knowledge production about the Arab world.

As crowds across the country were just warming up for the historic protests, around midday on 30 June, reports from Cairo appearing on Western broadcast and online news outlets focused on projecting an image of “polarization.” Rallies opposing the Muslim Brotherhood were represented as being balanced out, and in some cases even outnumbered, by the demonstration in favor of President Mohamed Morsi. The likelihood of violent clashes were carefully embedded within the news as a main characteristic of the current political situation in Egypt.

As the day went by, the 30 June anti-Morsi demonstrations turned out to probably be the largest ever in Egyptian history, with Egyptians from all walks of life peacefully, yet audaciously, denouncing the Brotherhood’s rule. In time for the evening news cycle in Europe and morning newscasts in the United States, editors of printed and online news outlets in the West started playing down their initial “polarization” message and began to recognize the size of dissidents as being truly unprecedented and in the millions.

The Egyptian people’s defiance of Brotherhood rule is a serious popular challenge to the most significant strategic reordering of the region perhaps since the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916. Still, there was a clear conservatism when it came to projecting the threat of such show of force on Morsi’s own legitimacy. The 30 June demonstrations were depicted merely as a significant sign of social discontent that would bear few consequences on the Washington-sponsored ruling coalition between the military and the Brotherhood. In other words, media sent a message to Western audiences that whereas the historical protests might look noble and impressive, the only real political players in Egypt (and probably in the Arab world as whole) are military generals and Islamists.

SNIP

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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby slimmouse » Wed Jul 03, 2013 4:50 pm

"Thinking of you" out to Alice
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed Jul 03, 2013 7:30 pm

I found myself thinking of you guys too. Am way too pooped from celebrating with millions of Egyptians who are out in the streets of every city, town, village and street of Egypt to write much, but I made the mistake of watching CNN and it (almost) soured my mood, so to set the record straight:

This was not a military coup.

What we saw today was the culmination of a massive, nation-wide conspiracy to deliver the Egyptian people from a US-imposed terrorist regime. The conspirators were: Egyptian peasants; Egyptian factory workers and labor leaders; Egyptian millionaires; Egyptian writers and thinkers, poets and songwriters; Egyptian judges, lawyers, prosecutors and constitutional experts; Egyptian singers, actors, dancers and painters; Egyptian housewives and mothers and professional women and workers (my God, the women inspired us all so much!); Egyptian soldiers, Egyptian police officers; Egyptian liberals; Egyptian conservatives; Egyptian leftists; Egyptian journalists; Egyptian tourist guides and hotel employees; the Egyptian Church; the Egyptian Islamic scholars of Al-Azhar; Egyptian comics and satirists; Egyptian bus and taxi drivers, Egyptian waiters and grocery store workers; Egyptian teachers and students and doctors and I hope I haven't forgotten anybody.

The US-imposed regime was terrorizing and oppressing Egyptians, using murder and threats of a "blood-bath" should the people rebel against the "democratically-elected government" of armed terrorists, which was brought to power via fraudulent elections under the approving eye of the US. Every day, the terrorist regime grew more powerful, its ranks swelled by terrorists from "Al Qaeda" and other, more obscure but no less bloodthirsty groups who were welcomed into the country from Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya and elsewhere. Weapons, including anti-tank missiles and rpg's and guns were flooding the country. Egypt was becoming fragmented into a number of isolated enclaves, placing its continued existence as a unified state in doubt. The regime's supporters were openly inciting sectarian hatred and constantly threatening to launch a civil war against the nation's Christians, whom they refer to as "Crusaders". The people begged the military to save them, but the Egyptian military was openly threatened by the US that any "military coup" would be "unacceptable" to the "international community". Even when the soldiers and regular police officers became openly rebellious against the top brass, the army refused to step in, fearing US military or economic retaliation, or both.

Thus, the Egyptian people put aside their differences to provide the army with the visible and undeniable proof that it is they, and not the army leadership, that is calling the shots and that is demanding that the army remove the terrorist US-imposed regime from power and disarm its militias. And that, boys and girls, is what they did, in numbers never before seen in human history and the military responded, to great nation-wide exultation and the relief of millions of grateful Egyptians. As for what comes next, the Army is leaving that to a number of widely trusted and respected individuals with a spotless record of bravery in standing up for human and civil rights even at the risk of their own lives, led by Dr. Mohamed El Baradei. The army and the police have strictly defined their role as servants of the people's will.

I know, it sounds too good to be true. If you like, you can choose to believe CNN instead. It doesn't matter in the least. We've lived through the nightmare of the past two and a half years, we've tasted bitter despair and the sure knowledge that as a nation, we were hurtling headlong towards the edge of a cliff, and it was every single one of us who made the massive effort to pull off this miracle. We did it, and we know exactly how and why we did it, and that's all that matters.
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Jul 03, 2013 7:31 pm

hi Alice

:lovehearts: :partydance: :lovehearts:
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed Jul 03, 2013 7:53 pm

Hi! For those who enjoy the musical accompaniments to our revolutions, here's one of the unofficial theme songs of the June 30th continuation of the January 25th Revolution:

"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X
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Re: Live: Al Jazeera coverage of Egypt’s growing revolution

Postby Searcher08 » Wed Jul 03, 2013 8:02 pm

I was watching the amazing news on Channel 4 in London which was live from Tahrir Square and sent you REALLY STRONG KIND thoughts to you and snuck in a "Please post! xxxxx"
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