Alice, Thank You for shouting over the wall.AlicetheKurious » Wed Sep 25, 2013 2:12 am wrote:You're very welcome. I also appreciate the chance to shout over the wall. I really do.
~ A.
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Alice, Thank You for shouting over the wall.AlicetheKurious » Wed Sep 25, 2013 2:12 am wrote:You're very welcome. I also appreciate the chance to shout over the wall. I really do.
Catherine Ashton, Baroness Ashton of Upholland, PC (born 20 March 1956) is a British Labour politician who in 2009 became the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy for the European Union. Under the Treaty of Lisbon, this post is combined with the post of Vice-President of the European Commission. Link
Who are these people, what do they do for a living, whose agenda do they really serve, and who do they really work for?
Presenter and Producers Wanted for The People's Voice Middle East Programme.
The two-hour show will be aired on Sunday afternoons and tell the truth about Middle Eastern and Near Eastern events and people with interview links to Gaza and other countries.
Please contact us as soon as possible at phonein@thepeoplesvoice.tv
."...This shit goes so deep that your name and a certain hole come to mind"
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Is this latest troll welcome.?
Defending unconditional democratic freedoms, even of one's opponents, is for the left a central task for all times. The populist left placed a Chinese wall between the struggle for democracy and that against imperialism. Indeed one was subordinated to the other: fighting imperialism took priority. And anyway the 'anti-imperialist Imam' was doing this so well. The battle for freedoms in the streets, in the universities, in the factories - which was a battle against the Islamic rulers - was distracting, nay obstructing, the anti-imperialist struggle, so the argument went. We were to sacrifice everything to a bogus anti-imperialist struggle conducted at the top by the Islamist rulers of Iran.
But even those who did not subscribe to this thesis, in practice, downplayed the democratic struggle. So it was that when women marched in their thousands on that first post revolutionary International Women's Day (March 1979) against compulsory hejab (Islamic covering) for entering government office, the left turned its face away: after all these were 'perfumed' women from the more affluent suburbs. The left was again silent when a few month later thugs ransacked the offices of the daily paper Ayandegan. It was 'liberal' - nothing to do with us. Within a year progressive newspapers such as the Bakhtar-e Emruz were also shut. And finally the left underground press was annihilated. The Iranian press scene went into total darkness for 15 years.
The left saw political democracy as belonging to the bourgeoisie. At best the era of 'bourgeois revolutions' was a ladder to socialism. Personal freedoms, such as the freedom of expression, were 'liberal' demands, either to be ignored or tolerated - for the time being - but not high on the agenda. Indeed liberal was used as a pejorative term, a swear word. The 'anti-imperialist' mullahs were far preferable. It was thus that the left dug its own grave.
Democracy and political freedoms, including individual freedoms, is the air the left breathes. This air is as necessary while building socialism as when fighting for it 3. This debate is not confined to Iran. The European left and the left in the Middle East should take heed. Many so-called 'bourgeois' freedoms would not have been achieved, nor sustained, without the struggle of the working class. Democratic rights are also a product of the era of proletarian revolutions. As such they form the struts of the future socialist society, to be expanded upon and deepened, not discarded.
A most important element in these freedoms is the freedom to associate. Here too the record of the Iranian left was disastrous.
Egypt: out of the US news but under General al-Sisi's crackdown
Tahrir's hopes in ruins: my country has swapped a Brotherhood leader who risked being a new Mubarak for a military one who is.................
(Editor: this article was amended to remove an unintended first paragraph)....curious!
....No news is good news, the adage tells us. But just because something does not make it on to the evening news does not mean the situation has improved, as demonstrated by the US-sparked civil war in Iraq, which continues to exact a heavy toll.
Though the situation is nowhere near as bad, Egypt, too, has been eclipsed in the United States' and much of the western media by the ongoing carnage in Syria, and by the new Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's conciliatory gestures and charm offensive towards the west, not to mention the weekend's US raids in Somalia and Libya.
But it is still very much news for us Egyptians and those who take a deep interest in the future of the country. In fact, as my four-year-old and I embark on a trip home to his "fatherland", I am plagued by worries and dogged by questions.
How much further will the violence escalate? Where will the clash between pro-military jingoism and divine demagoguery lead the country?
Borrowing from the neocon American lexicon once so despised in Egypt, General Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi's "war on terror" has, like its US counterpart, mushroomed into a war of terror, as reflected in the death this week of at least 50 people during pro-Morsi protests.
That is not to say there hasn't been terrorism. There has been plenty of it. Not only have prominent Muslim Brotherhood members incited violence, but their sympathisers have torched churches across the country, and are mounting an insurgency in the already restive Sinai.
In addition, while pleading "legitimacy" and "democracy" abroad, Muslim Brotherhood leaders have falsely accused Christians of being behind Mohamed Morsi's downfall. This has fanned the flames of hatred towards an already vulnerable minority, leading even as far as murder.
But the Muslim Brotherhood does not have a monopoly on demonisation and false accusations. Though I am a secularist to the core and, being an "infidel", am vulnerable to the Islamist project, I have been distressed and alarmed by the fever pitch that mainstream hostility towards Brotherhood sympathisers has reached.
For example, the idea that they are all terrorists and that the Raba'a al-Adawiya protest camp was a terrorist den, which goes against the evidence of my own eyes, has gained a surprising amount of traction. Besides which, the situation in Sinai is far more complex than the official narrative allows. The local Bedouins have been sidelined, forgotten and neglected for decades, leading to a lot of grievances that Islamists can exploit; and the military has allegedly targeted civilians, not just militants.
Then, there are Egypt's rebels who lost their cause. The Tamarod movement did a great job of highlighting Morsi's loss of legitimacy and channelling public anger at his dictatorial ways. Yet, the movement today sounds like a cheerleading squad for the military and its man of the moment, al-Sisi – even going so far as to defend the military trials against civilians it once opposed.
Little wonder that the revolutionaries who have not taken leave of their senses and principles are despondent. As Ahmed Maher of the April 6 Youth Movement, one of the main driving forces behind the 2011 uprising against Mubarak, said:
We are at square one as a revolution.
What can America do, some might wonder? Probably not that much, in light of Washington's squandering – by propping up dictators and engaging in military misadventures – of what remained of the goodwill it once enjoyed long ago.
There is one trump card Washington holds, though. It can threaten to cut off military aid if the army does not end its crackdown, release political detainees, and implement serious reform rapidly. (In fact, I would argue that Washington should also make military aid to Israel contingent on reaching a peace deal with the Palestinians.)
But the truth is that the situation is in the hands of the Egyptian people.
At a certain level, I understand why Egypt has reached this point. For me and other desktop revolutionaries outside the country, it's easy to talk ideals when we're not confronted with the bitter daily reality. After nearly three years of revolt, with precious little to show for it, Egyptians are suffering a sort of revolution fatigue.
Nevertheless, if Egypt does not change course, all the blood, sweat and tears Egyptians shed in their quest for freedom may prove to have been for nothing. Morsi and the Brotherhood peddled the illusion that they had a divine, magical solution to all Egypt's problems. Instead, they proved to be a bearded version of the Mubarak regime. They talked democracy, but they walked theocracy.
But it is a grave error to believe that my enemy's enemy is my friend. The army may have learnt to speak democracy, but autocracy is still in its blood. Six decades of military dictatorship, a disastrous first transition following Mubarak's ouster and a campaign that seems bent of purging Egypt of the Brotherhood – which could push Egypt over the abyss into civil strife – are not promising signs.
More troubling still, al-Sisi has become a cult hero, with campaigns petitioning him to run for president and polls showing he would win, if he ran. Even if we give him the benefit of the doubt and assume he is a man of integrity, the temptations of excessive power and popularity could potentially doom Egypt to decades more of dictatorship.
For that reason, I hope Egyptians reject both the military and the Muslim Brotherhood, and reject violence, no matter whom its target is.
In official US circles, classification of the uprising as a coup would require the cancellation of the annual provision of US military aid to Egypt.
Egypt under military rule
The upheavals in Tunisia and Egypt drew in virtually all layers of society, excepting only the upper echelons of the bourgeoisie closest to the regime. It is notable that despite the history of religious and ethnic conflict in the region the protests have centred on secular-democratic demands, spurred by the increasingly intolerable conditions of life. Workers are demanding bread and freedom. But the situation has also created an opening for the reactionary Muslim Brotherhood.
With the dictators overthrown what happens now? There is no automatic progression from these upheavals to a socialist revolution against the capitalist order. Winning the most fundamental necessities of life — decent jobs for all, healthcare and education — requires the working class to emerge as the leader of all the oppressed — the unemployed youth, the impoverished peasant masses, the urban poor and the women — and to fight for power in its own name. Our task as Marxists, through our propaganda, is to popularise the programme of socialist revolution, which alone can address the felt needs and aspirations of the masses. The fight for socialist consciousness, and for a programme that will achieve the emancipation of the workers and the oppressed in North Africa and the Near East, means overcoming many obstacles.
Chief among those obstacles today is pervasive nationalism as was seen in the large number of Egyptian flags on the protests. A key task of revolutionary Marxists is to combat nationalism, which is always antithetical to the interests of the workers. Nationalism is used by the bourgeoisie to obscure the class divide between the tiny layer of obscenely wealthy capitalist exploiters and the vast majority of impoverished workers and peasants.
Nationalism in Egypt is expressed in the belief that the army is the “friend of the people”. But whose army is it? The military regime has denounced workers strikes and told strikers to go back to work. Not surprisingly therefore, the army takeover has been supported by all wings of the bourgeois “opposition”, including the Muslim Brotherhood.
In all capitalist countries the army, along with the police, judges and prison guards constitute the core of the bourgeois state, an organ of class oppression to maintain through violence the rule of the exploiters. To win state power the working class will have to smash the bourgeois state apparatus, including by splitting the army along class lines — the conscripts versus the bourgeois officer corps — winning the soldiers to the side of the working class.
Illusions in the army are a deadly danger to the working people and the oppressed but they run very deep. Egyptian nationalism was born of British imperialist subjugation and humiliation — the British had occupied the country from 1882. In 1952, a group of military officers known as the Free Officers Movement, led by Gamal Abdel Nasser, overthrew the monarchy and ended the British occupation. Since that time the army has been viewed as a guarantor of national sovereignty, particularly against the Zionist state of Israel.
Nasser, a bourgeois nationalist, claimed to be leader of a mythical “Arab socialism”. His success in peddling this myth was aided by the treachery of the Stalinist Communist Party, which supported him. In fact Nasser aimed to crush the combative Egyptian working class and within a month of seizing power he delivered a massive blow to the workers movement. When a textile workers strike broke out in Kafr Al-Dawwar near Alexandria, Nasser had two strike leaders hanged on the factory grounds. The Communist Party was banned and strikes were outlawed. Undeterred by the murder and imprisonment of their own comrades, the Stalinists continued to support Nasser, finally liquidating into his Arab Socialist Union in 1965.
The role of the military in Egyptian politics has remained the same under the subsequent dictatorships of Anwar el-Sadat and then Mubarak. While Mubarak was hated and despised, there are considerable illusions even today in Nasserism, due largely to the betrayals of the left.
Evidence could send Obama to prison – two sources already claim to have "Documents and Proofs"
Voice of Russia 22 Aug 13
Another Egyptian came forward claiming she had proof substantial enough for Obama to go to jail, and her credibility is very hard to question. Tahani al-Gebali, Vice President of the Supreme Constitutional Court in Egypt, said the time was nearing when all the conspiracies against Egypt would be exposed—conspiracies explaining why the Obama administration is so vehemently supportive of the Muslim Brotherhood, she said yesterday on Bitna al-Kibir, a live TV show.
This information was reported by Raymond Ibrahim via Jihad Watch – a translator form Arabic, who was the one to disclose the documents about Libyan intelligence report tying Morsi to Benghazi.
The first accusation toward Obama was voiced less than a week ago, when the son of imprisoned Brotherhood leader Khairat al-Shater, Saad al-Shater, has been reported to claim that Obama had dispatched a delegation to Cairo to get his father and other Brotherhood leaders from prison, as the President was threatened that sensitive documents would be disclosed implicating him and the United States in significant crimes.
The nature of those crimes is not specified nor is the evidence. Also it is not clear yet, as to whether the claim was valid.
According to the dcclothesline.com site, it might have everything to do with the tie between Obama, Mohamed Morsi and what happened in Benghazi.
Also, in her talk, Al-Gebali mentioned "documents and proofs" obtained by Egypt's intelligence services, saying it was high time to take the truth out in the open. During the discussion about the documents listing massive financial transactions between the Muslim Brotherhood and international organizations, she pointed out that "Obama’s brother is one of the architects of investment for the international organization of the Muslim Brotherhood."
Though she did not specify which brother exactly she meant, earlier reports on frontpagemag.com contained information about President Obama’s brother Kenyan half-brother, Malik Obama running an African nonprofit organization which had ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and Sudanese terrorist Omar al-Bashir.
Chances are very high that Malik Obama might end up to be a part of the Muslim Brotherhood, since he has already a lot to explain about his actions and liaisons.
Walid Shoebat, a former Palestinian Liberation Organization operative, reported in May he discovered that Malik Obama was the executive secretary of the Islamic Da'wa Organization, or ID. It was a group created by the Sudanese government, while Sudan is on the US' list of terrorist states. In 2010, Malik Obama attended an IDO-held conference in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, which main goal was to seek out ways of spreading Wahhabist Islam in Africa. The conference was run by President of Sudan Omar Al-Bashir, who is an international criminal wanted by the International Criminal Court. With the above-mentioned evidence Shoebat concludes that Malik Obama is "in bed with terrorists, working in a terrorist state as an official of an organization created by terrorists."
Egypt crisis: Muslim Brotherhood might 'land Obama in jail'
The son of Egypt's jailed Muslim Brotherhood leader claims to have evidence that could "land Barack Obama in prison", the WorldNetDaily (WND) website reports.
In what may become Obama’s worst nightmare, the man accused him of paying a secret bribe of $8 million to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Saad al-Shater, the son of imprisoned Brotherhood leader Khairat al-Shater, told Turkey’s Anatolia news agency that Obama had sent a senior delegation to Cairo to get his father and other Brotherhood leaders out of prison in order to prevent the release of explosive documents that could incriminate both Obama and the United States.
Arabic-speaking former PLO member Walid Shoebat has translated the report by the Turkish news gency Anatolia as follows:
"In an interview with the Anatolia News Agency, Saad Al-Shater, the son of a Muslim Brotherhood leader, the detained Khairat Al-Shater, said that his father had in his hands evidence that will land the head of United States of America, President Obama, in prison.
Such documents, he says, were placed in the hands of people who were entrusted inside and outside Egypt, and that the release of his father is the only way for them to prevent a great catastrophe.
He stated that a warning was sent threatening to show how the US administration was directly connected.
The evidence was sent through intermediaries which caused them to change their attitude and corrected their position, and that they have taken serious steps to prove good faith.
Saad also said that his father's safety is more important to the Americans than the safety of Mohamed Morsi."
Several independent Arab sources confirmed the report.
http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2013_08_2 ... oofs-3648/
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