American Cut-and-Paste wrote:With that backing, the regime has gone to war against all opposition, secular and Islamist, leftist and liberal.
"The regime" doesn't give a shit about the so-called "opposition", such as it is. No time; got important things to do, like get the economy on its feet, feed the poor, build them decent homes, repair and expand the country's infrastructure, defend the borders from foreign-trained and funded and armed terrorists, get the rich to pay their share of the national budget, rebuild the public education system from the ground up, fix the country's badly deteriorated public health system, clean up the streets, deal with major crises in international relations, and do all this with the active backing and support of the people, without whom none of it is possible. And it must be done in record time, because people's lives are at stake, as well as a nation's survival in very challenging circumstances.
American Cut-and-Paste wrote:The army did not merely exploit real discontent with Morsi (whose authoritarianism and betrayals of his base should not be whitewashed), divisions in the revolutionary camp, and the open preference of some 'secular' forces for the military over the Islamists. It came to power with the passive support of a large popular, conservative bloc including sections of the rural poor and downwardly mobile middle classes. The huge crowds in Tahrir Square on the occasion of Sisi's pomp-bedraggled inauguration are a tedious reminder that there are such things as reactionary masses.
I think that paragraph is a good example of why this sort of pretentious, pompous, self-stroking "Leftist" so often finds himself marginalized and irrelevant, reduced to throwing hissy fits in publications few bother to read. These are huge egos shackled by their own incompetence and inability to see beyond their own delusions of grandeur. They pose as champions of "the people", but they don't care about anybody but themselves. In fact, they don't even see anybody but themselves. If they controlled "the masses" with a magic wand, if the masses were truly passive and obedient to them, instead of active and articulate and perfectly capable of expressing themselves loudly and clearly, then the masses would be wonderful, genuinely revolutionary and progressive. When "the masses" prove to have an actual identity and will of their own, and reject these losers for the simple reason that they have repeatedly proven to be incompetent and have nothing valuable to contribute to the actual improvement of people's lives, then the masses are dismissed as "reactionary", and barraged with insults. Those Leftists who happen to agree with the people are attacked as well. In fact, anyone who stands with the people and the nation against these pathetic, self-stroking, ego-driven losers is wrong and they, only they, are right. Just because.
American Cut-and-Paste wrote:What is it for? Well, undoubtedly the traditional state bureaucracies and security apparatuses ranged behind Al-Sisi's dictatorship have their own agenda, which is not simply identical to that of the US government. Nonetheless, if we are to parse Tony Blair's claim that Egypt's ruling elite is 'open' and enlightened, shall we say that it has something to do with the pronounced anti-Palestinian politics of the Sisi camp, and the reassurances that his regime has offered to business elites and regional Gulf powers that he will implement the neoliberal shock therapy that Morsi was unable to? Of course, Blair is as mad as Rasputin, but he often usefully says things that are impolitic from the point of view of his grubby ruling class sodality.
Egyptians have never been and will never be "anti-Palestinian", still less the Egyptian armed forces, whose central doctrine, despite the US' best efforts, remains that Israel is Egypt's number one enemy. How revealing that this self-styled Leftist appears to identify the Palestinian people and land with Hamas, a reactionary, extreme right-wing fascist subsidiary of the secret International Muslim Brotherhood which has no legitimate claim to represent the Palestinian people and refuses to allow the Palestinians to hold elections to decide who does represent them.
American Dream, I know you only copy-and-paste, but could you copy-and-paste an example or two of these supposed "reassurances...to business elites and regional Gulf powers that he will implement the neoliberal shock therapy"? Because so far, all we've seen from the "regime" are better and cheaper goods and services for the poor, and CC has made no secret of the fact that the rich will have to pay. He even began with himself, by first, cutting his salary in half, from the maximum of LE 42,000 per month (US$ 6,000) to LE 21,000 ($3,000), and by donating 50% of everything he owns, including his family inheritance, to the public budget. The Egyptian prime minister did the same, and a number of prominent business people were thus shamed into donating millions to the national budget. Army officers, who normally receive gifts at the start of Ramadan have been asked to give them up and distribute them to the poor, instead (which they've done with great pleasure). For the first time in Egypt's history, the government is taxing capital gains from the stock investors, and that's just the beginning of a total reorientation of Egypt's tax system, which CC has begun, but which will be carried out once a parliament is elected. CC has made it very clear that the government's priority is to improve the lives of the poor, not through band-aid solutions but through a systemic re-haul of the economy, and that the money to pay for it will have to come from those who can afford to tighten their belts -- namely the rich. One would think a self-styled Leftist would be delighted with this, instead of throwing around labels like "neoliberal", but go figure.
American Cut-and-Paste wrote:According to Amnesty International, 1,247 Morsi supporters have been given the death sentence since January this year. Thus far, 247 death sentences have been upheld.
Let me know when someone is actually executed, will you? We've now had had a total of two executions in the past 4 years. One was more than 3 years ago, and we had another one recently, of a man who broke into the apartment of two young women and brutally murdered them -- he was convicted and sentenced more than 6 years ago. It took that long for his defense to exhaust all the appeals. Yes, Egyptian law allows capital punishment for certain extreme crimes, such as premeditated murder, rape, and high treason. And we like it that way. But defendants get a fair trial and the right to a proper defense, which is more than the victims of murderers and rapists give their victims.
"If you're not careful the newspapers will have you hating the oppressed and loving the people doing the oppressing." - Malcolm X