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aparently some of the pro-mubarak are police officers in disguise,that explains why those didnt appeared before
I hate it when I type a good post and it ends up being the last on a page and nobody reads it.Yeah, today has been extremely violent. I bet we will hear that a lot of people died and a lot of people were seriously injured. Once the internet comes back in Egypt I predict there will be a massive inundation of video and images from these days like there were before the internet went down - right now we are only getting footage from major news organizations for the most part, but people are still filming all of this stuff on the street in Egypt, they just don't have any way to get it out to the rest of the world right now.
The anti-government demonstrations have been mostly peaceful up to this point, but today pro-government demonstrators (I would be willing to bet that a significant amount of which are either plainclothes police/security forces or paid by the government to agitate) have been attacking the protesters with fists, clubs, horses, rocks, and firebombs and chaos has reigned. As of a few minutes ago Al Jazeera's live blog reported automatic gunfire near Tahrir Square.
It's a very volatile situation right now. I really hope that this is resolved mostly peacefully, but things don't look promising. Mubarak seems firmly intent on staying in office until the end of his term (which is more than six months from now) despite the millions of angry protesters in the streets demanding his ouster. It looks likely that he's fomenting agitation and violent conflict directly by encouraging pro-government protesters to use violence (some reports of Egyptians being offered $17 by the government to participate in pro-Mubarak rallies), and the protesters don't seem eager to back down either. The military is still mostly a wild card, but it's hard to see which side they will eventually fall on.
I really just hope this doesn't end up like Tiananmen or anything similar.
I hate it when I type a good post and it ends up being the last on a page and nobody reads it.
I hate it when I type a good post and it ends up being the last on a page and nobody reads it.
cnn's anderson cooper attacked by mubarak supporters
http://www.etonline.com/news/107291_Anderson_Cooper_Attacked_in_Egypt/
Yeah, today has been extremely violent. I bet we will hear that a lot of people died and a lot of people were seriously injured. Once the internet comes back in Egypt I predict there will be a massive inundation of video and images from these days like there were before the internet went down - right now we are only getting footage from major news organizations for the most part, but people are still filming all of this stuff on the street in Egypt, they just don't have any way to get it out to the rest of the world right now.
The anti-government demonstrations have been mostly peaceful up to this point, but today pro-government demonstrators (I would be willing to bet that a significant amount of which are either plainclothes police/security forces or paid by the government to agitate) have been attacking the protesters with fists, clubs, horses, rocks, and firebombs and chaos has reigned. As of a few minutes ago Al Jazeera's live blog reported automatic gunfire near Tahrir Square.
It's a very volatile situation right now. I really hope that this is resolved mostly peacefully, but things don't look promising. Mubarak seems firmly intent on staying in office until the end of his term (which is more than six months from now) despite the millions of angry protesters in the streets demanding his ouster. It looks likely that he's fomenting agitation and violent conflict directly by encouraging pro-government protesters to use violence (some reports of Egyptians being offered $17 by the government to participate in pro-Mubarak rallies), and the protesters don't seem eager to back down either. The military is still mostly a wild card, but it's hard to see which side they will eventually fall on.
I really just hope this doesn't end up like Tiananmen or anything similar.
I hate it when I type a good post and it ends up being the last on a page and nobody reads it.
If it makes you feel any better (and it should) I totally read it.
So my friend came up with a good aphorism related to this:
A good dictator is not a dicktator.
an American company — Boeing-owned Narus of Sunnyvale, Calif. — sold Egypt "Deep Packet Inspection" (DPI) equipment that can be used by the regime to track, target and crush political dissent over the Internet and mobile phones
As I hear the reports of all these protestors using razor blades, sling shots, and rocks for their weapons I can't help to think about what would happen if something like this went down here. It wouldn't be rocks that would be flying, it would be thousands of bullets from very powerful weapons.
I saw a video clip of a guy riding a camel through a mob. Made me laugh real hard.
Security forces drive through a crowd, not for the squeamish.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=i5APaDE6ja8
It seems the regime now has started to imprison and harass journalist in the country. This is very worrying, as it might mean that they're about to do something which they don't want the outside world to see.
I know it's wrong, but I'm laughing my ass off right now. The cement one is ****ing gold.
I know it's wrong, but I'm laughing my ass off right now. The cement one is ****ing gold.
I agree with everything in that post Tyguy. It would be nice to have a real cause like they do, something righteous and moral and meaningful that you can actively strive for instead of just sitting around in America watching the slow process of social and economic entropy all around you while you idly dick around on the internet.
I can't help but be cynical about chances of a good outcome to all this. How many violent revolutions can you name that led to the creation to long-lasting, truly democratic, institutions? Romania in 1989 and perhaps Ireland in 1922, but what else?
Well...
In France Napoleon declared himself emperor 15 years after the revolution, so I wouldn't exactly call that long-lasting.
And in America is was more of a progress to democracy over several decades rather than a sudden abolishment of all undemocratic institutions. John Adams for instance made it illegal to criticize the US government and slavery wasn't abolished until a century after the revolution.