By Rob Janicki
Do you want to know what Egyptians in the streets of Cairo and other major cities in Egypt think of Obama and, by reference, the United States? Go here and find out in 15 photos you won't see in the MSM.
Keep in mind that in 2011 only 1 million Egyptians turned out to protest the rule of autocratic leader Hosni Mubarak in Cairo, the capital of Egypt. Today, protests can be found in all large Egyptian cities and an estimated 20 million protestors have been exercising their human right to protest a dictatorial government of the Muslim Brotherhood, led by president Mohammed Morsi.
The key is to watch what the professional Egyptian military does.
ReplyDeleteI doubt Morsi is going anywhere. However, the Egyptian military may be able to force the writing of a new constitution and a new election for the Egyptian parliament and that would probably result in far less Muslim Brotherhood influence and less Islamist influence in turning Egypt into an Islamic nation.
ReplyDeleteI think you are right the military wants elections, not a coup. The question is will Morsi allow new elections. John Bolton has opined that if Morsi does not agree to new elections, civil war is inevitable. If that occurs the military will be on the spot to choose sides.
ReplyDeleteHappy fourth - the history is here . . the fix is here . .
ReplyDeletehttp://articlevprojecttorestoreliberty.com/take-action.html
Play this for your family fourth of July meal . . share this post with all . .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=iPj82rBmIOE
Two days have passed since this posting and a surprising shift in Egyptian politics has transpired that I did not imagine would happen. President Morsi has been deposed, the Parliament has been dissolved and the military has appointed an interim civilian leader to move toward new national elections. Earth shaking events in such a short time. Let's hope it all leads to a secular government with a friendly working relationship with the United States. In the meantime we will have to see what the Muslim Brotherhood will do, since I don't believe they will take all this with no response. I believe the MB will try and foment violence across Egypt. I also believe that the Egyptian military will come down hard on any MB violence. Under Mubarak the MB was suppressed and the military knows who are members and leaders of the MB, so it won't be difficult for the military to quell any violence from the MB.
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