Saturday, February 12, 2011

Remarkable events in egypt

























Here is journalist and blogger Chris Floyd on the remarkable events in Egypt.
Mubarak is gone! Ordinary people took to the streets, in their hundreds of thousands, they stood their ground against state goons and hired thugs, they saw ordinary soldiers and many officers refuse to obey orders to repress them, and they have brought down a 30-year dictatorship supported by the full might of the American imperium.

Many, many things are still in play, many dangers abound, many uncertainties remain -- and many forms of retribution will no doubt be assayed by the powerful elites in both America and Egypt who have been humiliated by this uprising of the "rabble" against their "betters." But it is a great day, a day of rejoicing for all those who believe in the worth and dignity of individual human beings.
The Egyptians stood up, they asserted that worth, they embodied that dignity, and they have set themselves free. Long may they hold on to this liberation -- and long may it serve as an inspiration to everyone beset by the dead hand of elite domination.
And on the website of the Non Violent Action Network I read this:
Today let us celebrate and applaud the courageous Egyptians who struggled to bring down another dictator and set a new course for their ancient and accomplished civilization.
That is about all we should say today—thank you and congratulations, sisters and brothers of Egypt. You have shown not only individual courage, but also a cultural strength that draws from deep rivers of resources, flowing from the stories of resistance for millennia in ancient Egypt (e.g., Shiprah and Puah), from the deep waters of Islam (including such giants as Abdul Gaffar Khan and Maulana Azad, Chaiwat Satha Anand and other heroes of nonviolent resistance), from the twentieth century torrents of nonviolent resistance. You have become models for a new generation that takes up not the gun but the computer, the demonstration, the fearlessness of struggle.
Tomorrow or next week we can talk about the pitfalls of transition, about how to prevent another military dictatorship or another theft from the people by those wishing to take advantage of a power vacuum. There will be time later to ponder the shallowness of what Julius Nyerere called “flag independence” when colonialism was conquered but the revolution was only state-deep, rather than shaking up the economic, cultural and social structures ossified by decades of tyranny.
But for now, let’s shout and dance and thank God and the people of Egypt for their light shining through the darkness of yet another tyranny now conquered by courage.

No comments: