Egypt and the scum
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Tahrir square |
There is not a single Egyptian in Egypt now feeling comfortable with anything. Even me, I stopped writing here in my blog for long time. Waiting for any good news, but in vain. It feels bad to be forced to blend in with a large number of people who usually take things for granted, and think things will get better when God almighty decides. Religion again!! Seriously, Egypt! Egyptians are still not sure that it's them who should decide to change their awful lives, not God! God assists when we decide. Only a few of you, Egyptians, decided to face reality with dreams, they paid the price, and it was death. We keep loosing because we don't believe dreams can come true. How many Egyptians took part in the revolution? Almost 20% of its people, making up 16 million throughout all Egypt. This is a great number of people making a critical mass for a powerful peaceful revolution.
How about the rest? They're the ones who care most about food, movies, hangouts, and valentine's. The ones who were well enough and adopted to the Mubarak regime, including the Muslim Brotherhood. The MB which had a leader denying the youthful revolution before it started! The MB which was waiting for any chance to take an opportunity in the equation of power. The MB, along with their Salafi companions, playing around with religion as a poker game to end up owning the country.
And what the hell is that? A low-class magazine published by the MB sold at Carrefour Market cursing the opposition in an illogical, unreasonablte manner. A small magazine called "Islamic Selections" or "The Chosen Islamist" as the title can lead to both meanings (the usual trend MB follow). Honestly, no one can deny the fact that the MB has the right to publish such magazines, or newspapers. But we're just concerned about how their followers will turn into followers who only memorize what they're told, without thinking, analyzing, or discussing (logically).
What else can we do other than talk talk talk, and watch young protesters get killed by police and MB mercenaries every day in the streets? The Ahlawy Ultras before yesterday were accused of burning and vandalizing buildings (Police academy and Football union). I understand Ultras are angry, and Egyptian courts are not that promising. But vandalism is not the solution, when revolutionists fight, they fight with ideas. We're done with the Tahrir trick, its old-fashioned. But i think it is still effective if people don't get bored after 6 hours of protesting, if people stop getting afraid from the tons of tear gas bombs falling on us as rain. The ultimate solution is in our smooth power, civil disobedience. But the 16 million who made the revolution will the only ones doing it, not even all of them. I guess only a million can volunteer, and the rest will move on. The rest are tired, they need the feed their children, get salaries and live safely. Their minds are miles and miles away from the dream of making a real change to a civilized modern country. Their minds are only "live, and keep living". The revolutionists tumbled Mubarak to save the people, and the people vote for Mubarak's duplicate (Morsy). And the next question is: What can the revolutionists do after they've discovered that Egypt fell in the hands of the scum (a group of mercenaries, and "give-up to live" zombies).
Given that our battle is not religious, its about ideas, last week in Dr. Alaa El Aswany's gathering, representatives from a TV channel owned by "Abu Islam" (An Islamic speaker known for being impolite and offensive to women and freedom) wanted to record the speeches made. Dr. Alaa, managing the meeting, decided not to take the decision on his own, he took the attendees' votes for recording, as an example of democratic process. The majority voted for recording, while stressing on the point that we still don't trust what can the channel guys do in editing. The presenter, tried hard to get our consent (as in the video - sorry, no subtitles). But here it is, an example, the ones who vote for "yes" now encourage that our ideas should extent to closed-minded societies. Our war is a war of ideas, Islamic parties in Egypt and their police are the ones who used weapons, unfortunately, they have driven angry protesters (related to slaughtered protesters) to used the concrete weaponry. In the end, the one who loses, is only one, not both of us (as they say). The one who loses is the one with concrete power, not the dream.
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