The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations

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The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Some analysis of the revolts - 10 'tentative observations'. Interesting points made, I thought.

The Arab Revolts: Ten Tentative Observations
Mouin Rabbani

The extraordinary developments in Tunisia and Egypt during the first six weeks of this year, and more recently in Bahrain, Libya, Yemen and elsewhere, have inaugurated a revolutionary moment in the Arab world not experienced since 1958. If sustained uprisings continue and spread, it has the potential to develop into an Arab 1848. Based on what we have witnessed thus far, the following observations appear relevant:

1. The Arab world is a fundamentally different beast than Eastern Europe during the late 1980s. The latter was ruled by virtually identical regimes, organized within a single collective framework whose individual members were tightly controlled by an outside, crisis-riven power increasingly unable and unwilling to sustain its domination. By contrast, Arab regimes differ markedly in structure and character, the Arab League has played no role in either political integration or socio-economic harmonization, and the United States – still the dominant power in the Middle East – attaches strategic significance to maintaining and strengthening its regional position, as well as that of Israel.

Whereas in Eastern Europe the demolition of the Berlin Wall symbolized the disintegration of not only the GDR but all regimes between the Danube and the USSR, the ouster of Ben Ali in Tunisia did not cause Mubarak’s downfall any more than change in Cairo is producing regime collapse in Libya or leading to the dissolution of the League of Arab States. More to the point, neither the Tunisian nor Egyptian regimes have yet been fundamentally transformed, and may even survive the current upheavals relatively intact. (The nature of the Libyan case is somewhat of an anomaly, with regime survival or comprehensive disintegration the only apparent options.)

2. Many if not most Arab regimes are facing similar crises, which can be summarized as increasing popular alienation and resentment fueled by neo-liberal reforms. These reforms have translated into growing socio-economic hardship and disparities as the economy and indeed the state itself is appropriated by corrupt crony capitalist cliques; brutalization by arbitrary states whose security forces have become fundamentally lawless in pursuit of their primary function of regime maintenance; leaders that gratuitously trample institutions underfoot to sustain power and bequeath it to successors of their choice – more often than not blood relatives; and craven subservience to Washington despite its regional wars and occupations, as well as increasingly visible collusion with Israel proportional to the Jewish state’s growing extremism.

Even the pretense of minimal Arab consensus on core issues such as Palestine has collapsed, and collectively the Arab states not only no longer exercise influence on the world stage, but have seen their regional role diminish as well, while Israel, Turkey and Iran have become the only local players of note. In a nutshell, Arab regimes no longer experience crises of legitimacy, because they have lost it irrevocably. In perception as well as reality, with respect to the political system as well as socio-economic policy, reform – in the sense of gradual, controlled change initiated and supervised by those in power – is not an option. Meaningful change is possible only through regime transformation.

Furthermore, the contemporary Arab state in its various manifestations is incapable of self-generated transformation. This applies no less to Lebanon, whose elites have proven unwilling and unable to implement de-confessionalization as agreed in the 1989 Taif Agreement. With Iraq having demonstrated the catastrophic consequences of foreign intervention, sustained pressure by indigenous forces – perhaps only mass popular pressure – has emerged as the only viable formula.

3. Arguably, the Tunisian uprising succeeded because no one anticipated that it could. An increasingly rapacious, repressive and narrowly-based ruling clique that seems to have lost its capacity for threat recognition, proved incapable of pro-actively deploying sufficient carrots and sticks to defuse the uprising. The violence it did unleash and extravagant promises it made – as well as their timing – only added fuel to the fire of revolt. Faced with a choice between removing their leader and imminent regime collapse, Tunisia’s elites and their Western sponsors hastily and unceremoniously forced Ben Ali out of the country.

4. Although Egypt’s Mubarak was also initially slow to respond, he had the benefit of a significantly broader, better organized and more deeply entrenched regime whose preservation additionally remains an American strategic priority. Given the severity of the threat to his continued rule, Mubarak played his cards reasonably enough to at least avoid a fate identical to Ben Ali.

After the initial gambit of unleashing the police and then battalions of thugs failed, Mubarak’s appointment of intelligence chief Omar Sulaiman to the vice presidency – vacant since Mubarak left it in 1981 – was never meant to appease the growing number of demonstrators demanding his immediate departure. Rather, Mubarak acted in order to retain the military (and Sulaiman’s) loyalty. By sacrificing the succession prospects of his wolverine son Gamal to the security establishment (and by extension restraining the boy’s insatiable cohorts), Mubarak père calculated that his generals would crush the uprising in order to consummate the deal. (He presumably intended to use the aftermath to re-insert Gamal into the equation, perhaps by scapegoating those that saved him.)

With Washington positively giddy over Sulaiman’s appointment, the scenario was foiled only by the Egyptian people. Indeed, their escalatory response to Mubarak’s successive maneuvers – a resounding rejection of both reform and regime legitimacy – appears to have led the generals to conclude that the scale of the bloodbath required to crush the rebellion would at the very least shatter the military’s institutional coherence. No less alarmingly for them and for Washington in particular, Mubarak seemed determined to drag Sulaiman down with him if he wasn’t given a satisfactory exit.

If in Tunisia the revolt’s arrival in the capital set alarm bells ringing, it appears that in Egypt the spread of mass protests beyond Cairo and Alexandria played an equally significant role. As towns and cities in the Suez Canal zone, Nile Delta, Sinai, and then Upper Egypt and even the Western Desert joined the uprising, and growing numbers of workers in state industries and institutions went on strike, it became clear Mubarak had to go, and go immediately. Since in contrast to Ben Ali he retained sufficient authority to prevent his own deportation, and therefore the ability to threaten his generals with genuine regime change, he was able to negotiate a less ignominious end in time to escape the massive crowds gathering around his palace, but apparently too late to fulfill Sulaiman’s leadership ambitions. Given that Sulaiman and Gamal between them effectively governed Egypt in recent years, their ouster (yet to be definitively confirmed in Sulaiman’s case) is of perhaps greater significance than Mubarak’s.

5. The success of the Tunisian uprising inspired and helped spark the Egyptian revolt rather than produced the conditions for it. Indeed, there had been a steady growth of activism and unrest in Egypt for a number of years, which began to spike in the wake of the police murder of Khaled Said in Alexandria in June 2010 and then the December 31 government-organized bombing of a church in that same city. The Tunisian revolution, in other words, sprouted so easily on the banks of the Nile because it landed on fertile soil. The same can be said about protests and incipient rebellions in other Arab states in recent weeks and months. It is noteworthy that neither Tunisia nor even Egypt have – in contrast to Arab revolutionaries in the 1950s and 1960s – sought to export their experience. Rather, other Arabs have been taking the initiative to import what they perceive as a successful model for transformation.

6. If Tunisia has largely existed on the Arab periphery, Egypt forms its very heart and soul, and the success of the Egyptian uprising is therefore of regional and strategic significance – a political earthquake. Indeed, where the ouster of Ben Ali was celebrated in the region on the grounds that an Arab tyrant had been deposed, many non-Egyptian Arabs responded to the fall of Mubarak as if they had themselves been his subjects – which in a sense they were.

The impact of Egypt could already be observed the day Mubarak’s rule ended. Where Arab governments largely acted to suppress celebrations of Ben Ali’s removal, there were scant attempts to interfere with the popular euphoria that greeted the success of the Egyptian uprising. To the contrary, governments from Algiers to Ramallah to Sana’a rushed to demonstrate that– like Ben Ali – they “understood” the message emanating from their populations. And the message, of course, is that if Mubarak can fall then no autocrat is safe.

In the coming months and years, it can reasonably be expected that Egypt will seek to re-assert a leading role among Arab states, and whether alone or in concert with others seek to balance Israeli, Turkish and Iranian influence in the region.

7. Absent genuine regime change in Cairo, it appears unlikely that Egypt will formally renounce its peace treaty with Israel. It may however seek to restore unfettered sovereignty to Sinai by renegotiating key aspects of this agreement. More importantly, it seems inconceivable that Egypt will or can continue to play the role of regional strategic partner of Israel that was the hallmark of the Mubarak era. Rather, Egypt is likely to begin treating its relations with Israel as a bilateral matter. This in turn will place significant pressure on Israel’s relations with other Arab states, as well as the framework for domination through negotiation established with the Palestinians.

8. The Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings, and incipient rebellions in a number of other Arab states, suggest that a new generation has come of political age and is seizing the initiative. Organized, even disciplined, but not constituted through traditional party or movement structures, the region’s protesting populations appear to be led by coalitions of networks, more often than not informal ones. This suggests that Arab regimes have been so successful in eradicating and marginalizing traditional opposition that their opponents today lack the kind of leaders who exercise meaningful control over a critical mass of followers, and whose removal or co-optation can therefore have a meaningful impact at ground level. Ironically, in his desperate last days the only party leaders Mubarak found to negotiate with represented little more than themselves.

9. The current rebellions in the Arab world have been overwhelmingly secular in character and participation has spanned the entire demographic and social spectrum. This is likely to have a lasting political and cultural impact, particularly if this trend continues, and may form a turning point in the fortunes of Islamist movements who for almost three decades have dominated opposition to the established Arab order and foreign domination.

10. The key issue in the coming months and years is not whether Arab states organize free and fair parliamentary elections and obtain certificates of good democratic conduct. Many probably will. Rather, the core question is whether the security establishment will continue to dominate the state or become an instrument that is subordinate to it. Most Arab states have in fact become police regimes in the literal sense of the word. Their militaries, while remaining enormously influential, have been politically neutralized, often by leaders who emerged from its ranks and – recognizing better than others the threat officer corps can pose – have relied on the forces of the Interior Ministry rather than soldiers to sustain their rule.

That Ben Ali, himself a former Interior Minister, was the first to fly, and that intelligence chief Sulaiman may share a similar fate gives cause for optimism. By the same token, those who have seen Ben Ali and Mubarak fall can be expected to cling to power more tenaciously if effectively challenged. Qaddafi, whose head appears well on its way to a rusty pitchfork parading through the streets of Tripoli, is but a horrific case in point.

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/71 ... servations

shafique
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Very interesting indeed that it is about the jews again.

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder!
Flying Dutchman
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Tell us how it is all about "jews again" in this article? A jew is a person like you and me...but israeli policies are a lot different issue as they are inseparable/integral part of ME politics that effects everyone living in this region.
Sorry but it's you that have OCD symptoms..I'll ask you the same questions as sym had asked way back..
Why is it that your sensitivity only works towards israeli jews?... when palestinian/israeli muslims are the ones suffering greater in every aspect of their lives...
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
when palestinian/israeli muslims are the ones suffering greater in every aspect of their lives


Try telling that to the Isreali Jews that have been on the wrong end of a suicide bombing! Do you really think it is pleasurable to live with the constant threat of some nutter walking in with explosives strapped to themselves, hell bent on causing death and distruction? If the Palestinians would behave themselves there wouldn't be so many restrictions on their everyday lives.
Who can blame the Isrealis wanting to protect their people and lands? I certainly don't.
The hate towards the Jews shown on this forum every day just proves to me that there will never be peace in the ME and the Isrealis need to do more to protect their people.
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Is that all you can say in the name of indigenous Muslim human rights of palestine/Israel..
What this guy in this link says is more powerful and concerning to me than reducing the whole matter to the level of blame on suicide bombers..
http://www.adalah.org/newsletter/eng/apr05/ar2.pdf
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Flying Dutchman wrote:Very interesting indeed that it is about the jews again.

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder!


Bravo to you for reading it!!!
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Bora Bora wrote: You know that Shaf doesn't post unless it is relevant to how Muslims suffer at the hand of Jews and/or non-muslims.

Why are you so disturbed about the facts he puts forward? The current political turmoils of the ME is not the works of innocent civilian muslims, that's for sure...

Bora Bora wrote: Anything or anyone that isn't connected to Islam is a terrorist performing acts of terrorism against Muslims!!!

He never claimed anything as such but you do interestingly..how ironic...
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Sometimes I wonder which posts people are replying to. Bora and BM obviously didn't read the OP - so I can only imagine that FD is perhaps posting in the wrong thread?

But let's see the evidence.

10 observations - how many times is the word Jew or Jewish used? Hmm. Once.

as well as increasingly visible collusion with Israel proportional to the Jewish state’s growing extremism.

Factual, not controversial. Egypt was colluding with Israel visibly - and the extremism was increasing (siege of Gaza, slaughter in Gaza etc).

Ok, well perhaps the article mentioned Israel many, many times and blamed Israel (even though FD seems to think it blamed the Jews):
1.
United States – still the dominant power in the Middle East – attaches strategic significance to maintaining and strengthening its regional position, as well as that of Israel.


2. quoted above in 'Jewish' reference

3.
In the coming months and years, it can reasonably be expected that Egypt will seek to re-assert a leading role among Arab states, and whether alone or in concert with others seek to balance Israeli, Turkish and Iranian influence in the region.

Hardly blaming Jews/Israel for anything - lumping it with other countries, Turkey and Iran.

4, 5, 6 and 7
7. Absent genuine regime change in Cairo, it appears unlikely that Egypt will formally renounce its peace treaty with Israel. ..

Talking about a peace treaty - so hardly blaming Israel again?

And that's it.

FD - were you replying to my post or were you thinking of a different article? Where are the Jews being blamed??

Cheers,
Shafique
shafique
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Berrin wrote:it's you that have OCD symptoms..


At least try to be original, you guys never are!
Flying Dutchman
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Berrin wrote:
You know that Shaf doesn't post unless it is relevant to how Muslims suffer at the hand of Jews and/or non-muslims.

Why are you so disturbed about the facts he puts forward? The current political turmoils of the ME is not the works of innocent civilian muslims, that's for sure...

Anything or anyone that isn't connected to Islam is a terrorist performing acts of terrorism against Muslims!!!

He never claimed anything as such but you do interestingly..how ironic...


Disturbed?? Oh, no, berrin, I'm not the one that is disturbed. :wink:

You seem to have the same reading disorder as your brother. :)
Bora Bora
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
At least try to be original, you guys never are!

I don't need to be...It was a symptom that should have been used to address your condition..Sorry that I only took the courage after your misdiagnoses..
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
I never read Shafique's posts. You can predict the content without wasting time reading them. The Muslims are right and everyone else is a million miles wrong. And even if did pull him on the content, he manipulates your words. IMO the contents of his posts resemble a stuck record. Just saying....
Bethsmum
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
The Muslims are right and everyone else is a million miles wrong.


I put the single party dictators and kings of the ME on the same side of the manipulating western world..
Unfortunatly that leaves innocent muslim civilians of ME on the right side while everyone else is a million miles on the wrong side.The current political upheaval upholds this truth...
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Berrin wrote:
At least try to be original, you guys never are!

I don't need to be...It was a symptom that should have been used to address your condition..Sorry that I only took the courage after your misdiagnoses..


Absolutely no need to be sorry, Berrin.
Flying Dutchman
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Feb 28, 2011
Bethsmum wrote:I never read Shafique's posts. You can predict the content without wasting time reading them. The Muslims are right and everyone else is a million miles wrong. And even if did pull him on the content, he manipulates your words. IMO the contents of his posts resemble a stuck record. Just saying....


This is a recurring complaint of shafique.

Literally, members on another forum were driven off by his posting behavior and I posted complaints from even Muslims shafique had debated on a Comcast forum or something who said the same exact thing.

Best thing is to ignore him. He thrives on attention. Anyone remember when he claimed to have put FD and I on his 'ignore' list? After no one was interested in what he had to say, he was back to trolling both of us again.

Oh, and since shafique is no longer a moderator, you can now put him on your ignore list. Before I wasn't able to.

Thanks Andy!
event horizon
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Berrin wrote:
The Muslims are right and everyone else is a million miles wrong.


I put the single party dictators and kings of the ME on the same side of the manipulating western world..
Unfortunatly that leaves innocent muslim civilians of ME on the right side while everyone else is a million miles on the wrong side.The current political upheaval upholds this truth...


I rest my case.
Bethsmum
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
You'd never lose Berrin in a crowd would you, (unfortunately) you would just need to look for the chip above all the heads of the others!

:lol:
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Dillon wrote:Now this is where a mod would have stepped in and commented on your foul language ( or in this case your insulting and condesending comments about berrin ) Zubber, if you enjoy the freedom of self moderation on a public forum, I suggest you start to practice some self moderation before it is imposed on you.

you can of course still edit out the offending language if you feel it's the right thing to do.


regards
desertdudeshj
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Keep it up DDS you'll get there one day!

:lol: :lol:
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
shafique wrote:Some analysis of the revolts - 10 'tentative observations'. Interesting points made, I thought.

The Arab Revolts: Ten Tentative Observations
Mouin Rabbani

10. The key issue in the coming months and years is not whether Arab states organize free and fair parliamentary elections and obtain certificates of good democratic conduct. Many probably will. Rather, the core question is whether the security establishment will continue to dominate the state or become an instrument that is subordinate to it. Most Arab states have in fact become police regimes in the literal sense of the word. Their militaries, while remaining enormously influential, have been politically neutralized, often by leaders who emerged from its ranks and – recognizing better than others the threat officer corps can pose – have relied on the forces of the Interior Ministry rather than soldiers to sustain their rule.



first we need Mouni Rabbani here as he is the one who wrote this 8) not Shafiq...
and as a matter of fact Israel is part of the ME (in the heart of Arab world) this can't be denied (do u want to deny it?) so it make since to mention it whenever you talk about the ME in a way or another (if nobody mentioned it, they will say, see they are neglecting it)....

and there is no one on earth can say Israel is behind whats happening in the ME right now (if somebody blamed Israel then don't talk with him, he is outdated)...

there is just one irrelevant point I want to say, I think people mix between Jew ans Israel (although there is a connection) but generalization is the biggest mistake ever done...

but sure the balance of power in the world will change in the next years as it was changed before, and if you read history you will know the only constant thing in life is changes... but we need to learn from history these changes needs to take place easily...

by the way I don't like reading long posts :D and sorry for writing long ones...
Mahmoud04
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Excellent post Mahmoud - indeed, the OP didn't actually mention Jews at all, just one mention of Israel as a Jewish state in passing.

In many ways the hysteria and blind assumption made by some (some even took the trouble to post that didn't read the OP :roll: ) illustrates the paranoia and insecurities that seems to infect any discussion about Middle East dictators, democracy and moves for justice.

As pointed out, these people can - and should - just put me on their foe lists and not read my posts. They'll lose less sleep. :)

But back to the 10 points - I see you quoted point 10 above. Can I just clarify - do you agree with this point Rabbani is making, or where do you disagree with it?

Cheers,
Shafique
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Shafique, I seriously doubt whether anyone on DF loses sleep over your posts, more like being put to sleep.



You really do big yourself up in a rather unattractive way.
Bethsmum
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
I had a 9 hour sleep last night. :lol:
Bora Bora
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Dillon's still out for the count!

And before you say it Bora, no...I'm not there.
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
desertdudeshj wrote:
Dillon wrote:Now this is where a mod would have stepped in and commented on your foul language ( or in this case your insulting and condesending comments about berrin ) Zubber, if you enjoy the freedom of self moderation on a public forum, I suggest you start to practice some self moderation before it is imposed on you.

you can of course still edit out the offending language if you feel it's the right thing to do.


regards



Dillon in which of the threads Zubber has made insulting and condesending comments about me?
I must have missed but I'd like to read them...
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Bora Bora wrote:I had a 9 hour sleep last night. :lol:


I envy you a lot :lol:

well Shafique. I only quoted number 10 as the rest to me were like a story we all know (am I right?)
the point here change is already taking place (so we can't ask will a change happen or not, too late to ask now)

but how clear the change is? or how it will affect the region, and in what way, this is still not clear as you all know Egypt is a focus point in the ME, so is Israel, and I believe future pressure on Egypt from the Arab world will increase (go back to 1970's and see what they did with Saddat for Camp David), I don't mean bad pressure but I mean their expectations ceiling will be a bit high...

And also Egyptians now have a well for a real change and for moving forward and making a better future (i've received many calls from friends about the number of youth working on community service, unbelievable)

But again no clear expectations, specially now, what happened in the last few weeks was out of anyone's imagination so is what will happen in the next few years.. I was surprised when I heard about demonstrations in Oman...
Mahmoud04
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Berrin wrote:
desertdudeshj wrote:
Dillon wrote:Now this is where a mod would have stepped in and commented on your foul language ( or in this case your insulting and condesending comments about berrin ) Zubber, if you enjoy the freedom of self moderation on a public forum, I suggest you start to practice some self moderation before it is imposed on you.

you can of course still edit out the offending language if you feel it's the right thing to do.


regards



Dillon in which of the threads Zubber has made insulting and condesending comments about me?
I must have missed but I'd like to read them...


Berrin, DDS has confused you. Dillon was refering to some foul language that Zubber had used on another topic. DDS chose to repost his comment on this topic for whatever reason? Who knows what goes on in that man's head :drunken:
Bethsmum
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
well in this case all the parties involved delivering this post has something to say, for further clarification...Let's see who starts first?
Berrin
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Re: The Arab Revolts: 10 Observations Mar 01, 2011
Mahmoud - yes I was surprised to hear about the Oman demonstrations too. Even more surprised to hear that 2 (the last time I checked) had been killed.

But you're right - observation no. 10 is interesting - and it remains to be seen how the political make up changes in the near, and distant, future. I wish for the best.

(As for observations 1 to 9 - those familiar with the Mid East wouldn't have been surprised, but you may be surprised how many have a different view of reality when it comes to the Mid East!)

Cheers,
Shafique
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