#1
in an unprecedented move, the Egyptian people have resoundingly rejected the comprador bourgeois secularists, who want to sell Egypt out to the West, in favor of the national bourgeois Islamists, who want to sell Egypt out to Saudi Arabia. with a stunning 69% of seats in the new Egyptian parliament, the coalition of the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice party and their more radical Al-Nairf allies are sure to "put the kibosh" on any further attempts at Zionist interference in Egypt's internal politics. while they will no doubt face resistance from all corners, with the liberal imperialists, military strongmen and commie atheists all nipping at their heels, i have no doubt that this election signals a new day. long live the revolution! long live free Egypt!


now, all rise for the National Anthem Of The Kingdom Of Saudi Arabia.

#2

“Panicked” does not even begin to describe the feelings of many of Egypt’s more liberal and secular citizens. The results of the first and second rounds of the nation’s first apparently free parliamentary elections have been nothing but cause for serious existential introspection for the country’s entire liberal movement. In fact, many outside of Egypt share the same disheartened emotion, whether in the public sphere or governmental circles. To be sure, almost everyone expected an outright Islamist victory and majority in parliament, but few expected such staggering scores, with the Islamists set to easily dominate eventually at least sixty-five to seventy percent of parliament. The one side of the debate that grabbed most of the headlines and airtime centered on why Islamists were doing so well. But the question of why the liberals haven’t done as well is equally important.

First, and perhaps foremost, there’s the question of defining what the ideologies themselves mean to the people. The words “liberalism” and “secularism” themselves have been under heavy assault for decades in Egypt, and much of the Arab world, most particularly so since the end of the January revolution, framed as the antithesis of everything that a tradition-respecting Egyptian should call for. And both liberals and seculars have failed to project an alternative and proper public image and understanding, or create a uniform, clear, realistic and attractive message that could rationally appeal to a wide base of predominantly conservative citizens and voters. In fact, they often appeared to the public just as the opposition to conservative political forces, rather than entities with their own clear and unique project. This failure was both the result of the apparent lack of presence of such a consensual, consistent, coherent and presentable mainstream ideological construct from the start, as well as the difficulty of defining in clear terms the proposed delicate legal and de facto relationships between liberty and tradition in a society like Egypt.

And things were only further complicated following the formation of the nation’s electoral alliances. While at first there were two major coalitions, with one of them (the Democratic Alliance) led by the Muslim Brotherhood yet still inclusive of household liberal names such as Al-Wafd Party (whose head later stated that Al-Wafd was neither a “liberal” nor an “religious” party, but a centrist one, in an effort to appeal to the mainstream), and another more outright liberal bloc lead by the Free Egyptians Party (FEP), by the time the elections actually began to take place the Democratic Aliance had lost many of its mainstream parties, including Al-Wafd, and became more essentially a Brotherhood-based coalition. And with both blocs offering somewhat identical and very broad platforms and economic programmes, including the later-arriving Salafist third bloc, the debate further shifted to reinforce the perception that people were voting over the “identity” of Egypt, rather than a range of public policies, with one bloc appearing to represent the negatively-perceived ethea of secularism and iberalism, and the two others appearing to better represent local traditional values.

Moreover, a look at the Egyptian Bloc’s composing triumvirate of parties reveals the centre-right FEP, the centre-to-centre-left Egyptian Social Democratic Party, and the leftist Tagammu Party, further reinforcing the perception that the only thing that would unite such genetically different entities would be their unity over the preferred “identity” and socio-political ideology for the nation. There is also a degree of agreement that vocal coptic support of the Egyptian Bloc, and the inextricable association with controversial coptic telecom tycoon Naguib Sawiris as one of the main muscles behind the bloc, both didn’t help allaying the vocal suspicions of many conservative Egyptians over the vision of the bloc and relevant liberal forces for Egypt.

The question of identity also gained greater focus as attention to other, perhaps more pressing, questions was mute. There was little, if any, detailed and limelight-grabbing talk, debate or policy proposals on primarily technocratic issues such as healthcare, agriculture, transport, economic stimulation, or legal reform. Such debates would have helped further healthily engage the voter, widen the room for party differentiation and positioning, and create more a sophisticated campaigning and political environment based on real policy issues. But that was not the case.

Liberal parties have also fallen victim to another growing unflattering association, this time between “liberalism” as an ideology, particularly on the economic side, and the fallen Mubarak regime. The crony capitalist practices, corruption and the perceived rising socio-economic inequality between Egypt’s richer and poorer populations have been connected with both economic liberalism per se as an ideology, and also with Mubarak’s regime. And liberal figures and parties have not appeared to the exhausted public eye to significantly deviate in their economic plans from the basic premises of macroeconomic policy as implemented by the Nazif government of the former regime in the last several years, whether rhetorically or in terms of policy, though still promising to act firmly against corruption and ensure that they will (somehow) attend to the vague-yet-popular principle of “social justice”. This is an ironic deal breaker, given that almost all the major contending parties, including conservatives, have economic platforms that are essentially similar.

The liberals, other than being mostly newly-founded parties or predominantly based in larger cities, suffer as well from either a very recent and weak presence in Egypt’s various governorates and rural areas, as well as having a relatively smaller base of vociferously passionate volunteers. Conversely, the Brotherhood has had an organisational ground network that has been developed steadily over 80 years, including an army of loyal, rigidly-managed and active membership, and that network has been actively providing varying degrees of aid, social assistance and religious education to the members of such communities almost consistently for decades. The Salafists as well have been very active on the ground on both the social and religious levels, and command strong influence and loyalty over their followers through their dedicated media outlets, and were rather more ignored by the former regime than the Brotherhood due to the Salafists’ former doctrinal shunning of political involvement before the revolution. Thus, while liberal groupings will certainly aim to be present in various capacities in such areas in the coming period, the Brotherhood and other Islamists will have two advantages: they were present first and for much longer, and they were present and active long before elections were ever an issue.

It is true that the Egyptian Bloc and other more liberal or “civil” forces (as they are referred to in Egypt) are certainly doing a respectable job for entities that have mostly been founded less than six months ago. Nevertheless, they have a long path ahead towards becoming legitimate and competitive heavyweights in Egyptian politics.



http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3871/egypts-liberals-and-the-elections

#3
Saudi Arabia is about as Zionist as it gets
#4

Press Release by The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt's Debt

Interim Government Obtains Loans Four Times as Much as Those during Mubarak's Time

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan issue is looming again in the Egyptian horizon, a few months after the rejection of a similar loan. It was claimed that the first loan was rejected because its conditions were unacceptable, however, such conditions were never revealed to the public.

Dr. Fayza Abu el-Naga, Minister of International Cooperation and Planning, who previously rejected the first loan, refered to conducting positive consultations with the IMF, confirming that this time, the loan is “conditionless”. She further stated that negotiations are necessary to get a three billion US dollar loan from the IMF to support Egypt's budget.

Only three months earlier, Dr. Abu el-Naga had stated that Egypt was not in need of any loans to support its budget and its economy was instead in need of new investments to expand and create more jobs. Yet, today, she is talking about getting a loan to cover the budget deficit, although this step would not help efforts to achieve economic recovery, boost growth rates or create new jobs.

Why was the previous IMF's loan rejected at first when Egypt’s credit rating was much better than now and its negotiating position with the IMF was much better? The IMF gives low-interest loans under arrangements that stipulate economic or political conditions. Yet why are we witnessing the conduct of negotiations regarding the same loan, today, when Egypt is in a bad negotiating position, in light of its deteriorating political and economic circumstances? Who is responsible for such confusion and lack of sound vision?

Over the past two decades, the IMF has been involved in drawing up and implementing the main economic and financial policies of Egypt, which led to low living standards, high poverty rates, and a deterioration in public services and human resource development, as recen World Bank and United Nation Development Program reports state. Policies supported by the IMF resulted in the richer getting richer at the expense of the poor, as well as a downsizing in public spending on health services and education once offered to the majority of Egypt's citizens.

Yet, today, the government is negotiating again with the IMF to get a fresh loan under the pretext that the budget deficit reached unacceptable levels. The government ought to have reviewed the budget after the revolution to be able to restructure it, taking into consideration the requirements of social justice and human resource development. Instead it has applied the same old policies as the former Mubarak regime and its Minister of Finance who allocated more than nineteen percent of public spending to subsidize fuel. The majority of this subsidy goes to capitalists and does not benefit the poor. One fifth of the budget also went to service the public debt, while sums allocated for health, education, and social security remained the same.

Rejecting or approving the IMF loan is not the problem. The concern lies in the absence of public participation and lack of transparency in the Egyptian economic scene.

The transitional authority purposely uses the scarcely announced financial data to serve its own interests by either scaring the public about the revolution or alternatively giving a rosy picture of the economy. The absence of transparency, lack of adequate data, and the publication of misleading information manipulated by the government or the ruling authority are all still going on.

Another dilemma points to the fact that the current interim government's economic team belongs entirely to the former regime and its dissolved party. Such a government does not have the legal right to get such huge loans that would lead to further burdens on future generations, without any public authorization or real parliamentary monitoring or any measure of transparency that would allow the public to see for itself the benefits and obligations it would have to fulfill due to such interim governmental decisions. The same applies to the international commitments made by the Egyptian government after Mubarak was toppled. All lack transparency regarding the amount of the loan, its sources or its beneficiaries.

The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt’s Debts has monitored Egyptian foreign debt and has found that it rose from thirty-five billion to thirty-six and a third billion US dollars in the past year, as reported by The Economist. This increase comprises loans obtained during the reign of the interim governments without any public authorization, political legitimacy or full disclosure.

The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt’s Debts stresses the fact that the current IMF loan for Egypt is an odious one as the current government does not represent the Egyptian people for whom it is supposedly negotiating for, despite the fact that even donors realize that the current government is not a legitimate one.

In the event the Egyptian government gets a three billion US dollar loan from the IMF, the sum of loans obtained over the past year would be around four billion, which is four-fold above the average annual loans obtained during the Mubarak's era. This would pose a huge burden on the Egyptian people for years to come and thus would have to be addressed by the elected parliament and government.

In view of the Egyptian experience regarding past loan-related conditions imposed by the IMF, The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt’s Debts insistingly rejects getting any IMF loan and finds it necessary to identify better alternatives to cover Egypt's current budget deficit.

The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt’s Debts hereby calls on the interim government to provide complete data regarding the economic conditions of Egypt, including the precise amount of funds in the country's foreign reserve, the current budget deficit, the economic basis for getting external loans, and all political and economic conditions associated with the current IMF loan.

The Popular Campaign to Drop Egypt’s Debts also calls for the involvement of the elected parliament, not the Security Council of Armed Forces, immediately and without any delay, to reviewi the loan agreement in detail and consideri whether to approve it or not. We believe this is the least to be done.



http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4092/interim-government-obtains-four-times-the-loans-ob

#5
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.
#6
lmao "the will of the people" lmao im dying here seriously
#7
Lessons you're now on the same side as Grumblefish think about that
#8
nairf
#9
lol liberals
#10
also i don't think "islam" works the way the title of the op thinks it does
#11

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.


agreed.

#12

Impper posted:
lolberals

#13
Brotherhood of the traveling pants.....shitting liberals
#14
Fuckeng liberals and there microfinance.
#15
what are u talking about John Christy Islam has always existed in the form of the Ikhwan Muslimeen.
#16
Bro Imonna need ya to stop referring to me as John Christy and start referring to me as Christ Christy or simply Impper
#17
whatever you say Jack marrano
#18

Lessons posted:
Al-Nairf



al-Pointe
bin Egad
in Zo'rt

#19
apologies in advance that this blog has an arabic name

On 30 January, only five days into the revolution, the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions was born, the first such federation to be established since the union movement was monopolized by the state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation in 1957. Since then, some 300 independent unions have been established nationwide, with a reported membership of nearly two million workers.

But nearly one year later, these unions remain unrecognized by the interim government. Many workers say they have yet to see conditions change, despite their critical role in the protests that forced former President Hosni Mubarak from office. “Workers continue to feel marginalized, just like they did under the Mubarak regime,” says Mahmoud Rihan, a leading organizer of the recently established Federation of Transport Workers.

Rihan and other labor leaders met last Thursday, at a conference titled “Workers and Revolution,” to discuss how the declared objective of “Bread, Freedom and Social Justice” has yet to be realized for much of Egypt’s working class. The conference, which was held at the Center for Socialist Studies in Giza, also focused on the campaign “The Factories and the Square are One,” with the aim of coordinating the struggles of protesters in the streets with those of laborers in their workplaces.

Remaining Demands

Workers have achieved few concrete victories in recent months. Many labor activists say they are running up against the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces' (SCAF) anti-strike and protest laws, along with a deep intransigence in many companies and institutions. “Administrative and financial corruption are still rampant in Egypt's post offices and in other companies,” says Osama Abdel Latif, an organizer of the Independent Postal Workers' Union. “The body of this corrupt regime remains alive and intact.”

Activists say they want full-time contracts for full-time work, a monthly minimum wage of LE1,500, a maximum wage of not more than ten times the minimum, official recognition of independent unions, passage of a trade union liberties law, the purging of corrupt officials from state institutions and companies, and the re-nationalization of privatized companies.

Abdel Latif says these goals will only be achieved through much persistence. “We will never be granted social justice,” he says. “This can only be achieved by workers through their cooperation and joint struggles.”

One of the biggest obstacles to organized labor is gaining government recognition for independent trade unions. Its members are currently not recognized according to the provisions of Trade Union Act 35/1976, which stipulates that the Egyptian Trade Union Federation is the only such federation allowed by law.

Though a draft law on trade union liberties has been formulated and finalized over the past year, the ruling military junta has shelved it for the past three months. Labor activists at the conference criticized the SCAF for rushing to pass a law in April criminalizing strikes and protests, while dragging their feet over the passage of the law on trade union liberties.

Threat of Privatization

The military junta and Prime Minister Kamal al-Ganzouri are actively obstructing progress in the field of labor reform, says Khaled Ali, a labor lawyer and the director of the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights. In addition, he said, they are actively resisting the court-ordered re-nationalization of companies. "Privatization is the biggest crime against the national economy," says Ali. "These are not my words, but rather the findings of the judges in the Administrative Court."

During the privatization drive under the Mubarak regime, thousands of workers lost their jobs when their factories were sold to private owners. Ali says that 128 companies were privatized during Ganzouri’s first term as premier, says Ali. Among prime ministers, only Ahmed Nazif, who served under Mubarak from 2004 to 2011, presided over the privatization of a greater number of companies. The SCAF-appointed interim government is full of former board members of Mubarak's Ministerial Privatization Committee. They include Ganzouri, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, Minister of International Cooperation and Planning Fayza Abouelnaga, and Electricity Minister Hassan Younis.

The Administrative Court nullified privatization contracts for three companies in September, upon finding that they were illegally sold to investors for less than their market price. Indorama Shebin Textile Company, the Tanta Flax and Oils Company, and the Nasr Company for Steam Boilers are to be returned to the public sector. The privatization contracts of two other companies, the Omar Effendi department stores and the Nile Cotton Ginning Company, were similarly annulled by administrative court rulings in May and December, respectively. However, the Ministry of Investment has recently filed judicial appeals against these verdicts in an attempt to overturn them.

“In keeping with the judiciary's verdicts, we workers must fulfill our duty of ensuring that these companies are re-nationalized,” says Gamal Othman, a worker-activist from the Tanta Flax and Oils Company. “We will continue with our struggles for the re-nationalization of our companies. In doing so, we will be safeguarding our jobs and safeguarding the national economy.”

The failure of the interim government to acknowledge workers’ rights, activists said, means that they will be marking this 25 January not as merely an anniversary but as a time to take up the cause of Egypt’s workers again. “I hope that this coming 25 January isn't commemorated with celebrations, but with protests,” says Ali.



http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4139/one-year-on-the-labor-revolution-is-stalling

#20
I think one major factor explaining why the liberals got their ass handed to them was their association with the rich western liberals who have failed all over the planet to provide an alternative to Soviet communism.

The average Egyptian had to live under a secular despot propped up by the West for decades and the left didn't make a big deal about it in any powerful country. Why do business with a political group that is associated with people who have failed to stand up for them on the international stage?

Islamists in Egypt don't have the stigma of being part of a group that sold out to the West for nothing in return.

The question of identity also gained greater focus as attention to other, perhaps more pressing, questions was mute. There was little, if any, detailed and limelight-grabbing talk, debate or policy proposals on primarily technocratic issues such as healthcare, agriculture, transport, economic stimulation, or legal reform. Such debates would have helped further healthily engage the voter, widen the room for party differentiation and positioning, and create more a sophisticated campaigning and political environment based on real policy issues. But that was not the case.



This paragraph in particular is important. If the rich powerful West knew how to fix their economic and infrastructure problems and gave the left valid honest information on how to do it then the people would have voted for them even with their association with the West. The West is more interested in nationalism, militarism, and economic security for their own nations rather than fixing the problems of other countries. Libya is going to have a lot of fun realizing this.

Also, during the Cold War the West saw no reason to cultivate the liberal ideas they gave birth to because they were associated with communism. After a worldwide genocidal compaign to exterminate any liberal or leftist idea that wouldn't hold Western interests above all else they then wonder why the secular left is so weak and worthless today.

Just look at this article about a man being arrested for atheism in Indonesia.

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/breaking-news-indonesian-atheist-officially-arrested/492612

An Indonesian atheist who questioned the existence of God on his Facebook page has officially been arrested and is facing the prospect of five years in jail.



http://www.rhizzone.net/forum/topic/730/

If you read my above post about U.S. support for genocide in Indonesia in 1965 you realize the secular left is rotting in mass graves.

What was done over fifty years ago still has an effect today. What is happening in Egypt is a result of what happened decades ago when the West decided to support Mubarak.

As for Saudi influence, it's much more akin to the influence of the Soviet Union in a way. Back then there was a rich powerful nation with an educated populace and an ideology, but since they were a dictatorship their worldview was extremely immature. As a consequence they unintentionally produced groups like the Shining Path and the Khmer Rouge in Peru and Cambodia the same way Saudi Arabia is producing Al Qaeda and similar offshoots in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, etc.

The big difference is the West needs Saudi Arabia to maintain its economy with cheap oil. The largest proportion of terrorists who made up Al Qaeda in Iraq were Saudis but the U.S. never mentioned it as being anything important. Could you imagine during the Vietnam War the U.S. refusing to condemn the Soviet Union for supporting the Vietcong because it was afraid the Soviets could collapse the U.S. economy? That's what it's like today.

A lot of poor nations abused by the West saw communism as their only alternative for true independence. The Salafists are gaining power because they have a powerful nation untouchable by the West backing them up like the Soviet Union. If Saudi Arabia's strict interpretation of Islam threatens the West then the West, by supporting the Saudi dictatorship, is sowing the seeds of its own destruction.

#21

internationalist posted:
but since they were a dictatorship their worldview was extremely immature.



Lmao

#22
did the radical left boycott the election or do people just hate them. a lot of trots were flipping their shit about the Revolutionary Socialists but they don't have any seats.
#23

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.

you know who else represented the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace? that's right...

#24

internationalist posted:
As for Saudi influence, it's much more akin to the influence of the Soviet Union in a way. Back then there was a rich powerful nation with an educated populace and an ideology, but since they were a dictatorship their worldview was extremely immature. As a consequence they unintentionally produced groups like the Shining Path and the Khmer Rouge in Peru and Cambodia the same way Saudi Arabia is producing Al Qaeda and similar offshoots in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Nigeria, etc.



what does this mean

#25

Cycloneboy posted:

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.

you know who else represented the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace? that's right...



Castro?

#26
trots were also like hell yes tunisia is going to elect a full slate of guys who stand outside universities and sell papers we swear and then they got totaled in the election and i think the biggest socialist group in the constituent assembly literally upholds stalin and hoxha.
#27
the other day i saw a lady's okcupid where she made a large explicit note that if you are a member of a group that sells a newspaper that she doesn't want you to message her.
#28
full disclosure: my group has a discussion bulletin, which is completely different.
#29

getfiscal posted:
the other day i saw a lady's okcupid where she made a large explicit note that if you are a member of a group that sells a newspaper that she doesn't want you to message her.



That’s fair enough. People who sell newspapers are like people sell fax machines and if I was a chick I definitely wouldn’t be down for shagging no fax-hustler.

#30

Ironicwarcriminal posted:

Cycloneboy posted:

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.

you know who else represented the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace? that's right...

Castro?

hitler you dumbass.

#31
soviet union created the khmer rouge lol. pfngreaaaagh
#32

Cycloneboy posted:

Ironicwarcriminal posted:

Cycloneboy posted:

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
Wow Lessons you really hate the will of the people don't you.

I mean what kind of person is so misanthropic that they can do nothing but pour scorn on the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace, I hope i never get that cynical.

you know who else represented the legitimate aspirations of a newly enfranchised populace? that's right...

Castro?

hitler you dumbass.



whoosh.....

#33
[account deactivated]
#34
Islam didn't win big in Egypt, Israel did. You people lack some very basic common sense w/r/t Mid-East affairs
#35

EmanuelaOrlandi posted:
Islam didn't win big in Egypt, Israel did. You people lack some very basic common sense w/r/t Mid-East affairs


Freedom and Justice won.

#36

getfiscal posted:
full disclosure: my group has a discussion bulletin, which is completely different.

It actually is way different though. Ahem

#37
apparently also in tunisia the pirate party was involved in the protests and so the interim government appointed a pirate party dude as a secretary of state for youth and sport. but like i guess they found out what the party was about so they refused to recognize it as like a real party.
#38
Demonized in the U.S. as radical terrorists, Egypt's Islamists are actually led by free-market businessmen
#39
Pfff free market, in a real free market people would be free to kill their competitors . stop cramping my business strategy big government