Reconstituting Egypt picks fight with Israel

by YankeeJim | September 10, 2011 at 06:33 am
94 views | 4 Recommendations | 5 comments

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Cairo tense after Israeli embassy attack

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Cairo tense after Israeli embassy attack

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Egypt | Photo 14

Egypt | Photo 14

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US Department of State is a failed department

This makes little sense. Egypt is still reestablishing itself after overthrowing its dictatorial government. One would think that Egyptians would have their plate filled with becoming a viable nation again. Yet, the deep seeded bigotry of Muslims toward Jews and other non-believers overwhelms common sense and purpose.

http://www.jpost.com/VideoArticles/Video/Article.aspx?id=237431

“Cairo: Protesters re-attempt Israel embassy break-in

By REUTERS AND JPOST.COM STAFF 
09/10/2011 16:11 

Security forces on high alert after demonstrators try to breach embassy; report says military council rejected Egyptian PM Resignation; Israel ambassador evacuates Cairo.”



If one wants to learn more about Egypt today, the present situation, the US State Department and CIA will be of no help whatsoever. Their information on websites is totally out of date and is historical in nature – ancient history.

 

 

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3
"thirty-aught-six"

In the middle east it's always the Jews fault. The Islamic nations never take responsibility for their actions or non-actions in regional events. They openly and covertly support terrorism and terrorist and then use the Israeli reactions to these threats as justification to continue. While the aljazeera article would have you believe both Turkey and Egypt's support of terrorism is a justification of Israeli hegemony, they quickly forget to mention both countries own harsh reactions to "Palestinian" terrorism. Or mentioning that Egypt only recently reopened border access for the "Palestinian". Or mentioning Syria's recent attacks on "Palestinians refugees" in their country. More of the usual half truths and PC spin from the liberal MSM. Atleast the AP were honest enough to show that it's really all about the money and getting more of it thanks to their violence and rhetoric of hate. Buying democracy one failed Islamic State at a time.

2
YankeeJim

The fact is that there are large numbers of people living in the land of oil rich money and they aren't getting their share. Poor people are manipulated by having the rich exploit their religious beliefs to fight "customers" as if they are instead their enemies. Stupid it is.

There are many people in the world who have never gotten off the ground, even though they had thousands of years in a head start.

As you say, some people will always be the victims. 

4
"thirty-aught-six"

I never understood the sentiment of "their share". There is only so much employment and it doesn't appear according to the birth rate. While some of these Islamic States are "oil rich". They have no other means of production they can develop for a global market. What resources they would require would need to be imported and that is a layer of cost that would reduce any competitive trade. Water is usually another issue, so expansive agriculture is out of the question. The reality is that some of these nations need to strictly control their birth rates and that in itself would decrease the number of disenfranchised who in turn fall prey to orthodoxy and terrorism. Of course the elephant in the room is the multitude of clannish/tribal bigotry and prejudice working both up and down the social scale. Then there is the religious sect thing. Shia or Sunni. What are ya and what are you doin' over here Bloods and Crips hood thing goin' on. I wouldn't put it all on the "rich" when it has a cultural/religious basis for much of their internal turmoil. Which is why they try to export as much of it as they can. It's easier than changing 1400 years of doing as they do.

3
YankeeJim

I agree that part of optimizing return on national resources is ensuring advantageous ratio between population and resources. Managing the size of the population in many parts of the world is an enormous challenge. Actions taken by governments to accomplish this often infringe upon human rights and religious beliefs. While governments should be sensitive and respectful in that regard, the magnitude of the problem has reached a crisis stage. Extreme measures are necesary. 

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First Flagged at 7:12 AM, Sep 10, 2011 by The 1
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