traptunderice wrote:
An article that would make Frig cry on how democracy in the Middle East, or at least Tunisia and Egypt, will result in Islamic states insofar as radical Islam has been the only form of opposition to the US takes in those countries. So as the poor are given the right to vote, the radical Islam parties which have been helping them will be getting waves of votes and will in turn fuck over Israel and the US, deservedly for their treatment of Palestine, but not what liberals of the West would expect from democracy.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/01/31-0Pretty pessimistic, I'd say, given the wide reporting that this is a democratic uprising of the young through facebook etc that the Muslim Brotherhood have tagged along with after the event. Islamic parties are regularly demonised and compared to Al Qaida by western media sources, something quite far from the truth. Besides, saying that radical Islam is the only form of opposition to Mubarak is a lie that plays into these regimes' hands by painting them as necessary to oppress a backwards people incapable of thinking for themselves. Which is bollocks, clearly.
You'll find this interesting, Trapt, a briefing from the Quilliam Foundation set up here by a former member of Hizb ut-Tahrir.
http://www.quilliamfoundation.org/image ... yptjan.pdfQuote:
Reactions on jihadist internet forums to the protests in both Egypt and Tunisia have been confused and muted. It seems like that many jihadists are clearly struggling to fit the news from Egypt and Tunisia into their existing narrative that jihadist organisations throughout the Middle East are steadily progressing towards establishing projihadist ‘Islamic states’.
Quote:
The high levels of support for the Egyptian protests among ordinary people may indicate a larger than suspected groundswell of support for genuinely democratic, non-sectarian politics in the Middle East. The lack of vocal support among the protestors for standard Islamist slogans perhaps indicates that much of this apparent support for the Brotherhood was not ideologically-based but rather based on a
shared opposition to the status quo for whom the Brotherhood was the only available outlet. This shows that Brotherhood claims to be the ‘only real opposition’ to dictatorial regimes in the Middle East should be viewed with a considerable amount of scepticism in future. Given the opportunity, many people in the Arab countries clearly prefer civil, nonsectarian parties over Islamists.
Under it all, Arabs are just like everyone else. Quel surprise.