Today a court has order the dissolution of the April 6 movement. Egypt is obviously not heading for democracy through this transition. It has become unequivocally a fascist state.
Obviously, the initial stages of this barbarous government, as in its appointment of criminal military individuals as governors, were not signs of progress, democracy, or liberty, but of darkness, state terrorism, and autocracy.
Funny how all talk of political inclusivity is entirely gone.. Almost every serious political force outside of the military and former NDP officials is now frozen out of the government, the presidency, the cabinet, and the supposedly coming parliament.
In comparison to this fascism, the Morsi period was significantly more advanced and capable of accepting opposition.
It is extremely obvious now that the Tamarod movement is riddled with government agents and general supporters of police state politics. The divisions within the movement were brought on by the fact that its revolutionary and semi-revolutionary components opposed the autocratic control Mahmoud Badr is demanding, as well as the obvious and increasingly overt cheerleading of despotism.
Tamarod may have originally started as an initiative outside of the military/Mubarak economic elite (even that is unclear and may not be the case), but it is not sensible now to doubt that much of its support base, especially post July 3, 2013, came to be thinly disguised fascist cultists, feloul, and corrupt business elites.
The rifts were an inevitable outcome once the grim reality of the transitional despotism became undeniable.
The Egyptian junta has astounding echoes of the Chilean military autocracy, particularly in terms of numbers killed and quantity of political prisoners. All that in a much briefer period of time.
The revolutionary movements need to entirely dump this grotesque government and prepare for operating more forcefully against it, even if that means having to go underground.
Today a court has order the dissolution of the April 6 movement. Egypt is obviously not heading for democracy through this transition. It has become unequivocally a fascist state.
Obviously, the initial stages of this barbarous government, as in its appointment of criminal military individuals as governors, were not signs of progress, democracy, or liberty, but of darkness, state terrorism, and autocracy.
Funny how all talk of political inclusivity is entirely gone.. Almost every serious political force outside of the military and former NDP officials is now frozen out of the government, the presidency, the cabinet, and the supposedly coming parliament.
In comparison to this fascism, the Morsi period was significantly more advanced and capable of accepting opposition.
It is extremely obvious now that the Tamarod movement is riddled with government agents and general supporters of police state politics. The divisions within the movement were brought on by the fact that its revolutionary and semi-revolutionary components opposed the autocratic control Mahmoud Badr is demanding, as well as the obvious and increasingly overt cheerleading of despotism.
Tamarod may have originally started as an initiative outside of the military/Mubarak economic elite (even that is unclear and may not be the case), but it is not sensible now to doubt that much of its support base, especially post July 3, 2013, came to be thinly disguised fascist cultists, feloul, and corrupt business elites.
The rifts were an inevitable outcome once the grim reality of the transitional despotism became undeniable.
The Egyptian junta has astounding echoes of the Chilean military autocracy, particularly in terms of numbers killed and quantity of political prisoners. All that in a much briefer period of time.
The revolutionary movements need to entirely dump this grotesque government and prepare for operating more forcefully against it, even if that means having to go underground.