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Tunisia, Egypt ... Will the US Be Next?

It is truly scary as an American to admit that the U.S. isn’t really a democratic society at all.
Tunisia, Egypt ... Will the US Be Next?
Pooyan Tabatanaei

This post is an excerpt from a longer article written by Paul Cienfuegos available at his website.

Over the past few days, I’ve gathered the following quotations from Tunisia and Egypt which feel uncannily like they apply to America as well:

“People have grown tired of corrupt institutions and a stagnant political order. They are demanding reforms to make their governments more effective, more responsive, and more open.”
—Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, issuing a warning to Arab rulers just as the Tunisian uprising was beginning, on NPR’s Morning Edition, 1/28/2011
“These are really local conditions driving this. You have poverty. You have issues of access. You have young professionals, middle class, educated people complaining bitterly about a lack of opportunity.”
—Former Rep. Harold Ford Jr. of Tennessee, on Meet the Press, 1/30/2011
“Young people want to feel that they are participating: not only in their economic future, but participating in how they’re governed, participating in their future.”
—Assistant Secretary of State Jeffrey Feltman, on NPR’s Morning Edition, 1/28/2011

It’s surreal how well these quotes describe our situation in America. For example, the gap between the rich and the poor is wider here in the U.S. than in almost any other country in the world, including Tunisia and Egypt. And it’s growing wider by the day. The blossoming of authentic democratic structures in Egypt has been blocked for many years by a dictator calling himself a President. The blossoming of authentic democratic structures in the United States has been blocked for many years by an ongoing corporate coup, aided and abetted by the U.S. Supreme Court. Our mainstream press is almost entirely owned or controlled by a handful of giant corporations (including, tragically, PBS and NPR). Almost all of the key societal decisions are now made behind closed doors by corporate boards of directors, which have become the primary constituents of government and whose members now run most of our government agencies. Many of these outrages are legal only because We the People allow our corporate creations to exercise Constitutional “rights” as if they were real flesh and blood people.

It is truly scary as an American to admit that the U.S. isn’t really a democratic society at all.

Just two weeks ago, most Egyptians would have told you that they felt isolated from each other and scared to stand up for their beliefs. Then the people of Tunisia rose up in enormous numbers, (partially due to leaked U.S. Embassy cables from WikiLeaks), and their dictator fled. Young Egyptians started mobilizing themselves via Twitter and Facebook. And one week later, two million Egyptians burst out into the streets. The Egyptian dictator’s days are now numbered. And peaceful demonstrations are taking place in Jordan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Syria.

From peak oil and climate destabilization to the real possibility of widespread economic collapse, There are so many crises facing us that require urgent attention. We need responsive governing institutions freed from corporate interference if we are going to have any chance of negotiating a sane, sustainable future. Do We the People of these United States trust ourselves enough to act as boldly as our Egyptian brothers and sisters? Do we really even have the choice?

Paul Cienfuegos is an educator and community organizer working to dismantle corporate constitutional “rights.” More info at PaulCienfuegos.com.

78 comments on the article “Tunisia, Egypt ... Will the US Be Next?”

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Anonymous

"They are the power behind the curtain that has been pulling the strings since Waterloo."

So what? Really. When I walk around in my neighborhood there are no Rothchild's jumping out from behind the bushes. You may as well blame your frustration on Xultar of the Wicked Planet Kyzgo. You are involving yourself willingly in a massive illusion. You can stop anytime you choose to.

Turn of the television sets and go outside for a long walk. Say hello to the actual REAL people you live around. None of them are Al Qaida, or Rothchild's or Bildebergers. If you sit on a rock at the beach and just breathe in and breathe out is Bill O'Reilly coming to stop you?

Begin to reject the illusion being projected inside your skull.

Anonymous

"They are the power behind the curtain that has been pulling the strings since Waterloo."

So what? Really. When I walk around in my neighborhood there are no Rothchild's jumping out from behind the bushes. You may as well blame your frustration on Xultar of the Wicked Planet Kyzgo. You are involving yourself willingly in a massive illusion. You can stop anytime you choose to.

Turn of the television sets and go outside for a long walk. Say hello to the actual REAL people you live around. None of them are Al Qaida, or Rothchild's or Bildebergers. If you sit on a rock at the beach and just breathe in and breathe out is Bill O'Reilly coming to stop you?

Begin to reject the illusion being projected inside your skull.

Kewl Mo Dee

THANK YOU for this response. The only thing missing from the earlier post (above) were the always-irritating words "WAKE UP AMERICA"

Kewl Mo Dee

THANK YOU for this response. The only thing missing from the earlier post (above) were the always-irritating words "WAKE UP AMERICA"

Anonymous

Yes, "Wake Up America!" is a sentiment far funnier than people usually acknowledge. Slap your SELF - real hard - and see if you can awaken from the deep illusion that your job might is waking "the country" by sounding alarms or blogging!

Anonymous

Yes, "Wake Up America!" is a sentiment far funnier than people usually acknowledge. Slap your SELF - real hard - and see if you can awaken from the deep illusion that your job might is waking "the country" by sounding alarms or blogging!

Anonymous

http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/02/11/tunisia-slim-amamou-speaks-about-tunisia-egypt-and-the-arab-world/

deep illusion huh? this guy is a blogger who is now part of the Tunisian interim govt.

Knowledge is power and the ability to share information and let people know what is really going on, as well as to organize and create movements online is not exactly an illusion, as evidenced by the Eqyptian govts rush to shut down internet and cell phones.

When most media is corporate controlled and that is precisely what you oppose, blogging can be pretty powerful stuff.

if it weren't why do you think the govt's want "internet kill switches" so badly?

Anonymous

http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/02/11/tunisia-slim-amamou-speaks-about-tunisia-egypt-and-the-arab-world/

deep illusion huh? this guy is a blogger who is now part of the Tunisian interim govt.

Knowledge is power and the ability to share information and let people know what is really going on, as well as to organize and create movements online is not exactly an illusion, as evidenced by the Eqyptian govts rush to shut down internet and cell phones.

When most media is corporate controlled and that is precisely what you oppose, blogging can be pretty powerful stuff.

if it weren't why do you think the govt's want "internet kill switches" so badly?

Anonymous

They don't have to jump out because the poisons they put in the water. and air with impunity since EPA doesn't stop them have already given me autoimmune diseases that prevent me from exercising my "freedom" to walk around most of the time. Those same poisons are literally killing a lot of people, especially children who will never have these freedoms you speak of. the illusion is that you can escape the results of who has power. You can take that power back and work to clean up the immense mess they have made but you can't really ignore the mess when it's inside of you destroying your health and freedom every minute.
They don't control me, but they have physically limited me and many others and that is a fact we have to live with even if you have the privilege of not being poisoned-yet.
Try protesting logging roads, or clearcuts, try protesting environmental racism anywhere, or the WTO-see how much freedom they leave you with, and how much pain you can take.
We have the freedom within the bubble (ie white privilege, middle class consumer), but try stepping out and freedom disappears.
How about the well known "crimes" of driving while black, or native? How free is Leonard Peltier?

Anonymous

They don't have to jump out because the poisons they put in the water. and air with impunity since EPA doesn't stop them have already given me autoimmune diseases that prevent me from exercising my "freedom" to walk around most of the time. Those same poisons are literally killing a lot of people, especially children who will never have these freedoms you speak of. the illusion is that you can escape the results of who has power. You can take that power back and work to clean up the immense mess they have made but you can't really ignore the mess when it's inside of you destroying your health and freedom every minute.
They don't control me, but they have physically limited me and many others and that is a fact we have to live with even if you have the privilege of not being poisoned-yet.
Try protesting logging roads, or clearcuts, try protesting environmental racism anywhere, or the WTO-see how much freedom they leave you with, and how much pain you can take.
We have the freedom within the bubble (ie white privilege, middle class consumer), but try stepping out and freedom disappears.
How about the well known "crimes" of driving while black, or native? How free is Leonard Peltier?

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