MUBARAK IS GONE

Mubarak has officially resigned and asked the military to take charge as opposed to Suleiman.

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13 Responses

  1. I’m dancing in my chair !!!!

  2. Let the good times roll! All over the PLANET!***

  3. WOW!

  4. I think it was enevitible.

  5. Hopefully the people will be able to stop the IMF and World Bank from coming in with their disaster capitalism tactics.

  6. Happy for them!

  7. I hope that people will realise that the revolution in Egypt was not a “social media” phenomen. The regime carved in when they realised that the workers especially from Suez, Alexandria also supported the demonstrators and wre willing to use their muscle (strike) to further the goals of the revolution. The difference between Egypt and Iran 2009 was that the regime has a larger number of supporters and few if any workers support.

  8. Regardless of what Tarpley says, the revolution in Egypt is nothing like what happened in Iran.

    While it was going on, I was one of the few who was blogging that the revolution in Iran was a contrivance… a fraud. A quick check of Tarpley’s site will let you know where he stood on that one.

    What happened in Iran started when the business interests over there falsely reported that the election had been stolen. At first, the people believed that, but once the independent agencies who had been observing the elections started reporting in that there was not election fraud, the real people backed out of it, leaving only the “middle management” types hired by the “pro-democracy” think-tanks from here in America.

    The whole thing was a fraud. They had to stage the killing of a protester as a PR gimmick. They staged a fake hanging and “rescue”. After it was figured out by the people there, you never saw “protests” larger than a hundred or so, and they were all the pro-business, Wall Street wanna-bees who figured they would profit off the neoliberalization of Iran.

    Plus, if you remember, the “Green Revolution” protesters were the ones acting like thugs back then; attacking unarmed police, setting fire to their stations… there is a reason for that… they are the same types of people who made up the Mubarak thugs in Egypt… self-absorbed business-firsters who want nothing more than to make as much money as possible regardless of whom it hurts. Notice that in the “protests” they staged here in the states (New York specifically) they carried the flag of the Shah of Iran and his family and there was even talk of returning his son to power. They didn’t DARE do that over in Iran… the people would have turned on them faster than they actually did and probably killed them for advocating a return to those days.

    The people of Iran like their president. They weren’t crippled by the IMF created global depression. The only thing harming their economic growth is the sanctions imposed by Hillary and her globalist friends.

    These two, Egypt and Iran, aren’t even comparable on any level and like I said, I was one of the few who called Iran correctly while it was happening. Just look under the heading “Iranian Election Propaganda” for my writings on that subject.

    And please, if you can find anything that Tarpley wrote about it during the “Green Revolution”, let me know. I would LOVE to see where he stood during it.

  9. So your point about the workers striking making the difference is indeed valid. But what I stated above is the reason for that; Egypt was a legitimate revolution of the people, the workers, the students, and even to some degree, the army. Because without their ultimate support, it would have been crushed. Or at least, it would have been more bloody.

    And you are correct again… it was not a social media revolution. For the most part they had shut down the social media sites right off the bat and even after bringing the internet back, they still blocked access to Facebook and Twitter for a long time. So how could those two have created this? They couldn’t .

    The reason they are trying to spin that now is because they want to use it later for their advantage, just like all the fake Tweets that came out of Israel and the United States during the Green Revolution (they were supposedly coming from Iranian civilians during the protests)

  10. Speaking of frauds, saw Biden out yesterday calling on the leaders of Iran to listen to their people.

    Didn’t hear him saying anything to Algeria, though.

    r ap

  11. al Jazeera is covering Algeria now. Interesting. I haven’t even noticed up until now.

  12. Hey, Willy

    Sorry to be this long getting back with this, but Pat’s had the machine tied up–working out our taxes.

    Anyway, way I of heard of it, BBC Radio comes on live for an hour here at 4:00 AM–10:00 AM there. Algerian heavy-handedness dribbled out through their reports on Egypt the past few days.

    Biden is bound to have known about it, yet he put on his show of concern regarding the Iranian people–the phony fuck.

    Keep on keeping us up with all your good work.

    r

  13. And speaking of working out our taxes, I see they’re calling for a look into Mubarak wealth.

    I wonder if we, all us US taxpayers, will be getting a refund. We’ve propped him up for decades–every since Ronald RayGun days, I think.

    r ap

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