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2011-04-27 Arabia
Angered UAE expels Egyptians
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Posted by Fred 2011-04-27 00:00|| || Front Page|| [8 views ]  Top

#1 They're probably not happy about the fact that Egypt is drawing closer to Iran. To Gulf Arabs, this so-called Arab Spring is looking a lot like Arab Winter. It can't have escaped their notice that the Czar was followed by the Bolsheviks, and the Shah was followed by Ayatollah Khomeini. Mike Krikorian at NRO on how the nature of a democracy depends on its people:

But I think it’s important to caution yet again that there are worse things than the Assad thugocracy in store for us. We’re seeing the same divide in opinion as on other Mideast conflicts, between those skeptical that Muslim democracy can produce liberal results and those who still cling to the idea that “the desire for freedom is written in every human heart.”

The Journal’s own editorial today inadvertently sheds light on that divide. In a piece that much more enthusiastically calls for the overthrow of the Assad regime, there’s this sentence: “A regime that builds its domestic legitimacy on hostility to Israel is also unlikely ever to make peace, even if it recovered the Golan.” That’s almost certainly true; but why is the regime — and others in the Middle East — even able to build domestic legitimacy on hostility to Israel? Because the people hate Israel and long for its extermination. An otherwise unpopular government wouldn’t be able to blunt or redirect dissatisfaction among the populace by harking to something that didn’t already resonate with them.

My freshman government professor, George Carey, used to say that our political theory is based on the assumption of a virtuous people — all the safeguards and roadblocks of the Constitution would be for naught if the people, after due deliberation and delay, still wanted to do the wrong thing. Well, I’m afraid that in the Islamic world democracy faces the problem of a vicious people, one where the desire for freedom is indeed written in every human heart, but the freedom to do evil.
I wouldn't go as far as Krikorian in describing these people as evil. They certainly don't see their actions as evil, and much of the non-Western world would see their goals as legit. They are not Satanists who get up every day trying to figure ways to inflict evil upon the world. In their eyes, they are the do-gooders, and us the minions of Iblis/Shaytan. And that's precisely the problem with inflicting democracy on the Middle East - without some ability to ram cultural change down their throats, backed by coercion, all we're achieving is a glide path to power for the champions of irredentist and expansionist Islam.
Posted by Zhang Fei 2011-04-27 18:35||   2011-04-27 18:35|| Front Page Top

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