Friday, January 28, 2011

Should I Toss The Chapstick From Cold Sore



followed with apprehension, but also with great pride that what is happening in the southern Mediterranean. Old systems, obsolete and corrupt that they pulled the rope too long, are finally forced to deal with people who have suppressed for too long.
react young people, are organized on the Internet with "weapons" that the old and dusty pharaohs not know how to use, do not know how to control. "The police have bullets in our mobile phones and social networks," said a Tunisian blogger.
The people gather in "movements": There are no flags, no political party or religious manipulation. And 'the people, and the only people who are protesting. In its own name. They are young people who want a future, a job, freedom of expression. And they're willing to fight for this, but in a constructive manner. It is a struggle for its own sake. It is not channeling the anger of the exploited masses. And 'people who know what they want. Believes that now is the time to go in the future, leaving the dusty mud schemes whose kings are stuffed as the ubiquitous photos of themselves: ultra-seventies raven-haired, pathetic and anachronistic. But also dangerous.

Then there's the answer, just as flabby and out of date, the West: money. Not for development but to strengthen the armed forces. While all the western U.S. friendly regimes crumble.

For once, reading the comments on Facebook from my friends from Italy, Egypt, Albania, I feel that people are breaking down boundaries, and feel a wave of life to live a better life, above and beyond the logic of the old rotten and corrupt politicians to finally reel in order to survive.

0 comments:

Post a Comment