Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Civic Institutions Essential for Egypt’s Revolution
Colman McCarthy, a former Washington Post writer and founder of the Center for Teaching Peace, must be very happy with the news from Egypt. For twenty-five years, McCarthy has been persuading high schools and colleges to adopt peace studies in their curriculum (for more information, contact him at cmccarthy@starpower.net). Now he has another example of a largely non-violent revolution—led by young people of all backgrounds—successfully ousting a dictatorial regime.
The moral power of non-violence against tyrants is ridiculed by the militaristic mind. Tell that to Ghandi and Mandela and to U.S. civil rights leaders. Those who say these are exceptions due to the relative lower brutality of what they were up against should read the history. Those entrenched regimes were plenty brutal over the years. But when non-violent protests became organized and disciplined enough to reach critical mass, brutality only strengthened and enlarged the uprisings.
Hosni Mubarak’s inadvertent gift to the January 25 Revolution was that he united the protestors beyond class, religious and ideological lines. His regular oppression over the years led to the April 6, 2008 Youth movement, and organized labor strikes at textile mills. An auspicious spark came with the Tunisian upheaval of December.
The shaming jolt of immolations in Egypt to overcome widespread fear and reticence to join with others in those frightening early rallies in Cairo’s Tahrir Square can scarcely be exaggerated.
The 18 days that shook Egypt will make for fascinating study. The self-discipline and power of mutual self-respect with others locked arm-in-arm tested the regime and the protestors.
First came the security police with tear gas, rubber bullets, concussion grenades and water cannons. The resisters held. Then three days later, the police were pulled back and replaced by the respected and familiar Army (Egypt has a draft). The soldiers mostly kept a kind of neutral order, but some soldiers showed their support for the demonstrators by allowing them to decorate the tanks with flowers and freedom signs.
February 2 and 3 brought the ominous pro-Mubarak plain-clothesmen into the Square. That drew new resolve among the crowds that vastly outnumbered what they saw as the government’s thugs. The protestors held. From then on, bolstered by demonstrations in Alexandria—Egypt’s second largest city—Suez and other Metropolitan centers, the momentum swung decisively in favor of the rebels whose ranks swelled with each day.
Certainly, Al-Jazeera television countered the state-run television to inform the people, almost by the minute about what was transpiring in the streets. Certainly the Internet kept the protestors in touch with one another, though the government briefly shut it down along with the mobile phone networks.
But far from most cameras, residents organized Cairo’s vast neighborhoods to defend and supply themselves. They were the real glue, the real depth that convinced the regime that it was all over.
The fall of Mubarak led to the assumption of power by the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces which suspended the disliked constitution, dissolved the rubber-stamp Parliament, and announced “free and fair” elections with multi-party candidates in six months. They pledged to remove the despised “emergency law,” allowing arrests without charges or trial, and promised immunity for the protestors whom they described as “honest people who refused the corruption and demanded reforms.”
Now comes the hard part. Three “cultures” are presently the best organized—the military, commercial and religious groups. Least established is the civic culture that is now, in its revelry and formative stage, the toast of the nation.
But it is the civic—political culture at the urban neighborhood and village levels that will shape the future democratic processes and structures to avert falling back into a military-oligarchic concentration of power—one backed by the same old U.S. support for authoritarian stability over democracy. “Much of the old regime remains” wrote author of Middle-East revolutionary movements, David Porter.
As the New York Times columnist—Nicholas D. Kristof, wrote from Cairo where he once was a university student: “We tie ourselves in knots when we act as if democracy is good for the United States and Israel but not for the Arab world. For far too long, we’ve treated the Arab world as just an oil field.”
The peril for the protestors in the critical next six months is how to keep the momentum of unity going behind a broad universal agenda that would lead to the election without opening up rending sectarian divisions.
In 1990 I was in Moscow as a guest of the Soviet Union’s U.S. and Canada Institute just before Boris Yeltsin replaced Mikhail Gorbachev. The audiences were overjoyed at the looming prospect of democracy replacing Soviet dictatorship. I cautioned that there would be a large vacuum, should this occur, and joy and relief should not supplant the creation of civic institutions, independent judiciaries and prosecutors and the broadest possible civic participation by the people. Otherwise, the vacuum would be filled with forces not to their liking.
Sure enough, authoritarian practices and the corrupt give-away of Russia’s massive natural resources to a dozen oligarchs filled the vacuum.
The Egyptian resistance—politically savvy from dealing with years of repression—is anything but naïve. They know what they have to do and by when, taking nothing for granted. This wariness, they have made clear, includes not taking for granted Washington’s sudden praise of their unfolding quest for what President Obama called a “genuine democracy.”
Wouldn’t it be a surprising change were the Obama administration to stand resolutely with the workers and the peasants in this ancient land of 80 million?


16 Comments so far
Show AllMore than that, we need to get America's "World History" teaching classes in high school and college straight by going beyond select European history and including Africa, Middle East, and Asia too. What a shame that the US leaves their history out of the teaching curriculum. If more Americans knew a lot about Egyptian history, where would Hosni Mubarak be today? I know, what does this have to do with Ralph Nader's call for the need to get civics organized? Plenty. Let's look at it this way. Lack of in-depth knowledge of history makes it harder for anyone studying civics to take the lessons seriously, American or Egyptian.
Yesterday, on Democracy Now!, Amy Goodman interviewed Mona El Ghobashy, who made an analysis which included two possible paths for Egypt.
One would be the optimistic, wherein the people actually took control.
The other, which seems more likely (based upon the long history of protests which end up being absorbed by the status quo in Egypt, and elsewhere) would be where the ruling elites lull the people back into subservience.
I awoke this morning thinking of the poem, "Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost.
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that, the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - -
Took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."
As far as I can tell AmeriKKKa's right-wing government has not reached the degree of repression and brutality that was ongoing under Hosni Mubarek in Egypt. (Although, AmeriKKKa utilized his torture services with extreme renditions.) The AmeriKKKan government is adopting the extremes that existed in Egypt with its surveillance policies expressed in the Patriot Act and government-sponsored murder by presidential fiat.
While the corporate-owned news media trumpeted the fact that young, educated middle-class workers, who are either unemployed or under employed, led the revolt in Egypt, the media seem oblivious to the same economic conditions that continuously plague young, educated middle-class workers in AmeriKKKa.
Eventually, the revolutionary spirit that has caught fire in North Africa and the Middle East will blaze in AmeriKKKa. The greedy rich and their lickspittle in high office should take note that eventually the sleeping giant in AmeriKKKa will awaken.
"As far as I can tell AmeriKKKa's right-wing government has not reached the degree of repression and brutality that was ongoing under Hosni Mubarek in Egypt."
It seems they have, but the oligarchy, their government pawns, and the corporate media are much better at hiding the violence and the source. What was that MLK said about the USA being "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today"? Was he wrong, and was that not the case long before MLK and continuing to now?
"As far as I can tell" some fail to see far too much. This nation of ours is the greatest terrorist group in the world. That we live in a fools paradise, lulled by credit which enables us to buy cheap plastic crap we think makes our lives so worthwhile. In debt up to our eyebrows and threatened with a loss of jobs and homes so we will not take to the streets as we should.
All the while the middle class shrinks, the lot of the working class becomes harsher with each new generation, the money migrates yearly to fewer and fewer, and our kids are less educated than ever before. Currently 35% of all the money in the USA is in the hands of 1% of the people.
As the rest of the world begins to rise up and throw off (American installed) despots in the Middle East, South and Central America, as people movements insist that American owned corporations pay for the enormous harm they have done to the environments of so many places we here "in the belly of the beast" , as Doctor Ernesto Guevarra once noted , remain silent and manipulated.
This is Obama's great opportunity to put into practice all his campaign rhetoric about hope and change. He wanted to present himself as an alternative to the oligarchy. Now's, here his chance to do something worthwhile that would probably also get high ratings in the polls. He should use U.S. economic aid to Egypt to establish those civic institutions, it'd probably be more successful than the purported efforts to do it in Afghanistan. And it would be the best way to defeat radical Islam's ambitions there.
John, I am really sorry you are off the mark by a million miles! Good grief! Millions of Americans home foreclosed and 25% more project for 2011, you are telling me the stupid campaign's rhetoric and use US economic aid the help others? You may have a roof over your head and enjoying three square meals, there are many may not be as lucky as you. Tell me what should these Americans who are homeless, unemployed do, eat shit and live in cardboard homes?
Forget the damn polls, charity begins at home!
Yes, your point is well taken. I am luckier than most. I think that helping the unfortunate should be priority #1. I was against the bank bailouts from the beginning; I believe that money should have been used in recapitulating "New Deal" type of programs to put people back to work and keep them housed and fed. My intent in this particular post was within the context of "if we are giving billions to line the pockets of a corrupt, tortuorous regime, why use that same money to help the poor, abused people of Egypt?" I think it may be a false dichotomy to pose: "It's either helping us or helping poor them". We spend orders-of-magnitude more on killing or aiding/abetting the killing of poor people around the world. The real choice is between that and building up a peaceable world. Anyway, thanks for being courteous in your rebuttal. Words do matter, and so does respect.
..
To prevent the wealth and power concentration that breeds dictatorship, the people could hold yearly referendums establishing limits to personal net worth, with excesses to be given away to people, not to governments, religions or organizations of any kind.
from the article:
~ The moral power of non-violence against tyrants is ridiculed by the militaristic mind. Tell that to Ghandi and Mandela and to U.S. civil rights leaders. ~
why say 'U.S. civil rights leaders' on the heels of 'Gandhi' and 'Mandela'? oh, yeah...because the most popular one, Dr. King, was killed by a very effective and violent bullet, so we can't ask him to comment on the effectiveness of non-violence...not that we could talk to Gandhi or Mandela, either...
wasn't a sitting President shot through the head in the early 60s in broad daylight? pretty violent...and effective...
"As the New York Times columnist—Nicholas D. Kristof, wrote from Cairo where he once was a university student: “We tie ourselves in knots when we act as if democracy is good for the United States and Israel but not for the Arab world. For far too long, we’ve treated the Arab world as just an oil field.”"
What demcocracy is he talking about? In the United States? Are you shitting me? If it were democracy would working people here be treated as if they were Arab oil fields?
No, we don't have democracy. We have capitalism ruled by a financial elite. Sound like any other country you know of? Begins with E...?
This piece is absolutley putrid. I got as far as the next paragraph:
"The peril for the protestors in the critical next six months is how to keep the momentum of unity going behind a broad universal agenda that would lead to the election without opening up rending sectarian divisions."
This is the "unity" argument.
"In the name of maintaining “unity” with the upper classes, all socialist demands must be suppressed. There is not a word in the article about the independent interests of the working class. Nowhere does Sustar propose that the working class seize political power and implement socialist policies to realize the demands of the mass movement for jobs, decent living standards and political rights."
-On the US “left” and the Egyptian Revolution
http://wsws.org/articles/2011/feb2011/isos-f01.shtml
Nowhere does Nader mention what lies at the heart of the problem in Egypt--as well as in our own country: capitalism.
His job is to work WITHIN the system, no matter how many times that has been proven to fail working people.
Like chimpanzees we humans are herd animals. The old alpha-ape in Cairo has been sent packing but there is not yet a new and young alpha-ape. Hence all talk about a revolution in Egypt is premature.
Poor Ralph still does not get it. You can not work within the present system and get just results.
The Zeitgeist of today has completely corrupted the ideas of democracy to be anything but. What we are told is a democracy is actually a plutocracy, always has been. since it's inception in Britain in the 17th century.
Consider the battle for suffrage through out the years. First only land owners had the right to vote, then only men, and finally the rights of women we recognized in to the polls.
Every one should know that Politicians, and political party's are all PARASITES. Merely proxys for the rich, powerful, and privileged, to help them skim off of the fruits of the labour of the commoners. Capitalism is all about that. Today you hear about "Intellectual property" never about "Intellectual labour", as if any property of any value suddenly appears without the effort labour. Capitals was at it zenith long ago when the slave trade was encouraged.
Instead of "elections" we should have "rejections". Sortition was always the sign of a true democracy, befor the Westminster system was invented". The problem has been how to convince the public that this is the best way to manage national policy. Politicians will fight tooth and nail against a real democracy. Why are tax cuts so popular with the political class?. Aren't political contributions already tax deductible? It means more "partays" for the political class.
On voting day we should be given a ballot that names the incumbents. An X on any one line means you think that person should be sent packing. There should be 3 representatives for each riding.
If a representative gets a majority in these "rejections" he/she is removed from the assembly/parliament/congress and a new person is selected randomly from eligible voters.
Who are eligible voters? Any one who goes to the pols and wishes to represent their constituency gets a second ballot with their name on it. This is put into the "selection" box
Electronic voting is not allowed except for the printing of "selection" ballots at the polling station.
After a minimal introduction and vetting of the candidate he/she will join the assembly with term limits of say 5 years, but every year must face "rejections"
If you want an upper chamber people who have survived in the lower chamber may be selected in the same manner for the upper chamber.
I know I may be just a dreamer but without real change "civil society" will first devolve into Fascism and then into "corporate Feudalism".
I think that after "corporate Feudalism" things would quickly degenerate into total global social and technological breakdown with a die off that will include a lot of suffering as those who can cut it living like refugees try to make the best of the worst, chasing and squabbling after rapidly dwindling resources.
I do like the idea of voting in "general rejections." I'd go to the polls for that.
Thanks, Ralph, for another sound and important post. Too bad it seems lost on the negativity of so many nay-sayers.