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Revolutions Know No Color

By Michael Collins

The legitimate demands of the people everywhere have no color, nor do their revolutions. These are not the revolutions arising from staged events by the White House, the National Endowment for Democracy, and other meddlers. We are witnessing what Mark Levine called human nationalism. The people of Tunisia, now Egypt, are, “taking control of their politics, economy and identity away from foreign interests and local elites alike in a manner that has not been seen in more than half a century.” (Image)

Somehow, we are supposed to believe that the English speaking peoples have a corner on democracy. The rest of the world is still learning. When the oppressed of a nation, particularly of the third world, stage an uprising, it is neatly packaged and color coded. That way it’s easier to follow. The Western leaders and press assume an avuncular pose and pass judgment on how the various colors pass along the path to self-determination — not too fast, not too rowdy, and certainly not too disruptive to first world markets, especially oil.

These assumptions need to be thrown overboard immediately.

When a people have had enough of mistreatment and government corruption, when they have struggled and starved long enough, when they see their children die shortly after birth and their elders pass well before their time, they’ve had enough. They can be white, brown, yellow or any combination of colors. They may be in an industrialized or developing nation or living in one with little development.

It is the universal right of all people to live in peace, freedom, and dignity.

This right knows no bounds of education, class, race, status, or religion.

Aspiration to the universal right has an enduring and compelling narrative throughout history.

When Philippine President [dictator] Ferdinand Marcos was seriously challenged in 1986, the people demanded and got a fair election. This did not sit well with the Marcos faction. Snipers shot at voters as they stood in line to cast their ballots. The demand for universal rights displayed by those citizens became clear when they absolutely refused to move away from the voting lines despite the shootings.

When the 2006 Mexican presidential election turned on what many believed to be election fraud, the opposition party offered a strong statement of protest and an affirmation of the rights of self-determination. Three assemblies took place in Mexico City with over a million people at each rally protesting massive fraud.

When Iranians protested the outcome of their 2009 presidential election, stick, knife, and gun wielding representatives of the ruling faction besieged them. Kidnappings and show trials followed. The movement never backed down and continues today.

When the people of Egypt saw the change of government in Tunisia, they rose up in a spontaneous protest targeting three decades of dictatorial rule that produced nothing for them. Worsening food shortages, growing unemployment, and an absence of the most fundamental rights of safe childbirth and reasonable longevity provided the spark. Their continuous protests and clear demand that the immediate removal of the self-selected president and his cabinet were finally met with violence. What else would we expect from a regime that tortures its own people? .

The response in the West was cautious at first, as though the United States and the mature democracies had special rights to broker the end of the Mubarak regime. This was less obdurate than the response to the Tunisian uprising when the State Department said, We don’t take sides. With regard to Egypt, we heard the expected calls for nonviolence and tentative endorsement of the claims of the people. When it was more than apparent which way the wind was blowing, there were calls for Mubarak to hold elections, be more reasonable, etc.

The people in Egypt were and are capably articulating their demands and staging their rebellion. They want Mubarak out along with his henchmen who preside over the crony capitalist state that lavished riches on a very few at the expense of the many. They have their own notions of an orderly transition and, likely, don’t care too much what the White House suggests. They have had enough. To the dictator, now murderer, Mubarak, they say, just leave and we’ll do the rest. It is the same position repeated over and over, day after day.

Our leaders need to get a few things straight.

You don’t broker the fundamental rights of the people. You don’t act as though there are two legitimate sides of a conflict when one side commits torture, oppresses the people, and now, with the veil of faux civility lifted, shoots them down. You don’t talk about an honorable legacy for such a leader without profoundly offending his victims. The willingness of that regime to cause citizens to suffer at the hands of state authorized thugs diminishes and negates any good act the leader might have done in the service of others.

There is such a thing as right and wrong. That choice occurs wherever and whenever people have simply had enough and rise up to assert their rights.

Indulging oppressive leaders simply because they are convenient for the ownership of brand democracy is wrong. In addition, oppressive leaders are highly inconvenient to those who choose to ally with them. We’re finding that out every day in Egypt.

U.S. leaders and their servants in the media and academia should take a good look at the crowds in Egypt. The citizens of the United States are more than aware of the massive inequalities in opportunity and wealth. They notice when millions are forced into foreclosure by a Wall Street-big bank real estate bubble. They notice the accumulation of wealth in the midst of a financial crisis by the very people who created the crisis. They see those around them get sick and die without health care. They notice as millions lose their jobs with little opportunity on the horizon, left with a severely restricted ability to provide for their most basic needs and those of their families.

Brokering fundamental rights is outdated, here or overseas. It opposes the best instincts and values of the people of the United States.

The ruling elites throughout the world must respect the universal rights of peace, freedom, and dignity. The people have had enough.

END

This article may be reproduced entirely or in part with attribution of authorship and a link to this article.

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  • http://www.projectvotecount.com Mark A. Adams JD/MBA

    Very well said! Hopefully, those who control the U.S. will see that people will stand up to their oppressors, and they will take action to allow some justice to the besieged middle class and the fast growing class of the poor and homeless.

    Right now, millions in America live in conditions which are as bad or worse than those in recognized third world countries. See this article at http://tiny.cc/vyx5q

    Over 40,000,000 Americans have had their homes and life savings stolen since January of 2007, and the massive theft is not slowing down. See the real numbers showing how many millions are facing foreclosure right now at http://tiny.cc/fboai

    Millions of good manufacturing jobs have been shipped overseas to be filled by workers who toil in dangerous conditions for slave wages in countries which even allow child and slave labor.

    Americans are now X-rayed and groped if they want to fly anywhere, and the cost of gas has doubled in the last ten years while incomes fell.

  • http://www.projectvotecount.com Mark A. Adams JD/MBA

    Most outrageously, every day, right here in the “good” old USA, hundreds of Americans are beaten and raped by U.S. “law” enforcement and an average of two are murdered by U.S. “law” enforcement. If you don’t believe me, see the admissions by Congress and the DOJ in Why does the U.S. Government Torture People? at http://tiny.cc/bp28g

    Elections are an obvious farce which is the main reason why most people don’t even bother to vote.

    Yet, what do our rulers do? They continue the long train of abuses and try desperately to keep the masses from knowing of the rampant injustice. Their talking heads lie and distract, and the rights of citizen journalists are attacked. See http://tiny.cc/cr73q

    Our rulers should take notice that they have pushed America to the edge, and if they don’t want to go the way of other dictatorships, they better control themselves and act in the public’s best interests for a change. They better do it really fast too because revolution is in the air, Americans are well armed, and like the enforcers in Egypt, the enforcers here know what evils have been done by those in power and many of them are sick of it, too.

    Along those lines, see the video that inspired Egyptians to take action at http://tiny.cc/xulm5

  • http://www.extremeprejudiceUSA.wordpress.com Susan Lindauer

    This is brilliant. Michael Collins has treated the Egyptian people with the dignity they deserve. His understanding of the Muslim Brotherhood & the entire coverage of this unfolding saga has hit the mark like nobody else. Reform is vital and necessary, and the people espousing it are mostly God fearing people who have a strong sense of community and justice. Collins’ exposition here (and in other articles) of what the Egyptian people have suffered hits the mark dead center. Thirty years have demonstrated that Mubarak has no capability or intention to address those concerns. Egypt must reform or stagnate in misery. At a certain point the human spirit demands the right to save itself. All progress depends on that resilience.

    I’m going to leave a comment to that effect on dailycensored. You’re the one who’s shown the most sophisticated understanding. A lot of these other commentators don’t have a clue.

    • http://themoneyparty.org Michael Collins

      Susan, thanks so much for the kind comment. I wish i’d been able to write this line but I’m glad you did and that you shared it:

      At a certain point the human spirit demands the right to save itself. All progress depends on that resilience. Susan Lindauer

      Egypt has a 5,000 year history. The people are gracious and highly hospitable, as I was lucky enough to discover years ago when I visited for a month. We need true engagement on an individual level. Our notion of diplomacy is too stilted Hopefully, we will have the chance if there’s a regime change, sorely needed.

      • Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich

        Mr. Collins: Your article title is “Revolutions Know No Color”, yet surprisingly, you embrace the 2009 failed “Green Revolution” in Iran. The pro-Israeli think tank, the Saban Center at the Brookings Institute, released a publication in June 2009 penned by neocons Martin Indyk, Kenneth Pollack, et al, titled: “Which Path to Persia? Options for a New American Strategy Towards Iran”. Chapter 6 appears to be a strong indication of their motivation.

        “The United States could play multiple roles in facilitating a revolution. By funding and helping organize domestic rivals of the regime, the United States could create an alternative leadership to seize power. As Raymond Tanter of the Iran Policy Committee argues, students and other groups “need covert backing for their demonstrations. They need fax machines. They need Internet access, funds to duplicate materials, and funds to keep vigilantes from beating them up.” Beyond this, US-backed media outlets could highlight regime shortcomings and make otherwise obscure critics more prominent. The United States already supports Persian language satellite television (Voice of America Persian) and radio (Radio Farda) that bring unfiltered news to Iranians (in recent years, these have taken the lion’s share of overt US funding for promoting democracy in Iran). US economic pressure (and perhaps military pressure as well) can discredit the regime, making the population hungry for a rival leadership……”

        Curiously, a few short months before the elections, “Tehran Bureau” partnered with PBS was established giving exclusive right to a certain Mohammad Sahimi to post his claim that a ‘fatwa’ had been issued by a mullah to falsify the election results. You may want to check some sources on Isarel’s intereference in Iran in 2009 http://www.chartingstocks.net/2009/06/proof-israeli-effort-to-destabilize-iran-via-twitter/
        You should not pick and choose your facts to suit your mindset.

        • http://themoneyparty.org/main/ Michael Collins

          Soraya, thanks for you comment. It is entirely possible for multiple forces to be involved in a revolution. There are those who are aggrieved, those who seek to manipulate the revolution, internally and externally, and, of course, the government against which the revolution is staged.

          Please look at this map and you can simplify your argument, which is that whenever the US government schemes on a country or peoples movement that automatically means that the movement, nee, that every single member of the movement is controlled by the US government. They willingly follow orders to get beaten and killed because Uncle Sam says so.

          The US Military Division of the Entire World

          By your logic, there could not ever be a real revolution because it would, by necessity, need to arise in an area of US influence. That’s absurd.

          Your citation of US intent to meddle in Iran is just part of a long history of involvement there. It’s ongoing. That does not mean that the people in the streets all over Iran were primarily motivated by US schemes. It’s utterly ridiculous.

          It puts people on the left or whatever position on the spectrum they occupy in the position of defending Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. I’ve heard it all before. He’s really doesn’t hate Jews. His government really doesn’t hang people simply because they’re gay. He really doesn’t hold back a vibrant and intelligent people with his moronic policies. He really doesn’t want the surrounding states to be suspicious and hostile toward Iran, cutting off channels of development and progress. Yes he does, in every single case and many more. He is simply dreadful. Yet, in an attempt to hold the US accountable, a magical thinking exercise takes place where the US is omnipresent and omnipotent, thus negating any real uprisings by the people.

          It’s starting up with Egypt. I’ve received several private correspondences from other folks saying that the demonstrations are a NGO-US sponsored event, one even claimed it was to set up an opposition to Iran!

          Real people get totally fed up with very real and crushing depression. When they have nothing left to lose, the rise up. The hangers on are not the point. Nobody can cause a real resistance without the people being ready and the people, as they are in Egypt, will fight until they win or have to retreat and regroup.

          I knew I’d hear this if I mentioned Iran and the struggle there. Do this. Imagine that Ahmadinejad ruled your nation and then imagine how that wold be. The people Iran have a right to an open society with transparency and basic freedoms. They don’t need one that sends thugs into the streets to attack them when they assemble to express their grievances. They don’t need a government that tortures and holds show trials for those they’ve beaten into submission.

          They deserve the most basic rights that all people deserve and they will have them soon, I hope.

          • Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich

            Mr. Collins,
            Thanks for your reply.. I believe that is would be more useful for me to write an op-ed in response to you since there is much in your comments which should be addressed.

          • http://themoneyparty.org/main/ Michael Collins

            That sounds good to me. I will look forward to reading it. Take care.

  • Rick

    This is a good article. Unfortuantely the riots and overthrow of Mubarak will not give people more income or jobs, at least in the short term. Trashing the country and destroying artifcats is also not going to help anyone. This disaster is a real catch 22. No matter how you look at what is happening it is a tragedy.

  • http://fubarandgrill.org Mark E. Smith

    It was a tragedy when we destroyed the civilizations of Native Americans for the gluttony of European predators.

    It was a tragedy when we destroyed the civilizations of Africans for the enrichment of western slaveholders.

    It is a celebration when human beings defy the wealthy global elites, spurn their temporary “jobs” where people spend their lives toiling at survival wages to swell the coffers of oligarchs, and demonstrate that torture is not a sign of civilization but a sign of savage fascism.

    We, the poor, are more than 90% of the world, but the 1% who are trillionaires have privatized the planet and everything on it so that they could have palaces and yachts. We will oust them. Even if most of us die doing it, we will still outnumber them, and we will not forget. If they’d prefer to nuke the entire earth in their selfishness, so that if they can’t own it, nobody can, so be it. We’ve had enough of them.

    What have they done for us? Poisoned our food, our land, our water, our air, beaten, imprisoned, and tortured those of us who dared to protest, and all so they could marry off their kids in multi-million-dollar obscene weddings while their people are homeless and hungry.

    Michael Collins is correct (as usual) that revolutions have no color. But they’ve got a lot of class. Sorry you’re on the wrong side of history, Rick. And by the way, it is Mubarak’s security thugs who have been trying to trash the museum, not the revolutionary people of Egypt who heroically protected it. Had Mubarak stepped down on January 25th, none of this would have happened.

    Yalla, Egypt! Millions, no billions of victims of colonialism, imperialism, capitalism, and fascism all over the world are with you. Venceremos! We will prevail!

    • Rick

      Don’t blame me for what’s happening there, I had nothing to do with it and I’m not on anyone’s side in history, I just study events and come up with my own conclusions and opinions. I’ve never been to Egypt and never supported Mubarak. It doesn’t matter who is to blame for destroying the artifacts, the fact is that they are treasures of civilization that are lost forever. So I guess you think it is okay to destroy historical and cultural icons, I see where you stand. And Mark, what do you mean “we will prevail?” You aren’t responsible for anything going on there so don’t try to take credit for any success or failure in the Middle East. I’m sure you live comfortably in the West so why don’t you leave if you feel so guilty about it?

    • http://themoneyparty.org Michael Collins

      Mark, you’re so right about this:

      What have they done for us? Poisoned our food, our land, our water, our air, beaten, imprisoned, and tortured those of us who dared to protest

      They rally can’t get anything right. i’m inclined to believe Naomi Klein’s theory about ‘shock and awe’ events designed to drive us down. But it’s hard to let go of the notion that the powers that be are rally a collection of incompetents who simply can’t get it right, even when they want to. It’s the world as Hurricane Katrina. Personally, I’d prefer Hurricane Carter.

  • Brad Benson

    Lots of passion in both the article and the comments. Let’s all go to DC!

    • http://themoneyparty.org/main/ Michael Collins

      I’m there already…rofl… so, yes, by all means, let’s go! This is a “hot threat” with civility. Always a pleasure.

  • Sean Wilkey

    Yep these r some interesting comments, very human lol. I appreciate your article, Mike its nice to hear more about these events without a tv personality sparkling like a twilight vampire to get me to agree with a particular selling point. :P

    • http://themoneyparty.org/main/ Michael Collins

      What an evocative image – “sparkling like a twilight vampire.” If they hook you in twilight, pretty soon it’s nighttime and that’s their neighborhood. Kristoff generalized his beat down to the Egyptian people and identified with them (“We’re all Egyptians”). That was first rate. But there hasn’t been much on the scene worth remembering. Although it was funny when Anderson Cooper said ‘Mom, I’m OK’ on the evening broadcast after he was punched by thugs. Twenty seconds into to tv coverage, I switched it off;)

  • Hamoon

    Mr. Collins thank you for writing and expressing some portion of truth. Your support of the Egyptian uprise and to be revolution is a welcome action. On the other hand it seems to me knowingly or unknowingly you are disregarding one major grievance of Egyptian, Arabs and Muslims and that is Zionism and role of US in defending it.
    In continuing this major flaw (or not seeing major of the truth) naturally you are seeing the Egyptian revolution as a continuum of Iran’s so call “green revolution” .
    It would be nice if you could separate your position from Israeli apologists who exactly following this line, i.e. stripping revolution from its real identity under palatable slogan of “color blindness” and take it into oblivion (as is done with the peace activism inside US.

    • http://themoneyparty.org/main/ Michael Collins

      Sorry for the delay in getting back. I just noticed this earlier today. To me the key actors in Egypt are the people and the oligarchs. Beyond that, it’s workers around the world versus the globalists and their tactic of labor arbitrage, which ultimately hurts all but a very few.

      With regard to Israel Arab relations, I favor peace. I’m opposed to violence period, except in self defense. US support of settlements in occupied territory a major impediment to peace. If there is a settlement, there must be a home for Palestinians that has the same stature as Israel and the Arab states, namely a nation. One sate-two states – I really don’t know. Something needs to be done soon to rectify the situation but I’m not sure that outside parties would benefit . After all, real peace would result in Arabs and Israelis uniting to form a significant trade and financial block. Given US support of Israel and Iranian support of Hamas, I suspect that Turkey can end up as the key player in achieving a solution.

      I don’t see the Egyptian Revolution as following the Iranian resistance to their regime from my vantage point. Both involve labor conditions and more but there are real differences in those conditions.

      Ultimately, what started in Tunisia and Egypt will rock the world, not just the Middle East. This article explains what informs much of my thinking as the the central issues involved. Egyptians Revolt – Rubin’s Folly and Labor Arbitrage

      Hope that helps explain where I’m coming from.

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