Fortunately, there are signs that things may be about to
change. These may be false signs or they may be good omens – time will tell.
What we can do in the meantime is watch what is happening, encourage the
positive developments when and where we can, and hope for the best. One example
giving off hopeful signs is the article that was written by Erin Cunningham
under the title: “Young people led Egypt 's revolution, but the old
guard still rules.” It was published in the Washington Post on April 20, 2014.
Already from the opening few paragraphs, the reader senses
the kind of internal wrestling that is undergoing in the mind and soul of the
article's writer. On the one hand Cunningham went to Cairo
equipped with old banalities (Egypt 's
increasingly authoritarian trajectory) as well as instructions on where to go
in Cairo
(modest cafe in the capital's impoverished neighborhood of Imbaba.) These were
the old clichés and stereotypes that clashed with what the writer saw when she
got there.
And what she saw, and was not afraid to describe with
unusual honestly, was the reality that “the recent confrontation was a small
reflection of a widening generational split – one that is likely to challenge
Sissi should he be elected this spring.” She saw a generational gap; a human
phenomenon whose association with those hated by the Jews was forbidden to make
lest these people appear human to American eyes.
It may be that we are beginning to see a sign the Jewish
moral syphilis infesting the American journalistic setup is being expunged. In
fact, the rest of the article – or most of it – could have been written about a
situation unfolding in a place like say, America ,
Britain , Canada or Australia . This is a treatment you
never saw applied to Egypt
in the last four decades. In fact, it is a treatment you never saw applied
anywhere else in the world because every place had a set of specifications that
were determined for it beforehand. They were specifications designed to comply
with the view that the Jews have for each place.
But if the recent transformation of Cunningham is real and
permanent, it means that America
is on its way to being healed. This will happen because America 's
relation with the rest of the world will improve, and because the human
condition at home is better understood when looked at it from several different
angles. Given that the Americans were instructed to view that condition from
the Jewish angle, they could never have realized what Cunningham is now telling
them can happen and does happen.
Look at this passage: “The rift between generations is
certainly not absolute. A significant number of young people support the
current military-backed order, and some older people oppose the government and
its security campaigns.” In other words, the author is saying that nothing is
all black or all white, but things are made of shades of gray. This is true
everywhere in the world, and it must be true in America as well. This is a good
lesson to learn and to remember.
It also means that Erin Cunningham is re-injecting a sense
of depth into the American culture. This is what the Jewish moral syphilis has
been depleting since it arrived decades ago with the promise to educate the
public as to the “Jewish sensitivities.” The Americans got sensitive alright,
and the culture became superficial.
Another thing that Cunningham is telling her readers is that
the young in Egypt
are agitating because they want a seat at the table. Well, some of us remember
what happened when an Egyptian billionaire spent a fortune trying to get them
to go out and campaign for their candidates. But what did they do? They said:
“don't worry, Mr. Sawiris, we don't have to go out and campaign. We can do it
all by social media.” That was not good enough because these people need to
walk the walk to get to the table.