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Requiem for the Arab Spring - Printable Version +- MacResource (https://forums.macresource.com) +-- Forum: My Category (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: 'Friendly' Political Ranting (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=6) +--- Thread: Requiem for the Arab Spring (/showthread.php?tid=170516) |
Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - Ted King - 08-27-2014 Steve G. wrote: If you would reflect on the implications of what I said, you would see that if you agree with me that democracy that respects individual rights is something to be valued, then you would agree with my implied fairly harsh assessment of has been happening in many Arab nations. All I see in your comments is criticism for me hoping at the time that we would see a flowing of democracy with respect for individual rights as though there were something wrong with hoping for such an outcome. Either that or you are swatting at phantoms of what you think I said. Steve G. wrote: Ergo, "requiem for the Arab Spring". Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - SteveG - 08-27-2014 Nothing wrong with being optimistic. But, based on known factors, it never stood a chance. Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - rjmacs - 08-27-2014 Ted King wrote: What does it mean, exactly, to "draw a great deal of strength from young men who are [economically disaffected]"? I would think that the arguments from the jihadists would focus on economic development and opportunity if this were the case, but that hardly touches on their ideology which emphasizes the restoration of Islamic order in an increasingly colonized and corrupted society. Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - Acer - 08-27-2014 Ted King wrote: False dichotomy. False dichotomy. False dichotomy. False dichotomy. OK, how about "Religion: Does it drive the culture or reflect the culture or both?" Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - rjmacs - 08-27-2014 Acer wrote: False dichotomy. False dichotomy. False dichotomy. False dichotomy. OK, how about "Religion: Does it drive the culture or reflect the culture or both?" Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. Religion is an aspect of culture. ... ( ![]() Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - cbelt3 - 08-27-2014 The expectations of a country that has been a democracy for its entire existence as a multicultural polytheistic amalgm can only be assumed to be naive in the extreme when applied to other countries who are neither multicultural nor polytheistic. American optimism is another word for 'You have no freaking idea what other countries are like, do you ?" Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - rjmacs - 08-27-2014 cbelt3 wrote: Any explanation for Western Europe? Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - cbelt3 - 08-27-2014 rjmacs... similar... consistent democratic governments over multiple generations produces a more peaceful population. You can also look at Eastern Europe to understand the problems associated with the democratization of a population that had been under a dictatorship, and suddenly reverts to dictatorial politics through internal or external pressures. The death of the Arab Spring can also be laid to external pressures. But the external pressures were predictable.... in a region with SO much transnational extremist / jihadist activity, the destruction of governments produced a power vacuum. And such organizations flow right in and start taking over. If the external pressures had not been there, the movements may have had a chance. Personally, I think the external pressures were the root cause for the collapses. Blaming the locals for these collapses are naive. One might as well blame the citizens of ISIS territory for the organization's takeover. Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - rjmacs - 08-27-2014 cbelt3 wrote: But what you cited was a "multicultural polytheistic amalgam," which didn't exist in those nation-states at the time of their democratization. That's all i meant. Of course "consistent democratic governments over multiple generations" promotes continued stable democracy, but that's a tautology. Re: Requiem for the Arab Spring - Ted King - 08-27-2014 cbelt3 wrote: I think I must have expressed things in a way that gave people the impression that I expected that greater democracy would be a result of the uprisings. I didn't expect that. There was an element to the uprising that fit the "Arab Spring" mold and I was hoping that it would gain traction, but I didn't expect it. |