Gamal Mubarak is Our Next President
Gamal Mubarak is Our Next President
Like Syria, we are heading towards the second phase of the Mubarak dynasty. The path is clear and nothing short of a miracle or a coup would stop it. The opposition has been blown away, and the constitution has been prepared for a smooth transfer of power from father to his son.
I have to admit it, the Egyptian people have shown little resolve to change that, they just given up. We’re being led by a stick and a carrot, they tell us about the carrot but we never get it, we only see the stick.
So Gamal Mubarak is our next president and what you gonna do about it, It is in your face. Now Egyptians are in the same situation as our Syrian brothers who we used to make fun of for their incredible submission and lack of resolve.
To me, I don’t hold any grudges for the son, I don’t know him all that well, actually I don’t know at all, but he is getting more and more familiar to me everyday. He might turn out to be a great leader like Mohammad Aly and do some good to this country. It’s highly unlikely though, but I’m just giving him the benefit of the doubt . My gripe is with the corrupt system of the way the country is run. After all things are set and done, the truth of the matter is that the quality of living for the average Joe Egyptian is in a steady decline since the old man took power.
Take for example the education sector, when I was going to school in Egypt back in the 80’s, the system was not perfect, schools were in bad shape, there was no lab equipment, little physical education, but education though was at least somewhat decent. After all I managed to get my high school degree without ever taking a private lesson or attending after-hours school. I just relied on myself and on in-school teachers. Now-a day education is much worse and private lessons are the norm. The system is now broke and schools are useless.
That’s just an example, but overall everything is declining and the gap is widening between the poor and the rich. This has impacted all walks of life; so for us to endure another 30 years of the Mubarak clan would be catastrophic.
Gamal might be a good guy, but I’m sure there are more qualified people in Egypt than the beloved son. There has to be but nobody is looking. I would think a change would be good. It would give the people some hope for a brighter future. The statuesque means more corruption, more deterioration to the standard of living and a gloomy future that can be very unpredictable.
Read this article if you like the subject
Like Syria, we are heading towards the second phase of the Mubarak dynasty. The path is clear and nothing short of a miracle or a coup would stop it. The opposition has been blown away, and the constitution has been prepared for a smooth transfer of power from father to his son.
I have to admit it, the Egyptian people have shown little resolve to change that, they just given up. We’re being led by a stick and a carrot, they tell us about the carrot but we never get it, we only see the stick.
So Gamal Mubarak is our next president and what you gonna do about it, It is in your face. Now Egyptians are in the same situation as our Syrian brothers who we used to make fun of for their incredible submission and lack of resolve.
To me, I don’t hold any grudges for the son, I don’t know him all that well, actually I don’t know at all, but he is getting more and more familiar to me everyday. He might turn out to be a great leader like Mohammad Aly and do some good to this country. It’s highly unlikely though, but I’m just giving him the benefit of the doubt . My gripe is with the corrupt system of the way the country is run. After all things are set and done, the truth of the matter is that the quality of living for the average Joe Egyptian is in a steady decline since the old man took power.
Take for example the education sector, when I was going to school in Egypt back in the 80’s, the system was not perfect, schools were in bad shape, there was no lab equipment, little physical education, but education though was at least somewhat decent. After all I managed to get my high school degree without ever taking a private lesson or attending after-hours school. I just relied on myself and on in-school teachers. Now-a day education is much worse and private lessons are the norm. The system is now broke and schools are useless.
That’s just an example, but overall everything is declining and the gap is widening between the poor and the rich. This has impacted all walks of life; so for us to endure another 30 years of the Mubarak clan would be catastrophic.
Gamal might be a good guy, but I’m sure there are more qualified people in Egypt than the beloved son. There has to be but nobody is looking. I would think a change would be good. It would give the people some hope for a brighter future. The statuesque means more corruption, more deterioration to the standard of living and a gloomy future that can be very unpredictable.
Read this article if you like the subject
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