As I sit here, Cairo is ablaze with Molotov cocktails, and nobody
knows if Hosni Mubarak has booked a flight aboard Deposed Despots
Airlines. Come to think of it, perhaps the reason he wants to stay
put until September is because he realizes how much cheaper airline
tickets are when you can order them six or seven months ahead of
time.A lot of people in America are elated by the sight of mobs
gathering in the streets of Egypt. They view it as an oppressed
people longing for liberty. They rejoice at the prospect of a
dictator being dumped in favor of democracy. That is because a lot
of people who are forever quoting Santayanas quip, Those who can
not remember the past are condemned to repeat it, have apparently
remembered precious little themselves. It would seem that the
extent of their historical knowledge begins and ends with the final
score of the recent Super Bowl.img classalignright styleborder 0pt
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srchttp1.bp.blogspot.comSnKyXWeM1OUTVDP5GuKUeIAAAAAAAAABY4qYFtgiI1Es200HosniMubarak.jpeg
border0 alt width153 height200 The thing to keep in mind is that
Cairo and Alexandria are not to be confused with Concord and
Lexington, and nobody in the streets lobbing rocks and burning
bottles is named Washington, Adams, Madison, Monroe or
Jefferson.Then there are those simpletons whose eyes begin to
twinkle at the mere mention of the word revolution. But comparing
most revolutions to our own is sheer insanity. The French
Revolution led to Robespierre and the Reign of Terror. The Russian
Revolution led to Stalin and the gulags. Chinas Revolution brought
us Mao and the slaughter of millions, Cubas Revolution brought us
Castro and the Iranian Revolution brought forth the Ayatollah
Khomeini.Nobody can argue that each of those uprisings toppled a
rotten goodfornothing, but only a fool or a leftwinger or do I
repeat myself would suggest that he wasnt replaced by someone far
more monstrous.Those goodhearted chumps who insist that democracy
is the endall and beall are sadly misguided. Hitler won a popular
election, as did Hamas in Gaza, as did Barack Obama, Harry Reid and
Nancy Pelosi, in America. Just because folks are allowed to vote is
no guarantee that they can always be trusted to do the right thing.
In too many cases, its like handing a loaded revolver to a
toddler.At this point, nobody is certain whom or what would fill
the power vacuum once Mubarak is gone. But being the pessimist I
am, and the Middle East being the dunghill it is, Im predicting it
will be the Muslim Brotherhood, with Mohamed ElBaradei acting as
its front man.I am surprised that other people seem surprised that
Mr. ElBaradei would be aligned with a terrorist group. But so far
as Im concerned, he already was when he headed up the U.N.s
International Atomic Energy Agency. You can only imagine how
delighted Ahmadinejad and the Iranian mullahs were to have him
leading the nuclear inspection team. Leave it to the U.N. to pick a
fox to guard a chicken coop or a rat to inspect a nuclear
facility.For me, the clincher was the fact that ElBaradei was
awarded a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts, thus joining a long
line of villains and frauds, including Yasser Arafat, Le Duc Tho,
Jimmy Carter, Al Gore and Barack Obama, who have copped the Prize.
I think wed all have to agree that not even the Motion Picture
Academy does this lousy a job when passing out its Oscars.Speaking
of the Nobel Peace Prize, I recently got word that Julian Assange
was nominated for one by a Norwegian committee member. My initial
reaction was that the only thing Assange has coming is a very long
prison term. But once I cooled down, I realized that even I was
prepared to cut the creep some slack. All I ask is that he finally
gets around to Wikileaking Obamas birth certificate and longlost
college application.2011 a hrefmailtoBurtPrelutskyaol.comBurt
Prelutskya
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