Dan si Obama nunduk2 minta maaf biarpun bendera Al Qaeda dipasang di kedubes 
Amrik ngegantiin bendera Amrik. Betul2 anjing buduk piaraan orang Islam kayak 
suryana.






>________________________________
> From: Sunny <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Friday, September 14, 2012 2:40 AM
>Subject: [proletar] Al-Qaeda flags in Cairo
> 
>
>  
>http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=2&id=31049
>
>Al-Qaeda flags in Cairo
>
>13/09/2012 
>By Tariq Alhomayed
>
>What happened in Egypt was amazing, specifically the attack on the US Embassy 
>in Cairo, where the American flag was burned and the al-Qaeda flag was raised, 
>all because of what is said to be an offensive film about the Prophet Mohammed 
>(peace be upon him). The protests witnessed the participation of Islamic 
>groups, Christians, and even so-called ultras - radical football fans. 
>When I say that what has happened in Egypt is amazing, the reason is simple: 
>no one knew anything about this film that is said to be offensive to the 
>Prophet (pbuh) until now. Even the news agency Reuters, which broadcasted news 
>of the attack on the US Embassy in Egypt, said in its initial report: “it was 
>not clear which film prompted the protests”! This is a puzzling matter; no one 
>had heard about this film; no one knew its name, so is it rational to set the 
>world on fire whenever someone launches a trivial insult towards Islam, or one 
>of its symbols? The truth that must be told, and especially with regards to 
>the events in Egypt, is that the matter is more complicated than an offensive 
>film. The earlier reaction of some Egyptians, for example, towards the case of 
>an Egyptian national accused of smuggling illegal drugs into Saudi Arabia was 
>similar to their reaction now against the US Embassy, the only difference 
>being that in the former example
 the al-Qaeda flag was not raised, nor was the Saudi flag burned, which means 
that the problem in Egypt is much more complicated than a strong fervor for the 
Islamic religion. 
>
>The real problem in Egypt, ever since the fall of former President Hosni 
>Mubarak, lies in the adulation of a street that has no leader; in other words 
>someone to act in accordance with the concept of a statesman and not to simply 
>pander to the demands of the revolutionaries in the squares or social 
>networks. Even the media crudely attempts to keep pace with the Egyptian 
>street, where sometimes it is portrayed as the guilty defendant, and at other 
>times it is the innocent who is found guilty without trial. This is Egypt’s 
>illness today, and this will hamper Egypt’s march towards the future. 
>Countries are not built on screams, chaos and revenge, but with wisdom, 
>prudence, laws and reconciliation. Unfortunately, this is not the case in 
>Egypt, the evidence being that those who protested against the US Embassy were 
>Islamic, Christian and even football hooligans. 
>
>The puzzling and amazing problem is that no one knows anything about the film 
>they are talking about. If they were aware of the film, they would see it is 
>clearly the trivial work of an individual, or a petty extremist group. What is 
>incomprehensible, in the case of Egypt, is how there can be this reaction, 
>even if it stems from religious fervor, similar to the reactions of extremists 
>in Pakistan or Afghanistan, where they burn the American flag and fly the flag 
>of al-Qaeda? How can we demand an apology from America for a film produced by 
>a trivial or ignorant group, and not the US administration? Would it be 
>conceivable, for example, for the Obama administration to demand that the 
>Egyptians, whether the government or the people, apologize for the fact that 
>Ayman al-Zawahiri, the current leader of al-Qaeda, is an Egyptian? This is 
>both unreasonable and unacceptable. 
>
>Therefore, we love and care for Egypt, and what is happening there means only 
>one thing: the leaders of Egyptian public opinion must address the chaos of 
>the Egyptian street. Intellectuals and politicians should respect their 
>knowledge and awareness, and the same goes for the media, and they must stop 
>trying to keep pace with the street to avoid igniting Egypt as a whole
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
> 
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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