Beo tereak demokrasi?

--- In [email protected], "Jusfiq" <kesayangan.allah@...> wrote:
>
>
> Saya sudah bilang dan saya ulang: orang Arab di Timur Tengah dan
Afrika Utara menuntut demokrasi, freedom, keadilan dan lowongan kerja
dan BUKAN syariah...
>
> Agama taik anjing Islam yang dungu, buas, kejam, keji, zalim, ganas 
lagi biadab itu sedang karam dipurukkan oleh kecerdasan manusia dan
kemajuan ilmu pengetahuan.
>
> Dan adalah tugas setiap orang rasional untuk  ikut membenamkan ajaran
taik anjing Islam yagn disusunorna gArab primitif itu dalam-dalam.
>
>  --
>
> Out with bin Laden, in with Arab Spring
> By Salman Shaikh, Special to CNN
> May 4, 2011 -- Updated 1150 GMT (1950 HKT)
> tzleft.salman.shaikh.jpg
> STORY HIGHLIGHTS
>
>     * Salman Shaikh said the 9/11 attacks left Middle East shaken,
apprehensive, helpless
>     * But now a young generation is shedding narrative of
hopelessness, fear he says
>     * He says West's anti-terrorism aided Arab dictators' repression;
Arab Spring upending this
>     * Shaikh: Killing of bin Laden is chance to close sorry chapter,
begin anew; U.S. must help
>
> Editor's note: Salman Shaikh is director of the Brookings Doha Center
and Fellow at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings
Institution. Shaikh previously served as the special assistant to the
U.N. envoy for the Middle East peace process.
>
> (CNN) -- On 9/11, I was in Beirut with the U.N. envoy for the Middle
East peace process and with the late former prime minister of Lebanon,
Rafik Hariri, watching on television with disbelief as the twin towers
came down. The next day, we traveled in a nearly empty aircraft across
Israeli airspace to Cairo. We were met by Ahmad Maher, then the Egyptian
foreign minister, who during our meeting broke down in tears and said,
"I am really scared, I don't know what to do."
>
> His words summed up the bewilderment and hopelessness that descended
on the Middle East from Cairo to Beirut to Iraq to Saudi Arabia. It was
a time when the hopes and fears of more than 240 million Arabs were
effectively hijacked by just 20 of their fellow men; average age, 24.
What came next for Arabs was a conflict that would dominate the next
decade -- one for which they were neither responsible nor in agreement
with.
>
> Fast forward to 2011, and a new generation of under-30s is shaping an
entirely new region. In this extraordinary season of change, their Arab
Awakenings have managed to throw off the debilitating narratives of the
recent past. Hopelessness has been swept away as they attempt to reclaim
control of their destinies.
>
> Granderson: "Osama got Obama" won't win in 2012
>
> In Tunisia, Egypt, Syria and throughout the region, a younger
generation has used largely peaceful, nonviolent methods to lead entire
nations to overthrow their stale, corrupt and repressive regimes. Their
calls for justice, freedom and democracy have proved infinitely more
effective in mobilizing the young people of the region.
>
> The previous decade was defined by "the war on terror" and its "fight
against Islamist extremism."
>
> It was a paradigm foisted on the world by a U.S. president who waged
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and resorted too often to the binary
language of "them and us." To many Arabs, their daily struggles with
stagnant, unresponsive and repressive regimes were subsumed to the
omnipresent narrative of a fight against Islamist extremists.
> New details about bin Laden raid
> Pakistan involved in hiding bin Laden?
> Condoleezza Rice on bin Laden's death
> Little damage at bin Laden compound
> RELATED TOPICS
>
>     * Osama bin Laden
>     * Tunisia
>     * Protests and Demonstrations
>     * Egypt
>     * Syria
>
> They and the universal democratic values they wanted were forgotten in
their leaders' pursuit of another goal: the destruction of al Qaeda and
its affiliates and the prized head of Osama bin Laden. In pursuit of
those goals, the West, in particular the U.S., was accused of siding
with autocratic regimes that effectively proved their indispensability
as guardians against extremism and as bulwarks for stability.
>
> Opinion: Bin Laden: Father of American Islamophobia
>
> The West's al Qaeda obsession and the invasion of Iraq that resulted
in particular were triumphs for bin Laden and his followers.
>
> His goal was to rally all Muslims in an endless fight against the
"Western Zionist infidels" and create the perfect Islamist caliphate.
For a while, there seemed no alternative to the binary world that bin
Laden and his enemies had created and the Bush administration
supplemented.
>
> Extraordinarily, one act of suicide -- that of Mohamed Bouazizi in a
small town in Tunisia -- changed all that. The street vendor set himself
on fire in protest after a police officer humiliated him, setting off a
popular uprising that would topple Tunisia's authoritarian president.
>
> From this act of desperation, not vengeance, has emerged the promise
of a new beginning and a new Arab world. Throughout the region, there is
a sense that there is light at the end of the tunnel when only a few
years earlier there seemed none.
>
> The Arab world's response to the death of bin Laden has, perhaps not
unsurprisingly, been contradictory. Though there has been condemnation
of the United States, there has also been a mixture of ambivalence and
rejoicing.
>
> It belies a growing self-confidence amongst at least some in the Arab
world to bring about change. The killing of bin Laden has also, notably,
raised fears that Western interests will once again focus on the
conflict with extremists. Arabs themselves want to move on and are in no
mood to go back to the past.
>
> The killing of bin Laden has also been accompanied by calls to the
outside world to take notice of the Arab struggle. This is the moment to
recall President Barack Obama's speech in Cairo nearly two years ago
where he called for a "new beginning" in U.S. relations with the Arab
and Muslim world.
>
> This is a defining moment for a man who may well be the right
president at the right time of history. While his speech was not in
itself enough to transform relations, the killing of bin Laden presents
an opportunity to close the sorry chapter of the past decade.
>
> As Arabs open their own new chapter in their transformative struggle
for justice, equality and freedom, it is time for the U.S. to truly join
that struggle. A transformed Arab world is the best response to bin
Laden's life and his legacy.
>
> The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Salman
Shaikh.
>




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