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Joined: August 18 2008
Location: Anna Calvi
Status: Offline
Points: 22989
Posted: January 30 2011 at 04:54
BTW I just read that the cost of higher education in the US has risen with over 800% since 1980, while the over-all inflation since that year was just above 120%. If that doesn't look wrong to you, like a problem that needs to be solved, then I am sorry for you.
Joined: May 17 2005
Location: Los Angeles
Status: Offline
Points: 16310
Posted: January 29 2011 at 22:55
since the protests in Tunisia and Egypt are not based on self-centered ideals, no. And that goes for any developed country. In the developing world, yes.
Joined: June 14 2006
Location: Croatia
Status: Offline
Points: 4160
Posted: January 29 2011 at 22:42
harmonium.ro wrote:
^ But Ceausescu's rule started a decade before he "crowned" himself president (an office he only innitiated). And there were over four decades of communism over-all that people were fighting.
I'm not trivializing the suffering of Romanian people under the regime, or their struggles for democracy. I'm just saying it's high time a similar regime should be overthrown in Egypt (and in every dictatorship on the planet, for that matter).
Joined: August 11 2005
Location: Philly
Status: Offline
Points: 15784
Posted: January 29 2011 at 22:29
JJLehto wrote:
toroddfuglesteg wrote:
The Brits learned the lessons of uprising the hard way through their experiement with Oliver Cromwell and his terror regime. People in this country has long, vivid memories. Hence, this country is immune against another uprising.
There will be some demos and some harsh words and that's it.
Indeed, in one of my classes I believe he described the British political attitude as "muddling through" and they have a long history of stability.
No doubt the situation can grow tense, but I really don't see any chance of something really out there happening in the US, or Canada, or Europe (Western and Central). Seems like a lot of the "middle" countries of the world are the ones undergoing these process'. And wouldn't that make sense?
Certainly not in the USA. They don't have a history of overthrowing their oppressive government.
"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
Joined: September 15 2007
Location: Vitória, Brasil
Status: Offline
Points: 7971
Posted: January 29 2011 at 22:19
things can actually get pretty ugly when the people want to, but Lula os too good in the art of demagogy to let these things happen, plus things actually improved for > 50 million people. Actually better way of life + demagogy = >85% approval ratings, so no uprisings any time soon, lol.
The Brits learned the lessons of uprising the hard way through their experiement with Oliver Cromwell and his terror regime. People in this country has long, vivid memories. Hence, this country is immune against another uprising.
There will be some demos and some harsh words and that's it.
Indeed, in one of my classes I believe he described the British political attitude as "muddling through" and they have a long history of stability.
No doubt the situation can grow tense, but I really don't see any chance of something really out there happening in the US, or Canada, or Europe (Western and Central). Seems like a lot of the "middle" countries of the world are the ones undergoing these process'. And wouldn't that make sense?
Joined: August 18 2008
Location: Anna Calvi
Status: Offline
Points: 22989
Posted: January 29 2011 at 20:43
^ But Ceausescu's rule started a decade before he "crowned" himself president (an office he only innitiated). And there were over four decades of communism over-all that people were fighting.
Joined: June 14 2006
Location: Croatia
Status: Offline
Points: 4160
Posted: January 29 2011 at 20:39
harmonium.ro wrote:
To say that what's happening in Egypt resembles the Romanian revolution is an understatement. Everybody I know is shivering with flashbacks right now.
Well Ceausescu's presidency lasted 15 years before people throw him down, Mubarak is in the president's office for 30 years. It's about time they put the sucker down!!! I'm wholeheartedly keeping fingers crossed for Egyptian people.
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
Posted: January 28 2011 at 07:49
CPicard wrote:
Blacksword wrote:
CPicard wrote:
In MY country, France? No, for one reason: one can disagree with Sarkozy's politics (and I do), but France isn't a dictatorship led by the same leader and his party (clique?) for more than 20 years.I won't be surprised if the Belarus tried to get rid of his dictator; I'm not surprised about the uprisings in Algeria; but I don't see why it would happen in the USA, in Canada and most of the Western Europe (UK being an exception). In France, after all, we will have elections in 2012 and I doubt that Sarkozy will turn crazy and declare himself lifetime imperator just like Napoleon II made in 1851!
Why do you think the UK is an exception?
The last events (the riot of the students) makes me think that UK could experiment a harsher way of demonstrating than any other West European country: from what I see in news reports, in fictions, etc., it seems to me that the UK society is less equalitarian than, let's say, the Spanish society, the German society or even the French society. Of course, watching fictions is not the best way to learn about the society, but I'm always amazed to see the Inspector Barnaby dealing with aristocrats "reigning" over small country towns! I would also be interested in the evolution of mentalities in UK about the republican idea: is still a small, tiny minority which demands the end of monarchy? But, after all, it's still Greece which looks as the country the most canny to "enjoy" political and economical turmoil. When you hear that a 15-year-old teenager died in a riot, you can't wait but big, big, BIG troubles in Greece. And now, for something different, how will things turn in Belgium? Will Benoit Poelvoorde be able to pass a casting for ZZ Top?
I would say the riots we saw last year in Greece were on a par with our student protests, which turned into riots at the hands of those who turned up with other agendas.
Things will get fairly grim here I'm sure, but I've no reason to think public reaction will be any worse than any other European country. I think you're right in that we are less 'equal' than our European neighbours. There is certainly a bigger gap between the richest and poorest, and it's a gap that's been widening steadily over the years. Same in the US. Of course it all depends on who's stats you believe. I'm sure there are government stats that 'prove' the opposite.
I've seen no specific evidence that opposition to the monarchy is increasing, although in times of economic hardship it wouldn't surprise me to see that. We have one thing in common with the rest of the EU; we are broke.
Joined: October 03 2008
Location: Lą, sui monti.
Status: Offline
Points: 10841
Posted: January 28 2011 at 07:25
Blacksword wrote:
CPicard wrote:
In MY country, France? No, for one reason: one can disagree with Sarkozy's politics (and I do), but France isn't a dictatorship led by the same leader and his party (clique?) for more than 20 years.I won't be surprised if the Belarus tried to get rid of his dictator; I'm not surprised about the uprisings in Algeria; but I don't see why it would happen in the USA, in Canada and most of the Western Europe (UK being an exception). In France, after all, we will have elections in 2012 and I doubt that Sarkozy will turn crazy and declare himself lifetime imperator just like Napoleon II made in 1851!
Why do you think the UK is an exception?
The last events (the riot of the students) makes me think that UK could experiment a harsher way of demonstrating than any other West European country: from what I see in news reports, in fictions, etc., it seems to me that the UK society is less equalitarian than, let's say, the Spanish society, the German society or even the French society.
Of course, watching fictions is not the best way to learn about the society, but I'm always amazed to see the Inspector Barnaby dealing with aristocrats "reigning" over small country towns! I would also be interested in the evolution of mentalities in UK about the republican idea: is still a small, tiny minority which demands the end of monarchy?
But, after all, it's still Greece which looks as the country the most canny to "enjoy" political and economical turmoil. When you hear that a 15-year-old teenager died in a riot, you can't wait but big, big, BIG troubles in Greece.
And now, for something different, how will things turn in Belgium? Will Benoit Poelvoorde be able to pass a casting for ZZ Top?
Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Posted: January 28 2011 at 07:21
The Brits learned the lessons of uprising the hard way through their experiement with Oliver Cromwell and his terror regime. People in this country has long, vivid memories. Hence, this country is immune against another uprising.
There will be some demos and some harsh words and that's it.
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