I've been cribbing a lot lately from
Issandr El Amrani at The Arabist, but he finds a lot of great stuff, especially on Egypt. He's been mining the ElBaradei
Facebook sites for political art and has a post called
"ElBaradei Fan Art". There's something distinctly familiar about these two:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzun_wOlKv8f9rdTi6lxhBxALD2KZ3xrUhY4Wf9-cNbCYgyS1mJqz90ATJq5YwzsR3PauMS4Tad9SBuIhWwvqZFYb90J8gUsWpxbYIccgj9SBANF6N-VB3ogy6_MQF05W1OawU/s320/otherbaradei.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjp1_MByzdKVwatZ1O4pIMH42sxc5LmCKQKVKLEN1c723SJ8SHFANxQK-cYeCDV4kPiOXIJgRHzmRg1o_dmyILIT0d-AGyrGB1ZjYuk2OKK_VpqRxGGT5zjPM719SP3mL25kjti/s320/13040_231372264902_506274902_4296319_2838749_n.jpg)
Hey, it worked once . . .
4 comments:
I'd guess that the desired goal is not only to change the regime but to install effective government.
If so, wouldn't the USA's 2008 election be a warning and not an inspiration?
Political posters in English based on themes from a US political campaign.
That seems to speak volumes about the support that Mr. ElBaradei enjoys among the Egyptian electorate.
A centimeter deep and half a meter wide.
On the same theme Carnegie released an interesting piece today on the one dimensional nature of Egyptian politics. This would seem to support their view.
LJMarczak: I assume you mean Marina Ottaway's piece from, actually, a week or so ago:
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/index.cfm?fa=view&id=35629
Yes,indeed it was.
I'm on the weekly Carnegie email feed.
Luckily the news in the article wasn't a shocking new revelation or otherwise time sensitive.
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