Jasongreat said:
Although I don't have an opinion on what is happening in Egypt, nor do I really care. Imo the people of every country have the right to do what ever they want as long as it doesn't affect my country.
Agreed. Unfortunately, what's happening in the Middle East is affecting all nations, and will continue to affect all nations.
It was born of the enlightenment, when people were becoming aware of their natural rights and started to believe http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/document/" ...
Exactly.
According to my reading of history, the founders pleaded with their king many, many times before they resorted to throwing of the shackles and went about forming our own government. The ideas were born of studying the history of other governments and was planned and started to be implemented long before they ever started to rise up. They tried one form of republicanism, before and during the revolution, but when that form was found lacking shortly after, they changed it to the form of republicanism that we had for a while thereafter.
I think most people think the Founders were just some rich land-owners who threw some ideas around a room for a couple of weeks until everyone agreed on a form of government everyone could accept, then followed that with a Declaration of Independance and later, a Constitution, the latter of which needs radical reform to "keep up with the times."
Nothing could be further from the truth. Most of the founders had been very well-read students of other governmental systems for decades, including what worked, what didn't, and why. Our Constitution is based on mankind himself, human nature, to preserve the "inalienable rights" spoken of in the Declaration of Independance, so as to provide for the needs of all citizens such that they can have "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
It's needed a couple of tweaks over the years, but it's stood in it's near-original form very well over the last quarter-millennia for one simple reason: They Got It Right.
However, the egyptians haven't even decided what form their new government is going to take, all they know is they want this one gone and will riot till it happens.
I agree that this is what the Egyptian masses may believe, but http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caliphate" they're hoping to instill, one way or another, and they've been working towards it since 1924.
I think Egypts problems are only going to get worse, I hope I'm wrong. As I truly feel it is the Egyptian people's right to change their government if they wish to do so, I just think they are going about it the wrong way.
Agreed.
And I am sick of the comparisons with the US revolution, what is happening there and what happened here are nothing alike, so far.
I disagree. I see a lot of similarities between what most Egyptians are faced with and are trying to accomplish and what the American Colonists are faced with and are trying to accomplish:
American Colonists: Oppressed (via British military troops), over-taxed (King George became RICH off them), and desiring to throw off both the oppression and the taxation.
Egyptian Citizens: Oppressed (via Egypt's Police), over-taxed (Mubarak's net worth is $70 Billion), and desiring to throw off both the oppression and the taxation.
I also see a lot of differences, including one principle difference: The Colonists had a sincere desire to allow everyone to worship as they see fit. If anyone has any doubts that this is similar to what's going on in the Middle East, there's a lot of homework they haven't done.