So How Is Obama’s Hope And Change Working For The Egyptian People? Take A Look


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An Egyptian protester makes the sign of victory in front of riot police after the dismantling of a cement security barrier near Tahrir Square during a protest to call for the fall of Islamist President on Jan.24, 2012 in Cairo. (AFP)e

 

An Egyptian protester makes the sign of victory in front of riot police after the dismantling of a cement security barrier near Tahrir Square during a protest to call for the fall of Islamist President on Jan.24, 2012 in Cairo. (AFP)

Massive crowds of Egyptians opposing Islamist President Mohamed Mursi head to Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Friday to mark the second anniversary of the revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak and brought in an Islamist government, at a time of political tensions and economic woes.
The secular-leaning opposition called for mass street protests against President Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood from which he hails, using the same slogan that brought Egypt to its feet in 2011: “Bread, freedom, social justice.”
“Go out into the squares to finally achieve the objectives of the revolution,” opposition leader and former head of the U.N.’s atomic agency Mohamed ElBaradei wrote on his Twitter account.

“I call on everyone to take part and go out to every place in Egypt to show that the revolution must be completed,” ElBaradei, a leading liberal, added in a statement.
“It will be against the Brotherhood,” said Ahmed Maher, founder of the April 6 movement that helped mobilize the uprising against Mubarak through social media. “The goals of the revolution have not been realized yet,” he told Reuters.
Protesters in the iconic birthplace of the 2011 revolution, Tahrir Square, called for the downfall of Mursi’s administration on Friday.

 

The following image and tweet is from Twitchy.com

Man in #Tahrir holds sign asking for the US to stop supporting the Muslim Brotherhood#egypt pic.twitter.com/sMR0hAs3

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