you are a moist robot programmed to sad and lol

  • February 18 2011

  • +
    Link

    Feb
    18

    1 notes comments

    Southeast Asia offers lessons and warnings for Egypt

    As Egypt looks to shift to democracy, the experiences of the Philippines’ since the toppling of Ferdinand Marcos in 1986 and Indonesia since the overthrow of Suharto in 1998 show that, while the revolutions were all different, the transition is a bumpy and fragile process that can take decades to secure.

    “What I think is important is both the Philippines but even more so Indonesia show that you can do it right, and that as you do get the reform away from an authoritarian leader of that many years… that need not go to a fundamentalist group, an extremist group,” said Bob Broadfoot of Political & Economic Risk Consultancy.

    …

    Indonesia is seen by many as a better model for Egypt’s transition, both as a Muslim country that has largely held extremists at bay, and because of its early progress made in developing and strengthening its economy and institutions.

    Both the Philippines and Indonesia have managed to move the military out of the center of politics, a key issue for Cairo where the army allowed protesters to gather.

    …

    “In Indonesia the political elite was fragmented and so they agreed to hold elections. It’s different in Egypt, where Mubarak has handed over power to the military, which has never been very good at making the transition, especially in the Middle East… The key really is to have a civilian caretaker to usher in elections.”

    The Philippines offers some cautionary lessons — both for Egypt and Indonesia. The peaceful “people power” overthrow of Marcos was itself revolutionary in 1986, coming before the fall of communism in Europe, but the country has failed to capitalize on its opportunities.

    Helpful tips from my geographic region, Egypt, hope you like them.

    Short URL: http://tmblr.co/ZZKMZy38I9Po

    Post tags: Egypt

  • February 7 2011

  • +
    Quote

    Feb
    07

    comments

    For all that the revolution in Egypt tells us about the power of networked media to promote bottom-up change, it even more starkly reveals the limits of our internet tools and the ease with which those holding power can take them away.

    Yes, services such as Twitter and Facebook give activists the means to organize as never before. But the more dependent on them we become, the more subservient we are to the corporations and governments that control them.

    Some of us might like to believe that the genie is out of the bottle and that we all have access to an unstoppable decentralized network. In reality, the internet is entirely controlled by central authorities.

    Old media, such as terrestrial radio and television, were as distributed as the thousands of stations and antennae from which broadcast signals emanated, but all internet traffic must pass through government and corporate-owned choke points.

    That’s why President Hosni Mubarak’s regime had so little trouble shutting down his citizens’ networks when he wanted to. One phone call to each of the four internet service providers in his country was all it took. And while we might like to believe that couldn’t happen in the United States, we should remember that all it took was a call from Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Connecticut, to Amazon for the corporation to shut down WikiLeaks’ website recently.

    Douglas Rushkoff: Internet is easy prey for governments

    Short URL: http://tmblr.co/ZZKMZy2y9nLH

    Post tags: Egyptinternets

  • February 1 2011

  • +
    Video

    lisarahmat

    Feb
    01

    17 notes comments

    lisarahmat:

    Egypt: A New Spirit of National Pride

    This is an awesome side to the protests in Egypt that you’re unlikely to see on major news networks. A reminder of what the people really want - their country.

    People proudly clean up the streets of Cairo, because from this moment in history, Egypt now belongs to them.

    lisarahmat Rebloged from : lisarahmat

    Short URL: http://tmblr.co/ZZKMZy2rW8Cy

    Post tags: egyptviva la revolucion

  • January 31 2011

  • +
    Video

    Jan
    31

    2 notes comments

    Juju’s message to Mubarak

    “And by the way, some of your police officers removed their jackets and they’re joining the people.” Eight-year-old Saudi girl’s thoughts on the Egypt stuff.

    Short URL: http://tmblr.co/ZZKMZy2qiqe5

    Post tags: egyptviva la revolucion

Hello. I'm Lionel. From Borneo.
In KL.

I invented the Twitter/Favrd bookmarklet, to rave reviews. Favstar's and Twitya's bookmarklets (and bastard kids I may not know about) inherited its genes. I did not invent Sexy Sex Thursdays, but I might have caused it.

A robot what?

My askhole. (Suggestions)

My Twitter.

Email: lionelster at gmail dotcom

Search

Meta

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Mobile
  • Random

Follow

Follow on Tumblr

Stuff I like

  • Video via onthebrod
    Video

    In anticipation of the publication of On The Bro’d, here are classic movies subtitled for bros.

    Video via onthebrod
  • Post via newsblur
    From project to profession: going indie on NewsBlur

    Exactly four months ago, Jason Kottke found my project, NewsBlur, and tweeted:

    Looking like @

    Post via newsblur
  • Photo via everythinginthesky

    Adventures in logging.

    Photo via everythinginthesky
  • Photo via katefeetie

    I love this bitch.

    Photo via katefeetie
  • Photo via superamit

    Many of you have asked, so here’s what’s going on with me.

    WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE

    • 8/1979: Born. Grew up in CT, built a killer eraser collection,...
    Photo via superamit
  • Photo via everythinginthesky

    So I bought that new game that all the nerds are nerding about (Skyrim) and, as with a lot of the fantasy-type games, you find yourself fighting...

    Photo via everythinginthesky
  • Photo via delgrosso

    It’s like I always say: keep your friends close, but keep your anemones closer.

    Photo via delgrosso
  • Post via openareas
    also.

    I will be 50 years old in August.

    Right now, at this very moment, I can say this is the best I have looked and felt in my entire life. At...

    Post via openareas
  • Photo via mayafish

    It’s like, you WANT to stop posting xkcd all the time because you KNOW everyone already reads it, but then every time you look there’s another one...

    Photo via mayafish
  • Post via bradburnham
    I Believe In The Internet - The Content Industry Doesn't

    I have always believed that the entertainment industry’s effort to stop piracy by asking...

    Post via bradburnham

See more stuff I like

Latest Tweets

Powered by Tumblr | Theme: Next Blue | Designed by iro*iro | Tweaked extensively by Lionel