To: umgud
I was there in November 2012. The Egyptians I talked to were nor realistic about the situation. Most of them had kids 9 to 13. They wanted to educate their kids and 2 out of 3 hated the brotherhood. They have three problems bread, fuel and trafic, Now they have the islamists. Their balance of payment is getting even worse then it was then and for a country that imports food it is nota good situation. I feel really bad for the people.
I wanted to see the sites before the country collapse.
Very sad
13 posted on
06/28/2013 4:25:21 PM PDT by
sharpee
To: sharpee
I was happy when my oldest grandnice one year before the start of the Arab spring was able to go to Egypt via the university she attends in MA. Sadly I will never see that country in my lifetime.
Looks like it will end in a civil war.
15 posted on
06/28/2013 4:35:13 PM PDT by
Biggirl
("Jesus talked to us as individuals"-Jim Vicevich/Thanks JimV!)
To: sharpee
My comment is that the unrest is too great for Americans to be there.
16 posted on
06/28/2013 4:35:36 PM PDT by
umgud
(2A can't survive dem majorities)
To: sharpee
I wanted to see the sites before the country collapse.Good move. It's only a matter of time before the MB destroys them.
33 posted on
06/28/2013 6:44:12 PM PDT by
Zhang Fei
(Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that God will preserve it always.)
To: sharpee
I wanted to see the sites before the country collapse. What, missile sites...construction sites?
359 posted on
06/30/2013 7:04:18 PM PDT by
ROCKLOBSTER
(Hey RATs! Control your murdering freaks.)
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