wheres the wide angle shot of over 100 bodies?
do your homework, MB!
It is concerning when the news reports as they do and the people just lap it up Mel,....they have limited understanding that this is the people of Egypt saying no to the Islamic Brotherhood....the Brotherhood knows this clearly and why they are creating the chaos they are...the idea of “Morsi supporters” is long gone as they are basically being held hostage by the MBS and threatened if they object or try and go home.
There’s a photo out there I’ll try to find of guys breaking down the Mosque entrance...NOT the military ....as the MBS are saying.... they are blaming anyone other than themselves for these happenings and deaths.
ElBaradi said it would only take the Clerics to ask the people to go home now and the violence would be abbated....they refused to do so and in fact are inciting the people.
It’s their refusal and denial that is at the heart of all this violence...and their determination to make the military and new governance appear as vicious and hateful...when in fact it is the MBS and there co-hurts at the top of all this and directing it.
Another incredibly biased POS propaganda article on FR, haven’t checked peoples’ comments but if they believe it, they’re not thinking clearly. I will shortly post a link to this thread.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3047988/posts
Egypt has been warned of the violence to come by General Sisi himself
UK Guardian - Editorial ^ | July 27, 2013 | Gehad el-Haddad
Posted on Saturday, July 27, 2013 8:59:36 AM by don-o
The upshot of all of this is that when Sisi calls on all Egyptians to rally “in every public square”, and when the general characterises these forthcoming rallies as a “mandate” to fight “violence and terrorism” this has to be seen as paving the way for more military action.
The end game is not very difficult to see. Sisi has already given the world a taste of what he is willing to do when officers opened fire on peaceful protesters during morning prayers. There were at least 50 dead on the spot, possibly as many as a 100 in total.
The violence has continued sporadically since then. And while most news outlets conservatively label the violence as “clashes” between anti-Morsi and pro-Morsi factions, the inescapable facts are that all the deaths have been among those protesting the coup and calling for the return of Egypt’s hijacked democracy and that many of these deaths have come at the hands of non-uniformed state agents.
(Excerpt) Read more at guardian.co.uk ...