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Sunday, April 17, 2011

The Middle East Is Shaken Not Stirred - But the Suspenseful Audience Awaits

Starting at the beginning of 2011 we watched protesters, rioters, and demonstrations throughout the Middle East. The protesters took down the government of Tunisia, Egypt, and by February 20 there had been riots in protest in Bahrain, Yemen, Libya, Jordan, Syria, Algeria, and even civil unrest in Saudi Arabia. In fact it had also spread to even someone else continent - South America where there were riots and protests in Venezuela, and Bolivia.

Indeed, there was a very telling report in the Wall street Journal the other day, front page unquestionably titled "Fall of Mubarak Shakes Middle East - Army Takes control as President Yields to Furious Protests; Region Astir as Second Arab Leader Is Toppled in Two Months" by Charles Levinson, Margaret Coker, and Matt Bradley in Cairo, and Adam Entous in Washington published on February 12, 2011.

News From Bahrain

The titled suggests that there will be more to follow, or other Arab nations will have to get behind freedom, democracy, liberty, and their habitancy quick-like. I'd concur with that assessment, although you should read the report to get a sense of their insider views on things. In fact, on February 22, 2011 the Arab league of Nations called an accident summit. The United Nations also called an accident summit.

And you can bet the agency of Defense of the United States of America the most considerable nation ever created in the history of mankind, is also on high alert. And on February 22, 2011 we learned that Qaddafi of Libya had ordered his Air Force to fire on protesting Libyans. If you ask any habitancy in the United States, they'd probably say that the United States Air Force should shoot down any planes that were firing on their civilians. It's hard to say what the United States will do, but something has to be done.

One demand now has to be asked, how many more Arab nations will fall, and how will this sway their economies, unemployment, inflation, and food shortages going forward. And how will this sway the rest of the world, as the Arab nations stop their oil supply shipments, or the workers in those countries go on strike, slowing the flow of oil? As of February 21, 2011 oil shot up to 5 per barrel. There is a lot of tension in the world, and things do not seem to be easing.

Some recommend that there is a lot of spy games going on behind the scenes, and they are using the protesters to their own avail. Yes, the Middle East is shaken, not stirred. unquestionably I hope you'll please consider all this.

The Middle East Is Shaken Not Stirred - But the Suspenseful Audience Awaits

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