The Justice System proceeded Mubarak and it has been the most functional part of the government, the only part which has made any attempt to protect the rights of minorities. Mubarak always had to find ways to work around them because they often ruled against him.
Unfortunately the majority wasn't protected under Mubarak even though Mubarak is supposed to be a Muslim. Having beards was essentially a crime. There were tons of prisons where the government tortured religious Muslim people. I mean, America used to send prisoners from here to Egypt to be tortured.
Thankfully, Morsi did get rid of those aspects as well as the secret police that made people disappear (secret police are back thanks to the pro-coup people). I was more referring to the people of the judicial branch, I guess, and the military & police and not the entire justice system. Hindsight is 20/20 and it's very easy to dictate what Morsi should have done now (from the comfort of my own home, no less), but I hope that the next religious Muslim leader in the Muslim countries takes heed of the lessons learned here and cleanses the government positions of people like the loyalists to Mubarak. I think that's easier said than done because if the military gets a whiff of this plan, they'd have the leader removed.
Not if they declare martial law and attempt to dismantle democracy. At that point you can't wait for elections because by then the dictator will have complete power.
1.) The martial law was temporary. If you remember, Boston was pretty much under martial law temporarily. Now do you think that we should overthrow Obama, the dictator?
2.) Who decided for the majority of Egyptians what they want? Just because a couple million people had the military on their side, they get to go against what they claimed to supporters of (democracy which means abiding by the wishes of the majority of the people)?
Mind you, I think there are all kinds of problems with the military seizing power the way they did. I especially want to see the journalists freed and freedom of speech honored. And I'm not sure Morsi should be treated like a criminal. IMV he was more incompetent than malicious. On the other hand, the fact he would arrest comedians etc. and deny them free speech, does not speak well for his democratic intentions.
1.) It's the military and all the helpers of the coup who should be treated like criminals since they are the ones who killed more than 1,000 people in 2 months and all.
2.) He was not incompetent. It's like saying Obama's incompetent for not being able to fix the mess that Bush left him overnight.
3.) The pro-coup Egyptians could handle decades under a military dictator but they could not handle 1 year under a democratically elected leader and preferred the same military that operated under the dictator to take the country back by force against the wishes of the majority of the voters?
4.)
http://www.christianforums.com/t7767980-4/#post64434755
It is the pro-coup people who made the comedian flee.
How much undemocratic "reforms" can a democracy take before it ceases to be one?
And is a democratically elected would-be dictator to be tolerated when he starts to dismantle democratic structures and imposes autocratic laws? If the majority gave him the vote, and he obtains his goals by legal means, does that render him any less of a threat?
Who dictates what form democracy should take? Isn't democracy supposed to be for the people, by the people. It's supposed to consist of the majority voting and the one getting the majority vote being the one who takes the leadership role.
The majority of the people voted for a more religious leader. So just because the democracy in Egypt wouldn't take a secular approach, it's the wrong type of democracy? Just because democracy in Egypt wasn't like the democracy the West likes it means that it should be abandoned? The West doesn't get to decide how the rest of the world interprets democracy.