Remember when every Ron Burgundy out there was giddy as a schoolgirl telling us that Egyptian "freedom fighters" were getting rid of that old meanie Mubarak and were headed for a "democracy" in the land of Pharaoh? I sure do.
I particularly remember the reporters selling us that smack during the outset of the Arab Spring: "Revolutionaries," they called the Egyptian dissidents—veritable "mutineers from Mubarak's mayhem, sick of servitude and longing for liberty, just like Paul Revere!" They flung that noise, or something to that effect, at us with goggle-eyed glee each day for weeks on end.
Personally, I never bought this "freedom fighter" bull shiitake we were all being sold, and I said so from day one of this uprising on my amazing show, ClashRadio.com. Indeed, this "democratic" thang reeked of nutty radicals to me, and I believed it had zilch to do with "Egyptian young folk just wanting to live la Vida Loca."
That said, however, I must confess that I did question myself as to whether or not I was being too harsh on the newscasters' spiel and the motivations of the "freedom fighters." Perhaps I had become too much of a jaded skeptic when it came to the jacked-up scat in Cairo.
That personal inventory regarding the wrongness of my perturbation with the "democratic revolt" lasted about two days. I believe I second-guessed my naughty heart right up until two hundred "democracy seekers" gang raped CBS's foreign correspondent Lara Logan. I thought that was a strange thing for lovers of democracy to do.
Oh, another thing that made me think that maybe I was dialed into what was truly going down was the Muslim Brotherhood started popping up all over the place, gaining control over the "secular" Egyptian military.
And one more thing that ended my brutal introspection was that after Mubarak got deposed, the "new democracy" reestablished relations with Iran and Hamas and officially told Israel to blank off.
It was at that point in time that I ceased my second-guessing and formally realized that I am a genius. Radicals hijacked Egypt, and the Egyptians who truly long for freedom—at least as defined by sane standards—are now more SOL than they were under Hosni's boot.
And lastly, this past week the "freedom folks" in Egypt have put forth their liberty legislation that includes bans on bikinis, mixed bathing on beaches, and drinking beer in public—and they're even yapping about getting rid of the Sphinx, the pyramids, and other ancient Egyptian archaeological wonders.
Call me weird, but that doesn't sound like liberty to me.