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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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was announced that the former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi‘s Sunni-backed Iraqiya party, will take part in<br />

a new political coalition Iraqi government headed by the present president Nuri al-Maliki.<br />

In mid-January 2011, following with widespread protests and rioting over high unemployment, high<br />

food prices and claims of government corruption, demonstrators fought against Tunisia‘s police and<br />

military. On the 14th January 2011the government admitted 78 people had died in street clashes. [1] The<br />

state-run television reported that the prime minister and president were leaving the RCD to ―split the state<br />

from the party‖. Foued Mebazaa was appointed interim President, as the former President Mr Ben Ali was<br />

forced to flee the country, effectively a coalition government has been formed. After the resignations, UN<br />

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon renewed his call for ―broad-based consultations to establish an ‗inclusive<br />

interim government‘‖.<br />

Interesting to note. Slim Amamou, a prominent blogger who was arrested during protests, has been<br />

appointed Secretary of State for youth and sport, - so keep at it girls and boys as you never know where it<br />

may lead you! Then following the recent demonstrations in Egypt, Hosni Mubarak‘s resignation, and<br />

elections in September 2011, I‘ll put money on it there will be a coalition government. Whilst the word<br />

has spread throughout the Arab world, about the successes in Tunisia and Egypt, that without waiting to be<br />

chased out of his position, the long-time leader of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Saleh soon announced on the 31st<br />

January 2011, that he too will stand down from office before elections in 2013, it was reported he came<br />

under pressure from a ‗boisterous coalition‘ of relatively well-organised opposition groups, and announced<br />

that neither he nor his son would stand for office and that he would pull back proposed constitutional<br />

changes that would make him ruler for life. ―No to hereditary rule and no to life presidency‖, Saleh told<br />

his parliament. [2]<br />

The ―air of revolution‖ will spread even further throughout the middle east, with Algeria, Syria and<br />

Yemen next on the list of uprisings, that will in one way or another all come about to form ―coalition<br />

governments‖. And it must be said this kind of inspirational revolutionary spirit will no doubt encourage<br />

the people of Iran, whom too were only hours away from toppling Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last summer<br />

following their 2010 elections. Though as I say, no matter which way the dominos may fall, coalition<br />

governments will be to outcome of them all, yet still led and headed by the Illuminati appointed Muslim<br />

Brotherhood, so all the people will really be getting is the same as us over here in the West, the same body,<br />

just with new heads. Though the bigger picture is to indirectly build a united Muslim Islamic front, and<br />

when the timings right, cause mayhem in Bethlehem, and all things Israeli.<br />

As I watched the news on TV and the rapidly unfolding live reports of the clashes between the two<br />

main groups of protesters in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt. I couldn‘t help notice certain protesters proudly<br />

holding up newly made Egyptian flags that had both the Muslim Moon Crescent, and the Christian Cross<br />

overlaid and on top of the Crescent, as almost to say - the country was opening the doors to a religious<br />

coalition.<br />

Hmm, I thought, very ‗Brotherhoody and Masonic‘ to say the least, so it was interesting to read what<br />

reporter Mohamed Elmeshad from the Egyptian daily newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm had to say, as he<br />

helped explain my intrigue as to why and how this Egyptian Crescent-Christian Cross flag has all of a<br />

sudden come about.<br />

He wrote the following article on the 25th January 2011, in which I‘ve only taken an extract from, and<br />

where he mentions the Crescent-Cross logo. ―...It feels like the government benefits from this divisive<br />

multiplicity. After the tragic Alexandria church bombing that hurt me [and many people I know] in a very<br />

profound and personal way, the affirmation of [Christian]Coptic-Muslim solidarity was so ―over the top<br />

and fake‖ at times, that it felt like society had turned into a mosaic it‘s trying to arbitrarily fit together<br />

again. The Crescent-Cross logos coming out at every turn are an unfortunate illustration of that. I had to<br />

sit and listen to an artist deliberating how to best portray the crescent-cross symbol without undermining<br />

one or over imposing the other‖.<br />

―We need it to portray unity, you know? It has to portray Egypt, without upsetting one religion over<br />

another. It has to be both artistic, philosophical, and a rallying point.‖<br />

―Really? - I know he meant well, but…really? We‘ve reached a point--I realised we reached it a while<br />

ago-where we have to figure out how to artistically blend the crescent and the cross together on every<br />

billboard and placard to symbolise our national unity now? Since when was the flag not enough? And I<br />

know the short answer for this is: stop being naïve‖. [3]

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