Siege wrote:A lot of people in a lot of democracies don't like their government; that does not in any way justify the army rolling their tanks into the capital to assume direct control.
Yet the leader of the Supreme Court has been made a technical president, there's no Caudillo rising from the Egyptian army (so far). I hope it stays that way.
Siege wrote:My point is that what is happening in Egypt now is undemocratic.
You are correct in that it is a violation of representative democracy norms. However, the word "democratic" implies a lot more than merely following the law and technical procedure. It becomes synonymous with the will of the people and will of the majority, a vox populi-vox dei type of relation. This is what I am objecting to - picturing representative democracy as the one and only democracy, and the strict following of procedures as the only democratism there is. That is not the end of all democracy; popular uprisings and direct democracy, anarchism and syndicalism, et cetera are also options for people to express their will.
As you might have noticed, Morsi made it so that laws implemented by him could not be challenged in courts or overturned, and the Parliament dominated by his party could not have been disbanded using
any technically legal procedure. When the ire of the secular part of Egypt became serious enough to viably challenge the rule of Moslem Brothers, there were
no other means to replace Morsi at the helm.
I am not saying that there was no option to
wait and see, or that the rules of representative democracy have been strictly followed. They have not, and the option to wait is always there even under dictatorship or threat of dictatorship; even if the Constitution is changed by the Parliament into something you utterly reject - which is, by the way, close to what happened in Egypt.
The problem was that using democratic leverage Morsi was trying to introduce the legal basis for his Islamist measures at a very deep, Constitutional level - a level where, once it would be set for several years, these measures would be extremely hard to repel.
I am simply trying to understand what it should have been like for the current Egyptian, and how come there were well over one million people in Tahrir last days, and well over 17 million (!) people demanding for Morsi to go. By the way, Morsi's "yes" voters on the Constitution were only some 11 million strong.