Friday, July 26, 2013

Egypt’s Crowd Democracy Authorizes Army Chief to Combat Terrorism


In a speech at a military graduation ceremony aired live on television, Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, chief of the Egyptian army, asked "honest Egyptians to take to the streets today, Friday, July 26, to reveal their will and authorize the army and police with a mandate and an order to do what is necessary to stop bloodshed.” This call, despite being warmly welcomed by most Egyptians, was met with reservations from some activists and sharply denounced by the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies.

Read morehttp://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/07/egypt-army-asks-for-demonstrations.html#ixzz2aB8r27k1


Thursday, July 25, 2013

Western Media Infected with Conspiracy Theory Obsession while failing to understand what happens in Egypt


For decades, Western media has accused Middle East of being obsessed with #ConspiracyTheory - only to be infected with it - #CrowdDemocracy



US media is now turning to #ConspiracyTheory to understand what happens - when there is a much simpler way : #CrowdDemocracy 

Speaking The #ConnectedMind


In response to this article:
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/77348.aspx

A friend commented on how April 6 has more integrity and independence as compared to Tamarod movement - which endorsed El Sisy's call for July 26 demos while April 6 said that the army need no authorization to face terrorists.

May be so. But more likely that each represent a different constituency.

In #CrowdDemocracy terms -- #Tamarod speaks the #ConnectedMind" of its constituency - #Apr6 does the same. Tamarod speaks for the tens of millions who demonstrated on June 30. April 6 speaks for a certain segment of this crowd, mostly activists.

You will see things much clearer if you imagine #Tamarod as the "spokesperson" of a fuild "Political Party"


 enables people to bypass the middle man - & the strings that move him - & a pile of money which bought the strings & theater


#Egypt's #Revolution ... ironically #AgainstThePyramid ... #Tahrir #CrowdDemocracy


This revolution is not about who sits at the top of the pyramid. It is against the pyramid itself.



#الحشدقراطية - ديمقراطية الحشود #CrowdDemocracy



ما نشهده في مصر منذ سنوات هو الحشدقراطية أو ديمقراطية الحشود نتيجة لفشل العملية الديمقراطية في إفراز تمثيل حقيقي لإرادة الشعب




Egypt's Crowd-Democracy: As Representative Democracy Failed to Deliver, People Resorted to Alternatives

Wael Nawara | July 20, 2013

With the removal of former president, Mohamed Morsi, from power, Egypt's revolutionary youth have bristled against the labeling of his ouster as a 'coup.' Over months, tens of thousands of volunteers labored to collect 22 million signatures demanding that Morsi call for early presidential elections. With their demands ignored, Tamarod escalating its call to protest, as millions of demonstrators gathered in every major city in Egypt on June 30, calling upon the army to remove Morsi. But coups with massive public support are nothing new, so why should Egypt's case be any different?

As is the case with many global protest movements, Tamarod was shaped by significantly different forces, bringing together individuals who did not find themselves represented through a traditional representative democracy. A representative democracy which fails to represent its constituencies is by definition dysfunctional, even if the government or president has come to power through free and fair elections, which technically meet international standards. This sense of disenfranchisement can be seen in protests in Tunisia, Turkey, Brazil and even in the Occupy movement.

In crowd-democracy, the most powerful political player does not have headquarters or a leader. It is still able to debate ideas, processes trends, develop creative strategies, tactics and demands and can mobilize millions of people who voluntarily contribute to the cause. In Egypt's crowd-democracy, disenfranchised individuals were empowered by technology, using social networks like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, developing a "Connected Mind" which unlike before, was able to leverage their otherwise fragmented influence.

In the case of Egypt, those who were part of this empowering street movement which toppled a thirty-year dictatorship, found themselves, come election time, faced with a ballot that included candidates tied to the old regime. Ahmed Shafiq represented the former regime, while the Brotherhood candidate, Morsi, represented the same political contenders of pre-revolution Egypt. If a political system is defined by the choices it presents, the presidential election runoffs were a reflection of old regime politics. The new forces failed to generate viable options, as the "Connected Mind" of the revolution found itself outside the equation.

The most powerful political player in the game was not invited to the table, and the movement which enabled all candidates to run in the elections in the first place, was missing as traditional instruments failed to catch up with newly emerging social and political movements.

In crowd-democracy, the most powerful political player does not have headquarters or a leader. Yet, it is capable of debating thousands of ideas, exchanging information, processing trends and options, developing creative strategies, tactics and demands and mobilizing millions of people who voluntarily subscribe to the cause. This "connected mind" can be seen as the leader, thinker and strategist of the movement. It is a dynamic and voluntary network of people thinking together of ways to support a common cause. In crowd-democracy, these disenfranchised individuals get empowered by technology, particularly social networks such as Twitter, Facebook and Youtube and develop this "Connected-Mind" which unlike before, now leverages their otherwise fragmented influence.

Absent from the formal political process, Egyptian revolutionary forces have been influential in policy-making and legislation using the crowd-democracy model, at least, since January 25, 2011. Mubarak was removed by a leaderless revolution which was largely steered by this "connected mind". . The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) had to change the prime minister twice, as a result of crowd-democracy mechanics. Similarly, it changed ministers and governors, reorganized the State Security apparatus, changed media structures, amended election laws, proposed supra-constitutional principles and modified transition dates in response to swelling Friday protests or massive online campaigns. SCAF reform initiatives were often issued on a Wednesday, to give protesters what they wanted so as not to assemble the next Friday. Morsi himself was removed as the result of a similar movement using the same mechanics.

But if you manage to get 22 million signatures, why can't you win elections? Unfortunately, up until now, these have been two different and poorly integrated worlds. The National Salvation Front (NSF), composed of secular political parties, could potentially attract or represent some of these "Connected Minds," but that does not guarantee that they will actually support the NSF with the same zeal; or that once in government, they will continue to back it. Lacking in the relationship between the Connected Mind and the political players are ownership, responsiveness and interactivity. Handing over a blank check to the government for four years is What is missing is ownership. Fast response and interactivity. What is no longer acceptable is giving a blank check to a government for four years. Opinion polls could help in bridging the gap between government officials and elected representatives; and the masses they claim to represent , but the difference between opinion polls and crowd-democracy interactions is that polls come with traditional questions based on realistic options to choose from, while the "Connected Mind" often comes up with new paradigms and invents extraordinary options; like calling for early elections in order to resolve the political deadlock.

In a traditional democracy, winning elections depends on funding, organization, logistics, lobbying, alliances, the efficiency of a party's election machinery and its messages and media outreach. In the case of Egypt, the two presidential candidates who topped most polls, Hamdeen Sabbahy and Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh, were both seen, to some extent, as representative of the revolutionaries. They, however, did not make it to the runoffs because they lacked these ingredients and also because they failed to join forces.

In the case of parliamentary elections, it was even worse as the elections required deeper pockets and a far wider reach, one that most youth movements or new parties representing the revolution did not have. The result was that wealthy, well-organized parties were able to secure gains greater than their actual popular support. Once elected, protesters felt alienated from the legislature, as some members of parliament suggested the removal of English from the educational curriculum, Internet censorship, and more. As a result, protesters applied negative pressure, choosing not to protest a Supreme Court verdict dissolving parliament.

Of course, there is no single "Connected Mind." Every movement will have its own networked individuals and ideologies. With Morsi's removal, the question that remains is how to engage and integrate the "Connected Mind" of his own supporters and their protest movement in shaping the future.

Critics will say this is no way to run a country, and that daily life cannot be disrupted by protests in order to pass laws or change governments. They will say public policy cannot be developed by counting how many people are in Tahrir, and that sound policies require long term stability before paying dividends. However, it's important to note that crowd-democracy does not mean chaos must ensue. The reality is that people assembled in the square only because they were grossly misrepresented and no one gave them an alternative. Crowd democracy simply gets us a step closer to direct democracy with the help of technology. The new Egyptian government must find ways to integrate this "Connected Mind" in its policy debate and formulation or face the same fate as its predecessors. Technology allows it. New political structures and legislations should emerge to make it happen; otherwise we can begin a countdown for this, and every future government in Egypt. 

Wael Nawara is an Egyptian writer and activist. He is also a co-founder of Al Dostour Party and was a visiting fellow at Harvard's Institute of Politics. 


First Published at EgyptSource

http://www.acus.org/egyptsource/egypt%E2%80%99s-crowd-democracy-representative-democracy-failed-deliver-people-resorted-alternat


Egypt’s Crowd Democracy ... The Third Wave


Egypt's Crowd Democracy 

The Third Wave

On the evening of Thursday Nov 22nd 2012, I was sitting in my office after hours trying to catch up with some overdue work, when a friend called me and told me about Morsi's unconstitutional decrees, placing the President above the law in breach of his inauguration oath. I remember writing on that evening an article titled, "The End of the President's Legitimacy and Usurpation of Power". A few days later, the Muslim Brothers and Islamist Militias put the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court (SCC) under siege,  to prevent its members from convening and considering the case against the biased constituent assembly. Morsi had become a President after swearing before the very same court exactly five months before.  But it was on Dec 5, 2012, when the Brothers and Islamist militias attacked peaceful demonstrators, whom I happened to be marching with, near the Presidential Palace, killing a dozen and injuring a thousand of us, when I wrote, the Muslim Brotherhood has announced a civil war against Egyptian people, and thus it has drafted its own death certificate. In March, I warned that Egypt will soon reach a "point of no return" and that the army would soon have to intervene to prevent the country from sliding into chaos and explained that the forces of "crowd-democracy" in Egypt may be stronger than all of the political parties combined.

Months passed, and it became clear to Egyptians that the Muslim Brotherhood could not evolve and rise to match the task of governing a country like Egypt, the oldest state in the world. The Brotherhood instead continued to operate as a secret underground organization which sees its interests in continuing away from accountability or public scrutiny, while controlling all taps of  power in the country. The Brotherhood wanted to have both of two worlds, being an underground organization and being in government! Morsi started to appoint his "Brothers" and allies in every key position regardless of qualification or suitability. Arms smuggled from Libya flooded the country into the hands of Islamist militants. Morsi allowed militant Jihadists a safe haven in Sinai and ordered the army to stop a campaign designed to regain control of the peninsula, despite its strategic importance to Egypt's national security. Appointing a member of Al Gamaa El Islamia as governor of Luxor, where the same group slaughtered 59 tourists in 1997, was perhaps the final straw. Egyptians felt that the state was on the verge of collapse, their nation's unity is being jeopardized and their identity, way of life and very survival as a nation is being threatened. The people had to choose between two evils, allowing the Brotherhood to continue turning the country into a Taliban Afghani model or ousting Morsi who was elected only a year ago, alienating millions of his supporters and risking eruption of a civil war.

A few month before, a grassroots movement which called itself "Tamarod" or "Rebelion",had started a campaign asking people to sign a petition demanding early elections. The aim of the campaign was to get 15 million signatures by June 30, which marked one year of Morsi's inauguration. In the presidential elections held a year ago, Morsi had earned 5 million votes in the first round (25%) and 13 million votes in the second (51.7%), running against Shafik, who was affiliated with Mubarak's regime. Just before June 30, Tamarod announced that its volunteers and affiliated movements collected 22 million signatures and asked Morsi to call for early elections. Morsi refused to compromise and vowed to defend "legitimacy" with his life. On June 30, mass demonstrations broke out in every major city in Egypt demanding Morsi's removal. Estimates place the number of people participating in the anti-Muslim Brothers demonstrations between 20-33 million people, in what may be the largest political event in history. Morsi supporters were also mobilized from all over the country to gather in Rabaa El Adawya square in Cairo and Nahda square in Giza, but the picture was clear, Morsi had lost the popular support of the Egyptian people. The Egyptian center for public opinion research "Baseera" showed that Morsi's approval rate sled from 76% to 32% in 10 months! Many clashes erupted between Morsi's supporters and the protesters especially outside Cairo. The army intervened and gave a 48-hour ultimatum to Morsi to respond to the demands and form a government of national unity. Morsi again rejected these demands and was ousted on July 3rd 2013 by Army Chief, Gen. Abdel Fattah El Sisy, and was replaced by the head of the Supreme Constitutional Court who acts as an interim president till a new president is elected. Whether this was a revolution, a coup or a "recolution" is of little consequence to most Egyptians who see this as the third wave of the Egyptian revolution and are happy to resort to "crowd-democracy" until a democratic system which generates new alternatives exists.

Crowd Democracy has been influential in policy-making and legislation in Egypt at least since Jan 25, 2011. In the first wave of the revolution, Mubarak was removed by a movement which had no leader except the "Connected Mind" of the crowd. In the second wave, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), which ran the first transition, had to change the prime minister twice, shuffled many ministers and governors, reorganized the State Security apparatus (Secret Police), changed media structures, amended election laws, proposed supra-constitutional principles and modified transition dates, all in response to crowd-democracy pressures manifested in Friday million-man-protests or massive online campaigns. SCAF reform initiatives would often be announced on a Wednesday to appease protesters so that they do not assemble the Friday after! In the third wave, Morsi was ousted with a similar movement using the same mechanics. The problem of course, is that Morsi's supporters also have their own crowd. The country will continue in turmoil until two things happen: each crowd would recognize that it cannot alone monopolize the political scene or eradicate the other crowd; and democratic process would allow revolutionary forces to be adequately represented in the parliament and government, despite the parity in resources, logistics and organization. This parity currently favors old political parties and organizations such as the Muslim Brotherhood with disproportionate political gains much larger than their actual share of street popularity.

One thing is for sure, it is not yet time for Egyptians to celebrate. Violent clashes took place in several incidents around the country. Islamist militants intensified attacks on police and army  installations and personnel in Sinai. Pro-Morsi supporters killed and injured hundreds of protesters and bystanders in various areas. A church was burned down in upper Egypt. Over 51 pro Morsi supporters were killed in clashes with the army and police near the Republican Guard Officers Club where Morsi had been once held and more confrontations seem imminent.  The road ahead is full of challenges, most importantly, the task of reaching reconciliation between pro and anti-Morsi camps and restarting a political roadmap which would allow for an inclusive democratic process, one that is able to generate the kind of options representing the January 25 Revolution.



First Published at Harvard IOP Blog in July 2013

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Egypt’s Crowd-Democracy: As Representative Democracy Failed to Deliver, People Resorted to Alternatives | Atlantic Council


Representative democracy models are failing youth change movements. Empowered by technology, disenfranchised individuals use crowd-democracy, where they assemble around a cause and develop a “connected mind” which leverages their influence and power to the extent of disrupting government. It is high time to develop technology-enabled solutions which would allow these individuals to be a part of the policy debate and formulation, getting closer to a direct democracy model. In the case of Egypt, the article argues that most reforms and major policy shifts which happened since Jan 25 revolution were reached through crowd-democracy interactions and not traditional means, including Morsi’s ouster.

Read More:

Egypt’s Crowd-Democracy: As Representative Democracy Failed to Deliver, People Resorted to Alternatives | Atlantic Council


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