| “Dear 
                      Western Governments. You have been supporting the regime 
                      that was oppressing us for 30 years. Please don’t get involved 
                      now. We don’t need you.”  That 
                      was the pointed tweet from Wael Ghonim on February 11, after 
                      remarks by President Obama in the heat of the Egyptian people’s 
                      unwavering resolve to rid themselves of President Honsi 
                      Mubarak and all his cronies. Ghonim is a Google executive 
                      and an Egyptian national who heads up the company’s marketing 
                      operations in the Middle East. Little 
                      did Ghonim - or anyone else - know that his country was 
                      hours from the resignation of embattled dictator, Mubarak.
 Ghonim’s tweet was an 
                      ugly reminder for some and a wake-up call for others in 
                      the U.S. about our role in robbing the Egyptian people 
                      of their aspirations for a truly democratic country. Except for Israel, 
                      Egypt 
                      received the most U.S. aid of any country. 
                      (Together, the two countries receive one third of U.S. total aid.) Egypt’s 
                      reward for signing the peace accord with Israel 
                      in 1979 was about $2 billion annually; the majority of that 
                      going towards military assistance. In return, the U.S. 
                      received unfettered and expedited access through the Suez 
                      Canal and Egyptian airspace. This arrangement means that 
                      the U.S. is directly 
                      and almost totally responsible for propping up the brutal 
                      and oppressive regime of Mubarak. The Mubarak regime is 
                      yet another vivid example of how the U.S. receives benefits 
                      at the exploitation of other peoples in these countries. 
                      These foreign policy decisions are not the doings of a misguided 
                      President and Congress. They span decades, involving many 
                      countries, and continue irrespective of party politics. This is why it’s important 
                      that those of us in this country understand our role - and 
                      yes, complicity - in the foreign policies that prop up the 
                      likes of Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier, Saddam Hussein, 
                      Honsi Mubarak, Pervez Musharraf, Juan Manuel Santos and 
                      the list goes on and on and on. We must demand an end 
                      to that kind of military and financial support to these 
                      despotic leaders. We must demand that the monies to them 
                      be re-allocated in the rebuilding of America’s deteriorating infrastructure along with 
                      bolstering up our social and educational programs. Our government 
                      cries broke for meeting these critical needs while at the 
                      same time sending boatloads of money, arms, people, and 
                      whatever else to support the regimes of war criminals.  Our 
                      government professes its undying love for Democracy while 
                      at the same time sneaking around with Tyranny. The resolve of the Egyptian 
                      people during the three weeks of occupation of Tahrir (Liberation) 
                      Square was a culmination of years of resistance to the Mubarak 
                      regime. The new organizing tool of social networking played 
                      a role but it did not and will not trump the traditional 
                      organizing methods like street protests, distribution of 
                      literature and door-knocking to talk face to face with the 
                      people. We saw these methods kick in when Mubarak shut down 
                      the communications system and the crowds in Tahrir Square only got bigger and more determined. The resignation of Mubarak 
                      is only the first step on the long road to democracy for 
                      the Egyptian people. They must be vigilant for the slight-of-hand 
                      tricks that await them. They must continue to organize the 
                      people to ensure that a military government is just 
                      temporary and that democratic elections do take place in 
                      September as planned. There are some serious 
                      demands that have yet to be fulfilled. These include the 
                      end of emergency rule, freeing all political prisoners, 
                      the termination of the entire Mubarak regime and bringing 
                      all to justice. For those of us in the 
                      belly of the beast, we must honor the Egyptian people’s 
                      wish to keep our government out of their affairs. This includes 
                      halting U.S. 
                      military aid and making sure the Egyptian people get back 
                      the billions stolen by the Mubarak family (some estimates 
                      are as high as $70 billion). 
 Lastly, Americans can 
                      learn a lot from the disciplined, courageous and determined 
                      spirit of the Egyptian people to free themselves from the 
                      bondage of fear and domination. While ours is a corporate-controlled 
                      government, the stranglehold on true democracy is really 
                      no different. BlackCommentator.com 
                      Editorial Board 
                      member, Jamala Rogers, is the leader of the Organization for Black Struggle 
                      in St. Louis and the Black Radical CongressNational 
                      Organizer. Click here 
                      to contact Ms. Rogers. 
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