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Inside Libya – A Photographer Reports (wsj.com)
97 points by cwan on Feb 25, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 15 comments


As an Arab (Egyptian), what amazes me is the audacity of the leaders. The refusal to grant any wishes to the people, the sense of entitlement and "owning" the country, and the absolute ignorance most live in after believing in their own lies.

Corruption is one thing. But, having an estimated networth between $40-70 billion while 40% of your population lives on less than $2/day is just disgusting. Does the standard of living really change that much from the first billion to the tenth? Or, from the tenth to the fiftieth?

It's despicable. This was a long time coming; a few decades of holding back the people and that dam finally burst.


The problem is that oil allows the dictators to fund their governments' without the people's consent. This is in stark contrast to the Western world, where our political leaders must pay at least a modicum of respect to the common man, because he's the one paying the taxes.


That might be true in Libya, but it is clearly not true in Egypt, which has no substantial oil reserves. Mubarak made "his" fortune by stealing from the Egyptian people.


In the UK it seems like the government is quite happy to ignore the people aside from gesturing, and when the real decisions are made they listen more to their mates from Eton, who run banks and big business.


Which totally explains the existence of the NHS.

Either the Eton-conspiracy is less powerful than you think, or they have a bizarre concern for the health of the British people.

I apologize for the snarkiness, but really? Comparing the way that British politicians treat their constituents to the way that Qaddafi is literally gunning down his is pretty absurd.


Suggesting that the political situation in the UK is as bad as it is in the Middle East is a slap in the face to all those who have given their lives to overthrow brutal Middle Eastern dictators over the last two months.


Norway is a counterpoint. Western, plenty of oil money, yet has very low corruption and a very high standard of living for most of the population. The country has used their oil revenue wisely.


That's true, Norway is an exception. IIRC, all their oil revenue has been placed in a sovereign wealth fund. Then again, their neighbors don't have that same luxury, which no doubt pressured their own politicians into behaving. The Middle East is almost entirely ruled by dictators & monarchies, so it's not like the people can just go to a neighboring country if the going gets rough.


It's not only despicable, it's exactly what some people in the U.S. want the country to become. An impoverished working class to do the bidding of a few wealthy individuals.


A friendly reminder:

"Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon. Videos of pratfalls or disasters, or cute animal pictures. If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic."


I honestly don't mean to attack but I think I'd read this simply on the basis of good photography. This is our generation's Fall of the Berlin Wall; I'd say that's an interesting new phenomenon.

Nothing too political about this, either. Libya's also connected to us on a closer level with the .ly TLD.

The keyword in the second sentence is probably, but I think that enough people (55 now) found this interesting and made it acceptable here.


I put in another vote for it. Considering the relatively close timing to the Egyptian protests and how the Egyptian government temporarily shut down the internet, I would say this is worth a look especially with the .ly TLD as you mentioned, too.


This post has nothing to do with .ly domains. Even the fact that Libya is connected to 'us' doesn't make this relevant, we don't submit nice pictures of the US either right?


What's this? If you wanna play HN-cop go and flag the countless simple-minded articles that grace the front page, rise up against the mundane minutia and mediocrity that pass for tech reporting or "hacker culture".

Seriously.


Intifada everywhere. Today there are protests in 8 Arab countries.

Let freedom ring!




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