Feb. 11th, 2011

kiranlightpaw: kiran_likeshine (Default)
Some will get to where they're going
Find a place they've always been
Never understand the mystery
Turn around and start again
kiranlightpaw: kiran_likeshine (Default)
"No dictator, no invader can hold an imprisoned population by force of arms forever. There is no greater power in the universe than the need for freedom. Against that power, governments and tyrants and armies cannot stand." - G'kar, Babylon 5

"People with a passion can change the world for the better." - Steve Jobs
I sit here watching Egyptians partying in Tahrir Square on the Internet. Mostly because Al Jazeera is the only group that hasn't just totally halfassed the coverage of what has unfolded a half a world away. However, I did flip on CNN to watch some coverage on there.

The interviewed several of the protesters and organizers. All of them young - even relative to me, and I ain't exactly a greymuzzle - and all of them taking the time to actually thank for making the revolution possible. What were they thanking? Facebook and Twitter. One guy even said he hoped he could meet Mark Zuckerberg and thank him personally.

It occurs to me that these are the Digital Natives coming of age and taking power. To these people, the Internet is an integral part of their life, and have no memory a time before using the Internet to communicate. They think nothing of talking to people around the world. They've been exposed to worldwide ideas. Social and political borders mean nothing to them. They're all old ideas. The ideas of their parents.

We are just now beginning to grasp the social ramifications of a worldwide network that connects all people. The Internet is, for lack of a better analogy, like a virus that infects the world's population. People can access the world's repository of knowledge, and talk with people around the world with minimal effort. They can organize with minimal effort. This communication infects them with ideas of freedom and a desire to communicate.

Now, to be sure, the Internet didn't get out there and protest. The Internet didn't physically stand in Tahrir Square and chant protests against Mubarak. The Internet didn't take gunshots for freedom. But the Internet and social media did provide the tools and the framework in which the revolution could be organized. People will always be the ones taking action. But the ability to communicate - quickly, efficiently, and massively, in such a way that was unthinkable twenty years ago - is going to completely reshape the way the world works going forward.

Iran was the warmup. Egypt and Tunisia are the warning shots to nations around the world: neglect your people at your own peril.

Now, as for Egypt. The optimist in me hopes for a democratic republic. The pessimist in me fears a military dictatorship or, worse, an Islamic dictatorship. I guess we'll know soon enough.
 

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Kiran Lightpaw

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