State of Affairs in Egypt
26 Jun 2013 09:46 pmEgypt is fast approaching the one-year anniversary of Morsi's election as president, and many, many people are not happy with his job thus far. So, there are protests demanding his resignation on the horizon, very big ones planned for this Friday and Sunday. Already, there is no more gasoline in the country. Or at least no more being sold. Rolling blackouts have been going on pretty regularly, but they will certainly worsen, along with water cuts.
I have things to catch up on LJ (entries I want to reply to), but I need to spend the next few days preparing for worst-case contingencies. Better to prepare and have surplus food, water, etc on our hands than not enough. I may or may not be online, depending on whether or not our provider remains up and running, which was not the case for almost all companies during the revolution.
Another post coming tomorrow and then it shall be, "See you on the flip side."
I have things to catch up on LJ (entries I want to reply to), but I need to spend the next few days preparing for worst-case contingencies. Better to prepare and have surplus food, water, etc on our hands than not enough. I may or may not be online, depending on whether or not our provider remains up and running, which was not the case for almost all companies during the revolution.
Another post coming tomorrow and then it shall be, "See you on the flip side."