As I traveled around ancient civilizations visiting archaeological treasures in the places where cultures began — the neighborhood of Rome’s earlier Etruscan digs, the archeological treasures of Athens, Greece, the temples and artifacts in Pergamon, and Istanbul, Turkey — the rioting in Greece was all too close by. Of course, I’m forever disappointed not to have gotten to Egypt because of the safety concerns. The common traditions among ancient cultures though, was brought home all the more by the eruption of the subjected victims of a tradition that enables dominant parties to enslave and abuse the working people.
Soon, I’ll be putting up photos I took of the art showing pampered elites taking their ease in adorned glory while around them the workers go their way as best they can. The courts of the Pharaohs were altogether the epitome of luxury that denied even humanity to those it was built on.
While I was traveling, I had The Blue Nile by Alan Moorehead along for a good read. It’s an outline of area conquests including Napoleon’s – and ending with Ethiopian conquest, with the defeat of Emperor Theodore by a British invasion that brought along elephants to carry the baggage. While hilarious, the picture journalist Moorehead gives of the caste system is totally relevant to the present public overthrow of the abusive system that keeps them from enjoying the fruits they produce. Egypt’s particularly debased rulers included the warrior caste called the Marmeluke beys, spectacular troops that consisted almost entirely of captive Nordic ethnic soldiers, chosen for glamor and brought up as a horde of moguls that lived off of the common populace.
A telling point made by Moorehead is the shocking contrast of Egypt’s voluptuous monuments from the past with the squalor of the present day. Although he was writing in the early sixties, nothing much has changed until recent revolt by the workers who’ve been subjected by modern day Mamelukes to below poverty level conditions.
Inescapable in the writing of our own recent past, too, is the assumption that until the West discovered them, the lives of our eastern civilizations were irrelevant. It’s a note that we’re only gradually seeing as arrogant and wrong. Moorehead operated under the Western illusion that our jodhpurs were superior to the arabic robes, because we had more scientifically developed weaponry that defeated them. . . .
The idea that dominance proves superiority should remind us that the Roman rulers like the Pharaohs destroyed themselves by their own blind and abusive decadence. What our own original colonists fled keeps cropping up again and again, when a class system tries to take all of the wealth away from their working classes, and store it up in their own treasuries.
What’s happening in Egypt, overthrew abusive tyrants in Tunisia, and is bringing workers into the streets to demand their rights throughout the Middle East is our own revolutionary heritage. What we can win by the vote has become the right to our own best interests, and the demand that our own leaders serve those interests or get out.
Right wing subjugation of the very workers that bring prosperity to any system is overdue to be brought to an end.




10 Comments




Sorry Ruth, but I entirely disagree. It isn’t just the rightwing. Some of the most painfull cuts to the poor have been enacted by the supposed leftwing. If ever there comes a day, when it isn’t just the rich that are selected as leaders, then maybe the poor will actually get attention and help. Multimillionaires do not become rich by caring and sharing and that is the only people selected in most nations for leadership.
‘Some of the most painfull cuts to the poor have been enacted by the supposed leftwing’
examples?
Welcome back, Ruth. I was concerned about your well being when trouble broke out in Cairo. Too bad you didn’t get a chance to see Egypt. Maybe there will be a next time.
I have a different view of Ancient Egypt, particularly the Old Kingdom when Ma’at was revered by all and the pharaoh had obligations to honor all citizens and see that harmony and justice prevailed. Somewhere along the way they lost their way and things fell apart during the First Intermediate Period. Nevertheless, Egypt’s more than 5,000 year old civilization is in the process of being reborn as a people’s revolution for the first time and I stand in awe of the resilience and strength of her people.
Thanks, and like the ‘social contract’ that establishes government for the purpose of enabling its populace to enjoy the benefits of their own assets (land, work and natural benefits of the land) – the origins in Ancient Egypt were good, but as you note, were twisted and the ruling class became a tyrannical regime that worked against and not for the governed. Yes, seeing its rebirth is just awe-inspiring. I didn’t mean to give the impression that I saw a weakness in its national character, only a harmful tradition that its rulers degenerated into.
NAFTA, Obama’s cuts to heating subsidies for the poor, Clinton’s “Welfare Reform”….the list is actually very long.
‘most painfull cuts’?
not descriptive of NAFTA
and education,
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/05/20/eveningnews/main6504057.shtml
job training,
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20031200-503544.html
energy, environment and healthcare cuts,
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-02-09/house-republicans-release-list-of-proposed-u-s-spending-cuts.html
just do not appear on a level with -
‘Obama’s cuts to heating subsidies for the poor’, a proposal that is taking a look at returning heat subsidies to a 2008 level, and ‘Clinton’s “Welfare Reform”’ which did not cut actual spending;
not that I support the programs, I just cannot see the right’s proposals to drastically reduce the U.S. social support system to support its continued welfare system for corporate interests as inconsiderable or overbalanced by those you cited.
Welcome home, Ruth! Sorry you didn’t make it to Egypt, but I’m looking forward to the photos you took and the posts that go with them.
A small word to the wise – Egypt is dominating the attention here and everywhere (Ihope!), so if you hold off a little while you’ll probably get more attention.
Of course, as bright as you are, you’ve probably already thought of that. ; )
Thank you Ruth, have enjoyed traveling vicariously with you. So sorry you didn’t get to Egypt – this time.
Thanks. As the events in Egypt certainly command our attention, and support, I wouldn’t want to interfere. Just for awhile, I have a lot of observations that I think will help understanding, and hope I can contribute.
Glad to be back, too. Maybe a make-up trip, will keep looking for that to happen.