TheRiov wrote:
I understood perfectly what he said, but I responded to the first clause to draw attention the following question: "Where exactly would you draw the line?"
No, you didn't. You tried for a "gotcha" by altering the nature of the question
You're blaming the government for not reigning in the populace. Throughout the Arab spring, the lesson seemed to be that the populace IS capable of ousting the leadership of a country. These are govornments that have come to power through what were essentially a popular revolt. Opening fire on what could well be the same people that put them in power could well be the spark that lights another revolution. Its not like either country is terribly stable right now. [/quote]
So what? Who said anything about "opening fire"? If the government is so unstable that it can't execute the basic responsibility of maintaining civil order, then it's worthless anyhow, and there's likely to be another revolution. A government that demonstrates its willing to maintain basic order is a lot more likely to survive than one that shirks its responsibility due to fear of igniting another revolution.
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So the Governments that came to power on the wings of mob protest is now supposed to stop mob protests? How exactly were they supposed to do it?
That's their problem. Like I said, if they can't or won't, then we can do it
for them. They may find that a lot less to their liking.
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Mob protests often turn violent, especially when religion is involved. But without making across the board rules about protests, weapon ownership, etc the barely-stable popular can't take broad preemptive actions to head off protests. They're forced to react AFTER it turns violent.
This is completely silly. No one said they had to prevent protests. What they have to do is stop protestors from storming other country's embassys, ransacking them, and killing their diplomats.
If they can't do that, then for all intents and purposes, the mob is the government, or is acting as one. The only reason we don't simply retaliate as we would if the government itself had attacked the embassy is that the mod isn't coherent; it isn't controlled (as far as we know) by anyone trying to replace the government.