Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Has Obama thrown Mubarak under the bus?
Message
From
13/02/2011 11:53:07
 
 
To
13/02/2011 10:38:44
General information
Forum:
News
Category:
International
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01497759
Message ID:
01500005
Views:
54
>>>>>>A simple look at the underside of the mouse discovered the cause: there was a hair, right over the red eye :).
>>>>>
>>>>>Off topic, have you been to the Petrovaradin Fortress? Saw it in two different shows today...
>>>>>
>>>>>Update: given history, I should have specified as a visitor or tourist (sorry about that)
>>>>>
>>>>>It interested me for the size and duration of its existence without being destroyed over history and the buildings and structures in the local town. Also, it's known as a haunted site I understand...
>>>>>
>>>>>(sorry for the updates as well)
>>>>
>>>>I actually lived in Petrovaradin during my third year of college. Not in the fortress itself, but about two kilometers south, in the village, which means I passed through the fortress twice a day. The university is on the other bank. And went up there several times during my college years, which would count as "as a tourist".
>>>>
>>>>The whole area is a wine country; most of the older houses in the village are on a hillside, each with a cellar dug into the hill and extending tens of meters into it.
>>>>
>>>>The size of the fortress is a bit of a legend, because the visible part is an unknown fraction of the actual size. The local lore says that the plans exist only somewhere in the archives in Vienna, and that any arbitrary number of people got lost in the catacombs and never went out. There's a story of several secret exits, even of a tunnel which goes beneath Danube and can be entered via a door in the pillar of the unseen bridge, i.e. the one which got bombed in 1941 (or was never finished); another places the entrance somewhere on the left bank. The local criminals allegedly use it as an escape route of the last resort. As a tourist (once with a school trip, I think in VI grade), you get a brief tour of the corridors, no more than 50m in, and then there are heavy bars so you can't go deeper.
>>>>
>>>>A nice touch is the tower clock, where the hours hand is longer than the minutes hand - hours being more important than minutes in those years.
>>>
>>>The buildings in the nearby downtown (yellows and golds, green and white, pinks, fuchsias, oranges, etc) really demonstrate your previous comments on building colors. Some very interesting and attractive architectural designs...They did a great job using paint colors to enhance the structural design. Really, the closest the U.S. comes to that is with old Victorian houses and even then sometimes they really mess it up.
>>>
>>>Update: this is the only pic I could find and it only shows a very small and slightly muted (in comparison) section but it does demonstrate how well they did with enhancing the structural design using colors:
>>>
>>>http://www.hostelnovisad.com/
>>>
>>>There's always someone who has to ruin it:
>>>http://www.flickr.com/photos/neotalax/4267797865/
>>
>>Game over I think
>>
>>http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12443678
>
>Not necessarily - we'll have to wait and see what happens in the coming days and weeks and even months. If elections occur and a new government and parliament is created in a democratic way and then a new constitution drafted and voted in which allows for more freedoms - less military action - it could go good, but it still could go bad ...
>
>From your link:
>
>In a statement on state TV, the higher military council said it would stay in power six months, or until elections.
>
>Egypt's current parliament is dominated by supporters of President Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted on Friday after 18 days of mass protests.
>
>...
>A statement was read out on state TV on Sunday from the higher military council, saying it would suspend the constitution and set up a committee to draft a new one, before submitting it to a popular referendum.
>
>The current constitution has prevented many parties and groups from standing in elections, leaving Egypt with a parliament packed with supporters of the National Democratic Party, loyal to Mr Mubarak.
>
>Our correspondent says the new announcement means elections could be held in July or August, instead of in September as planned.
>Continue reading the main story
>Military statement
>
>By making another important statement and providing more details of how the future state will look, he adds, the military should satisfy protesters still sceptical about the pace of change.
>
>

Oh they said that. Thats ok then. That won't have anything to do with maybe imposing a state of emergency in a few months time and there is no forum left to debate it.

Why do they have to dissolve parliament. Why does it take so long to arrange elections. Why can they not appoint civilians to administer the country with their support . etc etc
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform