Another word for "out of control" is anarchy.
Anarchy is breaking out in Yemen, where the embattled President insists on holding his grip over raging tribal factions and youth resistance. Al-Qaeda has attempted to capitalize on this unrest, to some effect, despite the demise of key leaders.
The voluntary reforms of the Kings of Morocco and Jordan are a welcome diversion from the generally violent trends sweeping the rest of the Arab world. Unfortunately, unless revolution bleeds, there are very few leads that will report on peaceful transitions of power.
Despite the more wily and youthful elements refusing to be dictated to by older counterparts in the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, despite the moderate stance of the "Enhada" party that has risen to power in Tunisia, I fear that the skeptics about democratic reforms will be proved right about the short-lived sudden transitions of power breaking out across the Middle East.
Contrary to the writer's contention, I see very little evidence in current events in which Islamists are honoring the other monotheistic religions of the Book. The world cannot ignore the persecution of the Coptic Christians in Egypt, nor can we turn a blind eye to the recent and rapid expulsion of Libyan Jew David Gerbi, who attempted to reopen the Tripoli synagogue after the death of Moammar Gadhafi.
In closing, I submit that to remain suspicious of the growing tide of Islamic fundamentalism in the Arab world is not a dysfunction of simplistic thinking, but a reasoned conclusion based on the developments of well-organized yet latent forces who have been waiting for the moment to seize power and impose Sharia law in the Middle East.
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