Saif al-Arab
BANNED
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2015
- Messages
- 8,873
- Reaction score
- 5
- Country
- Location
I agree to the allowances part and the wasted Billions to satisfy some egos, but a constitutional monarchy!? we never had had that experience in the Muslim world, at least not in the Arab world as far as I know.. that might lead to putsches (coups) and creation of republics, this is the only experience witnessed throughout the Arab world.. Although I do not agree with absolute(ist) monarchy, the best will be to loosen a bit of the absolute part of it.. but one has to stay prudent in doing so..Mostly in KSA, Jordan, Morocco and other GCC countries, because the alternative is thousands of time worst, it is either a military Junta governing, or some chaotic democratic wannabe government..
Look at Iraq pre-1958. It was a constitutional monarchy de jure but because of the weakness of the Iraqi state and due to the demographic makeup of Iraq (newly created states that have diverse populations, much so countries located in the Middle East in the past 100 years) it was almost always at odds with itself or others. Hence the many military coups. Or one group trying to dominate the other whether religious or ethnic.
KSA does not face those problems. Arabia is a rather peaceful part of the Middle East and has been that for at least the past 100 years (by large), excluding Yemen.
Look at Morocco. Modern-day Morocco and the reforms that the monarchy has underwent. Those are very good signs. Similarly Jordan although they face huge problems that we do not understand such as an enormous amount of refugees (compared to the population), Syria next door, a country with a rather small population and limited resources yet the stability it has is mostly down to its system of governance. If it was anything like the one seen in KSA the people would have rebelled ages ago.
I stand by with what I wrote in post 27. This is (quick thoughts) some of the changes that I want to see in the not too distant future or at least in my lifetime. I believe that such changes are not unrealistic or utopic. Not only that they are IMO very necessary as I see it. However I am afraid that the leaders do not view it this way (more concerned about securing their own thrown) because otherwise they would have tried to pursue reforms in this regard (toward such a system) much earlier and much more aggressively. There are no excuses unless they view us (the people and citizens) as sheep put to this world to live under their eternal rule.
This is no longer the Saudi Arabia of the 1930's.
This can't/should not go on for much longer and blind regime supporters should honestly ask themselves those questions and tell themselves if I and many others are not right?
Last edited by a moderator: