“Democracy Champion” USA has been caught up in its Hypocrisy Web as Brutal Middle Eastern Regimes come under peaceful protests by common people.The latest to join the democracy outpouring in the Middle East and North Africa is Bahrain.Unlike Egypt,USA has failed to call for the exit of the Bahrain’s King despite killings of protesters.Following the example of Egypt,thousands of common people were peacefully protesting in Pearl Square when a 3 am raid by police dispersed them.Bahrain is even worse than Egypt for its brutality towards peaceful protesters as the police consists of foreigners.The minority Sunni ruling class has inducted hundreds of outsider Sunnis to keep the majority Shias in control.Note USA has a massive vested interest in keeping the despotic  corrupt Bahrain regime in place as it home to the US Fifth Fleet.Also it won’t like to see a Shia ruling dispensation as it would be close to Shia Iran.Thus despite increasing repression USA has chosen to just ask for restraint from all sides despite provocation only from the ruling side.

Most of the Middle East is ruled by dictators or kings who loot all the fossil fuel riches of the region leaving most of the people destitute and without any rights.While some of the kingdoms like Saudi Arabia and Qatar are so filthy rich that they can bribe everybody,not everyone is blessed with such bounty.While Jordan,Libya,Bahrain and Yemen are already facing massive protests,others like Oman could be next.Tunisia and Egypt have given hopes to millions of disenfranchised people around the world.

U.S. concerned by violence in Bahrain protests

The United States said on Tuesday it was “very concerned” by recent violence in protests in Bahrain and urged all sides to exercise restraint.”The United States is very concerned by recent violence surrounding protests in Bahrain,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in a statement. “We also call on all parties to exercise restraint and refrain from violence.”The spokesman said Washington had received confirmation that two protesters in Bahrain, home to the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, had been killed and urged Bahrain to quickly follow up on its pledge to investigate.

The growth in income disparity around the world is striking.The internationalization of capital and trade has led to increasing amounts of income for the top percentiles of the world population while the bottom percentiles share of income continues to decline.This has not only been happening in developing countries like Russia,India ,Egypt but also in some developed countries like the US. Their are many causes for this disparity but the end result is that its leading to increasing poverty , misery and social unrest. Capitalism practiced by most countries is a form of elite enriching crony capitalism in which the rule of the game totally favor the elites of the society.This leads to ever increasing Gini coefficient and corresponding growth in the  level of social problems.

From meat to wages, economic woes fuel Egypt anger - AP

For the past six weeks, Khulud Mustafa has walked past the butcher near her apartment in Cairo’s run-down Ain Shams district, casting wistful looks at the meat hanging outside his shop as the price has steadily risen.

From the equivalent of $8 per kilogram (2.2 pounds), to $9, then $13. When it peaked at more than $14, she stopped looking.

“I asked him, ‘Are you crazy? What are you doing? How can it go up that fast?’” said Mustafa, a 24-year-old housewife with 3 children. “How are we supposed to eat?”

Mustafa’s voice is one in a growing chorus of despair and frustration over rising prices of everything from food to housing in a key U.S. Mideast ally where more than 40 percent of the population of 79 million lives under or near the poverty line.

What’s worrisome for the government is that this anger is showing signs of turning political. The surge in the price of meat — blamed by officials on a “mafia of traders” — has led to a movement to boycott meat. Near daily protests have been held outside parliament on a variety of economic issues, including demands for an increase in the minimum wage, which since 1984 has been stuck at $6 per month. Across the country over the past year, there have been numerous strikes at factories demanding better working conditions and salaries.

The protests have mostly been small, but they cast a spotlight on an income disparity that critics contend goes to the heart of Egypt’s social and economic woes: An ineffective and autocratic regime more intent on preserving its authority and catering to the elite than the needs of the overwhelming majority of its 80 million citizens.

At one recent demonstration outside parliament, protesters spoke of working several jobs to make ends meet. Hussein Suroor, married with four children, said he earns only 425 pounds ($76) a month from his primary job as a technician at a public contracting company.

“The government wants us to be concerned with how we’re going to put food on our tables, so they keep us busy while they rob the country,” Suroor said.

Rida Noman traveled from the Gharbiya province 94 kilometers (59 miles) north of Cairo to show his support. He works as a property tax collector, making 350 pounds, or $63, but has to do carpentry in the evenings to feed his family of five. He broke into laughter when asked if he can buy meat.

“Meat?! We only eat meat in our dreams and possibly on holidays,” he said.