Hitchens on where "the Arab street" went:
In retrospect, it's difficult to decide precisely when this annoying expression began to expire, if only from diminishing returns. There was, first, the complete failure of the said "street" to detonate with rage when coalition forces first crossed the border of Iraq, as had been predicted (and one suspects privately hoped) by so many "experts." But one still continued to hear from commentators who conferred street-level potency on passing "insurgents." (I remember being aggressively assured by an interviewer on Al Franken's quasi-comedic Air America that Muqtada Sadr's "Mahdi Army" in Najaf was just the beginning of a new "Tet Offensive.") Mr. Sadr duly got a couple of seats in the recent Iraqi elections. And it was most obviously those elections that discredited the idea of ventriloquizing the Arab or Muslim populace or of conferring axiomatic authenticity on the loudest or hoarsest voice.
Of course, the Arab street was also going to rise up against us when the Afghan War began. And when Israel put Arafat under virtual house arrest. And when Saddam was captured, etc.
What Hitch leaves out is, where the Arab street is rising up in anger: In tiny Lebanon, in protest against their Syrian overlords. And quietly, in Iraq, during last month's election. With some trepidation, in Egypt, as free elections are promised. Anyway, you get the idea.
The Arab street is marching against homegrown oppression, not against American "imperialism."
The MSM has been wrong for 50 years. How about Ronnie and the "Evil Empire" Where is it now? Or Jimmy and North Korea? If we gave them$billions of food and $billions more in blank checks they would build no nukes.
UBL's 2nd mistake on 9/11 was that the Arab Street would arise and slay the infidel all over the world.
His 1st mistake? George W Bush is the same as William Jefferson Clinton, a paper tiger.
Speaking of William Jefferson Clinton... um... on second thought, let's not.
I think UBL's 1st mistake was that he believed, with quite a few people in this country, that Bush and Republicans are warlike and intemperate. In order for the Arab Street to rise up all over the world, OBL (UBL?) needed a certain kind of response from the US and he didn't get it.
I'm glad that I'll never know how a democratic president would have reacted to 9-11.
The "Arab Street" remains unpaved but it appears to be taking a new path.
Apparently, the "Arab Street" tends to make it's own decisions on what to be ticked off at.
This is something those attempting to invoke the "Arab Street" are discovering, and those opposed to them should take note of.
We Lebanese are not Arab and most are not even Muslim. This is like calling all North American Mexican just because you live near each other.