five days. it said like a multi year low. and he s got to extractt some some pleasure out of this nightmare. so, you know, what s the point throaving all that money if you can t throw your weight aroundem and bonus some people you finde? irksome? that s that s all he s doing right now. he s a that i benevolent king. wait until he really starts going after people he doesn t like. listen, we have we know how like crazy rich people cane. act. he s not anywhere close to howard hughes.d yeah. so now it s time for one vote fr that we bring back keithant to bring back k olbermann immediately. a long live stream of hislben reaction over the past. should live strea all be made has been fired from every job he s ever had. j and now it sob getting fired frm jobs he hasn t had. i get that.e it s funny to make fun ohasn tfh olbermann, but i just want to be clear before we go to break that we have moved from savir of the first amendment to sort of dison, r dictat whatever dictator. and that s co
so, when france, the president of france is doing that, - there must have been certain salient historical relationship between egypt and france, and that might have had. j but, i mean, the point is people accept, don t they? they accept coup leaders, even if, at first, they reject them, if it suits them. if you delve into that, - you realise that some of these countries have supported coups in africa, for their own selfish reasons. applause. they like what you said there. i think it was the point about the hypocrisy of the west that got you the applause. ok, let s go to our second question. it is from henry. henry. thank you very much. does the joy with which the populus welcomes coup leaders, who topple democratically elected i leaders, signal a disillusionmentl with african politicians leadership |ability, and the failure of westernj democracy, as applied in africa? gabriel, let s take that and look at it as a failure of democratic governance in africa.
because abdel fattah al sisi, current president, a coup in 2013, removed a democratically elected president. 2014, the european union for instance, said, no, we don t recognise you. he recently was given, by president macron of france, the highest honour that the french can bestow. so people change their mind, don t they? the international community can. that, again, is the basis for the definition of- diplomatic engagement. if you look at foreign relations, i countries have different interests, and that is actually. so, when france, the president of france is doing that, - there must have been certain salient historical relationship between egypt and france, and that might have had. j but, i mean, the point is people accept, don t they? they accept coup leaders, even if, at first, they reject them, if it suits them. if you delve into that, - you realise that some of these countries have supported coups in africa, for their own selfish reasons. applause. they like what you said th
are extremely bad in- the african continent. ok, you looked at north africa. let me just give you egypt. because abdel fattah al sisi, current president, a coup in 2013, removed a democratically elected president. 2014, the european union for instance, said, no, we don t recognise you. he recently was given, by president macron of france, the highest honour that the french can bestow. so people change their mind, don t they? the international community can. that, again, is the basis for the definition of- diplomatic engagement. if you look at foreign - relations, countries have different interests, i and that is actually. so, when france, the president of france is doing that, - there must have been certain salient historical relationship| between egypt and france, and that might have had. j but, i mean, the point is people accept, don t they? they accept coup leaders, even if, at first, they reject them, if it suits them. if you delve into that, - you realise that some of these coun