A little more than a year ago, the West watched in excitement as Egyptians forced long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak out of power. Now the country has just selected its first freely elected president. Mohamed Morsi is the choice of the majority of Egyptian voters, so he’s what the democratic process produces. He also ran using a slogan of, “Islam is the solution.”
He’s a candidate who promised to stand for “democracy” — whatever that means to him, or us, for that matter — and for women’s rights, but he also supported banning women from the presidency. He’s been the head of the political faction of the Muslim Brotherhood, a group working to place Egypt under Islamic law. If this is what the majority of people in Egypt want, is that just fine with us?
I’ve said before that freedom and democracy aren’t the same things, even if a tendency toward more freedom has generally correlated with some form of democracy. There’s no reason that a democratically elected government can’t pass repressive laws and even change the political system to keep themselves in power — all legally, of course.
Since the democratic process in Egypt seems to be leading in the Islamist direction, isn’t it time for the U.S. government to question its policy of trying to force countries down the road toward democracy?

Be careful what you hunger for; it’s very often not what you need
Faith and fear collide where dreams and reality come together
Search for ‘more’ can leave us craving what we haven’t found
Epiphany: Was it so bad that I used to work toward perfection?
Flawed bricks can build our lives, because perfection never arrives
As we encounter emotional truth, poisonous past can make us numb
We’re all prisoners of a culture which demands that we conform
My programming from childhood still equates blame with shame
Without community, we no longer know each other, in life or death