Nobody said that it was a quick death. In fact, I would have called a quick death beneficial. Most countries throughout history have a crisis, crash, and then get back on their feet after a few years. It’s the ones who are brittle and unable to change that end up with long-term problems.
If we want to talk about Western countries, for instance, compare the USA with, say, Germany. Germany has had far more successions of government than the United States, but currently functions better because they change when a crisis hits.
Or compare Syria with Tunisia—like with like. Protests in Syria led the government to use violent force over a period of years, leading to absolute disaster (by the way, you will notice on my profile that I don’t even that far from Syria). In Tunisia, the government actually stepped down, and things have improved. Egypt is a borderline case.
Nobody said that it was a quick death. In fact, I would have called a quick death beneficial. Most countries throughout history have a crisis, crash, and then get back on their feet after a few years. It’s the ones who are brittle and unable to change that end up with long-term problems.
If we want to talk about Western countries, for instance, compare the USA with, say, Germany. Germany has had far more successions of government than the United States, but currently functions better because they change when a crisis hits.
Or compare Syria with Tunisia—like with like. Protests in Syria led the government to use violent force over a period of years, leading to absolute disaster (by the way, you will notice on my profile that I don’t even that far from Syria). In Tunisia, the government actually stepped down, and things have improved. Egypt is a borderline case.