Told you once that your revolution reminded me of ours thirty-something years ago. It's great to see people fighting for freedom but when the infrastructures (cultural, educational, economical) are far from heading in the right direction, we always end up with wrong people jumping on the movement which had started by sincere and genuine intentions tainting it with selling their bigotry to the people who are still dazed and confused. Instead of coming to streets to ask for Mubarak's execution, I wished your people had their priorities somewhere else, not because Mubarak deserved to be given another chance but because he was gone and an unknown future was ahead of Egyptians which Mubarak, dead or alive, had nothing to do with it. Same goes with Syrians today, I'm not optimistic at all.
After 34 years, having gone through a religious revolution and an 8 year war, we Iranians are still not ready to welcome democracy: Instead of trying to make things better gradually and step by step, our people still think that the only way to get rid of the current situation is either another revolution or the US attacking Iran and most of them are supportive of either.