They're hurling molotovs and torching cars. Certainly sounds violent to me.
A government that has stood for decades has far more legitimacy than a bunch of rioters, whatever your idealism says.
You know what government stood for two decades? The Third fucking Reich. And save your "hurr Godwin!!11" shit. That you would even begin to suggest that a government that routinely falsifies elections and then cracks down on dissidents with
physical violence is "legitimate," when the people who actually have to live there are telling them in fairly unambiguous terms to GTFO, is beyond the pale. Hell, not even the military is on Mubarak's side.
Calling them "rioters" is tantamount to equating it to the frigging Rodney King riots or something that, in the grand scheme of things, is a fairly minor spat--no matter how bad it may appear at the time. These aren't riots because people want to steal a few TVs. This is concentrated, near-universal agreement among the Egyptian people that
Mubarak needs to go. You're a contrarian for the sake of being a contrarian and if you want to continue this insane assertion, you'd best actually back them up with some actual reasoning rather than "durr, it's been here for a long time." What are you, Nikov?
The biggest problem with supporting the protesters is that I'm pretty sure at one point the Muslim Brotherhood will come along and seize control of the country and the last thing we need is a second 6-day war, because this time there's a fair chance Israel is going to turn into a nuclear crater.
Possible but incredibly, incredibly unlikely. The hard-line Muslims are two steps behind. They are not leading this--they are a follower. If the Muslim Brotherhood
was leading it, the military would be shooting to kill. They have absolutely no love lost for the religious right-wing nuts.