#Egypt #graffiti artists El Zeft & Nazeer put a smile on the wall the government built #nov27 #tahrir #morsi twitpic.com/bgwj3g
—
shadi rahimi (@shadirahimi) November 27, 2012
Amazing.
As Twitchy has reported, massive protests are ongoing in Egypt, as citizens take to the streets to protest the Muslim Brotherhood and President Morsi. The smile graffiti speaks a thousand words.
The smile of #Egypt-ian youth in the face of dictatorship and boundaries, a smile over a dictator's wall! http://t.co/0tq0k3Ec—
Alfred Raouf (@Kemety) November 27, 2012

Here is the scene as the protests against Morsi and his dictatorial power grabs continue.
As tens of thousands gather in Tahrir against MB rule, Egypt is yet again making world history http://t.co/WcNsDYDb—
Hani Shukrallah (@HaniShukrallah) November 27, 2012
10,000 Egyptians Ultras on their way to #Tahrir to demonstrate against islamist president Morsy http://t.co/loaymPGT #egypt @LesNews—
M.D.B (@T3ev) November 27, 2012

Lights on in Tahrir square now. Crowd keeps growing #egypt http://t.co/Q94KKRf9—
joseph dana (@ibnezra) November 27, 2012

RT @MarquardtA: Protesters streaming toward #Tahrir. Same #Jan25 chants just with Morsi instead of Mubarak. #Egypt yfrog.com/moft2nj—
Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) November 27, 2012
The police continue their abuses. As Twitchy reported, a journalist was also beaten and robbed by CSF when filming the protests outside the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.
At Simon Bolivar square, just off Tahrir, police continue to fire tear gas at protesters http://t.co/4xzE3IRR—
Sharif Kouddous (@sharifkouddous) November 27, 2012

The protesters will not be cowed and are not backing down.
#Egypt #Women in #Tahrir 😊 #Freedom #Freedom @ Tahrir Square instagr.am/p/SidIERPQgt/—
Jasmine Elnadeem (@Selnadeem) November 27, 2012

Banner in #Tahrir: “The Brotherhood stole the country.” http://t.co/kdPIsAct—
The Daily News Egypt (@DailyNewsEgypt) November 27, 2012

In #Tahrir poster says; "the militias or brigades of the Brotherhood will never scare the people" #egypt http://t.co/CWntqE9I—
betsy hiel (@betsy_hiel) November 27, 2012

While the US Embassy in Cairo is “glad Mubarak is gone” and sees the revolution that put Morsi in power as a “positive step forward,” the people of Egypt do not.
Twitchy will continue to monitor this story and update with further developments.
Update:
Wow. Just wow. #Tahrir #Nov27 RT @SherifMagd: My God http://t.co/mrkeJYQP—
Robert Becker (@rbecker51) November 27, 2012
Amazing.
Related:
Thousands in Tahrir Square protest Egyptian President Morsi: ‘We won’t let another dictator rule’
Has Egypt cut off Internet access amid Tahrir protests, or is network just overloaded?
State-run TV falls silent in Egypt, sparking coup fears
Awful: Journalist live-tweets being beaten, robbed by CSF during protests in Cairo





















