I think that's basically true.
Egypt has been a society that has not seen a large degree of political violence. There has been some communal tension in the past. Generally what happens is you have all sorts of disputes laid on top of each other. Sometimes you have a neighbourhood dispute between families, neighbours, and that sort of thing. That sometimes morphs into a religious dispute if one side happens to be Christian and the other side happens to be Muslim. There are instances when, for example, because law on personal status is determined by your religion, somebody may convert, may leave one community for another. That sets up all kinds of family tensions.
Again, political violence is something that occurs in Egypt. Some red lines have been crossed over the last two years, but fundamentally this is a society in which violence of that kind still shocks people. It is also a very socially conservative society. It's a society where family is very strong. Your religion is not simply a matter of personal conviction, but a matter of who your family and relatives are and often who your friends are and where you live. That sometimes tends to create some sort of insular pocket. That's where I think the problem can be on a grassroots level. Those are the kinds of problems that get much worse in an uncertain security environment such as we see right now.