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Naomi Klein NAILS the Iraqi election, and the whores' hype

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Cocoa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-11-05 12:44 PM
Original message
Naomi Klein NAILS the Iraqi election, and the whores' hype
Klein should be a major media figure, with her excellent reporting and insight. But of course she's not.

http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/21235/

"The Iraqi people gave America the biggest 'thank you' in the best way we could have hoped for." Reading this election analysis from Betsy Hart, a columnist for the Scripps Howard News Service, I found myself thinking about my late grandmother. Half blind and a menace behind the wheel of her Chevrolet, she adamantly refused to surrender her car keys. She was convinced that everywhere she drove (flattening the house pets of Philadelphia along the way) people were waving and smiling at her. "They are so friendly!" We had to break the bad news. "They aren't waving with their whole hand, Grandma – just with their middle finger."

<snip>

But never mind that. Jan. 30, we are told, was not about what Iraqis were voting for – it was about the fact of their voting and, more important, how their plucky courage made Americans feel about their war. Apparently, the elections' true purpose was to prove to Americans that, as George Bush put it, "the Iraqi people value their own liberty." Stunningly, this appears to come as news. Chicago Sun-Times columnist Mark Brown said the vote was "the first clear sign that freedom really may mean something to the Iraqi people." On The Daily Show, CNN's Anderson Cooper described it as "the first time we've sort of had a gauge of whether or not they're willing to sort of step forward and do stuff."

This is some tough crowd. The Shiite uprising against Saddam in 1991 was clearly not enough to convince them that Iraqis were willing to "do stuff" to be free. Nor was the demonstration of 100,000 people held one year ago demanding immediate elections, or the spontaneous local elections organized by Iraqis in the early months of the occupation – both summarily shot down by Bremer. It turns out that on American TV, the entire occupation has been one long episode of Fear Factor, in which Iraqis overcome ever-more-challenging obstacles to demonstrate the depths of their desire to win their country back. Having their cities leveled, being tortured in Abu Ghraib, getting shot at checkpoints, having their journalists censored and their water and electricity cut off – all of it was just a prelude to the ultimate endurance test: dodging bombs and bullets to get to the polling station. At last, Americans were persuaded that Iraqis really, really want to be free.

<snip>

So what's the prize? An end to occupation, as the voters demanded? Don't be silly – the U.S. government won't submit to any "artificial timetable." Jobs for everyone, as the UIA promised? You can't vote for socialist nonsense like that. No, they get Geraldo Rivera's tears ("I felt like such a sap"), Laura Bush's motherly pride ("It was so moving for the president and me to watch people come out with purple fingers") and Betsy Hart's sincere apology for ever doubting them ("Wow – do I stand corrected").

More…
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MissMarple Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-11-05 04:23 PM
Response to Original message
1. She calls Al-Mahdi George's Trojan horse, Isn't that just great?
Not.

"Al-Mahdi is the Bush administration's Trojan horse in the UIA. (You didn't think they were going to put all their money on Allawi, did you?) In October he told a gathering of the American Enterprise Institute that he planned to "restructure and privatize state-owned enterprises," and in December he made another trip to Washington to unveil plans for a new oil law "very promising to the American investors." It was al-Mahdi himself who oversaw the signing of a flurry of deals with Shell, BP and ChevronTexaco in the weeks before the elections, and it is he who negotiated the recent austerity deal with the IMF. On troop withdrawal, al-Mahdi sounds nothing like his party's platform and instead appears to be channeling Dick Cheney on Fox News: "When the Americans go will depend on when our own forces are ready and on how the resistance responds after the elections." But on Sharia law, we are told, he is very close to the clerics."

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radar Donating Member (447 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-11-05 07:01 PM
Response to Original message
2. And breaks it down for idjuts like me....
...With this portion

Now it seems that two years of bloodshed, bribery and backroom arm-twisting were leading up to this: a deal in which
the ayatollahs get control over the family, Texaco gets the oil, and Washington gets its enduring military bases (call it the "oil for women program").
Everyone wins except the voters....


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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-11-05 10:01 PM
Response to Original message
3. Nice heads up on Al-Mahdi. eom
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Jack Rabbit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-12-05 01:01 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. We will need to watch his al-Madhi character
Edited on Sat Feb-12-05 01:03 AM by Jack Rabbit
He could be a real threat to Iraqi sovereignty.

There's more discussion on this piece in the long thread in foreign affairs.

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98geoduck Donating Member (590 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-12-05 01:01 AM
Response to Original message
4. Thanks for the article, good read. History won't forget this one.
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rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-12-05 03:51 AM
Response to Original message
6. the elections gave many people in the US a new sense of altruism-
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teryang Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-12-05 10:06 AM
Response to Original message
7. The freedom to be occupied
<Iraq's elections were delayed time and time again, while the occupation and resistance grew ever more deadly. Now it seems that two years of bloodshed, bribery and backroom arm-twisting were leading up to this: a deal in which the ayatollahs get control over the family, Texaco gets the oil, and Washington gets its enduring military bases (call it the "oil for women program"). Everyone wins except the voters, who risked their lives to cast their ballots for a very different set of policies.>

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