Saturday, March 19, 2005

Democracy in Iraq: 2 Years

From an Iraqi blogger...

Democracy in Iraq: "2 Years
It has been now two years since the United States, UK and other countries invaded our nation. It has been two years since Iraqis have had to live with daily violent attacks and rampant terrorism. It has been two years since our nation began being turned upside down. It has been two years since the road to democracy began.

It has been a very hard two years. So many people have died, so much has been destroyed, so many drops of tears and blood have been shed, so many have been robbed of loved ones, and so many words have been spoken about Iraq, it's future, and this war.

Two years...seems like yesterday that I was awoken by bombs going off in Baghdad, and the realisation that my life and that of my country was going to change. That very day I remember being scared that my house might be destroyed by a bomb, or that my relatives who were forcibly put into the Iraqi army might be killed.

Two years since Saddam came on TV, and pledged that Iraq would never fall. Little did he know, he surrendered like a rat in a whole only months later. Two years since my father had a heart.

Two years is about 730 days. In those days what have I seen. My eyes have seen more than I had ever hoped, more blood, more death and more pain, then I ever imagined or hoped I would have seen.

In those days I have seen the worst of humanity, the animal that lives in all humanity, the ability of humanity to destroy at will others, and rob the life given to others by God almight himself.

So you ask me, Husayn, was it worth it. What have you gotten? What has Iraq acheived? These are questions I get a lot.

To may outsiders, like those who protested last year, who will protest today. This was a fools errand, it brought nothing but death and destruction. I am sheltered in Iraq, but I know how the world feels, how people have come to either love or hate Bush, as though heis the emobdiement of this war. As though this war is part of Bush, they forget the over twenty million Iraqis, they forget the Middle Easterners, they forget the average person on the street, the average man with the average dream.

Ask him if it was worth it. Ask him what is different. Ask him if he would go through it again, go ahead ask him, ask me, many of you have.

Now I answer you, I answer you on behalf of myself, and my countrymen. I dont care what your news tells you, what your television and newspapers say, this is how we feel. Despite all that has happened. Despite all the hurt, the pain, blood, sweat and tears. These two years have given us hope we never had.

Before March 20, 2003, we were in a dungeon. We did not see the light. Saddam Hussain was crushing Iraq's spirit slowly, we longed for his end, but knew we could not challenge him, or his diabolical seed who would no doubt follow him and continue his generation of hell on Earth.

Since then, we now have hope. Hope is not a tangible thing, but it is something, it is more than being blinded by darkness, by being stuck in a mental pit without any future.

Hope has been the greatest product of the last two years. No doubt, many have died, many have died by accident or due to crimes. But their sacrifices are not, and will not be for nothing. I refuse to let it be, and my countrymen stand with me.

Our cities are smoking, our graveyards full, and terrorists in our midst. But we are not defeated. We are not down, we are not regretful. We are not going to surrender. For all that the two years have brought, the greatest thign they have given us is a future, and a view of the finish line.

Iraqis see the finish line, the finish line of freedom and democracy and a functioning nation. We can smell it, taste it, and like a sprinter, one who has broken his legs, but who has a heart full of passion, we will crawl there no matter what the cost. No matter what we must endure, we have realized what we can become, and that is the biggest result of the last two years.

Noone can take that from us. Not the terrorists, not those who want to question the good of the removal of Saddam, not those who want to reduce our glory for politics, none.

We have been brought from darkness to light. And not only has the future been made better for Iraq, but the martyrs of our nation, their blood is watering the roots of democracy across the world. We are watching our neighbors come closer to the light, and this only pushes us more, and makes us stronger in our burning desire to reach the finish line, to realize the dream that our people have had for so long.

No, we will not give up, and we will not say that the last two years were a waste. They for all their trouble have been momentus. They for us, have been a turning point in history. Whether or not you agree, this is how it looks from Iraq."

In Iraq -- Iraqi women seek power to safeguard rights

(top o' the hat to ARTHUR CHRENKOFF.
SignOnSanDiego.com > In Iraq -- Iraqi women seek power to safeguard rights BAGHDAD – They head the ministries of environment, agriculture, public works, migration, labor and social affairs, and the ministry for women. They have 31 percent representation in Iraq's new parliament.

Yet Iraqi women want more power in the country's nascent political system to ensure their rights are protected from any bid to replace civil law with Islamic Sharia and create what they say would be a new dictatorship.

An amusement

One of those silly Internet quizes...
The Knight
You scored 28% Cardinal, 41% Monk, 35% Lady, and 67% Knight!

You are the hero. Brave and bold. You are strong and utterly selfless.
You are also a pawn to your superiors and will be lucky if you live
very long. If you survive the Holy wars you are thrust into you will be
praised for your valor and opportunities both romantic and financial
will become available to you.



My test tracked 4 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
You scored higher than 99% on Cardinal
You scored higher than 99% on Monk
You scored higher than 99% on Lady
You scored higher than 99% on Knight
Link: The Who Would You Be in 1400 AD Test written by KnightlyKnave on Ok Cupid

Friday, March 18, 2005

ABC News: They say Girl Scout shouldn't sell cookies!

What a bunch of out of touch clueless, um, er, people! They ran a story (promoted heavily by Peter Jennings at every commercial break) about how GS cookies are bad for you. They had at least 3 people on talking about how unhealthy the cookies are. One of the speakers even recommended that the GS sell key chains. For "balance", they had the head of the GS talk a bit. How bout having a few voices of people that feel like most of us: We know they are bad for us. What cookies aren't? It is a very good cause. They taste good (don't get between me and my Samoas!). Who is responsible for my putting on a pound or two from the cookies? Certainly not the Girls Scouts.

Here is one of the talking heads:
"We're in the midst of an obesity pandemic and for children who are overweight — [with] obesity and diabetes — it's unbelievable," said New York chef Ann Cooper. "And here we have a group that sells hundreds of millions of cookies."
Putting aside the idea that people are themselves responsible for what goes into their own mouth (Ms. Cooper obviously doesn't believe that), aren't there bigger, more "evil", junk food companies to go after?

Long Live Girl Scout Cookies! (follow the link to see for yourself the nutritional facts, although you could probbly just walk to your kitchen and read the box, right?)

(disclaimer: my daughter is a GS and her troop uses their "cookie money" to buy clothes that are donated to a local women's shelter)

Charles Krauthammer: What's Left? Shame.

Read the whole thing. The last line in the article is great. One interesting part from the middle.

What's Left? Shame. (washingtonpost.com): "After all, going back at least to the Spanish Civil War, the left has always prided itself on being the great international champion of freedom and human rights. And yet, when America proposed to remove the man responsible for torturing, gassing and killing tens of thousands of Iraqis, the left suddenly turned into a champion of Westphalian sovereign inviolability.

A leftist judge in Spain orders the arrest of a pathetic, near-senile Gen. Augusto Pinochet eight years after he's left office, and becomes a human rights hero -- a classic example of the left morally grandstanding in the name of victims of dictatorships long gone. Yet for the victims of contemporary monsters still actively killing and oppressing -- Khomeini and his successors, the Assads of Syria and, until yesterday, Hussein and his sons -- nothing. No sympathy. No action. Indeed, virulent hostility to America's courageous and dangerous attempt at rescue."


iowahawk

iowahawk: "Talkin' 'Bout Cars

You wanna know what I don't like about the blogosphere? Friggin' 'car blogging' that's what. Some mope critiquing the peppy insouciance of the steering fade on the new Beemer 5 series. In the immortal paraphrased words of Dennis Hopper as Frank in Blue Velvet, 'fudge that shirt.' As a tonic for all the civilized-European-road-sedan gasbaggery, I am introducing a new recurring feature to iowahawk: CarPorn, featuring the very finest in vehicular excess. First installment:
Four Allison V12 aircraft engines in a 1938 Fiat Tipolino. No, it does not have refined road manners. That, pal, is a car."


with a picture!

iowahawk: College Profs Denounce Western Culture, Move to Caves

iowahawk: College Profs Denounce Western Culture, Move to Caves

Cox & Forkum: The Caribou's Nose

I support this proposal to drill in Alaska. Most of Alaska's elected officials support this. It is a long term move (like Iraq) that we have seen too little of the last 30 years. Will it solve all our problems? Of course not. But it will have an impact.

I am sorry that one of my Senators (Coleman) voted against it (Dayton is a lightweight) because he is trying to build the ethanol business here in Minnesota. Whie I disagree with his vote, he, at least is doing so to make life better for Minnesotans.

Anything we can do, including raising mpg requirements for all vehicles, to reduce our dependancy on Saudi Arabia and supporting a government that exports hatred of America and doesn't allow women to vote is a good thing.

Cox & Forkum: The Caribou's Nose

Roger L. Simon: Wolfowitz Derangement Syndrome

Make sure to read the comments also.

Roger L. Simon: Wolfowitz Derangement Syndrome: "So it must be his well-known role in the instigation of the Iraq War, but according to the latest poll, 61.5% of post-war Iraqis now feel their country is headed in the right direction as opposed to 23.2 thinking negatively, a stunning differential of nearly 40% which dwarfs any similar polls I have ever seen about America and Europe. The only conclusion we can draw from this is perhaps we should have invaded Europe. It would have cheered them up."

Power Line: Did Fidel earn this before coming to power?

At Bush, Cheney, Kerry and Edwards obtained their money before they came to power and not because they were in power. Their wealth wasn't taken from the people they are representing.

Power Line: March 2005 Archives

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Today's Chuckles

protein wisdom: A note to House Panel members: Jose Canseco is an expert on hitting the belt-high fastball, sticking himself with a needle, and banging Oakland A’s groupies five at a time in the bygone era of the Erasure music and mullets. Beyond that, he’s a self-serving egomaniac and a dullard trying desperately—and unsuccessfully—to sound intelligent.

You may as well be asking a porterhouse steak to conjugate Latin verbs.


IMAO: Star Wars Episode III - Dark and Diabolical: "For nearly 30 years, the world has waited with baited breath for the final installment of the Star Wars saga, expecting George Lucas to make it the best movie in the history of cinema.

Fools that we are."

This is not education, this is hate

Education is learning, debating, exploring, discussing, (occasionally) memorizing, experimenting, and a number of other "*ings". But what happened in this story is wrong.

Some complained that "When I dissented, I got a called a traitor. Bush/Ashcroft/Repubs are crushing dissent." This story cannot be framed as free speech unless my ability to call you wrong or even, yes, a traitor is also free speech. Either they are both hate speech or they are both free speech. And given the hysteria over the loss of our rights over the last 3 years, we should err on the side of calling it free speech.

Which leaves me free to say that the principals and teachers involved in this should be asked some very tough questions by the school board. And the students involved should attend some anti-hate classes to learn how to have rational conversations about topics that reasonable people can disagree.


Captain's Quarters

Power Line: From the front in Falluja

Good news that you won't read in the newspapers.

Power Line: March 2005 Archives

A *really* bad day on the river

This has been floating around for a while and I just came across it again. Scroll slowly and look at each picture carefully. If anyone knows the details behind the when and where, leave a note in the comments.

towboat

Just being nice

The New York Times > Opinion > Op-Ed Columnist: Who Gets It? Hillary: "Mrs. Clinton is also hard to dismiss as a screechy obstructionist because she's gone out of her way to be collegial in the Senate and to work with Republicans from Trent Lott to Sam Brownback. Senator John Kerry never seemed much liked by his colleagues, while other senators seem to like Mrs. Clinton. Perhaps it's that, according to New York magazine, she surprises other senators by popping up during meetings and asking: Anybody want a coffee?"

I was in a group job interview in college. There were about 50 of us and we had to break into groups of 6-8 to do some exercises. Halfway through we had a break. One of the other candidates had just broken their leg so I asked, like I hope anyone would, "Can I get you a soda?". I learned later (after I was hired) that my offer had been noticed favorably by the observers. I hope people don't get hung up about "a women offering to get coffee", but notice and instead approve of a person offering to do something small and nice for others.

lgf: The Palestinian Peace Process?

I can understand fighting with your life for something (although, thank God, I have never been forced into that situation). What I can't understand is encouraging, facilitating, and celebrating the use of children as suicide bombers.

I know the argument goes (I know, not you, kind readers, but from others): What is the difference between kids being suicide bombers and sending 20 years olds in our military into harms way? There is a huge difference: the suicide bomber is encouraged and expected to die, not for the actual event, but for the press coverage of it. The suicide bombers life is far less meaningful than the press coverage afterwards. In our military, we spend billions of dollars to make as certain as possible that our soldiers have such a training and technology advantage that as many as possible come home alive. The actual actions (clearing out neighborhoods house by house, protecting roads and people, building positive relationships with the community, etc.) are what matter, not the press coverage. When one soldier dies, it is a tragedy and we mourn. When one suicide bomber dies, their family and community celebrates their death and the death of whomever they took with them.

While we may have opinion's on Dan Rather's choice to list the soldiers that died during an evening news as a criticism of the government's policies, can you imagine Palestinian TV listing the names of suicide bombers as a criticism of the Palestinian Authority? I can't either. Instead they encourage their future to kill themselves.

lgf: The Palestinian Peace Process

Power Line: IRA is dead

While there is still much to be done on the political side, having the terrorism taken out of the equation certainly seems hopeful.

Power Line: March 2005 Archives

Review of a Bio of Woodrow Wilson

I have been reading biographies the last couple of years and have found a wide variety in the quality. Reviews like this one do a nice job of letting me know what kind of read it will be.

The Claremont Institute: The Perils of Progress

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

A Carnival of the Carnivals

I'm not sure how the term came about, but "Carnival of ..." is a collection of interesting posts on a particular topic. It is a good way to find new blogs to read.

King O'Fool - Carnival of the Carnivals

The Carnival Of Education: Week 6

The latest Carnival Of Education is up over at Education Wonk.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Austin Bay Blog: Iraq Prepares to Convene National Assembly

Whatever happened to those human shields? Have they no other cause? Dafur? Congo? Lebanon?

Austin Bay Blog � Iraq Prepares to Convene National Assembly

The power of protest. Let's hope it continues

Captain's Quarters: "The latest demonstrations of people power in Beirut may have convinced the Syrians to keep packing. Military intelligence units around the city began dismantling outposts and packing to leave under the careful watch of Lebanese security officers, the AP reports this morning:"

How 'Bout Now?

Lileks has a good one today. Nice play on the eye doctor angle.

LILEKS (James) :: The Bleat: "Assad, I suspect, may well suffer at the hands of the people in his government who are stronger and more serious. The sort of guys who flip between pictures of him and his dad and ask the old eye-doctor question: Better? Worse? Better? Worse? How about now?"

Today's Snickers

no, not the candy bar

ScrappleFace: Bush Puts His Poll Numbers in Personal Account

IMAO: Totally True Tidbits Archives

protein wisdom: Anti-democratic forces react to today's protest in Lebanon

A Small Victory - Have A Beer With Fear

A Small Victory - Have A Beer With Fear: "Fear is a powerful master. It's not so much what it makes you do, i.e., cower, cry, scream, shake, as it what it keeps you from doing that makes it so strong."

Michelle talks about fear from a clearly personal point of view. The first paragraph, quoted above, is dead on right and, I believe, what FDR meant when he said we have "Nothing to Fear but Fear Itself".

Monday, March 14, 2005

dooce: The SAT Reasoning Test was WAY easier than this

dooce captures another one of parenting's little moments.....

dooce: The SAT Reasoning Test was WAY easier than this

Twaddlitis: Emotions

Written in March 2004

Emotions

Tangled up in an all too human mess.
Emotions constantly moving, never rest.

Rejection
When a part of the center of your life
Betrays,
When there is no chance to mend what had gone astray,
You don’t want to spend the rest of your life with me.
What good am I?
What did I do wrong?
Why am I not good enough?
Why?

Pain
Seeing the family torn apart
Not able to stop it
Seeing the children struggle to understand
Not able to stop it
Seeing the dreams fly off to someone else
Not able to stop it
Shortness of breath
Stomach of lead
Mind racing at night
Sobbing uncontrollably
Not being able to stop it

Fighting
I will get back up on my feet.
Time will heal all so they say
True, but so far away
Getting the help I need.
One day at a time. One step at a time.
Be nice to yourself. All cliché’s, yet all true.
Several false starts
Then I met you.




Risk
I think I won’t be alone.
But the real world takes action, not thoughts.
And action brings exposure,
And exposure brings pain. Always?
Two wounded souls on the mend
Sparks fly.
Fire to burn?
Fire to warm?
How can I know?

Wondering
Am I healed? No, the journey has just Begun.
A struggle still to be won.
Do we like because we are liked?
Do we love because we are loved?
Is this a good thing?
How will I know?

Hope
The hope of finding a friend
A companion
A partner
To recharge, restore, explore
To make the Spirit sing
To Live

New futures
New dreams
New travels
New life

I Hope.




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Sunday, March 13, 2005

lgf: Incredibly Strange Graduation of the Iranian Female Police Cadets

I have not idea what to make of this.

lgf: Incredibly Strange Graduation of the Iranian Female Police Cadets

Kuwait hastens women's vote bill

"...delayed in parliament by the strong Islamist bloc."

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Kuwait hastens women's vote bill