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The Fair & Balanced Election
by Harry Browne
January 31, 2005
The occupying army manned the polling areas to assure that there would be
no voting irregularities. Meanwhile, the population went to the polls and
voted in unprecedented numbers. When the votes were counted, to no one’s
surprise the party in league with the occupying military won the election
and began to run the country —
while the foreign occupying army got a series of military bases and stayed
on and on and on.
Iraq in 2005?
No, it was Poland in 1947, and over 40 years passed before the Soviets
left.
But that was different!
Then why did you assume I was talking about Iraq?
The Orgy
I was traveling on Iraqi Election Day. So I wasn’t able to participate fully in the
24-hour television orgy celebrating President Bush’s great vindication.
Shortly after I returned home late at night, I tuned into Fox TV News and
watched the late-night reruns of
The O’Reilly
Factor and Hannity & Colmes. According to the Fair &
Balanced
network, there were no shades of gray concerning the Iraqi election:
• This was an "historic election."
• Somehow, although never explained, the
election turnout was proof that countries like France and Germany now
have to participate in rebuilding all the Iraqi infrastructure
destroyed by the American military.
• Somehow, although never explained, the
election proved that President Bush is right in saying that the world
is now a safer place with Hussein out of power.
• This was a defeat for the far left in
the United States.
• This was an "historic election."
• Somehow, although never explained, all
the American deaths (the Iraqi deaths don’t count) have now been
justified by the election.
• Somehow, although never explained, the
150,000 American troops in Iraq are now much safer.
• Somehow, although never explained,
"This is obviously a huge blow against worldwide terrorism, which
opposes any kind of democracy" (O’Reilly’s words).
• This was an "historic election."
• This election was unprecedented in a
Middle Eastern Muslim country.
• Failure in Iraq would have made our
lives more dangerous.
• This was an "historic election."
• Iraq will be the leading democratic
reformist state in the Muslim world, and other countries will
necessarily have to follow suit.
• The Democrats in the U.S. are looking
very bad now because of their negative statements about Iraq, and they
have a "real problem" because they’re so out of touch with reality and
with the American people.
• Did I mention that this was an "historic
election"? (They mentioned it over and over and over.)
All this was accompanied by a few film clips of Iraqis voting or dancing
— clips that were repeated over
and over.
The Other Side
Both Fox shows played clips of Senators Kennedy and Kerry making the
following points:
• The election in no way changes the fact
that Americans were deceived into supporting a war.
• The election won’t stop the violence.
• The election won’t change the growing
perception of an American occupation.
• We shouldn’t celebrate the election
until we see what it leads to.
• It is time to start withdrawing
American troops from Iraq.
• America is less safe as a result of the
war in Iraq.
The Fox hosts were shocked —
shocked! — that the
Senators would make statements that were so "irresponsible" (a word they
managed to repeat frequently during the two hours). The Fox commentators
came very close to accusing Senators Kennedy and Kerry of treason.
Although they felt it was important to show the film clips of the Senators’ statements
several times, no one was invited on the
Fox shows to explain or defend those statements. Instead, the Fair & Balanced network interviewed about ten guests who agreed that such
statements were "irresponsible." They even brought on everyone’s favorite
"moderate," Senator Joseph Lieberman, to register his disapproval of his
fellow Democrats.
And they dug up
Alexander Haig
from somewhere, so they could play the clips for him and ask him whether he
thought the statements were "irresponsible." Big surprise, he did.
He also mentioned that George Bush took America into war "to protect our
values and our interests." He didn’t mention how Saddam Hussein threatened
our values or our interests — or even what our interests are.
History
If there’s one thing that politicians and TV commentators know a great
deal about, it sure isn’t history.
Although the Fox commentators repeated over and over that the election
was "historic," none of them mentioned that Iran has regular elections.
Nor did they mention that Iraq has had plenty of elections already.
During Hussein's reign, the 220-member National Assembly was elected by
popular vote.
The only recognition of this came when someone reporting from Iraq quoted
one voter who said something on the order of, "We’ve had ballots before, but
Saddam marked them for us."
Yes, it’s true that the choices available in previous Iraqi elections
were limited.
But, then, Donald Rumsfeld made it plain on April 15, 2003, that the
choices to the people in a "liberated" Iraq
would be limited as well. Rumsfeld said that, no matter what the will of
the Iraqi people:
• Iraq cannot be divided into three
separate countries (a plan that many people believe is the only way to
bring lasting peace and freedom to the country).
• No matter what weapons nearby countries
such as Israel, Pakistan, or Russia might use to threaten it, Iraq
will not be allowed to have comparable weapons.
• Iraq cannot become a fundamentalist
Islamic country like Iran.
• Former members of the Ba'ath Party cannot participate
in any new government (although the Bush people chose Ayad Allawi, a
former official in the party, to be the interim Prime Minister).
• People who are pro-Iran or pro-Syria
cannot participate in the elections or the government, although anyone
who is pro-American is of course free to do so.
And speaking of limitations on democracy, the people of California voted in
1996
to make medical
marijuana legal, only to have the federal government tell them that
their "historic election" was unacceptable
— and
the Feds convicted
Ed Rosenthal for doing what the voters of California had authorized him
to do. Also the federal government (the same one bringing democracy to Iraq)
decided not to accept the
assisted-suicide law passed by a referendum of Oregon voters in 1998.
Current History
Along with ancient (pre-September-11th) history, the war hawks have
little interest in current history. As a result, the 24-hour "special
edition" orgy on the Iraqi elections acknowledged no facts, or even
potential facts, that would dampen the celebration.
Here are a few aspects of the election that the Fox TV News boys had no
desire to explore:
• Many of the Shi’ites who voted may have
been doing so because they thought it would hasten the end of the
American occupation.
• Many Iraqis voted because
they had been told their food rations would be cut if they didn’t vote.
• Estimates of voter turnout started at 72%,
and continue to be cited by various commentators, but
were
reduced several times during the day
— and will probably turn out to be significantly less than the
figures that formed the basis for the celebration. But then, it’s always more
fun to celebrate the initial expectation than the final result.
• The U.S. occupying authorities
have contingency plans to
adjust the election outcome if they’re not satisfied with it.
• Foreign monitors were unable to verify any of
the claims made for the election, because it
was unsafe for them to visit the polling places.
• Turnout was apparently very high in Shi’ite
areas because Shi’ites (deprived of power during Hussein’s Sunni reign)
expect to dominate the new National Assembly and perhaps impose a religious
regime on Iraq,
while
fewer than 1% of the population in Sunni Samarra bothered to vote.
• While the Fox programs showed video clips of the interim
Prime Minister, Ayad Allawi, casting his ballot and then issuing a
celebratory statement on the election, no one bothered to mention that those
clips
were
filmed in a heavily guarded bunker.
• Most likely, the soldiers shown in dispatches
by Geraldo Rivera in Iraq
had been hand-picked to assure that no one appeared on TV who didn’t
support the war.
• Does the phrase "Mission
Accomplished" ring any bells?
• Far from being a great triumph for George
Bush, he had to be pressured
into holding the election by Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani.
• After the U.S. celebrated
the end of "ethnic
cleansing" in Kosovo and
the victory over the
Taliban in Afghanistan — and
in each case turned its attention elsewhere
— all hell broke loose. But here
we are, once again celebrating before the final results are in.
Conservatives seem to be good at only two things: (1) They celebrate
victory when all they’ve done is start toward some goal; and (2) They never
run out of excuses when the plan fails.
Meanwhile, back at the Foxy TV News network, we can see that the slogan .
. .
We report
You decide
. . . should be modified to read:
We report one side
You decide between it. |