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Originally posted by Tyrone Slothrop
I think whether our project there succeeds or fails will depend on a lot more than whether everyone gets a chance to vote. They voted under Hussein, too.
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That's a cruel denigration of the word "vote".
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You really seem to be missing the point, so let me try again. Suppose a world in which, in the 2006 election in Maine, only five people show up to vote for Maine's two congressional representatives. Maine still gets its two seats, because under our system, the seats are apportioned on the basis of population.
In the Iraqi election to be held next month, if only five people show up to vote in one of the Sunni provinces, they will be unrepresented, in essence and in fact, because the number of seats they get in the parliament (or whatever it's going to be called) will be proportionate to their share of the total votes case, not to their province's share of the population.
So this is not about "counting votes that are not cast."
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Surprisingly, I do get your point. I think we're just doing the ships passing thing because of a disconnect in viewpoints.
Maybe I'm too optimistic, but I see the Iraqi society as being not that different than ours. There are two (or maybe three, depending on how you count) religions there. Each religion has some small share of radical nutjobs, who will freely give others' lives for their gawd. But, the mass of people are in the middle, basically believing, but certainly not about to crash planes into buildings or pull tripwires on vests just because of some raisins. (sp?). They yearn for some explanations of the unknowables, and they want a structure that tells them that, by sticking to a defined morality, they're not going to handicap themselves, because others will stick to it, too, but that's really all they're looking to their religion for, not unlike most people here.
They've had - what? - generations of strife. They've had a taste of prosperity, and also a taste of hell, through the auspices of SH. Mussolini made the trains run on time, with some obvious drawbacks. So, too, did SH. So, they know what a functioning infrasrtucture can bring them, quality-of-life-wise, and they want to take part in a society that offers them that, along with some control and freedom. They want to feed their families, send their kids to school, and be a part of the world. They want a Coke.
So, I think that the bulk of the society - Kurd, Shia, and Sunni - will find it more important to work to form a workable group that can build a healthy society, and be prosperous, and join the rest of us, than to fight for their tribal or sectarian advantage.
Obviously, if the Shia majority elects a government that governs to the clear advantage of Shia society, this won't work. But, I'm thinking that what will prevail will be a religion-neutral group, one that governs for Iraqis, and not some segment of Iraqis. If that happens - even if the Sunni's lose, but then see that the government treats them fairly, shia or sunni or whatever - then and only then can they form an honest-to-gosh cohesive civil society.
I think the chances of this happening are better than even. I also think this would be the greatest leap forward the entire middle east could possibly take at this point - leading to pressure all over the region for a similar result, starting with Iran, and maybe Syria.
If you understand my optimism for this, and if you understand that I think that right now - today - is the optimal time for this attempt - then you will understand why I think it so vital for the entire world that we make the attempt that we're making now, painful or not, and why I think that a Kerry win would have been so bad for the entire world.
Might even help you understand why I like Rummy.