Stand by Iraq
Iraq holds provincial elections on January 30th. Local candidates are defying threats from terrorists and proxies of theocratic states. The assassinations of some political leaders before the elections do not seem to hinder the Iraqi people’s enthusiasm for taking part in the vote. The situation in the country is still fragile, however. Even though the level of violence has dropped to its lowest since the war to topple the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003, we will surely see setbacks in he future. Yet, despite the bloodbath of the last few years, the Iraqi people have never strayed from the path of representative government. Our solidarity should be with the people of Iraq, slowly building a democracy in the heart of the Middle East.
Karrar Ali, 28, worker, quoted in a report on the elections from The New York Times:
“I won’t elect any of the religious lists … The lists that think art is forbidden, that sports are forbidden and that freedom of expression is forbidden won’t be elected by me because it ties me up with the chains I’ve always been with, and I want to be free now from those chains.”
Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to John Adams, September 4, 1823:
“The generation which commences a revolution rarely completes it. Habituated from their infancy to passive submission of body fend mind to their kings and priests, they are not qualified, when called on, to think and provide for themselves; and their inexperience, their ignorance and bigotry, make them instruments often, in the hands of the Bonapartes and Iturbides, to defeat their own rights and purposes. This is the present situation of Europe and Spanish America. But it is not desperate. The light which has been shed on mankind by the art of printing, has eminently changed the condition of the world. As yet, that light has dawned on the middling classes only of the men in Europe. The kings and the rabble, of equal ignorance, have not yet received its rays; but it continues to spread, and while printing is preserved, it can no more recede than the sun return on his course.A first attempt to recover the right of self-government may fail, so may a second, a third, etc. But as a younger and more instructed race comes on, the sentiment becomes more and more intuitive, and a fourth, a fifth, or some subsequent one of the ever-renewed attempts will ultimately succeed. In France, the first effort was defeated by Robespierre, the second by Bonaparte, the third by Louis XVIII., and his holy allies; another is yet to come, and all Europe, Russia excepted, has caught the spirit; and all will attain representative government, more or less perfect.”