Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Democracy in the Middle East? The MSM says: “whatever

Here’s Jeff Jacoby in today’s Boston Globe with “The good news from Iraq is not fit to print”:

What was the most important news out of Iraq last week?

That depends on what you consider ''important." Do you see the war against radical Islam and Ba'athist fascism as the most urgent conflict of our time? Do you believe that replacing tyranny with democratic self-government is ultimately the only antidote to the poison that has made the Middle East so dangerous and violent? If so, you'll have no trouble identifying the most significant development in Iraq last week: the landslide victory of the new Iraqi Constitution.

The announcement on Oct. 25 that the first genuinely democratic national charter in Arab history had been approved by 79 percent of Iraqis was a major piece of good news. It confirmed the courage of Iraq's people and their hunger for freedom and decent governance. It advanced the US campaign to democratize a country that for 25 years had been misruled by a mass-murdering sociopath. It underscored the decision by Iraq's Sunnis, who had boycotted the parliamentary elections in January, to pursue their goals through ballots, not bullets. And it dealt a humiliating blow to the bombers and beheaders -- to the likes of Islamist butcher Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who earlier this year declared ''a fierce war on this evil principle of democracy" and threatened to kill anyone who took part in the elections.

No question: If you think that defeating Islamofascism, extending liberty, and transforming the Middle East are important, it's safe to say you saw the ratification of the new constitution as the Iraqi news story of the week.

But that isn't how the mainstream media saw it.
There are people who don’t believe that we’re in a global war on terror, but do they all have to be journalists?

1 comment:

Bent El Neel said...

While democracy is indeed important and is severely lacking in the Middle East...I have my doubts it will do anything to quell the rise of Islamic fundamentalist ideals in the region.

If there is a true democracy in the Middle East, what you might end up with is a democratically elected Islamic party (because Muslims form the majority of the population), who may very well decide its a great idea to implement Sharia law...not really good news to the minorities living in that country, or to the rest of the world either. You know, the Jihad concept IS endorsed by Islam (in the Quran and Hadith)