Posted on 01/02/2008 12:53:41 PM PST by neverdem
Watching the debate over whether Huckabees withdrawn attack ad is over the top, and other assorted Iowa psychodramas makes interesting contrast with the rest of the worlds electioneering outside the Great Satan.
In Kenya theyre burning churches and rioting; in Pakistan riots lead to murder and arson. Hamas and Fatah are at it again in Gaza. At some point, someone might wonder how such a crass hyper-power can rather peacefully conduct voting in a way most abroad apparently cannot.
In the case of Pakistan, however, we are starting to see a disturbing pattern: the rioting and violence continues, the conspiracies mount, and the three general factions square off (the al-Qaeda/Islamists death to the West clique; the military/dictatorship at least we provide order and secure the nukes bunch; and the reform and democracy Bhuttoites [forget our past corruption]).
The common denominator is that it is somehow Americas fault for: either propping up a dictator, or not pressing him enough to reform, or naively backing him up against a wall, or demanding he fight terrorists, or giving him a pass not to fight terrorists, or rigging an American-backed Bhutto return, or exposing a brave heroine to the clutches of her enemies without proper security, or this or that or that or this.
And these endless, and self-contradictory indictments are often voiced by Pakistani elites of two types. They are either opposition figures whose past careers are ample proof of corruption and lost opportunities-or expatriate intellectuals in European capitals and American universities (who sound like they had a little bit more opportunity at the good life than those who grow up in El Paso or Bakersfield), endlessly faulting some aspect of U.S. foreign policyalways forgetting why they are here and not over in Pakistan, and why perhaps they might do more good to match their idealistic and often vituperative rhetoric by returning to the land of their birth to enact real change on the ground, a country that sorely needs those with such international experience and expertise.
The media usually, but unknowingly, provides some exegesis: they have shown now for the nth time the shrieking rioter who serially beats the skeleton of a completely burned out and utterly destroyed bus with a long wooden stickthen cut away to the typical interview with some government grandee, ensconced in a beautiful home of tile and gardens, defending the indefensible of the government in mellifluous English.
Meanwhile, we are daily reminded that Pakistans 1998 detonation of a nuclear weapon remains the greatest foreign policy lapse of the last quarter-century...
Damn ... who's watch was that on again?
But that was because the GOP was obsessing about sex with an intern. /sarc
Happy New Year!
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Now THAT is a subtle cartoon.
It's very popular among the lazy. One of its manifestations is in the insistence that one morning Bush just decided to invade Iraq, a country that posed no threat to the United States and had never done anything untoward, and never mind the fact that it was the continuation of a past history going back decades. That sort of thing saves a lot of time in thinking and ends up flogging the same predictable scapegoat - that is, after all, what scapegoats are for.
It is exceedingly dangerous to attempt to make policy based on this shaky foundation. Such a policymaker is forever at the mercy of perception and always in search of an excuse. The Clinton administration was notorious for it. "Well, we're in a hopeless mess, it's somebody else's fault, so don't blame us for a negative outcome" is hardly the stuff of leadership but it is certainly popular nevertheless. It is also paralytic, and Pakistan in particular does not need paralysis right now.
It sure is. I'll bet most people don't see it.
Ramirez is a genius, and all the moreso because he can draw a cartoon that still works even though some people don't get the entire thing.
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