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The Sunni Sun Has Set

October 22, 2009: The government has finally gotten several large foreign oil companies to agree to rebuild and expand major oil fields, and more than double output to six million barrels of oil a day. The government also approved a $67 billion budget for next year. About a quarter of that would be for investment in infrastructure (which Saddam neglected for over two decades). Last years budget was $58 billion. As oil production expands, so will income, as oil is the main source of government revenue. A primary activity of government officials is to steal as much of that oil money as possible. Politicians use as little of that money, as possible, to keep voters from rebelling against the theft. This is how it works in just about every undeveloped nation with oil, or other natural resource, wealth.

Another government survey shows that at least 85,000 civilians were killed after the 2003 invasion. Most of these were killed by Islamic terrorists. The slaughter reached a peak in 2006-7, as Shia death squads moved on Sunni areas in a big way. The initially killing got started, towards the end of the 2003, when the Sunni Arab minority (about 20 percent of the population, since reduced to about half that) decided that a terror campaign would drive the Americans out and prevent the Shia majority from taking over. This failed, and did so in a spectacular fashion when the Shia increasingly used the same terror tactics against the Sunnis. The Shia controlled the security forces, and took to wearing uniforms while slaughtering Sunnis. The U.S. "surge offensive" put enough American troops into Iraq to provide the Sunni Arabs protection (in payment for turning on the terrorist groups, and assisting in whipping al Qaeda and company out). A few thousand diehard Sunni Arab terrorists are still at it, but they are losing strength each week. The Sunni sun has set in Iraq.

The remaining Sunni Arab terrorists are exploiting the fears of the Sunni Arabs in cities like Mosul (on the border between Arab and Kurdish areas) that the Kurds will succeed in their plan to drive Arabs out of areas that Saddam had, over several decades, driven Kurds from and replaced them with Arabs from the south.  The Kurdish minority, in its largely autonomous northern enclave, remains deadlocked with the Shia dominated national government over where the border is, and who shall control the northern oil fields. This still has the potential of escalating into a civil war. 

Iraq is also having a hard time adapting to democracy. The entire Arab world is still stuck in an older period of human history, where it was believed that the people could not rule themselves, and that only a dictator, backed by unrestricted force, could do so. Many Arabs still believe in that approach, and Iraq is the example of how Arabs can deal with democracy. Earlier attempts (Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, etc) did not work out so well.

October 16, 2009: The U.S. cancelled plans to send a combat brigade of 3,500 troops to Iraq. The security situation in Iraq continues to improve, and American troops there have little to do.

October 12, 2009: Violence plunged nationwide in September, to the lowest rates since May. Violence in September was about half what it was in August.

 

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sjdoc    ''One man, one vote, ONCE''   10/23/2009 7:59:17 AM
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Democracy is neither the objective nor necessarily the vehicle by which to get at a condition of civil government in Iraq that is conducive to peace and prosperity for the various people in and around that ridiculously kludged-together excuse for a nation-state. 
 
What's the real purpose of government? 
 
Government is a noxious damned thing.  It has always been - practically, covertly, even overtly - utterly corrupt.  It is at best parasitic upon the productive (meaning "private") sector of society, and most commonly the officers of civil government are vicious predators.  Here in these United States just as much as in Iraq. 
 
No pseduoconservative illusions here.  This is supposed to be a consideration of current events in the context of history, and whether "traditionalist" fake-conservative Republican or overtly Marxist / Mao-worshipping / share-the-wealth "progressive" Democrat, anyone taking the historical perspective has to acknowledge that our federal, state, and local governments are criminally violative of Americans' individual rights not in default but as a matter of overt and planned policy.
 
They're screwing you deliberately and with malice aforethought.  
 
So why don't the people suffering under the burden of any government - here or in Iraq,  deprived of any possibility of peacefully securing redress of their legitimate grievances as victims of government predation - simply kill the officers of their governments on sight?
 
It's not simply because their governments' officers might shoot back or otherwise retaliate.  Keep in mind not only the events leading up to the American Revolution but also (for example) the Battle of Athens, Tennessee on 1-2 August 1946.  American citizens have, for the legitimate purpose of restoring good civil order, offered violent resistance against malfeasant officials of their own governments.  When the guys with the guns go off the tracks, the rest of us must take them down.  There's no other reason for the Bill of Rights.
 
People do not routinely treat the tax collector and the grafting building inspector to a policy of "shoot, shovel, and shut up" because their governments do serve an important and legitmate purpose: suppressing the criminal activities of foreign governments and those of free-lance goons within said governments' jurisdictions.
 
The American Founders - despite the influence of malignant thieving machinators like Hamilton and the rest of the Federalists - looked long and hard into ways by which a civil government for our diverse federation (every bit as much divided and violently contentious as the various factions of Iraq) could achieve a robust national government without setting up the basis o corruption, tyranny, and the necessity for people to repeat Lexington and Concord against the uniformed officers of their own federal power.  They came up with some good observations, and applied as many of these solutions as the Federalist conpirators running the Constitutional convention and the ratification process could not suppress. 
 
That legitimate government in these United States lasted as long as it did - up to 1861, when Lincoln took office - is a tribute to the efforts of the Founders.  After that, we've been completely in the shit, and now we're deeper in the shit than ever, but the brief success achieved in 1787 shows both Americans and Iraqis that it is possible to get a national government that achieves the very few legitimate functions of government without inflicting upon the people of these nations the conditions requiring that we draw a bead on Officer Friendly and Politician Blowhard and shoot them down like the child-killing rabid dogs they really want to be.
 
--
"I propose that it shall be no longer malum in se for a citizen to pummel, cowhide, kick, gouge, cut, wound, bruise, maim, burn, club, bastinado, flay, or even lynch a [government] jobholder, and that it shall be malum prohibitum only to the extent that the punishment exceeds the jobholder?s deserts."

-- H.L. Mencken

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