All I know is what I saw with my own eyes. What I saw with my own eyes were the people of this community turning out to vote, turning out in droves....I tell you, the job they did, it's--they've created an environment stable enough so that these people--not only are our GIs heroes, each one of these voters is a hero. Remember what they have been threatened with. Remember what they have endured. Remember the people who have been beheaded. Remember the threats that if you come out today, this is your last warning, you're going to be killed, your family is going to be killed. Well look at them. They're turning out anyway....
It's just amazing....There are the explosions, there's no doubt about it, in the background, the occasional fire, but that's not the news. Yes, it's the news of course, but the real news is that despite everything they are going to cast their ballots. It's incredibly heartwarming....
An exciting day, an historic day here in Iraq. It is the dawn of freedom....You folks who live in the United States who are watching this, just be proud. Be proud of this. This is amazing. This was inconceivable, wasn't it, during the days of Saddam Hussein. Look how far this country has come. It will heal its wounds. The terrorists are going to lose.The next time you hear somone say the results are not legitimate, that the votes don't count, remember these words. The Iraqi people certainly didn't behave as if they thought their votes were meaningless.
Hopefully, over the next couple of days, the Democrats will realize how hollow and cynical the words of the Kennedy, Kerry, and Boxer coalition sound.
To paraphrase Kerry from Meet the Press this morning, what the Democrats do in the next few days will decide the outcome of the Democratic party for years to come. And this is - not may be - this is the last chance for the Democratic party to get it right.
Hopefully they will realize that we, as Americans, should be working together against a common enemy.
Hopefully.
If not, they will isolate themselves from mainstream America in ways they haven't even dreamed of.
I couldn't agree more. Democrats who can't bring themselves to say something nice here are putting their hatred of Bush above their own political survival. Did they wake up today, turn on their TVs, and feel a sense of disappointment that more people didn't die?
ReplyDeleteEight million people risked their lives to vote. Even the non-Fox press knows they can't downplay the historical nature of that act. People who think the press 'have retreated' are really just exposing their own increasingly lonely ideological position.
Credit for what happened in this election goes like this, in order of importance:
1. Iraqi citizens.
2. Iraqi police, and fledgling civil defense.
3. Moderate Shiite clerics.
4. Iraqi interim government.
5. U.S. armed forces.
6. Some folks back in Washington D.C.
And in a way, the insurgents deserve some credit too. They have shown Iraqis an awful, violent, and backwards-looking alternative to democracy.
David,
ReplyDeleteActually, I think the U.S. military and Pres. Bush should be on top of the previous list. But history will be the judge. But certainly, the Iraqis coming out was a big deal.
Good thing there wasn't rain or long lines, huh? Have the insurgents filed for a recount yet?
Not yet. But Jesse Jackson was booking a flight over this morning...
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