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Vendredi 10 novembre 2006
Par Duffer2222
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Vendredi 10 novembre 2006
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Mercredi 29 novembre 2006
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Jeudi 7 décembre 2006
In spite of the recommendations of the Iraq study group  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraq_Study_Group_Report) the rotten duo of Bush and Blair still refuses to hold talks with Iran and Syria.
Also, Ehud Olmert, refuses to see a connection between the Israeli-Palestinian conflict (which is actually not a conflict, Israel being the only agressor in this case), and the crisis in Iraq and elsewhere.
Tell me, with politicians as corrupt and vicious as them, how are we going to manage to live in peace in the future?


From www.bbc.co.uk

Bush: No early Iran-Syria talks
Tony Blair and George W Bush
Bush and Blair presented a united front
US President George W Bush has ruled out early talks with Iran and Syria on tackling Iraq's unrest, after meeting Tony Blair at the White House.

Their talks came a day after a damning US report called for such a move as part of a change in strategy on Iraq.

The two leaders agreed that a new way forward was needed on Iraq.

But they said Iran and Syria would have to be clear they backed a non-sectarian democratically elected government in Iraq and ended support for terrorism.

Mr Blair welcomed the Iraq Study Group (ISG) report, and mirrored its call for action on finding an end to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

He conceded conditions in Iraq were "tough and challenging".

Iraq's neighbours and key states in and outside the region should form a support group to reinforce security and national reconciliation within Iraq

But he said the people of the Middle East faced a choice - either secular or religious dictatorship, or "they can enjoy the same possibilities of democracy that we hold dear".

The leaders called for:

  • Support for a non-sectarian democratically elected government in Iraq
  • Iran and Syria and other neighbours to meet their own responsibilities towards Iraq
  • Renewed efforts to bring peace to the wider Middle East

The BBC's diplomatic correspondent, Jonathan Marcus, says the comments gave little sign the leaders planned to shift their ground after the ISG review - with both sticking to their overall goals for Iraq and the Middle East.

Middle East trip

The ISG's assessment of the Bush administration's policy in Iraq is scathing, saying the situation there is "deteriorating" and warning that "time is running out".

KEY SUGGESTIONS
Primary mission of US forces should evolve to one of supporting Iraqi army
By first quarter of 2008... all combat brigades not necessary for force protection could be out of Iraq
US must not make open-ended commitment to keep large numbers of American troops deployed in Iraq
Source: ISG report
Most computers will open this document automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader

"It's bad in Iraq," Mr Bush conceded to reporters.

But he said the violence was not a result of "faulty planning".

And he stressed an Iraq that could govern and sustain itself was a noble cause - which extremists inside and outside the country were trying to prevent.

The ISG urged talks with Iran and Syria on tackling the instability.

But Mr Bush said US policy towards Tehran would change only if Iran verifiably suspended its uranium enrichment programme.

Syria needed to be told to stop destabilising the Lebanese government and allowing arms and money flowing to insurgents in Iraq.

"They know what is expected of them," he said.

Mr Bush said the US and Britain would continue to work together towards bringing peace and freedom to Iraq.

HAVE YOUR SAY
The damage has already been done and now ordinary Iraqis have to live with the mess
Daniel, London

He announced the UK leader would be travelling to the Middle East shortly with the aim of finding an end to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.

Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has rejected the ISG's assessment that progress in Iraq is linked to resolving the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians - although he said he was interested in re-starting peace talks.

But he ruled out opening peace talks with Syria in the near future, as recommended in the report.
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Lundi 11 décembre 2006

The Atrocities of Gen. Augusto Pinochet and the United States

The Condor Model

By ROGER BURBACH

In Santiago on September 11, 1973 I watched as Chilean air force jets flew overhead. Moments later I heard explosions and saw fireballs of smoke fill the sky as the presidential palace went up in flames. Salvador Allende, the elected Socialist president of Chile died in the palace.

As an American the death of General Augusto Pinochet brings back many memories of the military coup and the role played by my government in the violent overthrow of Allende. From the moment of his election in September, 1970 the Nixon administration mounted a covert campaign against him. Henry Kissinger, then Nixon's National Security adviser, declared: "I don't see why we need to stand idly by and watch a country go Communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people." Weeks later the pro-constitutionalist head of the army, General Rene Schneider, was assassinated in a failed attempt to stop the inauguration of Allende.

For the next three years CIA-backed terrorist groups bombed and destroyed state railroads, power plants and key highway arteries to create chaos and stop the country from functioning. The goal was to "make the economy scream" as Nixon ordered. US corporations such as IT&T also participated in the efforts to destabilize the country.

In the midst of this struggle for control of Chile, Allende insisted, almost stubbornly, on maintaining the country's democratic institutions. He enjoyed immense popular support from below, even in the waning days of his government when the economy was in shambles and virtually everyone believed a confrontation was imminent. I'll never forget the last major demonstration on September 4, 1973, when the Alameda, the major avenue of downtown Santiago, was packed with tens of thousands of marchers, all intent on passing by the presidential palace where Allende stood on a balcony waving to the crowd. This was no government-orchestrated demonstration in which people were trucked in from the barrios and countryside. These people came out of a deep sense of commitment, a belief that this was their government and that they would defend it to the end.

In the aftermath of the coup over three thousand people perished, including two American friends of mine, Charles Horman and Frank Terrugi. The United States knowing of these atrocities, rushed to support the military regime, reopening the spigot of economic aid that had been closed under Allende. When the relatives of Horman and Terrugi made determined inquires about their disappearances and deaths, the US embassy and the State Department stonewalled along with the new military junta. Four weeks after the coup, I fled across the Andes, returning to the United States to do what I could to denounce the crimes of Pinochet and my government.

For the full article log on to http://www.counterpunch.org/burbach12112006.html

You can donate to Counterpunch, or simply subscribe to this great political magazine.

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Dimanche 31 décembre 2006

Goodbye, 2006! Hard to Call It Vintage

Ahoy 2007! It Just Could Be Bobby Byrd's Year

By ALEXANDER COCKBURN

No task is more important for any newspaper than to impart the news convincingly to the people and their government that a war is lost or futile or wrong.. The failure of America's major newspapers in 2005 and 2006 to disclose the U.S.'s defeat in Iraq has been as disastrous as the earlier failure to challenge the government on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.

As for Saddam Hussein--some whiners complain he didn't get a fair trial. What do they think these trials are for, for heaven's sake? Here's what I wrote when he was captured back in December 2003:

"All the U.S. wants is for the former Iraqi president to be hauled into some kangaroo court and, after a brisk procedure in which Saddam will not doubt be denied opportunities to interrogate old pals from happier days like Donald Rumsfeld, be dropped through a trap door with a rope tied around his neck, maybe with an Iraqi, or at least a son of the Prophet pulling the lever."

Just one more reason why you need read nothing but CounterPunch.

Sixty-nine countries still retain the death penalty. The most recent to abandon it was the Philippines, in 2006. Mexico and Liberia in 2005. Greece and Turkey (along with Bhutan, Samoa and Senegal in 2004). There is some small progress in human affairs.

That said, let's scroll quickly through the calendar, as it unfolded in a few of my bulletins on this site.

 

January 18

Three very leftists pass on. Sanora Babb died on December 31, aged 98. Harry Magdoff died on New Years Day, at 92. Frank Wilkinson died a day later, at 91.

My line has always been that to get really old it pays to have been a Commie or at least a fellow traveler. In younger years they tended to walk a lot, selling the party paper. They talked a lot and above all, they never stopped thinking. The quickest way to kill someone is to send them off to quasi-solitary, torn from their comfortable nest and thrown into a nursing home or into managed care, where people talk about them at the tops of their voices, referring to them in the third person. You can see them dying before your eyes, their brains turned to mush. It takes about a year to kill them off, unless a "surprise birthday party" wipes them out even earlier.

Trotskyists tend to be more feverish and stressed out, hence less likely to turn the bend into their Nineties. As for Maoists (over here) , I don't know. As Chou En Lai answered, when asked what he thought of the French Revolution, Too soon to tell. The ex-Maoists I know are mostly still in their mid-60s.

 

January 19

From the opening moments of the Judiciary Committee's hearings it became instantly clear that Alito faced no serious opposition. On that first ludicrous morning Senator Pat Leahy sank his head into his hands, shaking in unbelieving despair as Senator Joe Biden of Delaware blathered out a self-serving and inane monologue lasting a full twenty minutes before he even asked Alito one question. In his allotted half hour Biden managed to pose only five questions, all of them ineptly phrased. He did ask two questions about CAP but had already undercut them in his monologue by calling Alito "a man of integrity", not once but twice, and further trivialized the interrogation by reaching under the dais to pull out a Princeton cap and put it on.

In all, Biden rambled for 4,000 words, leaving Alito time only to put together less than 1,000. A Delaware newspaper made deadly fun of him for his awful performance, eliciting the revealing confession from Biden that "I made a mistake. I should have gone straight to my question. I was trying to put him at ease."

The Democrats have forgotten how to ask tough questions. The last Democratic senator who knew how to do it was John Edwards.And even if the Democrats could remember how to put a nominee on the spot, their nerve has gone. They think any tough challenge to any nominee will come and haunt them.

Year after year the Democrats have called for loyalty from dubious liberals, crying that the bottom line is the Supreme Court. In January, the bottom line was right there in the nominee's chair, in the form of Sam Alito and the Democrats ran away. Senator Diane Feinstein told the press, "I don't see the likelihood of a filibuster. This might be a man I disagree with. But it doesn't mean he shouldn't be on the court. I was impressed with his ability to maintain a very even demeanor."

January 24

I'd got so used to Nicholas Kristof's January visits to prostitutes in Cambodia that it was a something of a shock to find him this January in Calcutta's red light district instead.

As readers of his New York Times columns across the past three years will know, Kristof heads into south east Asia around this time--a smart choice, weatherwise--to write about the scourge of child prostitution. One can hardly fault him for that, even though Kristof's bluff, busy-body prose is particularly irksome as he takes his pet peeve out for an annual saunter, the way A.M. Rosenthal did for years with female circumcision in Africa.

So far as I know, Rosenthal never actually bought a young African woman to save her from circumcision. Maybe they aren't for sale. In 2004, Kristof did buy two young Cambodian women--Srey Neth for $150 and Srey Mom for $203--to get them out of the brothels in Poipet, and took them back to their villages.

There was something very nineteenth-century abut the whole thing, both in moral endeavor and journalistic boosterism, though presumably there was a twentieth-first century footnote as to whether Kristof billed the Times for the purchase money and transport expenses or listed the girls as a charitable deduction on his own tax return, which could have led to sharp interrogation by some cynical IRS auditor.

In January of 2005, Kristof was back in Cambodia to report that while Srey Neth was doing well, learning to be a hair stylist, Srey Mom was back in the brothel, probably because she needed the drugs. Even in 2005 some of us had our doubts, since Srey Mom wouldn't leave the brothel until Kristof sprang not only the $203 but also some extra cash for her cell phone and some jewelry she'd hocked. Mind you, most girls would put cell phones ahead of moral renaissance.

February 14

Paranoid America--by which I mean its governors--has long dreamed of foolproof technology to guard the Homeland from subversion, or penetration by alien hostiles.

In its latest variant, the vaunted technology comes in the form of the sweeps by the computers of the National Security Agency, programmed to intercept hundreds of millions of phone, email and fax messages. These days, as much as a third of global communications are on fiber-optic cable routes that pass through the United States.

So, "data mining" by artificially programmed computers is a proceeding that is not only constitutionally illegal but a technological fantasy. The Post quotes Jeff Jonas, now chief scientist at IBM Entity Analytics, as saying pattern-matching techniques that "look at people's behavior to predict terrorist intent are so far from reaching the level of accuracy that's necessary that I see them as nothing but civil liberty infringement engines."

March 9

Americans are in a fever about possible "Arab control" of mainland ports along both coasts of the United States. The whole storm is ludicrous. When it comes to America's national security and penetration of the mainland by foreign capital, there are bigger worries. This very week, the week of the Chicago Auto Show, the widely read magazine Consumer Reports lists the ten safest cars sold in America this year. They are all Japanese, mostly Hondas, and mostly made in U.S.-based plants put up after Japanese and other foreign automakers were welcomed in by the U.S.A. thirty years ago, partly as a way of undercutting the Union of Autoworkers. This same month the headlines here have been full of stories about the collapse of the top two U.S. automakers--General Motors and Ford--in the face of foreign competition. Well over 100,000 American workers are to lose their jobs, thus vastly increasing U.S. insecurity. Hundreds of thousands more U.S. workers have already lost their jobs to India, China, Mexico, and other low-wage nations because that is the way American business, backed by the U.S. government, wants it.

March 15

Milosevic's death in his cell from a heart attack spared Del Ponte and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia ­ICTY -- (itself a kangaroo tribunal set up by the United States with no proper foundation under international law or treaty) the ongoing embarrassment of a proceeding where Milosevic had made a very strong showing against the phalanx of prosecutors, hearsay witnesses and prejudiced judges marshaled against him.

There are now charges and countercharges about poisons and self-medications. Milosevic's son says his father was murdered. The embarrassed Court has claimed Milosevic somehow did himself in by tampering with his medicines. But no one contests the fact that Milosevic asked for treatment in Moscow--the Russians promised to return him to the Hague--and the Court refused permission. As the tag from the poet A.H.Clough goes, "Thou shalt not kill; but need'st not strive Officiously to keep alive".

The trial had been going badly from the point of view of the prosecution (which included the judges) for most of its incredible duration. Here is what Neil Clark, a Balkans specialist, wrote in the Guardian newspaper of London, in 2003,

" But not only has the prosecution signally failed to prove Milosevic's personal responsibility for atrocities committed on the ground, the nature and extent of the atrocities themselves has also been called into question In the case of the worst massacre with which Milosevic has been accused of complicity-of between 2,000 and 4,000 men and boys in Srebrenica in 1995-Del Ponte's team have produced nothing to challenge the verdict of the five-year inquiry commissioned by the Dutch government-that there was 'no proof that orders for the slaughter came from Serb political leaders in Belgrade.'

March 19

(This was a joint bulletin by Jeffrey St Clair and me.) Across the past year the peace movement didn't do much, so far as we could tell. There are thousands of excellent local efforts, but no national agenda, no overall strategy for ending the war. As popular opposition to the war across the country has mounted, the demonstrations have got smaller! We ascribe this in large part to the disastrous fealty of the leadership of at least two of the big organizations to the Democratic National Committee. This explains why UPFJ, for example, was missing in action for most of 2004. The national leaderships of the peace movement have failed but were bailed out by two great champions who changed the political picture. The first was Cindy Sheehan.

The second champion was Jack Murtha, the 73-year-old former U.S. Marine and life-long hawk who turned on the war in a sensational press conference on the Hill in November, calling for "immediate withdrawal" and repeating that call in vigorous interviews and speeches.

Here was no peacenik turning against the war. But the day he did, the Democratic delegation in Congress fled him, almost to the last man and woman. In its present form the Democratic Party has ceased to be a credible opposition.

Is this too cruel? Surely the Democrats have some fight left in them. After all, the first edition of the Patriot Act in 2002 passed with only one No vote in the Senate. Russell Feingold's. When the second edition of the Patriot Act passed in recent weeks, there were ten votes against, one from a former Republican, Jeffords of Vermont. The Democrats invented a new form of "safe opposition" here. When Russ Feingold tried to lead a filibuster against the Patriot Act, his Democratic colleagues conducted "test votes" where many of them puffed up their chests and boldly said they opposed the Patriot Act. Then they came to the real vote, chests subsided and the numbers dwindled to eight.

Feingold has now introduced into the Senate a censure motion of the President, charging him with violating the law in the NSA eavesdropping. Dana Milbanke in the Washington Post had an entertaining piece describing the panic of Feingold's Democratic colleagues when asked for their views on his motion.

Barrack Obama of Illinois: "I haven't read it."

Ben Nelson of Nebraska: "I just don't have enough information."

John Kerry of Massachusetts: "I really can't [comment] right now."

Hillary Clinton of New York rushed past reporters shaking her head, then trying to hide behind the 4'11" Barbara Mikulski.

Charles Schumer of New York, who would normally run over his grandmother to get to a microphone: "I'm not going to comment."

Mary Landrieu of Louisiana: "Senator Feingold has a point he wants to make. We have a point that we want to make, talking about the budget."

Chris Dodd of Connecticut: "Most of us feel at best it's premature. I don't think anyone can say with any certainty at this juncture that what happened [i.e., the NSA's eavesdropping] is illegal."

 

For the full article, click on http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn12302006.html

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Jeudi 5 juillet 2007
Caught Red-Handed: Media Backtracks on Iran's 'Threat'
by Arash Norouzi

For close to two years, the media has stubbornly clung to a long discredited story about the Iranian president's alleged threat to "destroy Israel" with nuclear weapons Iran doesn't have and denies any intent to acquire. "Wiped off the map, wiped off the map," they bleat incessantly, even though his actual words, "The Imam [Khomenei] said this regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time," were paralleled with the fall of regimes like the Soviet Union and Iran's former U.S.-installed monarchy (see this for a thorough refutation of this claim). From the start of his presidency, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has rhapsodized regularly about the demise of the "Zionist regime" in various metaphorical terms. He and his associates in the Iranian government have compared its fate to that of the pharaohs of Egypt and the former apartheid regime in South Africa (which they also did not recognize), but never have they threatened to start a war with any country.

Yet the rumor persists. Top respected journalists, advocates for peace and dialogue with Iran, and individual Iranians themselves bring up the misquote regularly, as do noted Iranian-American scholars. The media's constant drumbeat has even duped top world leaders into believing the myth. On Oct. 29, 2005, the false quote was officially condemned by all 15 Security Council members in a United Nations statement, following Israel's demand that the Security Council expel Iran from the UN due to the remark.

The effect this misquote has had on American policy toward Iran is undeniable. The majority of 2008 presidential candidates in both parties have repeatedly mentioned the alleged threat in speeches and interviews, obviously influenced by media reports.

And yet suddenly, after all this hoopla, at least two of the biggest media titans, the BBC and the Associated Press, appear to be backing away from the incorrect "wiped off the map" quotation they've been drilling into people's minds for so long. It's happening quietly and undemonstratively, but some recent subtle changes in their presentation indicate a tacit acknowledgment of their previous misreporting.

The details of how this reversal came to be, their curious handling of the subject in some of their recent news items, and contradictory arguments defending their work are a story in themselves. Let's begin with the legendary British Broadcasting Company.

The BBC's Adolescent Excuses

Formed in 1922, the BBC has a history of disinformation campaigns against Iran. In the early 1950s, Iran's democratically elected prime minister, Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh, had enraged Britain by nationalizing his country's British-dominated oil industry. The BBC, which was funded by the Foreign Office (FCO), was directed by the government to "destroy Persian confidence in the present policy of the Persian government," which they branded as "stupid and obstinate." The BBC's Persian Service broadcasts in Iran reflected this to a tee, pumping out anti-nationalization propaganda to the Iranian people regularly, which pleased the folks in Tehran's British embassy immensely.

In the summer of 1953, at the request of the British government and in coordination with the American CIA, the BBC broadcast a code word over its radio airwaves to signal the young shah of the start of the coup which Britain and America had plotted to overthrow Mossadegh. The BBC's role in the coup d'état is confirmed by the CIA's own declassified documents and by the BBC itself. Britain's use of the BBC as a state propaganda arm and extension of the British Empire was not denied by the head of the BBC's Eastern Service, Gordon Waterfield, who admitted at the time, "There is, on the whole, little divergence between what the Foreign Office want us to do, and what in actual fact, we are doing." London-based news agency Reuters was also not immune from state influence. Their official biography states, "During both World Wars, Reuters came under pressure from the British government to serve British interests."

Misinformation continues to thrive in the information age of the 21st century. In 2006, British Prime Minister Tony Blair admitted on Sky TV his complete ignorance of the British-American coup that caused Iran's young democracy to vanish from the page of time, claiming that he had never even heard of Mossadegh. But in a speech given the same year, Blair warned ominously, "Iran's president has called for Israel to be – and I quote – 'wiped off the map.' And he's trying to acquire a nuclear weapon." Yes, the most powerful man in Britain has never even heard of the monumental 1953 coup – one of the most significant events of the 20th century – which his own country helped carry out, yet a mistranslated sound bite and an unproven suspicion about Iran's nuclear intentions, that he knows.

With over 85 years of history, the BBC, which continues to receive funding from the Foreign Office, cannot include juvenility among its reasons for getting Ahmadinejad's words wrong. The BBC was just one of countless organizations which jumped on the "wiped off the map" bandwagon in 2005. Yet mention of the phrase largely disappeared from their reports in 2007. Then, in a June 8, 2007 article, the BBC finally published the following reversal:

"In October 2005, the Iranian president made a statement in which he envisaged the replacement of Israel with a Palestinian state. This was widely translated as a call for Israel to be 'wiped off the map.'

"While he has repeated similar comments many times, he has insisted that Iran is not a threat to Israel."

The first statement referencing Palestinian statehood is an astonishing departure from what has been consistently presented in the media as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's "calls for the destruction of Israel." As for the "widely translated" plea – this same phrase was reported ad nauseam by the BBC itself in its print, radio, and television outlets. In essence, the BBC's rationale recollects that typical adolescent excuse: but everybody was doing it!

In passing the blame to others, the BBC seems to indicate that it did no independent verification, translation, or fact-checking with regard to the quote and merely repeated what everyone else was saying. Yet three months earlier, a BBC journalist made a claim that totally contradicts this version of events.

On March 6, 2007, BBC editor Peter Rippon wrote a blog post on the BBC Web site, "Wiped off the Map?," which acknowledged that although the BBC has regularly cited the quote, "others" have argued that a "more accurate" translation would be "The Imam said this regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time." Rippon did not bother to mention who any of those "others" would be or acknowledge his source for the alternate quote.

Moreover, Rippon claims to have looked into the matter and reports matter-of-factly that the phrase "was picked up and translated from the Farsi" by BBC Monitoring, and he even quotes unnamed "experts" at the service defending their translation. Ah, but this story is completely negated by the BBC's own original reports from October 2005, which clearly and unmistakably named Iran's state media department, IRNA (Islamic Republic News Agency), as the source of the quote.

For proof, see the following passage, which occurred repeatedly in several BBC articles on Oct. 27 and 28, 2005, just after the Oct. 26 World Without Zionism conference where Ahmadinejad first made his statement:

"He was addressing a conference entitled The World without Zionism and his comments were reported by the Iranian state news agency Irna.

"'As the Imam said, Israel must be wiped off the map,' he said, referring to Iran's late revolutionary leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini."

BBC Monitoring is a government-funded subscription service founded in 1939, with a staff of about 500 translating press and agency reports spanning a claimed reach of over 150 countries in more than 100 languages. If, in fact they did independently translate the quote as Rippon reports, then their contributions appear to have been disregarded in the final analysis. British journalist Jonathan Steele wrote about the mistranslation in his June 14, 2006 column in the Guardian ("Lost in Translation") and reports querying a BBC Monitoring spokesperson (who, as in Rippon's piece, spoke on the condition of anonymity), who said their original translation was "eliminated from the map of the world." Upon further inspection, the spokesperson said their Farsi translators were in a rush, and if they had to do it all over again, would have gone with "eliminated from the pages of history." Whoops.

To quote the anonymous spokesperson:

"The monitor has checked again. It's a difficult expression to translate. They're under time pressure to produce a translation quickly and they were searching for the right phrase. With more time to reflect they would say the translation should be 'eliminated from the page of history.'"

Does this level of professionalism square with BBC Monitoring's own assessment of its service and standards?

"Editors at BBC Monitoring possess specialized knowledge of countries they cover … they translate reports in a way that preserves the tone of the original, allowing subscribers to draw their own conclusions from what they read."

Rippon's piece also relates a relatively frivolous viewer complaint over BBC One host Andrew Marr's presentation of the quote on Oct. 30, 2005. It seems Marr referred to the phrase as "wiped off the face of the map" rather than "wiped off the map," and this viewer objected to the change, which he felt contained several false implications. What is noteworthy, however, is the BBC Governors' Complaints Committee's careful examination of the matter in their complaint review process (which ultimately did not uphold the complaint), evaluated under the criteria of Accuracy, Impartiality, and Fairness.

In their explanation, the BBC states:

"The Committee carefully considered the wording of the translation of the speech from a number of sources, including translations from BBC Monitoring and from the Middle East Research Institute in Washington. The Committee also reflected on how the speech had been translated in British newspapers and on al-Jazeera online."

According to this explanation, having pondered over what other media were saying, including some of their own British competitors, the BBC felt satisfied that the quote was acceptable to run. The mention of al-Jazeera is also specious, as they too relied on the same wrongly worded IRNA press item from which the rest of the international media took the quote. Even the committee's reference to BBC Monitoring is highly dubious, since, as previously mentioned, their own reporting already credited IRNA with the quote.

Most curious of all, though, is the mention of the Middle East Research Institute (MEMRI) as a major source. That's because MEMRI had an entirely different interpretation of Ahmadinejad's words, bearing almost no similarity whatsoever to the BBC's favored "wiped off the map" selection. MEMRI's version:

"Imam [Khomeini] said: 'This regime that is occupying Qods [Jerusalem] must be eliminated from the pages of history.'"

Note again the absence of words such as "Israel," "wipe out," and "map." MEMRI is no impartial body either – it's an organization which focuses almost solely on translating and exposing examples of Islamic fundamentalist propaganda, hate speech, and terrorist ideology in the Arab and Iranian media. Founded by former Israeli Defense Force Col. Yigal Carmon, its supporters include many figures from far right and pro-Israel media such as The Weekly Standard, The New Republic, The National Post, and Fox News channel. MEMRI's Web site lists glowing praise for its work from people such as right-wing columnist Charles Krauthammer, former CIA chief James Woolsey, and Israeli political figure Natan Sharansky, who cites MEMRI's "invaluable contribution to the struggle against anti-Semitism, hate, and racism." So an outfit such as MEMRI, with a clear political agenda, has produced a far less inflammatory version of the quote than the venerable British Broadcasting Company.

The BBC implicates itself further by admitting that translations of foreign languages are inherently fraught with inaccuracies:

"The Committee noted the inherent problem with accuracy in translations. It noted that all the translations varied to a greater or lesser degree, and it was difficult to decide which, if any, was the most accurate."

If the act of translation is such a delicate guessing game, then why trust translations? According to the BBC's logic, journalists apparently have a license to interpret foreign languages in a myriad of ways. With so many options on the table, what's to stop a media outlet with a political bias from choosing a preferred interpretation?

The BBC also rationalized:

"The Committee felt that the language used by the Iranian president was highly emotive by its nature and had been recognized as such in the international condemnation of what he had said."

Do these visceral, buck-passing comments sound consistent with the BBC's stated editorial standards?

"The BBC's commitment to accuracy is a core editorial value and fundamental to our reputation. Our output must be well sourced, based on sound evidence, thoroughly tested, and presented in clear, precise language. We should be honest and open about what we don't know and avoid unfounded speculation."

How does the BBC achieve accuracy?

"We aim to achieve accuracy by:

  • the accurate gathering of material using first hand sources wherever possible.
  • checking and cross checking the facts.
  • validating the authenticity of documentary evidence and digital material.
  • corroborating claims and allegations made by contributors wherever possible."
  • The bottom line: the BBC's various stories do not check out. Their initial reports cite IRNA as the source of the quote, later documents list a hodgepodge of sources and rationalizations, and they later reported that the entire quote was translated "directly from the Farsi" by BBC Monitoring. Finally, a June 2007 article seems to assign responsibility to others, saying that the quote was "widely translated as a call for Israel to be wiped off the map," making no mention of their own alleged hand in the translation process or the responsibility incumbent upon them to verify its accuracy.

    Reuters: Deny, Deny, Deny

    A global news juggernaut, Reuters has been in existence since the mid-1800s and bills itself as "the largest international multimedia news agency." Though Reuters has stuck to its guns on the map quote, they are well aware of the controversy surrounding it. In January 2007, they responded to reader concern about their story "Iran President Says Israel's Days Are Numbered," which repeated the map rumor and also contained the misquote, "Just as the Soviet Union was wiped out and today does not exist, so will the Zionist regime soon be wiped out." The reader wrote:

    "You continue to report that Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called for Israel to be 'wiped off the map' even though many Mideast experts have stated that the interpretation of what Ahmadinejad actually said was that the 'Zionist regime will not last.'

    "In other words, rather than calling for ethnic cleansing, as your news stories imply, Iranian officials are calling for regime change – a common enough phrase these days. Are your reporters and editors deliberately misinforming the public? - Jan"

    Reuters' reply:

    "We actually had access to this speech, and heard the president's words verbatim from our own TV footage. We stand behind our translation. In this case, he used the word 'mahv,' which in Farsi means 'wiped off.' - Editor"

    Reuters' response skips over the reader's major point – that regime change, not genocide, was the true message – and ignores the crucial context of Ahmadinejad's words as they related to the other faded regimes, including Iran's previous ruler, the shah.

    Reuters again responded to a reader's complaint on the matter on June 14, 2007:

    "President Ahmadinejad never said any such thing. That 'quote' is a complete fabrication. It's an urban myth. What he REALLY said is 'The regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time.'

    "You'll note that there is an enormous difference between an active threat 'to wipe something of the map' and a passive comment that 'something must vanish from the page of time.' You will also note that the Farsi word for map, 'nagsheh,' appears nowhere in the speech text.

    "I would think that if a multi-million dollar organization such as Reuters News Service is going to continue agitating for an American attack on Iran it could afford to spend two or three hundred dollars to have Ahmadinejad's speeches professionally translated into English. - Mark K."

    Reuters' reply:

    "Thanks for your interest in this matter. Reuters is confident that its translation of what Ahmadinejad said is correct. We watched the original speech in 2005 and have not altered our rendering into English since. The Iranian authorities have never challenged our translation of the words, which echoed those of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, when he spoke on the same issue. - GBU Editor"

    Like the BBC, Reuters has just publicly stated that they translated the quote by themselves, on their own. And, as with the BBC, this far-fetched story can easily be disproved. In their very first reports in 2005, Reuters clearly identified IRNA as the source of the quote in the opening sentence!

    For proof, see these Oct. 26, 2005, and Oct. 27th, 2005, Reuters news items:

    "TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that Israel should be 'wiped off the map,' the official IRNA news agency reported."

    Contrary to Reuters' claims, Iranian officials and Foreign Ministry office have refuted the quote's interpretation numerous times. Reuters itself has reported on this. [1] Take, for example, Reuters' own article from Feb. 20, 2006, "Iran Denies Wanting to 'Wipe Israel Off the Map.'" In this piece, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki directly refutes the quote in English, acknowledges the reality of the Holocaust, and reiterates that Iran's nuclear program is purely peaceful.

    "'Nobody can remove a country from the map. This is a misunderstanding in Europe of what our president mentioned,' Manouchehr Mottaki told a news conference, speaking in English, after addressing the European Parliament.

    "'How is it possible to remove a country from the map? He is talking about the regime. We do not recognize legally this regime,' he said."

    Not only that, the February 2006 article again cites IRNA as the source of the infamous quote, which contradicts their repeated claim that the translation was their own. As Reuters noted: "Ahmadinejad caused a storm of condemnation last October after Iran's official IRNA news agency quoted him as telling a conference: 'Israel must be wiped off the map.'"

    Reuters must have overlooked the April 2006 CNN interview with Iran's ambassador to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, where he said,

    "Iran … will not threaten any country, and we want peace in the Middle East and the whole world … but if you are going to conclude that we have said the people there [In Israel] have to be removed or they have to be massacred … this is [a] fabricated, unfortunate, selective approach to what the mentality and policy of Islamic Republic of Iran is. I have to correct, and I did so." [2]

    Perhaps Reuters also missed Ahmadinejad's Feb. 13, 2007, ABC News interview with Diane Sawyer in which he responds to the "map" charge: "What happened to the former Soviet Union? It disappeared, disappeared from the face of the Earth. Was it because of war? No, it was through the decision of the people, and what we say is quite clear." [3] There are many other examples.

    Reuters may claim plausible deniability, but they already had early warning of the issue long before these complaints and rebuttals. After helping organize a workshop in Beirut in December 2005 that brought together six American and six Middle Eastern journalists, Reuters republished a St. Louis Dispatch article about the event by participant Jon Sawyer. The piece quoted another participant, Tehran Daily's Khosrow Soltani Kasseb, who explained his take on Iran's recent "map" outrage:

    "For the journalists at the Beirut workshop, there was a lesson a few days after they headed home in how words can inflame – and confuse.

    "The only thing missing, said Iranian journalist Soltani, was any acknowledgment that Ahmadinejad's remarks were neither new nor, in the Iranian context, incendiary – not in a country where 'Death to Israel' chants have been a staple of Friday prayers since the era of Ayatollah Khomeini two decades ago.

    "'These slogans remain slogans and nothing more,' Soltani told fellow journalists in an e-mail. 'Let's not forget the occasion in which Ahmadinejad said those things,' he added, 'a conference dubbed "The World Without Zionism." What else did you expect him to say? Viva Israel?'

    "'What is certain is that no one here (I mean the officials) has any intention of wiping out a state by killing its people!' Soltani said. 'They just wish Israel did not exist or would somehow perish for the cause of Palestine.'"

    So Reuters has had plenty of opportunities to rectify the error, yet have chosen not to do so. According to Reuters' editorial policy, "We are committed to accurate and balanced reporting. Errors of fact are always promptly corrected and clearly published." Further:

    "We are committed to reporting the facts and in all situations avoid the use of emotive terms . … We aim to report objectively actions, identity, and background and pay particular attention to all our coverage in extremely sensitive regions.

    "We do not take sides and attempt to reflect … the views of all sides. We are not in the business of glorifying one side or another or of disseminating propaganda. Reuters journalists do not offer their own opinions or views.

    "The world relies on Reuters journalists to provide accurate, clearly sourced accounts of events as they occur, wherever they occur, so that individuals, organizations, and governments can make their own decisions based on the facts."

    Reuters also adds that they do pay attention to feedback, and in fact, "we often spot and correct errors faster with the help of sharp-eyed readers. Other e-mails have made us question and sometimes change the way we describe people, countries, concepts, and controversies." Yet to date, despite reader complaints, media articles to the contrary, and its own blatantly contradictory explanations, Reuters is still standing by its story, which it is "confident" is accurate.

    The Associated Press and Those Imaginary "Supporters"

    Along with Reuters, there may be no other source that has exploited this misquote more relentlessly than the Associated Press, which calls itself "the largest and oldest news organization in the world." The misquote has infected hundreds of AP articles since 2005 and is almost certainly one of the most frequently repeated quotes attributed to any individual in their history of reporting. Since October 2005, the AP has hammered this fake quote into the consciousness of millions of people around the world, and it continues to do so. But in May 2007, a change occurred. Whereas before the AP's quote always read, "Israel must be wiped off the map," as of May 24, a new version has begun appearing in some of their articles:

    "[The] Zionist regime should be wiped off the map."

    "Israel" has now magically transformed into the "Zionist regime," i.e., the government. "Must" has become "should." The distinction is enormous. If Ahmadinejad was referring to the regime, then it cannot be claimed that he has made "genocidal" threats to physically and militarily "destroy Israel." This new interpretation is further validation for those who have disputed the quote's accuracy.

    Here is the AP's new "Zionist regime" version in its context. On May 24, AP introduced the following block of text in some articles. The entire passage reads:

    "In October 2005, he raised outrage in the West when he said in a speech that Israel's 'Zionist regime should be wiped off the map.'

    "His supporters and some independent analysts have since argued Ahmadinejad's words were mistranslated from Farsi and should have been better translated as 'vanish from the pages of time' – implying Israel would vanish on its own rather be destroyed."

    Beginning June 3, AP articles reusing the stock text were suddenly missing the words "independent analysts" and "from Farsi":

    "His supporters have argued Ahmadinejad's words were mistranslated and should have been better translated as 'vanish from the pages of time' – implying Israel would vanish on its own rather be destroyed."

    While AP's acknowledgment of those who have disputed the quote is a victory, the gratuitous and misleading inclusion of the phrase "his supporters" sabotages the clarification – readers are less likely to take the claim seriously if they believe that Ahmadinejad's fans dispute it. The unnecessary removal of the "independent analysts" phrase in subsequent reports is additionally suspect.

    In May 2006, University of Michigan professor Juan Cole, an expert on Middle Eastern affairs, squarely refuted the quote on his blog, where, by the way, he denounced the Islamic Republic, saying, " I personally despise everything Ahmadinejad stands for, not to mention the odious Khomeini, who had personal friends of mine killed so thoroughly that we have never recovered their bodies." In June 2006, veteran journalist Jonathan Steele took Cole's correct translation as his lead and examined the controversy further in his own column in the Guardian. There is nothing to suggest that Steele supports Ahmadinejad.

    As the rumor rampaged on despite the new analysis and protests, I recognized the need for a critical mass to influence the discourse. In January 2007, I wrote a comprehensive examination of the quote and its context in Ahmadinejad's speech. The piece has become something of a phenomenon. To date, the "Rumor of the Century" article has traveled the world and been translated into languages such as Spanish, French, Italian, Dutch, Slovak, and Swedish. In Thailand, the Bangkok Post featured an entire column about it. Numerous writers, academics, and authors quote and reference it. Newspapers have printed letters to the editor that quote from it, and others have created YouTube videos inspired by it. I have discussed it on American and Canadian radio programs, and it was recently selected for an award and inclusion in a forthcoming book.

    Since the map quote was first called into question at least a year earlier, and these revisions were only made after my January 2007 article was released, I believe that I'm one of the people being referenced here. If the AP is attempting to include my article as a defense of Ahmadinejad, then they have conveniently overlooked my association with the Mossadegh Project and condemnation of his "backwards regime." There is no comparison whatsoever between the benevolent, secular democracy of Dr. Mossadegh and the Islamic Republic's oppressive, fundamentalist dictatorship, which has always openly despised him. Since none of the prominent media critiques are pro-Ahmadinejad, just who are these "supporters" to whom the AP refers?

    House of Representatives Charges Iran with Inciting 'Genocide'

    Two years after Ahmadinejad's speech, the quote is still causing a stir. On June 20, 2007, the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a resolution calling on the UN to charge Ahmadinejad with the crime of inciting genocide "because of his calls for the destruction of the State of Israel" – specifically citing the erroneous "wiped off the map" statement. (Somehow the person whom Ahmadinejad was quoting, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, seems to have averted all international condemnation and censure over the statement in the 1980s).

    In his June 18 testimony before the House, the resolution's co-sponsor, Congressman Steve Rothman (D-N.J.) referred to Ahmadinejad as a "lunatic" five times and a "madman" twice, compared him to Hitler, and falsely accused Iran of openly admitting to a nuclear weapons program with the purpose of destroying Israel. Said Rothman:

    "Here we have the president of a sovereign nation … who says that a fellow nation … should be wiped off the face of the Earth, the people killed. … Lest one think that Mr. Ahmadinejad, a twisted, backward, lunatic, be some non-threatening individual crazy man who happens to talk about the death of millions of innocent people, this is the head of a nation, a sovereign nation with oil wealth and an army and with a stated goal of acquiring nuclear weapons to use to carry out his homicidal, genocidal, lunatic delusions of wiping out the State of Israel."

    The only congressmen who voted against the resolution were Ron Paul (R-Texas) and Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), both of whom recognized H. Con. Res. 21 as a pretext to lay the groundwork for war. Paul called it "an exercise in propaganda that serves one purpose: to move us closer to initiating a war against Iran," and he questioned how the U.S. could not consider its own threats of a possible nuclear attack on Iran as an incitement to genocide itself. "Does anyone believe that dropping nuclear weapons on Iran will not wipe a people off the map?" he asked.

    Congressman Kucinich has said the resolution "sets a dangerous precedent in foreign affairs. A mistranslation could become a cause of war. The United States House may unwittingly be setting the stage for a war with Iran." He repeatedly raised questions about the accuracy of the words being condemned. "There is reasonable doubt with regard to the accuracy of the translations of President Ahmadinejad's words in this resolution," he said in a subsequent press release. "President Ahmadinejad's speeches can also be translated as a call for regime change, much in the same manner the Bush administration has called for regime change in Iraq and Iran, making this resolution very ironic."

    Kucinich's attempts during his June 18 testimony to insert four other alternate translations into the Congressional Record (including my own article, parts of which he read into the official record) were formally blocked by House members. [4] None of Kucinich's suggested texts were taken seriously by the resolution's supporters, who continuously interrupted his testimony.

    "When I learned of these translations, I felt obligated to bring it to the attention of the House," Kucinich said in a press statement. "It seems that much has been lost in translation. Members have a right to know of the translations, and the refusal to permit them to become a part of the Congressional Record does a disservice to members."

    In his testimony, Kucinich quoted from significantly different translations from MEMRI and the New York Times' Tehran bureau. The members remained unimpressed, and the suggested documents were dismissed without any logical explanation. Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), who has publicly called for the illegal assassination of Fidel Castro (which she denied and later admitted to), gave the baffling reasoning, "I would hate to have Ahmadinejad's statements be included as a part of the record in this part of the debate where we are saying that he is a despot." In other words, she and her colleagues, like countless others, have already made up their mind.

    The Truth – War's First Casualty

    The U.S. war against Iraq has caused enormous tragedy for both countries, with hundreds of thousands of innocent lives lost on the basis of a flawed narrative. Clarifying the narrative vis-à-vis Iran has nothing to do with supporting a particular regime. It's about truth, accountability, and preventing yet another conflict that is in nobody's interest. As Congressman Kucinich cautioned regarding the mistranslation, "We must make every effort to ascertain the truth, because peace in the world may hang in the balance."


    Footnotes

    1. Reuters reports:

    March 4, 2007:
    "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has fueled fears … by urging that the Jewish state be 'wiped off the map,' though Tehran officials said this did not constitute a threat."

    June 4, 2007:
    "He has often referred to the demise of the Jewish state but says Iran does not pose a threat to it."

    June 8, 2007:
    "He has often referred to the destruction of the Jewish state but says Iran is not a threat."

    2. CNN Late Edition With Wolf Blitzer, April 2, 2006. Quotations from an interview with Iran's ambassador to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh:

    "[T]hese are fabricated news that they are … using … as an excuse for the military aggression or the aggressive policy."

    "[T]he policy of Islamic Republic of Iran … is against any sort of school of thought or regime such as apartheid, Zionism, racism, and this is a matter of principle. Therefore, what you are talking about as apartheid was disappeared and it could not be accepted by civilized world, this Zionism and aggression of racism is also condemned. That is the message, and I'm sure that we are – this message is shared with all the international community and peace-loving people of the whole world."

    "And I assure the whole world that Iran is for peaceful activities and will try to continue it, and we spare no effort to assure that these activities will be peaceful and will not threaten any country, and we want peace in the Middle East and the whole world."

    "[B]ut if you are going to conclude that we have said the people there have to be removed or they have to be massacred … this is [a] fabricated, unfortunate, selective approach to what the mentality and policy of Islamic Republic of Iran is. I have to correct, and I did so."

    3. ABC News, Good Morning America, Feb. 13, 2007. Quotations from Diane Sawyer interview with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (1, 2):

    "We shy away from any kind of conflict and any kind of bloodshed, and we will be sad by such. We are opposed to any kind of conflict and as we have said repeatedly we think the world problem can be solved through dialogue, the use of logic and a sense of friendship. There is no need for the use of force."

    "And what we have said about Palestine, it's quite clear, based on the charter of the UN, based on international regulations, we say let Palestinians decide. … Please allow the Palestinians to decide. Please respect their decision. But please give them the opportunity for decision-making."

    "We believe that in Palestine, there should be a referendum and Palestinians, Muslims, Jews, any Palestinians, and this is based on international regulations, and I think it's their right to determine their future. Any decision made by Palestinians must be respected, and I think this is a very clear proposition."

    "Why are people opposed, what we say is clear. If you continue massacring innocent people, if you continue to make them refugees, and if you continue attacking neighboring countries, then the countries and the people of those countries, regions … get angry, because the Zionist regime was imposed upon them."

    "We are opposed to any proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and nuclear weapons. We believe that the time is now over for nuclear weapons. It is a time for logic, for rationality, and for civilization. Instead of thinking of finding new weapons, we are trying to find new ways to love people. And if talking about the 'Death to America' slogans, I think you know it yourself, it is not related in any way to American public. Our people have no problem with American public, and we have a very friendly relationship."

    4. Congressman Dennis Kucinich, June 18, 2007:

    "At this time, Mr. Speaker, I would like to ask unanimous consent to include a New York Times translation of the text of President Ahmadinejad's speech, a translation by the Middle East Media Research Institute of his speech, articles relating to an analysis of the speech, and the words that were used by Virginia Tilley of Johannesburg, South Africa, and by Arash Norouzi written on the 18th of January 2007."

    Par Duffer2222
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    Mardi 23 octobre 2007

    Stop Playing Their Game

    Time to Boycott Voting

    By JOEL S. HIRSCHBORN

    After many years of political disappointment, more progressives, liberals and conservatives -- and certainly moderates and independents -- know in their hearts that voting for Democrats or Republicans is a waste. Just imagine if voter turnout was cut to 25 percent or less! Let the whole world see Americans boycotting a broken and corrupt political system and rejecting what has become a delusional democracy. To keep voting in an unjust political system makes us willing political slaves that the rich and powerful elites exploit.

    Just leaving the major parties is not good enough and, besides, most Americans are not party members. We need a bolder strategy. We must humiliate the political elites in both major parties and the corporate interests that support both of them. We can send a shock wave throughout the political establishment by not voting in the 2008 presidential election.

    Stop playing THEIR game. Take back control. Take back YOUR nation. Time to boycott voting. This strategy is consistent with the thinking of Gandhi and King: peaceful resistance to political tyranny that can bring the corrupt system to its knees. Ultimately, the most effective protest is through civil disobedience -- to visibly and stubbornly refuse to respect what has become a corrupt, untrustworthy system. Before it can be fixed it must be deconstructed and then rebuilt. Taxation with MISrepresentation means we need a Second American Revolution; it must begin -- not with violent action -- but with massive withdrawal by citizens that have seen the light. We have a good head start with about half of eligible voters already so turned off that they don't vote. Obviously that has not been sufficient to change the system.

    There will be negative, defensive knee-jerk reactions to this audacious strategy. Let's examine them:

    Many will think that taking such action violates our responsibility as citizens. But taking that responsibility seriously as engaged citizens in the Jeffersonian sense must reflect that there is still a valid contract between citizens and their government. When we vote we have the right to a political system that respects we the people and gives us an authentic representative democracy. We have a right to a constitutional republic operating under the rule of law. But we have elected representatives that no longer have the public interest as their primary commitment, nor truly honor and respect our Constitution.

    They have been corrupted by corporate and other special interests that fund their campaigns to get the laws, loopholes and largesse they want. They have been corrupted by power and the perks of office. They are political cowards and mostly intellectual midgets. The two major parties have a stranglehold on our political system that no longer merits our participation in their crooked game. Political parties are not part of our Constitution and the two-party duopoly has demonstrated that both Democrats and Republicans put their own interests above those of we the people, our nation and our democracy. We cannot vote our way out of our current, dreadful political system.

    Whether you are on the political left or right, you will fear that not voting will help put in office people that support policies your abhor. But decades of objective political reality tell us that even people from the party that we align with do not, when elected, fulfill their promises and our hopes. Sadly, most Americans have become lesser-evil voters, deluding themselves that this is the best, least worse, yet awful choice. Instead of feeling bad about voting for candidates that we know in our hearts are not worthy of our votes and public office, we must have the courage to say "enough is enough; I will not play in this shameful game any longer." We must stop legitimizing and abetting our disgraceful government.

    Many may fear that not voting sets a terrible example to children. But isn't it more important to tell America's children that true patriotism must reveal itself by rejecting a political system that no longer merits respect? Thomas Jefferson believed in periodic rebellion. Now is the time for all good Americans to come to the rescue of their nation, peacefully by boycotting elections.

    The small number of third party members may be screaming: yes, don't vote for Democrats and Republicans; come over and join us! I have been a strong third party supporter, but we must face the painful truth. The two major parties have so rigged the political system in their favor and against third parties that voting for third party candidates for federal office is a futile action. We must first boycott voting to create sufficient pressure to open the system to genuine political competition. That requires a number of electoral reforms, possible if the nation gets its first Article V convention. With reforms we can increase voter turnout to over 90 percent, as routinely seen in other democracies.

    False patriotism may cause some to think that we must not show anti-American nations and terrorists that our government no longer has the trust of its citizens. But that has already been widely disseminated by endless polls and surveys, including the recent Zogby poll that found a record-low 11 percent support for Congress. Better to show our enemies that we the people have finally awakened and decided to re-assert our sovereignty and restore American democracy. Loyalty to country, yes; loyalty to government, no. Our populist American insurgency must begin with a boycott of voting.

    Proof that this extraordinary strategy can work is that by now diehard Democrats and Republicans reading this are squirming in discomfort. So spread the word, if you have not deluded yourself about voting the nation into a far, far better place. Time to boycott voting. Join the picket line; admit that none of the above is the only rational decision when the choices the two major parties give us for federal officials are not worth a dime.

    Voting in a delusional representative democracy is as harebrained as voting even though you know votes will not be honestly counted -- which many fear may be true. We may have lost control of our government, but we still control our voting. Time to walk away from the brainwashing and fiction that it really matters which Democrat or Republican you vote for in primaries and general elections for federal office. Power elites want us to believe that. They collude with the corporate mainstream media that make tons of money from campaigns and want you to stay glued to suspenseful horse races. Loud-mouth political pundits that narrate the races are democracy's enemies. We must stop watching and listening to the political entertainment designed to keep us obediently mesmerized, as if the game is honest. Without an audience, these phony races and media circus will disappear.

    Don't be fooled by the large number of candidates in the Democratic and Republican presidential primaries. It is a sham -- a scheme to keep spectators glued to the illusory competition. Ron Paul has as much chance of being the Republican nominee as Dennis Kucinich has of being the Democratic nominee. With power elites controlling both major parties, zero chance for them and the other minor candidates, regardless of their grassroots support. Reflect on how both major parties accept lots of candidates in televised debates in the primary season. But come the general election with prime time televised presidential debates they keep out third party candidates that desperately need that exposure to rally meaningful support. Such is the hypocrisy and disdain of the two-party duopoly.

    Come Election Day in 2008 we should party and celebrate (with TVs turned off) our populist boycott of voting and enjoy the camaraderie of fellow patriots. We must help them resist any late urge to vote, because by then millions of dollars will be spent by many special interests to make us feel guilty and ashamed if we do not vote. I can hear Paul Revere now: The liars are coming! The liars are coming! All that advertising and pundit-screaming to herd us back into the voting booths will verify that our boycott strategy works.

    With having the votes of only a small minority of the electorate, whoever becomes president will have no public mandate except major, systemic political reforms that satisfy the will of the people. Either that or accept being the president of a fake democracy on the world scene.

    Be brave. Stick together. Save voting for a reformed political system worthy of respect and participation.

    Joel S. Hirschhorn is the author of Delusional Democracy -- Fixing the Republic Without Overthrowing the Government that presents many electoral and other reforms. Formerly, he was a senior official at the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment and the National Governors Association. He can be contacted through his website: www.delusionaldemocracy.com.
    Par Duffer2222
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