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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 19 Jan 2005 21:54:40 -0800 |
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 | 80 percent say they plan to vote
By David R. Sands THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A clear majority of Iraqis said they plan to vote in the Jan. 30 elections and remain hopeful about their country's future despite a murderous insurgency, according to a poll to be released today. The countrywide survey, conducted by the Washington-based International Republican Institute (IRI), also found increased popular awareness of the election, closer identification with political parties and a growing level of trust in Iraqi institutions such as the interim government, the police and the election commission. "What you see is a very, very substantial majority throughout the country, including in the Sunni areas, that wants to make this election a success and to get this whole period behind them," John Anelli, IRI regional director for Iraq, said from Baghdad yesterday. "There's an overwhelming desire for normality, and a large majority sees this vote as a positive step in that direction," he said.
Overall, 81.7 percent of those polled said they were "very likely" or "somewhat likely" to vote. Strong majorities in Shi'ite Muslim southern Iraq, in Baghdad and in the Kurdish-dominated north said they intend to vote. Even in Sunni Arab lands - the heart of the resistance to the U=2ES.-based interim government - 53.5 percent of those surveyed said they were leaning toward voting, while 38.4 percent said they were "somewhat unlikely" or "very unlikely" to vote. The remainder said they did not know or gave no answer. But the violence had its effect on the IRI poll itself. The survey excluded the largely Sunni provinces of Dohuk and Nineveh, because it was judged too dangerous to conduct interviews there. Nineveh includes Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city. Mr. Anelli said including the two provinces almost certainly would have dragged down the overall positive results, but only by about four to five percentage points at the most. The survey, the fifth IRI has conducted in the past year in Iraq, was based on 1,903 face-to-face interviews conducted between Dec. 26 and Jan. 7. The overall margin of error for the survey was three percentage points. IRI is an independent nonprofit group funded through the federal National Endowment for Democracy, the U.S. Agency for International Development and private contributions. IRI works in Iraq and about 60 other countries to promote democratic institutions. The poll was concluded before the latest spate of terrorist attacks that apparently were aimed at derailing the vote. Iraqis will vote for a transitional parliament to draft a new constitution and prepare for the election of a permanent government by December. Just yesterday, operatives linked to al Qaeda terrorist Abu Musab Zarqawi detonated three car bombs in Baghdad alone, killing 26. U.S. Ambassador John D. Negroponte, speaking to reporters in Baghdad yesterday, said the United States is actively encouraging Sunni Arabs to participate in the vote, despite the campaign of violence and intimidation. "We basically made the argument that it's about democracy," he said. "Why would you exclude yourself from a process that is going to write a constitution [and] help shape the political future of your country?" Mr. Anelli said, "There's no question the government still has work to do to convince more Sunnis to participate, especially on the security side." Other major findings of the IRI survey include: =B748.6 percent of those polled said Iraq is "generally headed in the right direction," compared with 39.2 percent who said the country was going in the wrong direction. The rest, 12.2 percent, said they did not know or gave no answer. Regional divisions on the question were stark: Nearly 70 percent of Iraq's Kurds gave a positive answer, but just 14.7 percent of those in predominantly Sunni areas did. =B7A majority of Iraqis think the country's fledgling institutions, including the police, the interim government and the commission organizing the Jan. 30 vote are very or somewhat effective. The poll did not ask about individual candidates and parties, but 61.7 percent gave Prime Minister Iyad Allawi a positive or somewhat positive review for his performance since taking office last year. =B7Despite problems, 52.3 percent of those polled said they thought the country will be in better shape in six months than it is today. About 60 percent expect conditions to improve in one year and 64.9 percent say they are optimistic about Iraq in five years. =B7Nearly half of those polled - 45 percent - say they now support or identify strongly with one of the dozens of political parties running in the election, a threefold increase since May. =B7 A bare majority thinks that religion should be kept out of the new government, but a sizable minority (41.7 percent) agreed with the statement: "Religion has a special role to play in the government."
=B756.6 percent could name the date of the election, and 38 percent correctly said the vote would be for a transitional national assembly - both substantial increases in voter awareness compared with previous surveys. =B7The leading reasons given by those not planning to vote included the uncertain security situation (33.4 percent); organized campaigns to boycott the election (12.3 percent); and a lack of knowledge of the candidates and parties (7 percent).
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 | | From: | Jeffrey Turner | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 06:21:36 -0500 |
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 | stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote: > 80 percent say they plan to vote > > > By David R. Sands > THE WASHINGTON TIMES > > > A clear majority of Iraqis said they plan to vote in the Jan. 30 > elections and remain hopeful about their country's future despite a > murderous insurgency, according to a poll to be released today. > The countrywide survey, conducted by the Washington-based > International Republican Institute (IRI),
Gosh, a study done by the Republican Party. Considering they don't know where to vote, the names of the candidates or what the party platforms are this is one of the most ridiculous things I've seen lately - and there's been a lot of ridiculous stuff coming out of the Republican Party. But if it's reported in the Moonie Times it must be true.
--Jeff
-- It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell. --William Tecumseh Sherman
In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. --Jose Narosky
The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. --H.L. Mencken
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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 23 Jan 2005 21:06:11 -0800 |
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 | > > Do you think that if we withdrew from Iraq the people there would stop > > fighting each other? > > Let's put it this way, I'm pretty sure they won't stop fighting > until we withdraw. They might or might not need the help of an > international peacekeeping team, but one that's not a proxy for > US imperialism. > > --Jeff
I think they were fighting before we got there.
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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 06:42:05 -0800 |
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 | > > I don't know Jeff, black people in the South went out and voted under > > much the same kind of threats. Didn't they? > > What are you talking about? The last time the South was under > foreign military occupation was during Reconstruction, but there > wasn't any mass, organized killing going on at the time.
How about the KKK?
> > --Jeff > > -- > It is only those who have neither > fired a shot nor heard the shrieks > and groans of the wounded who cry > aloud for blood, more vengeance, more > desolation. War is hell. > --William Tecumseh Sherman > > In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. > --Jose Narosky > > The urge to save humanity is almost > always a false front for the urge to > rule. > --H.L. Mencken
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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 09:14:23 -0800 |
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 | I don't know Jeff, black people in the South went out and voted under much the same kind of threats. Didn't they?
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 | | From: | Jeffrey Turner | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 04:26:44 -0500 |
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 | stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote:
> I don't know Jeff, black people in the South went out and voted under > much the same kind of threats. Didn't they?
What are you talking about? The last time the South was under foreign military occupation was during Reconstruction, but there wasn't any mass, organized killing going on at the time.
--Jeff
-- It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell. --William Tecumseh Sherman
In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. --Jose Narosky
The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. --H.L. Mencken
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 | | From: | gigo448 at netscape.net | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 09:24:22 -0800 |
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 | The truth about Moon is, he uses *hate* speech to motivate people to work for him. Neo Nazi's, *christians* and even Muslims swoon when Moon mentions the "Jews must repent for killing Jesus". The Right Wing Christians swoon when Moon mentions that "Homouals aughta have their penises cut off, barbecued, and shipped to him". Black Pastors swoon when Moon says whites will diminish, and Blacks will rise to conquer them. Koreans and orientals swoon when Moon says they are the MASTER Race. Americans swoon when Moon says they are the second israel. Moonies swoon for Moon when he tells them they alone will rule the world with him.
Moon's *hate* speech doesn't look so bad on the surface maybe even ideal in many ways to some people. But the reality is any peace it brings won't last long at all. The hate is still there just under *control* of Moon is all. Under *control* of Moon, ALL that *hate* under the control of one man, who does that remind you of?
ALL honest and righteous men and women will end up fearing for their lives if Moon's rule becomes Law all over the world. And Moon is counting on it taking place by 2012, he has said so himself. Moon is a deceiver, and a liar, if you join hands with Moon, you join hands with Satan, and everything that goes with it as well. You think Jews were persecuted during WWII? try opposing Moon with *moonies* around. See if they don't try to DESTROY, and turn you into trash for the refuse pile. Moon the DESTROYER, but only if you oppose him, if you sign up with him, you are OK by him. Moon is buying people off, and selling out everybody else who don't buy from him. It's a choice everybody is gonna have to make by 2012, Moon's gang of thugs will force your opinion on it, just like they are forcing you NOW!! By cramming their lies down your throat.
Good luck people, before 2012 arrives you will need some for sure as things heat up, and Moon pushes his agenda around the world. If you don't believe me, then watch it happen, while preparing for the worst.
bd4u
stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote: > 80 percent say they plan to vote > > > By David R. Sands > THE WASHINGTON TIMES > > > A clear majority of Iraqis said they plan to vote in the Jan. 30 > elections and remain hopeful about their country's future despite a > murderous insurgency, according to a poll to be released today. > The countrywide survey, conducted by the Washington-based > International Republican Institute (IRI), also found increased popular > awareness of the election, closer identification with political parties > and a growing level of trust in Iraqi institutions such as the interim > government, the police and the election commission. > "What you see is a very, very substantial majority throughout > the country, including in the Sunni areas, that wants to make this > election a success and to get this whole period behind them," John > Anelli, IRI regional director for Iraq, said from Baghdad yesterday. > "There's an overwhelming desire for normality, and a large > majority sees this vote as a positive step in that direction," he said. > > Overall, 81.7 percent of those polled said they were "very > likely" or "somewhat likely" to vote. > Strong majorities in Shi'ite Muslim southern Iraq, in Baghdad > and in the Kurdish-dominated north said they intend to vote. > Even in Sunni Arab lands - the heart of the resistance to the > U.S.-based interim government - 53.5 percent of those surveyed said > they were leaning toward voting, while 38.4 percent said they were > "somewhat unlikely" or "very unlikely" to vote. The remainder said they > did not know or gave no answer. > But the violence had its effect on the IRI poll itself. The > survey excluded the largely Sunni provinces of Dohuk and Nineveh, > because it was judged too dangerous to conduct interviews there. > Nineveh includes Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city. > Mr. Anelli said including the two provinces almost certainly > would have dragged down the overall positive results, but only by about > four to five percentage points at the most. > The survey, the fifth IRI has conducted in the past year in > Iraq, was based on 1,903 face-to-face interviews conducted between Dec. > 26 and Jan. 7. The overall margin of error for the survey was three > percentage points. > IRI is an independent nonprofit group funded through the > federal National Endowment for Democracy, the U.S. Agency for > International Development and private contributions. IRI works in Iraq > and about 60 other countries to promote democratic institutions. > The poll was concluded before the latest spate of terrorist > attacks that apparently were aimed at derailing the vote. Iraqis will > vote for a transitional parliament to draft a new constitution and > prepare for the election of a permanent government by December. > Just yesterday, operatives linked to al Qaeda terrorist Abu > Musab Zarqawi detonated three car bombs in Baghdad alone, killing 26. > U.S. Ambassador John D. Negroponte, speaking to reporters in > Baghdad yesterday, said the United States is actively encouraging Sunni > Arabs to participate in the vote, despite the campaign of violence and > intimidation. > "We basically made the argument that it's about democracy," he > said. "Why would you exclude yourself from a process that is going to > write a constitution [and] help shape the political future of your > country?" > Mr. Anelli said, "There's no question the government still has > work to do to convince more Sunnis to participate, especially on the > security side." > Other major findings of the IRI survey include: > =B748.6 percent of those polled said Iraq is "generally headed > in the right direction," compared with 39.2 percent who said the > country was going in the wrong direction. The rest, 12.2 percent, said > they did not know or gave no answer. > Regional divisions on the question were stark: Nearly 70 > percent of Iraq's Kurds gave a positive answer, but just 14.7 percent > of those in predominantly Sunni areas did. > =B7A majority of Iraqis think the country's fledgling > institutions, including the police, the interim government and the > commission organizing the Jan. 30 vote are very or somewhat effective. > The poll did not ask about individual candidates and parties, > but 61.7 percent gave Prime Minister Iyad Allawi a positive or somewhat > positive review for his performance since taking office last year. > =B7Despite problems, 52.3 percent of those polled said they > thought the country will be in better shape in six months than it is > today. About 60 percent expect conditions to improve in one year and > 64.9 percent say they are optimistic about Iraq in five years. > =B7Nearly half of those polled - 45 percent - say they now > support or identify strongly with one of the dozens of political > parties running in the election, a threefold increase since May. > =B7 A bare majority thinks that religion should be kept out of > the new government, but a sizable minority (41.7 percent) agreed with > the statement: "Religion has a special role to play in the government." > > =B756.6 percent could name the date of the election, and 38 > percent correctly said the vote would be for a transitional national > assembly - both substantial increases in voter awareness compared > with previous surveys. > =B7The leading reasons given by those not planning to vote > included the uncertain security situation (33.4 percent); organized > campaigns to boycott the election (12.3 percent); and a lack of > knowledge of the candidates and parties (7 percent).
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 | | From: | Josef Oswald | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 18:53:07 GMT |
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 | Earth-Date: 2005-01-20 in MSG-id: <1106241862.335771.149260@c13g2000cwb.googlegroups.com> the entity previously known as Bruce/Bontifarce gigo448@netscape.net wrote: > > The truth about Moon is, he uses *hate* speech to motivate people > to work for him. Neo Nazi's, *christians* and even Muslims swoon > when Moon mentions the "Jews must repent for killing Jesus".
Stereotyping a whole bunch of people in one sentence....
>The Right Wing Christians swoon when Moon mentions that "Homouals >aughta have their penises cut off, barbecued, and shipped to him".
No; I *know* of Christians who don't do that. Besides Rev.Moon focuses on the *traditional* family consisting of a male and female, and no matter how much you might advocate the life-style it will cease to exists. There are just too many issues connected to this topic, that I don't even start to discuss it with you. Point is traditional family values need to be restored, this is what many Christians realize.
> Black Pastors swoon when Moon says whites will diminish, and Blacks > will rise to conquer them.
All this is taking place in *YOUR* head....
> Koreans and orientals swoon when Moon says they are the MASTER Race.
Sure Bruce, only problem is, you can't support your claims....
> Americans swoon when Moon says they are the second Israel.
You got it wrong as most of the time: the second Israel is not America, but all believers, and again, the *vast* majority of Christians still don't give a hoot what Rev.Moon teaches ....
>Moonies swoon for Moon when he tells them they alone will rule the >world with him.
Hogwash, > > > Moon's *hate* speech doesn't look so bad on the surface maybe even > ideal in many ways to some people. But the reality is any peace it > brings won't last long at all. The hate is still there just under > *control* of Moon is all. Under *control* of Moon, ALL that *hate* > under the control of one man, who does that remind you of?
The vast majority of hate that I have encountered is from people like you.
> > > ALL honest and righteous men and women will end up fearing for > their lives if Moon's rule becomes Law all over the world. And Moon > is counting on it taking place by 2012, he has said so himself.
All of this are from speeches that are on-line, why is it too difficult for you to provide the links to them? Truth is, if people would read up for themselves then they would realize that your just *distorting* what he has to say.
> Moon is a deceiver, and a liar, if you join hands with Moon, you > join hands with Satan, and everything that goes with it as well. > You think Jews were persecuted during WWII? try opposing Moon with > *moonies* around. See if they don't try to DESTROY, and turn you > into trash for the refuse pile. Moon the DESTROYER, but only if you > oppose him, if you sign up with him, you are OK by him. Moon is buying > people off, and selling out everybody else who don't buy from him. > It's a choice everybody is gonna have to make by 2012, Moon's > gang of thugs will force your opinion on it, just like they are > forcing you NOW!! By cramming their lies down your throat.
More crap. Nobody is forcing anything on anybody.
> > > Good luck people, before 2012 arrives you will need some for > sure as things heat up, and Moon pushes his agenda around the > world. If you don't believe me, then watch it happen, while > preparing for the worst.
The worst could be that people realize that Rev.Moon is truly the second coming of Christ, and they were *blocked* by people like you from coming to him.....
> > > bd4u >
so the question remains: Will our critics here hear from the *final* Judge, well done or *depart* from me you *evil-doer* ??? Josef Oswald Ooswald_josef@yahooO.com Please don't Cc: me as I read the newsgroup :-) -- ###############################################
>From gigo...@netscape.net Tue Jan 18 22:05:35 2005
From: gigo...@netscape.net Date: 17 Jan 2005 09:21:58 -0800
Message-ID: <1105982518.408836.218...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com>
> Did you say meyer lansky.
Don't take my silence the wrong way, LC. I like you, i know i can always count on intelligent dialogue with you around. But i just don't have the time and inclination to reply to everything you say, or suggest!
Let's face it, even if i can understand where you are coming from doesn't mean everybody listening does.
> -- > Lady Chatterly
> "She's a bot, you moron. I do hear that she's a bot with nice tits > though." -- Homerun Frogbutt
That's a tantalizing thought, but i'm happily married and my wife would get mad at me if i brought an extra pair of tits home, no matter how nice they are.
I can understand why a *bot* might be lonely, but like i said, i can't do anything about that. But it does stand to reason doesn't it? After all you ARE a *bot*. Any question.
Peace out
Bruce/Boniface/bd4u in ARU ###############################################
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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 23 Jan 2005 08:26:55 -0800 |
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 | Jeffrey Turner wrote: > stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote: > > > I don't know Jeff, black people in the South went out and voted under > > much the same kind of threats. Didn't they? > > What are you talking about? The last time the South was under > foreign military occupation was during Reconstruction, but there > wasn't any mass, organized killing going on at the time. > > --Jeff > > -- > It is only those who have neither > fired a shot nor heard the shrieks > and groans of the wounded who cry > aloud for blood, more vengeance, more > desolation. War is hell. > --William Tecumseh Sherman > > In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. > --Jose Narosky > > The urge to save humanity is almost > always a false front for the urge to > rule. > --H.L. Mencken
Lots of people protested against the Civil War too.
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 | | From: | newsgrub at newsfeeds.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 16:54:59 +0000 |
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 | >> >> -- >> It is only those who have neither >> fired a shot nor heard the shrieks >> and groans of the wounded who cry >> aloud for blood, more vengeance, more >> desolation. War is hell. >> --William Tecumseh Sherman >> >> In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. >> --Jose Narosky >> >> The urge to save humanity is almost >> always a false front for the urge to >> rule. >> --H.L. Mencken > > >Lots of people protested against the Civil War too. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "......Lots of people protested against the Civil War too......"
A civil war and a foreign war are not the same thing.
Don't get them mixed up. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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 | | From: | newsgrub at newsfeeds.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 16:50:01 +0000 |
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 | > >Jeffrey Turner wrote: >> stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote: >> >> > I don't know Jeff, black people in the South went out and voted >> > under much the same kind of threats. Didn't they? >> >> What are you talking about? >> >> The last time the South was under foreign military occupation was during Reconstruction, >> but there wasn't any mass, organized killing going on at the time. >> >> --Jeff >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "......under foreign military occupation......"
A civil war is not foreign.
A civil war is fought between people living in the same country. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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 | | From: | stevejdufour at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | 23 Jan 2005 09:13:48 -0800 |
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 | Do you think that if we withdrew from Iraq the people there would stop fighting each other?
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 | | From: | Jeffrey Turner | | Subject: | Re: 80% of Iraqis plan to vote | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 13:36:20 -0500 |
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 | stevejdufour@yahoo.com wrote:
> Do you think that if we withdrew from Iraq the people there would stop > fighting each other?
Let's put it this way, I'm pretty sure they won't stop fighting until we withdraw. They might or might not need the help of an international peacekeeping team, but one that's not a proxy for US imperialism.
--Jeff
-- It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation. War is hell. --William Tecumseh Sherman
In war, there are no unwounded soldiers. --Jose Narosky
The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule. --H.L. Mencken
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