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global1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:08 PM
Original message
I Received the Following E-Mail From A Repug Friend - Help Me Refute .....
I will be visiting the couple that sent me the following e-mail. It is out and out Repug propaganda and I want to have some printed material to take to them to refute. Please help me. They are brainwashed and I would like to begin to deprogram them.

THE E-Mail:

"Subject: Fw: News from Iraq......
Can you circulate this? This is a letter from Ray Reynolds, a medic in the
Iowa Army National Guard, serving in Iraq:

As I head off to Baghdad for the final weeks of my stay in Iraq, I wanted to say thanks to all of you who did not believe the media. They have done a very poor job of covering everything that has happened. I am sorry that I have not been able to visit all of you during my two week leave back home. And just so you can rest at night knowing something is happening in Iraq that is noteworthy, I thought I would pass this on to you. This is the list of things that has happened in Iraq recently: (Please share it with your friends and compare it to the version that your paper is producing.)

(1)-* Over 400,000 kids have up-to-date immunizations.

(2)-* School attendance is up 80% from levels before the war.

(3)-* Over 1,500 schools have been renovated and rid of the weapons stored there so education can occur.

(4)-* The port of Uhm Qasar was renovated so grain can be off-loaded from ships faster.

(5)-* The country had its first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August

(6)-* Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time ever in Iraq.

(7)-* The country now receives 2 times the electrical power it did before the war.

(8)-* 100% of the hospitals are open and fully staffed, compared to 35% before the war.

(9)-* Elections are taking place in every major city, and city councils are in place.

(10)-* Sewer and water lines are installed in every major city.

(11)-* Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets.

(12)-* Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country.

(13)-* Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers are patrolling the streets side by side with US soldiers.

(14)-* Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever.

(15)-* Students are taught field sanitation and hand washing techniques to prevent the spread of germs.

(16)-* An interim constitution has been signed.

(17)-* Girls are allowed to attend school.

(18)-* Textbooks that don't mention Saddam are in the schools for the first time in 30 years

(19)-Don't believe for one second that these people do not want us there I have met many, many people from Iraq that want us there, and in a bad way.

They say they will never see the freedoms we talk about, but they hope their children
will. We are doing a good job in Iraq and I challenge anyone, anywhere to dispute me on these facts. If you are like me and very disgusted with how this period of rebuilding has been portrayed, email this to a friend and let them know there are good things happening.

Ray Reynolds, SFC Iowa Army National Guard
234th Signal Battalion"

BACK TO Me:

Help me with some counteracting statements I can share with them to see the folly of their ways.
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tbuddha Donating Member (453 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:10 PM
Response to Original message
1. I would just have him look at optruth.org
Those are guys that have been there and they don't seem as optimistic.
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Worst Username Ever Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:10 PM
Response to Original message
2. Right here
Edited on Thu Dec-02-04 08:12 PM by Worst Username Ever
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DemocratSinceBirth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:16 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Exactly...
The original post is so much spin....


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Nicholas_J Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 09:18 PM
Response to Reply #2
12. Women In Iraq under Saddam had the highest level of Education
As well as women in the higher professions than even the United States, there is a great deal of concern that given the control that conservative Muslim Clerics have in the interim Government, that women are now being banned from educational opportunities:

WORLD VIEWS: Were Iraqi women better off under Saddam?

With the increasing influence of Iraq's religious establishment weighing heavily on their concerns about work, family life, education and opportunities to take part in politics, many Iraqi women have been thinking -- and are now giving voice to -- the unthinkable: Could it be, some are asking, that they were better off under Saddam Hussein?

The main reason for their consternation lies in a decision made last December by Iraq's Interim Governing Council (IGC), which was then headed by the leader of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, "to scrap secular family laws and place them under Muslim religious jurisdiction." Those 1959 laws were "once considered the most progressive in the Middle East, making polygamy difficult and guaranteeing women custody rights in the case of divorce." (Al

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2004/02/05/worldviews.DTL

Information and history of the rights of women in Iraq
Compared to women in neighboring Middle Eastern countries, women in Iraq have many rights and abilities. They have equal pay and the opportunity to work, they are able to drive legally, they can uncover their heads, and they are allowed to serve in the army. Still, women in Iraq suffer from honor killings, human rights violations, torture and execution, and political repression.

... and their rights are slowly deteriorating...

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Information and history of the rights of women in Iraq
Compared to women in neighboring Middle Eastern countries, women in Iraq have many rights and abilities. They have equal pay and the opportunity to work, they are able to drive legally, they can uncover their heads, and they are allowed to serve in the army. Still, women in Iraq suffer from honor killings, human rights violations, torture and execution, and political repression.

... and their rights are slowly deteriorating...

History of Women in Iraq

In the 1920s and 1930's, women in Iraq began working and accepting positions in the job market. In 1970, the Iraqi constitution, under Saddam Hussein, declared all women and men equal before the law. The 1970s and early 1980s were years of economic growth in Iraq and state-induced policies were formed to eradicate illiteracy, educate women and incorporate them into the labor force. Labor at that time was scarce and the Iraqi government chose to tap into its own human resources and hire women. Women in Iraq became among the most educated and professional in the entire region, and working outside the home became the norm. Women could find and retain jobs, obtain higher education, and receive extensive medical coverage. A working Iraqi mother received five years of maternity leave. In 1980 women could vote and run for election.

http://womensissues.about.com/cs/iraq/a/iraqi_women.htm

Sorry, but your friend is just plain wrong and a a result of overthrowing Saddam, and U.S. policy, political factions dedicated to removing woment from the public arena has bewcome a major consideration among the strongest political groups in Iraq. THe religious fundamentalists are now the strongest political block in Iraq. George Bush recently stated just before his re-election that he had no problem with Iraq electing a fundamentalist religious tgovernment in an Associated Press Interview"

Not only this, but education of BOTH SEXES through the age of 16 was COMPULSORY under Saddams regime, infuriating the fundamentalist majority in Iraq:

At one time, women in Iraq held an enviable status in the Middle East. In 1979, the Constitution of Iraq declared the equality of men and women. Compulsory education through age 16 led to greater opportunities for women, and in 1980, women were given the vote and the right to run for electoral office. By the early 1980s, women comprised 40 percent of the workforce and the Unified Labor Code mandated equal pay and benefits for men and women. Then began the erosion of women's rights, starting at around the time of the invasion of Kuwait and the Gulf War of 1991.

Hoping to broaden his support among the most retrograde elements in society, Saddam Hussein decided to permit tribal leaders to implement traditional tribal codes, invariably at the expense of women. In 1990, a new penal code was enacted which permitted honor killings of women. Under Article 409, men could murder with impunity female relatives who were suspected of engaging in adultery or premarital sex. Victims of rape could be -- and often were -- killed in order to clear a family's reputation.

http://www.swans.com/library/art10/iraq/elich.html

In fact it was the assault on Hussein during the Gulf war that began to lead to the erosion of the laws protecting women. In order to get support from the tribal chieftains, Saddam had to turn a blind eye to violations of the laws he passed requiring equal treatment of women under the law. Since 1991 Saddams agreement to allow the tribal areas to operate under their own traditional laws led to wom,enm in these areas being pulled from schools. Rape increased by massive increments in these regions. IN the areas that did not fall under tribal leadership. womens rights were still maintained. Unfortunately a U.S. policy based on ignorance allowed far more brutality to be comitted in Saddam's Iraq because of Saddams weakening position than had ever occured when Saddam was tightly in control of his country.

Other results, the wholesale slaughter aned attack of Iraqi Christians
since the overthrow of the Baathist Regime which was forbidden under Saddam and rather brutally punished. It was not a bad idea to brutally punish people who murder people of minority faiths in Iraq.

Many of the assaults on women and womens rights occured among the Americans favorites, the Kurds, as well as among the Shi'ites who are far less active in the insurgency.


How has life been for Iraqi Christians and other non-Muslims under Saddam Hussein?

With regard to Christians and churches, there's been peace with regard to his politics. There was no religious persecution; there was tolerance. The regime of Saddam Hussein has friendly relations with church leaders.

On the whole, relations between Christians and Muslims are OK. But especially in the north, in the Mosul area, there have traditionally not been good relations between Christians and Muslims. There's a sort of fanaticism.

But in general there are no problems. Saddam has specially favored the Christians with his generous initiatives towards churches.

So even though people think he's a bad ruler in other ways, you—and many other Iraqi Christians--approve of his position on religious tolerance.

Right.

When Saddam's record on human rights is so poor, why is he tolerant of Christians?

We don't fully know why he's retained this policy of tolerance towards Christians. Perhaps because it would help him gain the support and allegiance of Christians who come originally from the north of the country, because that's the Kurdish region. There's always been conflict between the Kurdish region and the Iraqi government, even before Saddam.

http://www.beliefnet.com/story/123/story_12341.html

In essence, findamentalist Muslims in Iraq were pissed at Saddam because in their opinion he was TOO tolerant of Christians.

To really understand this one has to look at the traditional and historical position of Christians in Muslim Society. Non-Muslims were tolerated, but had to pay a tax to retain their religious practice, which was usually a lower tax than theyt suffered under Christian rule, but they were prohibited from taking part in much of the governance of Muslim Societies, and in particular, thewy were completely prohibited from being part of the military. Until Secular Governments were formed in the mid east they could take no part in
the military at all. This varied as to the relative moderation of Muslim Caliphates, but by and large, it was rare for a high level official in any Islamic Society to reach a high political level, yjough there are some examples of both Christian and Jewish Viziers and heads of the treasury, these are the exception rather than the rule. Much osf the opposition to Saddam came from the religious right, and many of those people that are being dug up as evidence of Saddams brutality were people who intended their own brutality in opposition to Saddam's secular regime. Most of those 300,000 dead who are being thrown up as an example of saddam's brutality were essentially the nucleus of an Iraqi Taliban and it own nascent Al Qaeda. Saddam dealt with them as his culture demanded. They were essentially a reactionary force that opposed all of Saddams attempts to get rid of the old Islamic traditions that discriminated against women and other faiths. He wouldnt tolerate it, and handled it more like Stalin would rather than have let them vote on whetther they wanted women or christians and jews to be treated equally, being fairly aware that had such a vote occured, women would be enslaved again, and non-Muslims brutalized. much as Baha's are now brutalized in Iran. This is beginning to occur in Iraq as well where there was a Bahai community, but now they are being treated by the Shi'ites in a manner similar to the occurences in Iran. And the U.S. turns a blind eye to it.

In Iran, it is completely legal for a comminity to murder a Bahai neighbor, as they are considered apostate by the Shi'ites. In Iran, members of this religion have been doused with gasoline and forced to dance for their tormentors while burning to death. Such events are starting in Iraq, not only to Bahais but to Christians as well. The U.S. and the Interim authority are turning a blind eye, as long as the violence is not directed towards U.S. troops or government forces.

In essence, since the U.S. occupation of Iraq, sa much or more brutality has been allowed to occur than occured under Saddam.

Lets look at what the situation for women in the professional world was under Saddam, and what is starting to happen since his regime has been "changed":

Many women professionals in Iraq fear that the gains they made during the early years of Saddam Hussein's Baathist secular rule -- in education, the work place and marital status -- are at risk from rising Islamic conservatism.
"If we don't reaffirm our right now, we won't be able to do it later," said gynecologist Lina Abood, 28, whose father was an opposition activist against Saddam.
Despite living in a dictatorship, women in Saddam's Iraq had more rights than many in the Middle East. They could vote, attend school, hold public office and own property. The regime guaranteed a woman the right to prevent her husband from taking a second wife -- permitted under Islam.
However, with the collapse of Saddam's nominally secular regime the influence of Islamic traditionalists has grown, especially in the majority Shiite community but also among the minority Sunnis.
Secular figures such as Ahmad Chalabi, a Westernized Shiite backed by the Pentagon, are widely perceived as losing ground to religious leaders such as Shiite Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani. Many clerics have close ties to Iran where they spent years in exile under Saddam.

http://www.occupationwatch.org/article.php?id=2739

Saddam was in some way, a brutal dictator, but to be honest no more brutal than many of the leaders and governments that we supported in the region, such as in Egypt and in Saudi Arabia.

RAther than look at the situation from the viewpoint of the right wing consevative in the U.S. look at it this way, no matter how brutal Saddam was, it is a rare dictator who begins to give rights and equality to groups that had been oppressed for centuries. As a dictatorm he certainly didnt have to do this. He could have kept all of the oil welath to himself, for his own purposes, For some reason he spent money on mandatory education for all, for universal heqlth care for all, and for food and housing subsidies for all. Did he have to as a dictator. No. did he do it, yes.

So 400,000 innoculations were given. Lets compare this to what Iraqi's had under Saddam:

SUSAN DENTZER: Today the country still bears the scars, not just of Saddam's despotism, but also of wars and international sanctions. Iraq's infant mortality rate, at more than one death for every ten live births, is on a par with many poor African nations.

Until recently, most of Iraq's roughly 4 million children under age 5 had never been immunized against common diseases. Last year, Saddam's government spent just over $16 million on health care, a meager 65 cents for each of Iraq's 25 million citizens. And after widespread looting last spring, many of the nation's 240 hospitals and 1,200 primary health clinics were in shambles.


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/july-dec03/iraq_12-31.html

The article above points out the deterioration of the health system in Iraq AFTER the Gulf War.

Again. conditions for Women in Iraq before the U.S. Gulf War:

Introduction

Women have played important roles throughout Iraq's history. It was in the early years of secular Baathist socialism and early in Saddam Hussein's rule that women's status and rights were formally enshrined in legislation and treaties. In 1970, a new constitution nominally made Iraqi women and men equal under the law (although family law continued to favour men). Under Saddam Hussein, women's literacy and education improved, and restrictions on women outside the home were lifted. Women won the right to vote and to run for political office, and they could drive, work outside the home and hold jobs traditionally held by men. Before 1991, female literacy rates in Iraq were the highest in the region, Iraq had achieved nearly universal primary education for girls as well as boys, and Iraqi women were widely considered to be among the most educated and professional women in the Arab world...

http://www.womenwarpeace.org/iraq/iraq.htm

This article points out that since the U.S. takeover womens rights have been places under religious control, rather than secular control"


Under Saddam, 93 percent of the population had free access to health care (prior to U.S. sponsored sanctions).

A number of studies have noted that, contrary to Sabah A. Salih's claims, Iraq invested heavily in social and economic development before the Persian Gulf War, even during the Iran-Iraq War. In 1980, Iraq initiated a program to reduce infant and child mortality, which, according to a 1990 UNICEF report, rapidly and steadily declined as a result. According to the World Health Organization, prior to the Gulf War, 90 percent of Iraqis had access to safe water and 93 percent had access to health care. According to academics and humanitarian agencies, there was nearly universal access to primary-school education, Iraq won international recognition for its literacy campaign in the 1970s and 1980s, and the vast majority of households had access to electricity. Whatever the government's reasons for these measures, the results were impressive and tremendously beneficial.

http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1111/is_1833_306/ai_98923238

The demise of the Iraqi health care system, which left far fewer people without health care than the U.S. actually does (& opercent of Iraqi's without health care before the sanctions compared to almost 20 percent of Americans without health care in the U.S> iunder George W. Bush)...


Just because we are doing less than Saddam did prior to sanctions which made it almost difficult for Saddam to provide the levels of social benefits that he did prior to the fist U.S. invasion of Iraq, 12 years of economic sanction, and a second invasion of Iraq does not mean we are doing better than Saddam. In fact, the sanctions have been found to have been responsible for the deaths of over 1.5 million Iraqis since 1991, which is fifteen times as many deaths as attributed to Saddams brutal regime.

This is the typical Republican argument. They virtually destroyee Iraqs infrastructure by placing sanctions on Iraq, and then actually destroyed it during ths recent invasion, and then brag that things are getting better. Had Saddam been left alone, and the situation handled diplomtically, while Saddams regime might have killed a few hundred thousand more during the time it would have taken for huis regime to collapse, the number of deaths would have been far fewer than those caused by sanctions and the recent war.

The accusations are much like saying that things in Hiroshima and Nagasaki got better when the Japanese surrendered after we droppeed the nuclear bombs.
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CBHagman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:14 PM
Response to Original message
3. I don't think they ever forbade girls to go to school.
As far as I know, women were not barred from schools, universities or public office in Iraq. In fact, some worry that eventually women might lose ground if a more fundamentalist tone is set in the government.

Perhaps the guy's (or whoever) is thinking of the Taliban in Afghanistan. As for Afghanistan, the administration is fond of suggesting that everything is hunky-dory for women there. It's true that they can vote and that females can attend school, but there's also considerable oppression of women by the U.S.'s warlord allies. If a rival ethnic group comes to rape all the females in a family, that still counts as oppression, even if the ethnic group is supposedly on the U.S. side.
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Ducks In A Row Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:34 PM
Response to Reply #3
8. Saddam had Christians in his government
Tariq Aziz for one


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kat21 Donating Member (146 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:26 PM
Response to Original message
5. See my post to link to what Urban Legends has to say -
http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/bl_ray_reynolds.htm

And you are correct, girls were allowed to attend school. Did you also know that women were allowed to work and wear western clothing and that Christians were free to practice their religion - until now.
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methinks2 Donating Member (894 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:31 PM
Response to Original message
6. Cute, that reminds me of Nero
Edited on Thu Dec-02-04 08:32 PM by methinks2
you know the guy, fiddling while Rome burned.
I'm sure that some who haven't been killed or wounded will suck up to the occupying army. But that doesn't mean that they like us or want us there. Also Iraq had more women in high government station than we do. They were a secular nation. Saddam was definitely not a religious man.

Of course you can just counter that email with a civilian body count.

http://www.leaderu.com/humanities/demy.html
Onward Christian Soldiers? Christian Perspectives on War

Here is a nice article on war from the Christian perspective. It clearly outlines the "Just War" rules.
Here is an exerpt:

"Proportionate means--Combatant forces of the opposition forces may not be subjected to greater harm than is necessary to secure victory and peace. The types of weapons and amount of force used must be limited to only what is needed to repel the aggression, deter future attacks, and secure a just peace. Therefore, total or unlimited warfare is inappropriate. ("You don't burn down the barn to roast the pig.")

Noncombatant immunity--Military forces must respect individuals and groups not participating in the conflict and must abstain from attacking them. Since only governments can declare war, only governmental forces or agents are legitimate targets. This means that prisoners of war, civilians, and casualties are immune from intentional attacks. "
I hope this helps
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zulchzulu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:34 PM
Response to Original message
7. Where are his "numbers" coming from?
Hot damn, 546,323,452 Iraqis now have American flag underwear! Woo hoo!

Catch my drift...
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CatWoman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:37 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. I think they use it for toilet paper
rather than underwear.
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llpoperations Donating Member (26 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:41 PM
Response to Original message
10. All that good news from Iraq
I have just one question, who collected the data??

This sort of stuff is the exact same horseshit the public was fed during Vietnam.

US military forces can't safely move into most parts of Iraq, so how was this information collected? If the source is illegitimate, so is the data.

Here's a clearer perspective:

http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/

Finally, ask your "friend" if he thinks Frenchmen would have told the Germans they don't want them there during WWII. The Iraqi people don't hate us, they despise us. But they do it with a smile on their faces.
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newyawker99 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-04 10:09 AM
Response to Reply #10
15. Hi llpoperations!!
Welcome to DU!! :toast:
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zulchzulu Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 08:52 PM
Response to Original message
11. Your buddy missed other important data about the Iraqis
100,231 Iraqis now masturbate to Jessica Simpson instead of Madonna

145,065 Iraqis now hate falafels and wish they could have one of those bigass Hardee's burgers.

45,021 Iraqi children are more into reading Bill O'Reilly's kids book than the Koran.

780,320 Iraqi Sunnis are really into watching anything done by Carrot Top, especially his earlier works.

56,231 Iraqi senior citizens now drink water they got from a secret new water well that no one else can see...it's a miracle!

230,301 Iraqis now think George Bush is one of the most handsome men that this ancient universe ever has witnessed.
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Brundle_Fly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 10:05 PM
Response to Original message
13. GOOD GRIEF
(6)-* Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time ever in Iraq.

BUT NOT IN ANY OF THE MAJOR CENTERS, THE WATER AND ELECTRICITY REPAIR HAS BEEN DISMAL.


(17)-* Girls are allowed to attend school.
UH THATS AFGHANISTAN, NOT IRAQ

(12)-* Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country.
AND THE AMERICANS KEPT THE RULES THEY CANNOT UNIONIZE CIVIC WORKERS, JUST LIKE SADDAM HAD / AND THERE JOB IS MADE EASIER BY THE 100,000 DEAD


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lizzieforkerry Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Dec-02-04 10:54 PM
Response to Original message
14. #8- I highly doubt that 100% of the hospitals in Falluja
are opened and fully staffed- call me crazy. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info has great articles about waht is really happening in Iraq. Including stories and pictures of the "collateral damage". It is very upsetting, but in this case necessary. I know the women are worse off education wise, but I think the earlier post took care of that! Good luck. Take a copy of What happened to Kansas or something and then accidentaly forget it after talking about how good it is! Did you go to school on pell grants? I did and have won several arguments this week since they basically got rid of them last week and Bush bragged about them in the debates.
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Cheswick2.0 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-04 10:14 AM
Response to Original message
16. once again DU swallows the hook
the OP posts some right wing crap some one e-mailed to them and we all sit here refuting it. Where is the OP?
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NVMojo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-04 10:15 AM
Response to Original message
17. sounds like a Rove Republican marketing brochure
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RUDUing2 Donating Member (968 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-03-04 10:18 AM
Response to Original message
18.  a good reply has been written...I would simply send it..
http://www.orwelliantimes.com/2004/04/26.html

Pro-War Propaganda from an America Soldier in Iraq

An email is making the rounds that sure looks like Republican propaganda:
"This is a letter from Ray Reynolds, a medic in the Iowa Army National Guard, serving in Iraq:

As I head off to Baghdad for the final weeks of my stay in Iraq, I
wanted to say thanks to all of you who did not believe the media. They have done a very poor job of covering everything that has happened. I am sorry that I have not been able to visit all of you during my two week leave back home. And just so you can rest at night knowing something is happening in Iraq that is noteworthy, I thought I would pass this on to you. This is the list of things that has happened in Iraq recently:
(Please share it with your friends and compare it to the version that your paper is producing.)

* Over 400,000 kids have up-to-date immunizations.
* School attendance is up 80% from levels before the war.
* Over 1,500 schools have been renovated and rid of the weapons stored there so education can occur.
* The port of Uhm Qasar was renovated so grain can be off-loaded from ships faster.
* The country had its first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August.
* Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time
ever in Iraq.
* The country now receives 2 times the electrical power it did before the war.
* 100% of the hospitals are open and fully staffed, compared to 35% before the war.
* Elections are taking place in every major city, and city councils are in place.
* Sewer and water lines are installed in every major city.
* Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets.
* Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country.
* Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers are patrolling the streets side by side with US soldiers.
* Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever.
* Students are taught field sanitation and hand washing techniques to prevent the spread of germs.
* An interim constitution has been signed.
* Girls are allowed to attend school.
* Textbooks that don't mention Saddam are in the schools for the first time in 30 years.

Don't believe for one second that these people do not want us there. I have met many, many people from Iraq that want us there, and in a bad way. They say they will never see the freedoms we talk about but they hope their children will. We are doing a good job in Iraq and I challenge anyone, anywhere to dispute me on these facts. So If you happen to run into John Kerry, be sure to give him my email address and send him to Denison, Iowa. This soldier will set him straight. If you are like me and very disgusted with how this period of rebuilding has been portrayed, e-mail this to a friend and let them know there are good things happening.

Ray Reynolds, SFC
Iowa Army National Guard
234th Signal Battalion"

The email sure has a lot of the earmarkings of right-wing propaganda -- ignore any information which doesn't support your position, slam the media, misinform, make unfair attacks on the opposition and asking to spread the word.

This morning (Monday) I spoke with Lt. Col. Gregory O. Hapgood, the Public Affairs Officer for the Iowa National Guard. He told me that Sgt. Ray Reynolds exists. Lt. Col. Hapgood told me that he received an email this morning from Sgt. Reynolds which confirmed Sgt. Reynolds wrote the email. While we talked about the contents of the email, I did not confirm that every word in the email I received was written by Sgt. Reynolds. Nonetheless, for the most part, the email appears to be an authentic communication from one of our soldiers.

Contrary to the information in the email I received, Sgt. Reynolds is not a medic. He does communications work. In fact, the 234th Signal Battalion's "mission is to provide wide area communications support in a theater of operations."<*> Sgt. Reynolds' civilian job is as a police officer.

Lt. Col. Hapgood told me these were Sgt. Reynolds' sources for the information in the email:

USAID Fact Sheet
Influential Iraqis
The Police Chief of Baghdad
While the email appears to provide some truthful information, it is replete with misinformation. I don't have time to check each representation in the email, but here's an overview:

Over 400,000 kids have up-to-date immunizations
This is interesting. A lot of kids have been immunized in Iraq. In fact, last year the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) "25 million doses of vaccines to Iraq to help prevent the spread of polio, tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis, measles, and tuberculosis -- considered the main killers of children in developing countries."<*> At the time, UNICEF spokesman Gordon Weiss explained that the children of Iraq would need several stages of repeated immunizations for the immunizations to be effective:

"Iraq is in a particularly delicate stage at the moment -- postwar, with a lot of the health system having broken down and a lot of the water systems having broken down, as well. So children are more than ever this year vulnerable to water-borne diseases. Usually you don't vaccinate just once, you vaccinate a number of times in order to have the vaccinations work."<*>

Here's what the Fact Sheet says:

"USAID has partnered with UNICEF, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Abt Associates to support health program in Iraq. Since the end of the war, USAID has vaccinated three million Iraqi children under the age of five, administered tetanus vaccine to more than 700,000 pregnant women, and by April 30, 2004 the USAID mission will have provided updated vaccinations to 90 percent of pregnant women and children under five years of age."

Hmmm. UNICEF said that 3 1/2 million Iraqi children were vaccinated last year. Does this mean that the vaccination program is not being pursued as much as last year? I don't know.

I also don't know where the 400,000 number came from. Last year, Iraq had approximately 4.2 million children in Iraq under the age of five. If fewer than 10% of young Iraqi children have up-to-date immunizations out of the millions who have been on an immunization schedule and are exposed, that would seem to be a serious failure.

That being said, hundred of thousands of immunized children has got to be a good thing.

The country had its first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August.
Nonsense. First, there's nothing in the Fact Sheet about oil. Iraq is presently exporting approximately 1.9 million barrels of oil a day, or under 60 million barrels per month. And that's going to be difficult to maintain. You probably already know that insurgent attacks have been limiting the exports.<*> In August -- the supposed 2 billion barrel month -- Iraq was expecting to export fewer than 1.2 million barrels a day, about 37 million barrels for the month.<*>

Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time
ever in Iraq.
Here's what the Fact Sheet says:

"Iraq has 13 major wastewater facilities. Baghdad's three facilities are currently inoperable and comprise three quarters of the nation's sewage treatment capacity. Raw waste flows directly into the Tigris River. In the rest of the country, most wastewater treatment facilities were only partly operational before the conflict, and a shortage of electricity, parts, and chemicals has exacerbated the situation and only a few wastewater treatment plants are operational. Iraq's 140 major water treatment facilities operate at about 65 percent of the pre-war level of three billion liters a day."

Water does appear to be getting to a lot more people. But, apparently, at a price. A witness from Basra last month claimed:

"The plant seems to be working well . . . This plant is up and going and provides water for a huge number of people. Someone is constructing a new plant to expand so that there is drinking water. I have not met anyone here yet despite the poverty who is not buying drinking water."<*>

The country now receives 2 times the electrical power it did before the war.
Not true. According to the Fact Sheet, on March 11, 2004, power peaked at approximately 92% of "the pre-conflict generating level". ABC reports that power generation is off since last October and is averaging somewhere around pre-conflict generation.<*>

100% of the hospitals are open and fully staffed, compared to 35% before the war.
Not true. The Fact Sheet provides no information about this. But, the Washington Post on March 5, 2004 reported<*>:

"Health Minister Khudair Fadhil Abbas said about 90 percent of the hospitals and clinics have been brought back to the same poor conditions as before the war but that the others will take more time to reach even that low level."

Here are the first few paragraphs from the article:

"The stout woman, covered from head to toe in a black abaya, shuffled into the crowded hospital. She went straight to the emergency room and opened her robe to reveal a tiny baby wrapped in fuzzy blankets. The boy had been born prematurely, and the family was afraid he was going to die.

Uday Abdul Ridha took a quick look and shook his head. The physician put his hands on the woman's shoulders in sympathy, but his words were blunt. "I'm sorry," he said. "We cannot help you. We don't have an incubator, and even if we did, we are short on oxygen. Please try another hospital."

Scenes like this one at the Pediatric Teaching Hospital in Baghdad's Iskan neighborhood have become common in Iraq in recent months, as the health care system has been hit by a critical shortage of basic medications and equipment. Babies die of simple infections because they can't get the proper antibiotics. Surgeries are delayed because there is no oxygen. And patients in critical condition are turned away because there isn't enough equipment."

Elections are taking place in every major city, and city councils are in place.
False. In June, 2003, US authorities put a halt to local elections. We installed mayors and administrators of our choosing.<*>

Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets.
I don't know how many Iraqi police are on duty, given widespread desertions.<*> But, we know how many police are in the New York Police Department -- 39,110.<*> According to the 2000 Census, NY City had a population of more than 8 million and covered an area of 320 square miles.<*> According to 1993 estimates, the population of Iraq is about 19,435,000.<*> Iraq is about the size of California, approximately 171,000 square miles.<*>

Though New York, like any other big city, can be dangerous at times, armed insurgents aren't blowing people up daily. New York has about 1 police officer for every 205 residents. Iraq -- which does have armed insurgents blowing people up daily -- has about 1 police officer for every 324 citizens.

Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever.
Not true. The Fact Sheet says that before we invaded 1.2 million Iraqis had "subscribed to landline telephone service." As of March 9, 2004, "104,680 subscribers to the Iraqi landline phone network were reconnected." Repairs have reconnected some form of telephone service between Baghdad and 20 other cities.

Girls are allowed to attend school.
True, but not because of the invasion. Girls were allowed to attend school during Saddam's rule. Between 1997-2000 82% as many girls attended primary school as did boys. 62% as many girls attended high school as did boys, during the same period.<*>

The email is not informative, but disinformation. It's propaganda. While he did not cite any particular rule, Lt. Col. Hapgood said that members of the force are not to take a politically partisan stance in any communications they use in which they identify themselves as members of the force. Lt. Col. Hapgood, in essence, also said that it was improper for Sgt. Reynolds to attack Senator Kerry in his email.

Thanks to Andrew Lazarus for his comment at dailyKos<*> for some fact checking leads.<*>

UPDATE: Apparently, Lt. Col. Hapgood misinformed me about Sgt. Reynolds' civilian job. He's not a cop. He's a firefighter. This is how Sgt. Reynolds responds to inquiries about his message:

"I did write it and I am in Kuwait now on my way home. I wrote it while at home because I felt that too many people were exploiting the violence in Iraq to sell papers and gain votes. Sometimes the silent majority need to be awakened to respond to the bad things in our world. I am passionate about our President's decision and support this rebuilding whole heartedly...Yes legit..I am a fire fighter in Denison, Iowa and to verify, call Mike McKinnon of the Denison Iowa fire department."

Too bad that the Sergeant's passion got ahead of his control of the facts.

Thanks to Snopes.com for the additional information.<*>

SECOND UPDATE: This article has been corrected to fix two typos. We misspelled "sergeant" once and identified Lt. Col. Hapgood as being from Ohio instead of Iowa.

THIRD UPDATE: We changed the title of the article.

FOURTH UPDATE (October 2, 2004): Since this article is several months old, it's fairly out of date regarding the goings on in Iraq. We recently fact checked the Bush-Allawi press conference. It gives a lengthy overview of what's going on in Iraq. Here's the link.<*>

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