Hold the good news: Iraq's pathetic payoff."THE AMERICAN PEOPLE An American people may be:
Thus the American media ignore the joyful, voluminous, ever-increasing good news that has apparently become Iraq's chief export now that its oil pipelines have been sabotaged beyond functionality. If only the media were reporting the positive developments, it's argued, the public would stop questioning whether the effort is worth the deaths of two or three brave Americans a day. Unfortunately, the same people who bellow bellow one of the voices of cattle. Usually refers to the arrogant call of the bull used to announce territorial rights. Abnormalities of the voice include hoarseness as in rabies, or continuous repetition as in nervous acetonemia. See also low, moo. that the media are ignoring the good news become suspiciously quiet when it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a to say what that good news is. Fox News, The Weekly Standard, the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, and other war supporters run occasional features on Good News You're Not Hearing, but it's clear the real attraction is the "not hearing" rather than the "good news." Like the rest of the press, pro-war media outlets spend more time on battle deaths, terror attacks, and an insurgency in·sur·gen·cy n. pl. in·sur·gen·cies 1. The quality or circumstance of being rebellious. 2. An instance of rebellion; an insurgence. insurgency, insurgence 1. whose death throes throe n. 1. A severe pang or spasm of pain, as in childbirth. See Synonyms at pain. 2. throes A condition of agonizing struggle or trouble: a country in the throes of economic collapse. are entering a third year with no end in sight. At press time, Iraq was planning a third post-invasion election and the Bush administration had published a "victory strategy"--positive events that got full media coverage. So what's this good news we keep hearing about not hearing about? According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. National Review's Crawford, an electrical plant in Nineveh "that had not been used for several years" has been turned back on after a $3 million renovation; the first of a planned 120 family health centers has been opened in Baghdad; and 15.7 kilometers of roads in Samawah have been paved. According to a newsletter from the U.S. Central Command, a grant for rehabilitating a road will lead to employment for 60 Iraqis; work "continues" on Al-Sadder Stadium; and a Wassit Internet center will benefit persons with disabilities. But these accomplishments are a pittance pit·tance n. 1. A meager monetary allowance, wage, or remuneration. 2. A very small amount: not a pittance of remorse. compared to the progress that's been made in the area of America's greatest genius: public schools. Did you know that 58 Iraqi teachers, supervisors, and administrators attend training to improve teaching methods ? That Centcom's Model Schools training program "shows continued success in preparing secondary school teachers"? That a new primary school is being built in the Qadisiyah governorate? That's what you've bought with more than $220 billion and 2,000 American lives: a set of process-oriented half-measures so humble they wouldn't have made it into a Brezhnev-era progress report to the Supreme Soviet. War supporters counter that while these achievements may look pathetic to Americans, they're vital to Iraqis. That may or may not be true, but the point is whether this stuff is worth it to Americans. Can any American worthy of the name suggest that public-works boondoggles in a foreign country are worth a red cent red cent n. Informal Insignificant value: not worth a red cent. Noun 1. red cent or a drop of American blood? The story isn't that the media ignore the good news out of hatred for President Bush. It's that, just as in the prewar period, the media are doing the president a huge favor. If the good news were regularly circulated, if the American people were daily presented with the idea that this is what success looks like and that teacher training programs are the payoff for a grim toll of blood and treasure, they'd be abandoning the war effort even faster than they are now. Tim Cavanaugh
Tim Cavanaugh is the Web editor of the Los Angeles Times opinion page. (tcavanaugh@reason.com) is reason's Web editor. |
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