Monday, September 26, 2005

The big picture

Michael Barone wrote in Townhall It's often hard to keep the big picture in focus. Television news tends to center on bombs going off in Iraq and has mostly ignored several million people voting in Afghanistan. We see footage of angry Palestinians, but not much about the ongoing progress toward democracy in Egypt.

That is a combination of two causes:
  • The MSM's hatred of Bush, and wanting to take any opportunity to hurt him, and
  • The journalistic philosophy of "if it bleeds, it leads"
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in turn have dominated the news and have made it difficult to get a sense of what is happening in the world. A world spinning out of control: That is what the old-line broadcast networks seem to be showing us.
Because that is what they want you to see.
But I see other patterns. George W. Bush has consistently asserted that one reason for removing Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq was to advance freedom and democracy in the Middle East. In spite of the improvised explosive devices, that seems to be happening. Lebanon's Cedar Revolution was as inspiring an example of people power as the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Libya has dismantled its weapons of mass destruction. Egypt, by far the largest Arab nation, had its first contested election this month, and, as the Washington Post's David Ignatius writes from Cairo, "the power of the reform movement in the Arab world today ... is potent because it's coming from the Arab societies themselves and not just from democracy enthusiasts in Washington." Which is evidence that Bush was right: Muslims and Arabs, like people everywhere, want liberty and self-rule. Afghanistan has just voted, and Iraq is about to vote a second time this year. Violence continues, but the more important story is that democracy and freedom are advancing.

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