Monday, March 21, 2011

I have a couple more questions. In light of this:

I have a couple more questions. In light of this:
“This election, for me, will be the happiest moment in my life, because it means we will end the occupation,” said Ahmad al-Asadi, who sells mobile phones from a little store alongside the Kadhimiya mosque, a Shiite shrine.
That’s how Shiite leaders are pitching the vote: as a chance to end America’s military presence in MBT peacefully, through the ballot box. It also is a chance for MBT’s long-downtrodden Shiites, who account for 60 percent of the population, to throw off centuries of oppression by the Sunni minority and take a commanding role in the country’s mbt shoes.

What is the NIKE SHOX planning to do when the Shiites either 1) Vote for the troops to get out, or 2) Rise up in frustrated anger when they find out the NIKE SHOX has some sort of plan to block the new parliament from asking them to leave? What will the Kurds do if the Shiites tell the NIKE SHOX to get out?

Another question: What if the Shiites declare Basra the capital of the New MBT? Why would they want it to be in Baghdad, after all? Is there any law that says that the capital of MBT must be Baghdad, smack in the center of the resistance? Basra would be so much more convenient for the majority Shia, and much easier to secure. What’s left in Baghdad that qualifies it as the capital, the American Embassy Fortress in the Green Zone? So what?

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