Sunday, June 21, 2009

30 Seconds of Twitter

THE ABSURD TIMES



In case you don't bother with Twitter and yet have heard a great deal about it lately, there is a post of only 30 seconds on Twitter. By the time I captured it, less that 5 seconds, 34 more entries. One has to be a real masochist to follow this.

An important point: Although most entries are in favor of a new election, that has little to do with the reall point. In addition, it is hardly representative. Only the computer literate, and amongst that group, thos able to use proxy servers and the like, wind up posting. In addition, one can not tell whether the poster is in Iran or not.
The incumbent's supporters are not likely to be in this group. It is a class divide as well as an age one.
For those of you at the site itself, I didn't bother to try to upload all the photos (IDs) that preceed each "tweet".
Just to be fair about this whole thing, following is an excerpt from "fivethirtyeight", Nate Silver's site. He is the most accurate statistical analyst around, so I usually believe him, even if intuitively I disagree and don't like the result. One example, did you knw that the larger the population you are measuring, the smaller the sample you need to be reliable? I shit you not. I didn't believe it either until I had to work out the proof.

Real-time results for #Iranelection

34 more results since you started searching. Refresh to see them.
  1. Default_profile_normal michellecohan #IranElection http://dwarfurl.com/639bf less than 10 seconds ago from web
  2. 4762_105107219320_630899320_1792198_7140486_n_normal zapataser #iranelection Moussavi calls twitter "the voice of infidel Santa followers" less than 10 seconds ago from web
  3. Bum36_normal HassieHoa #iranelection #neda Solidarnosc. haha http://tinyurl.com/ny9eet less than 10 seconds ago from twitterfeed
  4. 6a00d83451c45669e2011571177d0d970b-500wi_normal Beomoose RT from Iran: CORRECTION: #neda's funeral ceremony tomorrow 4:30 pm MASJED e REZA, NILOOFAR SQ. #iranelection less than 10 seconds ago from web
  5. 4234_normal donnacd marg bar basij Iranian army about to come out on protestors' side?? #iranelection #neda less than 10 seconds ago from web
  6. Free-iran_thumb_normal lauraorem "Suppressing ideas never succeeds in making them go away." Pres. Obama #iranelection less than 20 seconds ago from web
  7. 2901_normal doshaugh RT from Iran: She has been identified as Neda Soltani a philosophy student. Please update. #iranelection #Neda REST IN PEACE NEDA SOLTANI less than 20 seconds ago from web
  8. Penguins2_normal twopencer #IranElection RT - VOA-Persia has goodcoverage of the clashes in Tehran for all Hotbird Satellite viewers RT less than 20 seconds ago from web
  9. Untitled_normal araz_233 فائزه هاشمی آزاد شد http://bit.ly/3Bgldn #iranelection less than 20 seconds ago from web
  10. Green-avatar3_normal minerva_a #iranelection 24 reporters arrested according to New York Times less than 20 seconds ago from web
  11. Bum36_normal HassieHoa Regime change BY Iranians (not Bush or Netanyahu) - Dawn with Khamenei #iranelection #neda ohhhh yea! http://tinyurl.com/lgx3e4 less than 20 seconds ago from twitterfeed
  12. Bear-avatar-green_normal davyde RT @madyar: عبدالله مومنی همین الان بازداشت شد #iranelection #neda less than 20 seconds ago from Seesmic Desktop
  13. N109538533763_5113_normal AliSafaei NEDA befor she was shothttp://bit.ly/u4SQU #iranelection less than 20 seconds ago from web
  14. Half70__normal faronak revolutionary road... http://bit.ly/17bnCv #Iranelection less than 20 seconds ago from web
  15. Green_8187_img_0078_normal quillh RT @EShahan The power is ALWAYS with the people if they choose to exercise it, for their numbers are in the millions #iranelection #Foucault less than 20 seconds ago from TweetDeck
  16. Stand_iran_bigger_normal_normal fresherv RT Ppl now chanting "Death to Khamanei (supreme leader)" #iranelection less than 20 seconds ago from web
  17. Green_ribbon_bigger_normal Desech RT @StopAhmadi "The regime uses violence, the ppl protest peacefully & w/ dignity" #iranelection half a minute ago from web
  18. Screenshot002_normal VinnyTheAlien Gunfire heard in northern Tehran (Reuters) http://tinyurl.com/9ebspp #iranelection #iranelections #gr88 half a minute ago from web
  19. Green_3011_img01003_1__normal Zachattack25 CONFIRMED: CNN's Last report has been kicked out of Iran!!!! #iranelection #gr88 half a minute ago from web
  20. Default_profile_normal IranPoll No vote rigging..no corruption live results http://poll.fm/10yxk #iranelection half a minute ago from web
*******************************************************************************

6.19.2009

The Ayatollah's Flawed Logic

I don't know how many people caught this expression of logic from Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in his call for an end to the protests over the electoral outcome in Iran. As reported by the BBC:

Responding to allegations of electoral fraud, the ayatollah insisted the Islamic Republic would not cheat.

"There is 11 million votes difference," the ayatollah said. "How one can rig 11 million votes?"
This particular argument is not unique to the Ayatollah. It has also been used by some Western observers such as Flynt Leverett (emphasis mine):
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Still many people, including in Washington, have expressed skepticism as to the validity of the results.

Leverett: I am a little surprised by the margin, too. But that makes me more comfortable about the overall validity of the election. Look at the irregularities Mousavi is citing now: that they ran out of ballot paper in some polling precincts, that they did not keep some polls open long enough. There is no way such things could change the overall outcome which is clearly in favor of Ahmadinejad. If you compare this to the flaws of the presidential election in Florida in 2000, it seems very insignificant.
Leverett and Ayatollah are arguing from an ironically Western conception of how to rig an election. In the United States, it is actually rather difficult to steal an election: because of our federalist system, elections are monitored and voting totals are reported by hundreds or thousands of individual officials at the state, county, and precinct levels. There is therefore a rather substantial marginal cost to stealing additional votes: you have to recruit some number of additional people into the conspiracy, and hope they don't rat you out or leave some kind of paper trail that makes obvious your intention. It is probably not that difficult to find a few corrupt (but competent) stooges who will help you out, but for each additional vote that you want to steal, you have to go lower down the food pyramid, soliciting the help of people who are less loyal and might undermine your plan.

But this is simply not the case in Iran. All votes are counted are reported by the Interior Ministry. There is no other source of information. There are no election monitors. Nor does the fraud alleged involve any sort of physical process (e.g. stuffing ballot boxes). It is simply a matter of changing numbers on a spreadsheet. Under these conditions, it is essentially no more difficult to steal a thousand votes than one, a million than a thousand, or 11 million than one million.

The only constraints, rather, are perceptual: certain vote totals might be more or less likely to trigger protests and unrest. It is probably easy to identify those voting margins that are most likely to trigger unrest: one would be to claim to have won the election (or secured enough votes to avoid a run-off) by exactly one vote; the other would be to claim to have won the election with 100 percent of the vote. In the former case, you would almost certainly wind up being subject to a recount, and any one report of irregularities could undermine your claim. In the latter, your claim would a laughable on its face, and every single Iranian who had voted against you would know that his vote had been stolen and would take to the streets.

It is less clear the margin of victory that minimizes the risk of unrest. But one can posit a curve that looks something like this:



I'd imagine there's a fairly broad sweet spot somewhere between about 55 percent of the vote and 75. Totals below 55 percent might trigger piecemeal scrutiny of irregularities and/or otherwise embolden your opponents, either of which could ultimately cost you the "victory". A claim to having won more than 75 percent of the vote would stretch credibility in an ethnically diverse country where there is clearly a lot of political disagreement; you'd have gotten too greedy. Ahmadinejad's claim to have won 63 percent of the vote falls somewhere in this sweet spot. That doesn't mean he stole the election -- but it also doesn't mean that he didn't.

73 comments

Greener said...

I don't really understand how you constructed this curve, there is really no basis for postulating a maximum, or even that there is a single maximum.

It seems totally pointless to me to assume any curve shape whatsoever.

johnzep said...

I would think the curve depend not on the actual vote, but on the difference between the commonly expected results and the reported results.

The Iranian election seemed to be on the order of a 30-40 points net swing compared to what most people expected. That's probably outside the sweet spot.

Doctor Who said...

Well, Nate, why don't you go over to Iran and speak with Khamenei or Ahmadinejad face to face? Present your case to them face to face and explain to them how the election seems fishy on this side of the world based on empirical evidence. I'm sure you'll be received well.

Charles said...

"It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything." - Joseph Stalin

Nasarius said...

What about the perception, apparently held by both Iranians and the Western media, that this was going to be a close election?

Your curve is probably only accurate if there is little or no reliable data (polling). Otherwise, the "sweet spot" (ie, believable results) is probably going to be within a fairly narrow range of what is expected.

One can't go back and rerun historical experiments, but it does seem like a result of, say, 55-40 may not have generated such an overwhelming backlash.

Zach said...

The point isn't that the 11 million margin means the totals weren't fabricated, it's that the 11 million margin means new anecdotes about broken seals on ballot boxes and running out of ballots aren't sufficient to account for the swing.

I also don't know the details, but Mousavi did have monitors in polling places to some extent. Here's an article from the day of the election in which Mousavi himself talks about difficulties faces by his monitors: http://televisionwashington.com/floater_article1.aspx?lang=en&t=1&id=11221

The problem is that Mousavi's original claim was that he really won 2/3 of the votes (stated before the polls closed) and that the announced result was a fabrication. As analysis here has pointed out, there's no concrete evidence of fabrication in the numbers. Now we're hearing claims of broken ballot boxes, etc.

Of course none of this means the announced results are actually legitimate.

Me, not you said...

Absolutely! Thanks Nate!

liberal_defender_of_freedom said...

I remember hearing the other day they had decided to recount one region. Was there ever a result of this recount?

Sean Fitzpatrick said...

Jack Kennedy once quoted his father as saying "Don't buy one more vote than is necessary. I'll be damned if I'm going to pay for a landslide."

Some connections.

T. S. Bragdon said...

I think it's clear that the numbers were fudged. It's definitely easier to make the election a landslide victory than to 'keep it close,' especially if Mousavi really did win by such a big margin. In other words, it would be really hard to make the numbers work out if they wanted to keep the vote close, and it would open up the recount challenge as a real means to getting into office.

Close elections aren't as suspicious even with fraud and intimidation, e.g. 2000 Bush v. Gore, than a landslide victory in an oppressive state with a now dead official claiming a vastly different vote tally.

STepper said...

The best evidence of fraud appears to be circumstantial.

First, the speed with which millions of paper ballots were "counted." (Sure, there was only the one name on there, but the ballots were flimsy pieces of folded paper rather than stiff cardboard, and merely opening them and recording the votes should have taken a couple of days.)

Second, the speed with which the alleged final vote count was certified. It's supposed to take 3 days. Here it was done in 1, reminiscent of the fraudsters getting out of Dodge right after they got the sucker's money.

The Repuboican response, by the way, remains pathetic. If Obama had done what they propose -- before they proposed it -- they would have slammed him for inserting the U.S. into a foreign election and jeopardizing the lives of the protestors, as well as the possible success of the protestors.

Juris said...

My gut tells me that Khamenei didn't want to leave anything to chance, so he doubled up on the process -- getting locals (officials, mullahs) to steer voters toward Ahmadinejad, getting "favorable" counts at the municipal level, making additional "unintentional errors" as the municipal votes were tallied at the next level.

The evidence by Mebane in particular for a fairly massive "non-natural" factor in the vote outcome is quite persuasive, even if he himself hasn't declared with certainty that the outcome is a fraud.

Zach said...

@Stepper

I don't get the "speed of the count" critique. The vote came in at a slower pace than many American states, and the ballot was far simpler. A single person can count several hundred votes an hour. Unless we learn more about how votes are (or are claimed to be) counted, this seems premature.

Of course, there's the separate fact that the announcement of the victor came after only a fraction of the vote totals were in. This might've made sense statistically base on early returns or something, but it's undoubtedly fishy.

beatingredlights said...

@Walker I think everyone knows that the republican strategy right now is to harp on the needs of Americans for INSTANT GRATIFICATION. The GOP is just Grazing Onthe Pasture.

Keep trying, but while you are trolling the interwebs, try to make a comment that is remotely relevant to the topic, e.g. Obama is tip-toeing on this issue and therefore will give in to Iran's whims-- which he won't.

I'd like to see the US like France during the American Revolution. Once it's remotely viable and the people are fighting against tyranny, we will assist. Of course, I don't think that logic applies in this world.

If anything (and fearfully, nothing), we'll see Obama work the UN for a coalition.

Michael said...

The protests aren't about the election anymore, they have broadened into a general sense of having had enough oppression, and wanting the kinds of freedoms that much if the rest of the world has. The vote margin has nothing to do with the protests today, tomorrow, and in the coming weeks.

bruce b. said...

Nate said:

<< But this is simply not the case in Iran. All votes are counted are reported by the Interior Ministry. There is no other source of information. There are no election monitors. Nor does the fraud alleged involve any sort of physical process (e.g. stuffing ballot boxes). It is simply a matter of changing numbers on a spreadsheet. Under these conditions, it is essentially no more difficult to steal a thousand votes than one, a million than a thousand, or 11 million than one million. >>

Are these claims true? the SUBSTANCE of how the vote could have been stolen have not been reported by the press. Let's examine your claims:

-- "All votes are counted and reported by the interior ministry. There is no other source of information. There are no election monitors."

At some level, this is misinformed. Rasfanjani was boasting before the election of the monitoring system he had set up. This was covered extensively in the Western press. Moussavi's people have complained about some of their monitors being interfered with.

-- "Nor does the fraud alleged involve any sort of physical process (e.g. stuffing ballot boxes)."

Stuffing of ballot boxes was the main accusation of fraud in 2005.

-- "It is simply a matter of changing numbers on a spreadsheet."

Is there a paper trail? How does the Guardian Council do a "selected" recount with no paper trail? If there is a paper trail, how is it a matter of simply "changing numbers on a spreadsheet"?

In fact, I don't think we know very much at this point about how Iranian elections are conducted, which is amazing. The press should look into these real questions, and determine whether or not Ayatollah Khamanie has a good point (it seems to me he does, but what do I know?):

-- can independent observers from the various candidates check to see if the ballot boxes are empty when they arrive at the polling places?

-- are voters checked off some list as they arrive? can observers from the candidates verify this process?

-- what is the process for "closing the polls" (i.e. opening the ballot boxes)? what happens to the ballots then?

-- when are the ballots at each opf the 45,000 polling places actually first counted? are they shipped before counting?

-- how is the count from each polling place reported and recorded?

There are more questions to be asked. Let's ask REAL questions, Nate, instead of drawing out-of-your-head curves with no actual numbers.

liberal_defender_of_freedom said...

7:30am eastern time tomorrow will be a telling moment when the scheduled Mousavi rally was scheduled to take place. I have not heard of Mousavi telling his supporters to not show up yet.

STepper said...

Zach

The votes were on a single piece of paper, folder in half (or quartered). This paper is not conducive to an easy or quick count. What kind of a paper ballot is used in the States? It's generally a piece of stiff or cardboard type paper, which is much easier to handle.

I wouldn't compare the ease with which precincts in the United States can count their paper ballots with the way the folded piece of paper is counted in Iran.

While there were other reported deficiencies (including Mousavi's election monitors being sent home), it appears the ballots were all sent to a central location to be *cough, cough* counted. And that they were then counted at a record speed. About as long as it took to create the phony numbers supporting the little Hitler's landslide.

interstices said...

I like the nuts and bolts questions from bruce b as this election in another country is a black box to us. Perhaps it is also to those in Iran.

The video clips, what few I saw, showed what looked like chaotic polling places. Not the staid, organized American type election where the blue-haired ladies take over the gym of the local school for a 12 hour voting period.

Nate, I must quibble about that graph because the Y axis should point the other direction. The protest risk should increase as one moves further away from the axis. Alternatively, you could keep the same shape of curve and label it "chance of getting away with stealing the election"

Dragan said...

@STepper
How long did it take to count and certify votes in previous elections?

John said...

My problem with the graph is that it seems to presuppose a two-horse race. Most people were not expecting any candidate to obtain a clear majority of votes.

Zach said...

@Stepper

Regardless of how the votes are counted, a person can count hundreds within an hour at a (very reasonable) 10 seconds per vote. A two person team could unfold votes a couple seconds per vote and then tally them at about the same rate. This is a reasonable estimate. According to an AP article on Monday, the votes were tallied in 12 hours. At 360 votes/counter/hour (10 seconds/vote) it would require 10,000 counters to tally these votes in that amount of time.

When you say, "It appears that the ballots were all sent to a central location," what are you basing this on? If, indeed, the ballots from across a gigantic country were brought to a single, central location before counting, the announced totals are obviously absurd. I don't know that this is the case, and very much doubt that this is the case. According to the AP article, this election was fully counted in about half the time it took in previous elections. It's suspicious, but really compelling evidence of fraud.

Zach said...

Above, I'm assuming votes weren't counted until after polls closed. If counting was going on throughout the day, it's very reasonable to count 40e6 votes within 12 hours of poll closing with counters numbering a tiny fraction of the total population.

bruce b. said...

The counting process is simplified as there was only one question on the ballot, as I understand it: who do you want as President? So "counting" consists of putting the ballots in one of 4 piles (5 piles, I guess, one for blank/ indetermined). It is then very easy to count each pile.

Nosimplehiway said...

Is the graph based on research by a political scientist? Or is it just a best guess way of graphically illustrating the concept of a fraud sweet spot. (ie POOMA data)

It's my hunch that the most likely elections to trigger protests would be where a majority opinion in a highly contentious election loses due to weird events. For example, the failure of mainstream parties to form electoral coalitions, thereby splitting the mainstream vote in a crowded field and allowing a far fringe party to gain power, with a minority of the vote. Losing the usual way is one thing, but the public does not respond well to Black Swan events. (imperfect example, but the US Presidential Election, 1860, in which Lincoln only got 39% of the popular vote, but a solid majority in the electoral college)

I think the second most likely elections to lead to unrest would be very closely contested ones, such as Florida 2000, in which the inherent MoE in elections, which most people aren't even aware of, becomes apparent to the general public.

These two instances are exactly why many election rules require a run-off in case no one gets an absolute majority.

Intuitively, I would think that of all the elections run in the world, or in that region, that the least likely ones to trigger riots would be results over 90%. By the time a state has those sorts of results either the election draws little notice from the public because the opposition failed to field a candidate (eg GOP primaries for state offices in the Deep South, circa 1920) or the authorities are so iron-fisted that voting for the opposition and demonstrating in the streets are equally unthinkable (eg North Korea, 2009).

So, I doubt the chart illustrating risk of protests is likely to be of a bell shape at all. It should start very low, showing a high risk of protests at low winner's shares of the vote. Then the line would rise steadily, showing less risk of protests (please, god, next time flip your Y-axis, Nate, this is too confusing. lol) as it passes through 30%, 40%, 50%. After about 55% or 65% the line should shoot through the roof, indicating little or no chance of protests.

Now all this goes out the window if the electoral process itself is in serious doubt as it seems to be in Iran, but that would be a whole other chart, with two variables: degree of confidence in the electoral process' ability to accurately express the preference of potential protesters (not all voters, the winner's supporters don't figure in this, they won't protest) and the resulting likelihood of protests. The final election returns on that chart would be immaterial. If a candidate manages to win with 10%, 50% or 90% of the vote, but the public agrees that it was an accurate reflection of the will of those who voted (even if the will was coerced, you can get lots of votes by saying, "Vote for me, or I'll send you to the gulag."), then no protests. But if a candidate wins with 10%, 50% or 90% of the vote, and the public believes the election did not properly reflect popular will due to fraud, machine failure, restrictive registration rules or coercion, there will then likely be protests, except of course in authoritarian regimes. But those protests are not about the election results, they are about the supposed corruption of the electoral system itself.

footstep said...

Nate, is this piece lacking a final conclusion? - one that would go like this: "What the alleged 63% victory indicates is that if it was indeed invented, then the figure was created precisely with the above graph in mind. I.e. it potentially served, according to the logic of the regime, as the most believable result that could be created. Not too close to undemine the regime, and yet not so sweeping as to arouse too much suspicion. If one were trying to simply steal an election, then the results wouldn't matter, but the veneer of believability is optimally served by the 63% figure, and that in itself makes 63% a suspiciously perfect number."

Richard said...

First, I have to agree with interstices' critique of the graph. The Y-axis needs to be fixed.

The bigger flaw with this curve is that is it overestimates the danger to Ahmadinejad of a close race. If, as this post speculates, Ahmadinejad could set the vote totals as he wanted, he would be able to control both his own and his opponents' totals. Not only that, but the Guardian Council would be much more justified in denying a recount if the results were more plausible. In any case, he cannot lose. The only threat to him, then, is of suspicion; the higher the suspicion, the more danger to him.

Just as in any form of cheating, the optimal result is the closest result that can ensure a win. And if one knows one's opponent's hand, that makes it all the easier. If I am stacking a deck and know that you will hold two pair, I should arrange a set for myself. Any higher hand only increases the risk of suspicion with no payoff.

beatingredlights said...

@Richard "Just as in any form of cheating, the optimal result is the closest result that can ensure a win."

That may be true for card games where slight of hand is key, but in elections, close elections arose much more scrutiny. Also, it would not give the cheater much clout.

If you are going to steal an election, you go big.

beatingredlights said...

BTW, I think there's a big difference between cheating in an election and stealing the election.

We should be careful about the difference. For example, IMO Repubs cheated in 2000 and 2004, but it was a close election... so heads or tails.

Zach said...

Also, consider that if the number was grabbed out of thin air, it was likely picked to almost exactly match Ahmadinejad's haul in the 2005 run-off. Iranians were given a choice between a hardliner and a relative moderate in 2005 and 62% of them chose Ahmadinejad. Unless that result was also fabricated, it's difficult to buy that this result is unbelievable. Do we have the run-off results by province yet?

Doctor Who said...

It's looking more and more like Nate is just making up shit as he goes on this Iran deal.

How appropriate is it that my word verification is 'prove'? As in, Nate, can you prove any of this mularkey that you suggest or are you just pulling stuff out of your ass?

Ubermonkey said...

It's more correct to talk about the "Supreme Leader" of Iran rather than the "Ayatollah", because he is not the only one.

Richard said...

@beatingredlights

I am not saying that there cannot be other reasons for wanting a wide margin. As you imply, the most likely of these would seem to be sending a message of power to the opposition and avoiding close scrutiny or a recount.

What I am saying is that risk of protest is not one of those reasons for wanting a wide margin. In fact, it is quite the opposite.

beatingredlights said...

@Richard

OK. Then we agree on that point.

Interesting Op-Ed in the TIMES: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/19/opinion/19shane.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss

Mike in Maryland said...

Something else to consider:

It's one thing to have more voters than ballots available (the 'shortage of ballots at a precinct' that almost every election has faced somewhere).

It's an entirely different thing to have more votes that voters registered to vote in a particular area.

Rachel Maddow reported Thursday night (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#31435624) that according to the Aiyanda (sp?) Iranian News web site, at least 30 Iranian towns reported turnout of voters to be more than 100% of the number of people registered to vote, and three towns were mentioned in particular:

Chadegan had a turnout of 120%
Kohrang had a turnout of 132%
Taft had a turnout of 141%

Notational errors on the tally sheets? Double voting? Double counting?

Who knows, but it is a good indication that something was rather amiss in several locations. And who's to say that the opposite did not happen in other locations, where 90% of the registered persons voted, but only 75% of the votes actually cast were counted?

In any event, as much as I dislike Ahmadinejad, is Mousavi that much better? After all, he was one of the leaders of the Iranian Revolution; and as Prime Minister from 1981 to 1989 worked with many of the current leaders of the Iranian government. For instance, (current) Supreme Leader Grand Ayatollah Khamenei was President of Iran while Mousavi was Prime Minister.

In my mind, I view it as similar to a choice between Hitler and Mussolini. If just those two were on a ballot and you had to choose between one or the other, most would prefer Mussolini, But in reality, most (especially those outside the 'election territory') would prefer neither.

Mike in Maryland

My Blogger ID is http://www.blogger.com/profile/02848893412251095965

Milltycoon said...

I think that many of the speculations here pre-suppose that the Supreme Leader had a diabolically keen mind in the way he fixed the election. "Ah, 63% is the perfect number to properly stage a riot-proof result." But everything about this event shows massive incompetence in perpetrating this fraud. If he had announced the winner 3 or 4 days after the vote (what was his hurry?), and it had been a closer 53% to 46% win (why did he need to make an 11M vote landslide when he could have made it a very solid 2M margin?), and Ahmedinejad hadn't dominated the cities and Mousavi's home town (the only result GUARANTEED to arouse suspicion),and the country had not instantly shut down all communication lines and thrown out all journalists, would we all have concluded that the election must have been fixed? It would have been disappointing to those of us rooting for the slightly less evil maniac (for a position with virtually no power anyway), but we and most Iranians would have accepted the result, just as outraged Californians do not think the Prop 8 vote was "rigged" even though they are saddened by it. All of this leads me to believe that, while the stated results may or may not adhere to a logical graph of an adeptly stolen election, Khamenei is too stupid to have been thinking about any logical, shrewd plan. It is as though he wrote the "give me all of the bank's money" note on his own personal stationery and then tried to escape on foot with wet paint on the bottom of his shoes.

Nosimplehiway said...

Maybe the protests for change are simply a demographic imperative. It could just be that a segment of the Iranian people were ready and primed for unrest, and waiting for a precipitating event. Had the election looked more fair, they would eventually have protested over inflation or women's rights or an accidental killing by the police or whatever. Even if Mousavi had been declared the winner, there would still be an un-democratic Grand Council and Supreme Leader holding the real power and the morality police would still be the regime's thugs in the streets.

The country has a very young population with easy access to more liberal ideas, but a minority of the population are older people who fought the previous armed ideological struggle, and hold strict hardline beliefs in opposition to the views of the youth. Inflation is high, after a period of relative prosperity. Social and cultural change has been moving forward quickly for a segment of the population, while another segment clings to the stagnant lifestyles of the past. There is a large, well-educated class of urbanites living under a government which is perceived as undemocratic, arrogant, staid, out of touch and needlessly confrontational in foreign affairs. (I mean Tehran in 2009, not the US in 1968. It would be easy to be confused.)

With or without a suspicious election, was there any possible outcome other than protests and unrest?

PeteKent said...

Obama it seems cannot make up hi mind on freedom and individual liberty. Whether it be in Iran or here in America.

Could it be he truly is not a democrat?

It has been well-chronicled how he has given the back of his hand to the Gay Rights movement and it is equally apparent that he will appoint ideologues to high office like Sibelius who recieved tens of thousands of support from murdered baby-killer "doctor" Tiller and like Sonia Sotomayor who is a blatant racist with demonstrated animus agains white males.

Sotomayor is obviously biased in favor of woman's rights as illustrated by her memebership in an exclusionary, radical feminist group from which she has just been pressured to resign.

http://tinyurl.com/q9t7f4

It seems curious, therefore, that Obama would seek to put a radical feminsit on the highest Court but is utterly lukewarm in his support for woman's rights within the Arab world.

Most striking about the opposition is Iran today is its focus on woman's rights and the oppression females face within Iran. Yet Obama has virtually abandoned women in Iran and is implicitly condoning the repression of spontaneous outpouring of a desire for freedom.

You can draw a straight line from this to Obama's support of the marital rape law in Afghanistan, codifying Sharia law and permitting the opression of women and girls by males within their households.

It is an illusion to think that Obama is for freedom. He is not.

Obama is an authoritarian who wishes to imposes his vision of society on the rest of us. Where his notion of liberty facilitates that, fine. Where it does not, it must be abandoned to the greater good.

Just as Obama has turned his back on America's long history of support for indigenous freedom movements in the world (more of the "old ways"?), he is beginning to take away our domestic freedom of choice using his expanding control of the economy and our incomes as the way to force us to conform to conduct that he wishes to enforce.

This is a budding and insidious dictatorship. And should scare us all.

petekent01 (on twitter)

markymark said...

PK,

Those are just Limbaugh talking points.

But I shall only pick you up on one thing, as its really at the nub of your wrong headedness on all of this

'Just as Obama has turned his back on America's long history of support for indigenous freedom movements in the world'.

You what? What record is this? Sure Wilson spoke of 'self determination of nations' but his view of international relations was pretty much put into the garbage as soon as he had a stroke, and then the Dems lost the 1920 election. Nothing in the Cold War comes close to support for indigenous nations. Take The Vietnam War as an example. The main reason the US got involved was a fear of a popular revolution putting Vietnam in the hands of communists. (That is to say that the US went into Vietnam to support a corrupt regime against the popular will of the people.)

Its actually quite pathetic the way that the right are overstating there case against Obama. Maybe the left were guilty of the same thing vs Bush, but seriously, PK read your last post again, and ask yourself if you aren't coming off as a paranoid freak?

PeteKent said...

Markymark,

You have quite a selective memory.

If Obama were Prez, as a single example, his leadership would have ensured the continued enslavement of 100s of millions behind the iron curtain and would have propped up our number one enemy, the Soviet Union.

Now his ambilvalence about supporting a freedom movement in Iran, branding it as "meddling", serves only to prop up our number one enemy today, radical Islam.

The people of Iran and many others in the Islamic world long to throw of the medieval shackles of their oppressors. Freedom comes from self-interest.

America has always stood for the promotion of freedom and democracy.

You may think me paranoid, but that does not mean Obama does not have malicious intentions and that he is an authoritarian.

Other than on Fox no one is questioning this man and exploring his motives and the logical conclusion of his policies: enhanced state control over our lives. That only feeds on the paranoia.

Your knee jerk support of him is part of the problem and could likely help to assure our repression.

petekent01 (on twitter)

Breaking News: Protestors have just bombed the Ayatollah's tomb in Tehran. Obama issues call for "calm" and urges protestors to return to their homes and pray from the "Holy Koran".

PeteKent said...

I detect a shift in coverage that bodes ill for Obama.

This struggle in Iran is now being perceived as fundamentally a women's movement This is Obama's soft underbelly.

Me, not you said...

Happening in Iran a few minutes ago, lots of shooting. Possible bomb placed at Khomeini shrine (Al Jazeera reports it was government placed)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2009/06/090620_og_tehran_shooting.shtml

Me, not you said...

PK, BO has done more for Iran than anyone else, without a war, just a great speech in Cairo.

Bush spends a trillion, BO gives a speech and does more.

Nosimplehiway said...
This post has been removed by the author.
Nosimplehiway said...

If there is the slightest whiff of foreign meddling in Iranian affairs, the movement now afoot in Iran will fail. Why? Oh, I dunno....

1901: A British national buys up Iran's oil exploration rights, a deal in which Perisans would receive only 16% of the profits from their own oil.

1914: Persia, neutral during WWI, is invaded by British and Russian forces. The country is occupied until the end of the war.

1921: Britain supports a military coup d'etat in Persia.

1941: Iran, this time more literally neutral, is invaded by Britain and the Soviets to secure the oil fields and the rail link between the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea. They depose the ruler, Reza Shah Pahlavi and place his 22 year old son, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, on the peacock throne. (The guy we usually think of as "the shah" today.)

1943: In peace agreements that ended the war, all parties agreed that Iran should return to independence without outside interference. The Societ Union, after agreeing to this, did not remove their troops from northwestern Iran, instead establishing puppet soviet republics.

1946: The Soviets finally agree to withdraw from Iran in exchange for major oil concessions. They withdraw, the puppet states are overthrown and Iran cancels the oil deal with the Soviets.

1951: In the weak office of PM, in a constitutional monarchy, Mossadeq pushes for and wins a vote granting him more power. His government cancels the oil deal with the British and nationalizes Iran's oil.

1951: Mosaddeq is elected PM and recognizing his popularity, the Shah also names his Premier under Iran's constitutional monarchy. After attempts at renogotiation fail, Mosaddeq cancels the oil deal with British early and nationalizes Iran's oil.

1953: Mosaddeq wins a referendum granting the PM broader powers. The Americans, French, are Dutch are offered a share of the British oil monopoly if the nationalization was overturned and Mosaddegh was ousted. The CIA and MI6 achieve this through Operation Ajax, in which they openly orchestrated a coup. They placed the Shah back in full control. Madeline Albright has commented, "The Eisenhower administration believed its actions were justified for strategic reasons. ... But the coup was clearly a setback for Iran's political development. And it is easy to see now why many Iranians continue to resent this intervention by America in their internal affairs."

1960's and 1970's: The Shah insituted a program of westernization, but coupled it with quashing of internal dissent. His brutal internal enforcers is called SAVAK. Norman Schwarzkopf has said, " [the CIA operatives] trained virtually all of the first generation of SAVAK personnel."

1975: The Shah's political party, Rastakhiz, is founded with explicit support by the US. All Iranians are required by law to join the party and pay dues.

1979: Islamic Revolution.. we all know about this.

2007: US Presidential candidate McCain sings a song to supporters calling for the bombing of Iran, a country with which the US is not at war. A country which considers Al Qaeda a mortal enemy.

2009: The US Senate and House pass a resolution supporting massive demonstrations against the government in Iran.

Now, given the century of foreign invasion, meddling, coup d'etats, and economic exploitation, what exactly would our interference in Iranian affairs, even just a strong statement of support, achieve other than giving both governments a talking point to rile up their most conservative citizens?

Pragmatus said...

The flaw in Nate's argument is the supposition that there is some entity Iranians can appeal to in the face of irregularities or discontent. There is no such apparatus in Iran. The government is essentially the Supreme Leader—when he gets cranky enough, he turns the dogs loose, much as the Shah did. So Khamenei can make all sorts of silly, specious remarks in his speeches, and for him there will be no consequences, unless Hashemi Rafsanjani manages to persuade the Assembly of Experts (which he heads) that it's time to replace Khamenei with someone whose brainwaves aren't quite so brittle. This is highly unlikely, since Khamenei is regarded as one of the "three pillars" of the Islamic revolution of 1980. It would be like kicking Thomas Jefferson off Mt. Rushmore—not gonna happen.

My guess is that the protests will flare some today, a little less tomorrow, then go back underground. There is not enough impetus in Iran today for a major political upheaval.

PK Everything you "detect" bodes ill for Obama. I think your detector is on the fritz, the controls stuck on "Wishful Thinking".

PeteKent said...
This post has been removed by the author.
PeteKent said...

This struggle in Iran is now being perceived as fundamentally a women's movement. This is Obama's soft underbelly.

Mainstream feminists have long resented Obama because he displaced their best shot of putting a woman in the WH. He could have waited. Upstart.

The "tell" came right after his NATO summit press conference during his Euro trip at which he supported temporizing for victory in Afghanistan over the protection of woman's rights as a matter of law in that country

He essentially allowed the Afghani government freedom to enact any aspect of Sharia law, stating that he was in Afghanistan not to change that society, but to defeat Al Qaeda and all else was secondary. Never mind that pesky mindset and mind control of the Taliban that lead to the Fall of the Towers.

It was a breathtakingly ruthless statement of policy, worthy of Dick Chaney: Screw the women and girls, they can be raped and enslaved by their husband's and fathers, as long as we get to kick some Al Qaeda ass.


It would be a brilliant strategy of all anti-government forces in Iran coalesce around the issue of women's rights. Framed as a woman's movement how could Obama continue to take his ambivalent, measured tone, acting impotent and defeated by his nation's history? If he did, what a weenie he would be! A real wet noodle.

The Republicans would be wise to create its own feminist perspective. It should start by calling out the hypocrisy of Obama supporting women's rights in the US but not in the rest of the world. The validity of the principal rests in its universal application.

They should showcase Sarah Palin, the ultimate victim of the Fascist Left, a woman who rose to success based not on birth, or her marriage but on her own qualities and still fulfilling the role of wife and mother.

America loves a comeback story. Feminism needs a makeover and "reparations" must be paid to its victims. Sarah Palin can make good her claim of victim hood and demand an airing of her grievances. The Left has invested great power in this woman. She is now self-sustaining.

How and when she chooses to use her power is up to her. And versus Letterman you had to give the round to Palin. Letterman may have gotten his ratings, but at the cost of his likeability and at the exposure of his bias. Palin received the deserved apology but kept the issue focused on the general implications for the perception and treatment of women and girls in our society.

Again, the silence of the Left was deafening and I think defeating.

Command and control. Feminism, equal rights, are by-products, not goals in themselves of Obama's authoritarian vision. The bureaucratic state, carefully measuring with statistics must assure the greatest good for the people, as determined by a proportionate formula that is also subject to the bureaucratic processes.

Equality of Results.

I prefer Equality of Opportunity. The results always seem to follow that. It is the history of Republican postwar economic policy.

When government gets involved in economic allocations, the market reacts predictably and correctly to attempt to thwart them to the extent that the cost of evasion does not exceed the benefit. The net of all this are economies that are focused more on evasion of government regulation than on innovation and productivity, neither of which can flower in an economy that would tax them at first blush.


It seems we have come full circle.

The GOP economic argument is nearly flawless. Their problem is on the social issues. Our party must start with Feminism. The difference now is that the Republicans can find its feminist voice centered perhaps on respect for mother and family. It must expose the hypocrisy of Obama and the Left on the issue. Take control of feminism as a freedom issue and take it away from the "movement". Theirs is the hypocrisy that must be exposed.

Petekent01 (on twitter)

capt said...

Good piece with insight and thoughtful expression.

Thanks Nate!

And . . .

"The GOP economic argument is nearly flawless."

ROFLMFAO!

Thanks - a GREAT way to start the day is with a good laugh!

lolololololo

Rudy said...

So, is Obama still waiting to see which way the wind is blowing before finally do the right thing and strongly expressing support for fairness and liberty? His continuing equivocation is feckless.

beavis said...

What you and your master Limbaugh fail to realize is exactly what Nosimplehiway posted.

If it looks like the protesters are being supported by the US or any other country, they and the movement are dead.

For the time being, this will have to play out as it will.

It is a simple concept, even your tiny mind should be able to grasp it. Well, once Limbaugh figures it out, you will miraculously figure it out also.

Me, not you said...

Rudy-

Iranians are still very sensitive to America telling them what to do after the Shah. Even what Obama has done so far is being used in country to support Khameini.

Obama is playing Iran perfectly.

Purported video of ballot box stuffing: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FS6pbUDHjks

polls_apart said...

@PeteKent:
Your new-found concern for the hungry, gays, and feminists is truly touching. I find it interesting that your concern for feminism has to do with motherhood and family, not the workplace.

The only time you should go near a "wedge issue" is on a golf course! Better stay out of the rough, PK!

polls_apart said...

From Washington Post web-site

Obama to Iran: 'Stop All Violent and Unjust Actions'

Updated 2:51 p.m.
By Glenn Kessler
President Obama reacted to the unfolding events in Iran by issuing a statement calling on the government of Iran to "stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people."

The White House said the president had been monitoring the situation during the day, meeting repeatedly with senior advisers. But the statement largely echoed the president's measured response since the election crisis began a week ago.

"The Iranian government must understand that the world is watching," the president's statement said. "The universal rights to assembly and free speech must be respected, and the United States stands with all who seek to exercise those rights."

The president has not yet said whether he thinks the election was stolen but he hinted at that with a reference to "truth" in the later part of his statement.

"Martin Luther King once said -- 'The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.' I believe that. The international community believes that. And right now, we are bearing witness to the Iranian peoples' belief in that truth, and we will continue to bear witness," the president said.

The president also linked the response of the Iranian government to this crisis to its desire for a greater role in the region. "If the Iranian government seeks the respect of the international community, it must respect the dignity of its own people and govern through consent, not coercion," the president said.

polls_apart said...
This post has been removed by the author.
polls_apart said...

@PeteKent:
The above statement seems pretty clear to me. What else would you have the President do? Send the Marines? Bomb-bomb-bomb, bomb-bomb Iran?

polls_apart said...

@Pete Kent:
Anticipating your argument that the President should have said this a week ago:

(1) One week ago, there hadn't been any violence yet.

(2) If you can stand it, read nosimplehiway's post at 10:52 AM concerning the history of Western interference in Iran's affairs. Facts. History. Like spinach, they're good for you PK. Try some. Iran's experience with "The West" (and the Soviets) requires restraint in dealing with Iran now.

(3) If, indeed, it becomes necessary to go to war with Iran, restraint now will make it easier to justify such a step and gather allies in such an effort, should it come to pass.

Jason_M said...

Ahmad didn't steel or not steel the election. The Supreme Leader did.

Jason_M said...

I mean "steal." Jeez.

Mike in Maryland said...

Jason_M said...
Ahmad didn't steel or not steel the election. The Supreme Leader did.

The Supreme Leader stole it FOR Ahmadinejad, which in effect, means that Ahmadinejad DID steal the election.

Same as 2000 in the US - little shrub didn't directly steal the Florida vote. It was a combination of Katherine Harris, and when that wasn't enough, the Supreme Court finished off the deal.

In the end, who was the beneficiary? In Iran in 2009, it was Ahmadinejad; in the US in 2000, it was little shrub.

Mike in Maryland

My Blogger ID is http://www.blogger.com/profile/02848893412251095965

Marie said...

My understanding; every voting precinct voted roughly the same, @63%- making the mockery obvious.

Marie said...

Nosimplehiway : Yes, any US interference will make any movement in Iran illegitimate.

Cosa Nostradamus said...

.
Latest videos from Iran: Protests continue despite police assaults, woman killed.
.

BehSal said...

Nate,

What you say about the "counting" and not having monitors etc is simply not factual.

bruce b's questions about the tallying process in iran is really important.

They way it works is that the administrator of the election (the one that is in charge of the logistics, etc) is the interior ministry but the guardian council has --I think at least two-- representatives at each station.

also, each candidate can have a monitor at each station, and in the centers where votes are added up and spreadsheets are made.

Most importantly, the guardian council gathers the results and does the tallying for itself in Tehran. In fact, in 2005 when khatami's government was in place much of the quibble after the election was that the results were sneaked out of the guaradian council and announced in the state media before the "official result" was announced by the interior ministry!

So when Mousavi's (main?) argument is that a few of the stations were so and so, or that some of his monitors were not allowed, what the ayatullah says makes clear sense.

of course there are people who think that the guardian council and their local trustees are all ahmadinejad's friends or that they are acting as they are because they are held at gunpoint by the forces of the coup etc...


oh, and there is physical trail of everything with the signatures of the observers at every step in the election day and they are in one word quite anal about it.


Finally,
To the ignorants who are certain that the "boxes are gathered at one place and counted there": get a life."



j

Opus 132 said...
This post has been removed by the author.
Opus 132 said...

Face it,everybody who is quibbling about monitors,counters,folded or unfolded ballots,no ballots,early announcements,etc.,etc.,etc.

IF THIS ELECTION WEREN"T RIGGED,THE SUPREME LEADER WOULD BE DELIGHTED TO HAVE AN IMMEDIATE RECOUNT IN ORDER TO LAMBAST "THE GREAT SATAN AND ITS LACKEY STATES GREAT BRITAIN AND ISRAEL"!

But of course,as the election was rigged he can't possibly allow a recount.Case closed!

June 21, 2009 4:01 AM

Mike in Maryland said...

So, BehSal, if everything is on the up and up, how do you explain the reports of at least 30 municipalities of more than 100% of the registered voters voting (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#31435624)?

Or is the concept of "one person, one vote" not in vogue in Iran and certain other parts of the world?

Mike in Maryland

My Blogger ID is http://www.blogger.com/profile/02848893412251095965

markymark said...

PK,

Let me state here and now, that when Obama does something of which I dissaprove, I will state it here on this blog. You say I have 'knee jerk support of Obama' well you have a far more knee jerk opposition to him.

And to assume that American Policies freed Eastern Europeans from Soviet control is the most dodgy arguments you have ever made on this site. What exactly did any American President do to bring down the Iron Curtain??

And 'radical islam' in Iran? There has never been any evidence that Al Qaeda has any kind of serious foothold in Iran, as far as I can remember, if there is point me in its direction. Just because someone is Islamic and we don't like them does not make them a threat to the west. Again I am not aware of Ahmedinejad making any threats to the West at all. (With the possible exception of Israel). Its the 'them and us' mentality iof US foreign policy that is the biggest threat to the US, and thats what Obama's Cairo speech was about ending.

Dan said...

Chatham House, an independent UK think tank has posted their review of election results, including provincial cross-tabs from the 2005 election.

http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/files/14234_iranelection0609.pdf

One of their surprising findings -- 2005 Ahmadinjihad support did NOT come from rural areas -- but urban and suburban districts.

Also, voter turnout numbers are suspicious (duh), and Ahmadinjihad would have had to win almost all non-voters plus switch a significant portion of support from one of the Reform or Moderate candidates.

It. Does. Not. Make. Sense.

justin said...

PeteKent,

In one of your posts, you seemed to imply that, had Obama been president at the time, the Soviet Union would not have collapsed... You state that this is an "example", yet you not only fail to give any proof, you don't even offer an EXPLANATION of this very strong statement.

BTW, your usage of the phrase "knee-jerk" to describe an opinion that doesn't match your own isn't fair... you don't agree with a pro-Obama stance, and so you take the low road and simply declare that it's solely based on some unconsidered and thoughtless instinct.

These underhanded (and transparent) arguing tactics are all well and good for an incendiary radio host who only needs to focus on preaching to the choir while remaining controversial enough to keep people's interest, but they don't play very well in a forum that emphasizes rational and reasoned debate.

As to those claiming that Nate's chart lacks scientific basis, only one of you was really justified in pointing that out... I'm referring, of course, to Nate himself, who's usage of the phrase "But one can posit a curve that looks something like this" made it pretty clear that this chart was purely theoretical.

justin said...

"America loves a comeback story. Feminism needs a makeover and "reparations" must be paid to its victims. Sarah Palin can make good her claim of victim hood and demand an airing of her grievances. The Left has invested great power in this woman. She is now self-sustaining"

Sarah Palin didn't lose because of some left-wing conspiracy. She lost because she alienated most reasonable women (who her viewpoints do NOT coincide with), made an embarrasing fool of HERSELF on TV (say what you will about media being biased, I don't think that asking her about her favored newspaper is an unfair or at all difficult question), and by bringing nothing of any intellectual merit to the table (her debates consisted of ignoring the questions asked in favor of regurgitating McCain's talking points).

Self-sustaining? In case you hadn't noticed, her ratings, even in Alaska, plummeted during and after the national campaign. Even those Alaskans who were previously enamored with her realized she utterly failed the greater test that the national stage presented her with.

IMO, Obama is doing exactly what he should be doing in regards to Iran. Any direct involvement of the US would only give legitimacy to claims that the protests were engineered by the US. This is a fight of the Iranian people against their own government. If the US sent troops, then it would be an all-out war between two governments, with the people of Iran stuck in the middle. Many more would die, and all the ideals they are giving their lives for now would be tarnished.

PeteKent said...

Credit Where Credit is Due

This is now an indigenous internal uprising that has everything to do with the aspiration for freedom in Iran and little to do with world politics.

The flowering of this movement can be credited in part to both Presidents Obama and Bush.

Bush has created a democratic and stable Iraq that has largely abandoned its ambitions for more territory. The stability of Iraq and its reduced threat to Iran has allowed the people of Iran to think inwardly rather than outwardly as to where the threat lies.

Obama by his passivity has assured that this is not being seen as a pro-US movement or one being backed or instigated by us, thus disarming the foes of freedom from one of their greatest counter-arguments.

Still Obama's muted response seems oddly behind the curve and it would behoove him as leader of the free world to stand for those fighting for freedom while making clear that this is an issue of self-determination for the Iranians.

You would think with all his rhetorical strength he would be able to thread that needle.

Obama, it seems, is hamstrung by his own sense of unworthiness, his view of America as being part of the problem, not the solution.

Our leader had better develop some more self-confidence or he will risk becoming an irrelevance, contesting with the Jonas brothers for attention, but becoming less and less an influential figure in the world.

petekent01 (on twitter)

Mike in Maryland said...

Bush has created a democratic and stable Iraq

More LIES from PK.

Truck Bomb Kills Dozens in Northern Iraq (Actually it was at least 70 killed per the AP)
New York Times - Jun 20, 2009‎
(http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/21/world/middleeast/21iraq.html?ref=middleeast)

Military deaths (Five US deaths in the last week)
Kansas City Star - Jun. 20, 2009
(http://www.kansascity.com)/news/nation/story/1264098.html)

Round-up of Daily Violence in Iraq
McClatchy Washington Bureau - Jun 20, 2009‎
(http://www.mcclatchydc.com/iraq-daily-violence/story/70422.html)

Two British hostages die in Iraq
Times Online - Jun 21, 2009
(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/iraq/article6544245.ece)

And that's just from the first page of a Google news search, using 'bomb Iraq' for the search criteria, for the period May 22 to June 21, 2009.

"A stable Iraq" ??????????????????

What liquids or drugs have you ingested, PK ??????? They are certainly powerful stuff if you believe that Iraq is stable, let alone 'democratic'.

Mike in Maryland

My Blogger ID is http://www.blogger.com/profile/02848893412251095965

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