freediver wrote on Jul 8
th, 2014 at 11:23pm:
10 pages eh? I guess you won't have any trouble quoting me then.
Here's your take on a protest that was literally impossible to see past all the freedom, peace and democracy placards:
freediver wrote on Feb 1
st, 2014 at 8:10pm:
I am suspicious because I have not heard anything about freedom or democracy from them, and the words were not used on any of their placards.
FD: protest was not about democracy because there was only one (oversized) democracy placard...
freediver wrote on Feb 8
th, 2014 at 11:20am:
Obviously if their main interest was democracy, there would have been more democracy placards.
Yes FD - obviously

Any more requests for embarrassing quotes?
freediver wrote on Jul 8
th, 2014 at 11:23pm:
Quote:
The sunnis have been effectively excluded from the "democracy" in Iraq
How?
Its called "de-Baathification" - read up on it.
Ooop! Sorry, I almost forgot - you don't look stuff up.
Here you go...
Quote:The prime minister emphasized Shia dominance in state institutions and has changed the dynamics of Shia politics. In his second term, Maliki took advantage of deficits in power-sharing agreements. Using the powerful patronage available to him as chief executive, he pursued a policy of “divide and rule” in dealing with other parties. He filled vacant positions in the military and administration with his loyalists and augmented the powers of his office and of networks related to him personally, thereby creating a kind of “shadow state” within the government. He gave more influence to independent commissions such as the de-Baathification committee, the Communication and Media Commission, the Iraqi Media Network, the Central Bank of Iraq, and the Commission of Integrity. He managed to greatly subjugate the federal court and forge an alliance with its chief that helped him encircle his opponents and weaken their ability to check his power through the parliament. The fact that Iraq is a rentier state and the Iraqi economy is largely dependent on oil revenue has also tended to empower the executive branch and those forces that seek to establish a more centralized state.
http://carnegieendowment.org/2014/04/17/iraq-s-sectarian-crisis-legacy-of-exclus...The US sidelined sunnis from the start, which led to the revolt in Fallujah, and the protracted sunni insurgency. Maliki has further institutionalised it by cementing power though his "shadow state" described above. What little representation sunnis might enjoy in a functioning parliamentary democracy is well and trully rendered useless by Maliki's effective curtailing of Parliament's ability to check his power.