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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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From: LindyBill3/27/2005 11:17:58 PM
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Instapundit - NOW THEY'RE MARCHING FOR DEMOCRACY IN MONGOLIA: That should make the neocon who authored these words very happy. . . .

This victory of freedom is practical, not ideological: billions of people on every continent are simply concluding, based on decades of their own hard experience, that democracy and markets are the most productive and liberating ways to organize their lives.

Their conclusion resonates with America's core values. We see individuals as equally created with a God-given right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. So we trust in the equal wisdom of free individuals to protect those rights: through democracy, as the process for best meeting shared needs in the face of competing desires; and through markets as the process for best meeting private needs in a way that expands opportunity.

Both processes strengthen each other: democracy alone can produce justice, but not the material goods necessary for individuals to thrive; markets alone can expand wealth, but not that sense of justice without which civilized societies perish.

Don't you think


Mongolians inspired by Kyrgyz
26/03/2005 21:22 - (SA)http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1681333,00.html

Ulan Bator - More than one thousand people marched in front of the Mongolian seat of government here demanding more democracy in a protest inspired by the revolt in Kyrgyzstan, witnesses said on Saturday.

However the Friday protest, organised by the Just Society-Civic Movement (JSCM), was forced back by a strong police presence amid cries of "the struggle by protestors in Kyrghyzstan led to the victory."

Last Thursday crowds stormed the Kyrgyz White House compound housing the government and presidency in Bishkek and seized control of the government as discontent over earlier parliamentary elections boiled over.

Opposition leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev was appointed acting president and prime minister after veteran leader Askar Akayev was forced to flee. The revolt has also raised fears of further rebellions in other former communist countries.

In Mongolia, demonstrators claimed the JSCM had no ties with any of the major political parties, including the ex-communists which have been out of power since losing national elections in mid-2004.

They demanded the removal of corrupt officials and an investigation into former Prime Minister Nambaryn Enkhbayar and the diversion of 2.9 million US dollars of public funds.

Enkhbayar, who is currently president, was also accused of controlling and manipulating the media in his favour during the lead-up to the legislative elections held last June.

Witnesses said the protestors dispersed calmly but vowed to hold further demonstrations on April 7.

A presidential election is scheduled for May. Mongolia's 2,6 million people have lived in a democracy since 1992, when 70 years of communist dictatorship came to end.
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