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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (452567)9/4/2003 2:00:58 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Bush spends 50MILLION instead of 300,000 of OUR TAX MONEY!!!!
IMPEACH THE CLOWN!
Live from Iraq, it's the real story

Jon Carroll

Wednesday, September 3, 2003

I suppose blogs have had their day as a populist
phenomenon. Democratic candidates for president
have blogs now, and that's pretty much the death
knell for cutting-edge status. If John Kerry has one,
it's not a trend, it's an appliance.

But I think that's true only of blogs produced in the
United States. In other countries, the Internet is still
a revolutionary tool, a place for information censored
in every other medium in the nation. Vox populi, and
no pop-up ads. It's 1991 all over again.

.5 Some of the best blogs are coming out of Iraq.
They are designed for a foreign readership -- they're
in English, for one thing -- and they tell a very
different story from anything our media is presenting.
Here's the difference: Young Iraqi bloggers know what
they're talking about. They have not just arrived in
country with a briefing book, a Kevlar vest and a
Lonely Planet guide.

My current favorite is
www.riverbendblog.blogspot.com. It is written by a
woman, a resident of Baghdad not otherwise
identified, and it's funny and sad and constantly
informative. I offer as an example one tale from last
week. It's one of those "you thought this was going
on but you had no data" deals.

.5 Here's the setup: Riverbend has a cousin who
works as a structural engineer. He is, says
Riverbend, a "bridge freak"; he can spent hours
talking about trusses and pillars and stuff. (It is useful
to remember that Iraq, before we started destroying
it, had a pretty good infrastructure of roads, bridges,
water and power, education; all that. Iraq ain't
Afghanistan.)

The Iraqi company that employees Riverbend's
cousin was asked to bid on rebuilding the New Diyala
bridge south and west of Baghdad.

"They did the necessary tests and analyses
(mumblings about soil composition and water depth,
expansion joints and girders) and came up with a
number they tentatively put forward -- $300,000. This
included new plans and designs, raw materials (quite
cheap in Iraq), labor, contractors, travel expenses,
etc.

"Let's pretend my cousin is a dolt. Let's pretend he
hasn't been working with bridges for over 17 years.
Let's pretend he didn't work on replacing at least 20
of the 133 bridges damaged during the first Gulf War.
Let's pretend he's wrong and the cost of rebuilding
this bridge is four times the number they estimated --
let's pretend it will actually cost $1,200,000. Let's
just use our imagination.

"A week later, the New Diyala Bridge contract was
given to an American company. This particular
company estimated the cost of rebuilding the bridge
would be around -- brace yourselves -- $50,000,000!!"

She goes on to talk about all the work Iraqi engineers
did rebuilding the country after the first Gulf War. She
tells a story:

"My favorite reconstruction project was the Mu'alaq
Bridge over the Tigris. It is a suspended bridge that
was designed and built by a British company. In
1991 it was bombed and everyone just about gave up
on ever being able to cross it again. By 1994, it was
up again, exactly as it was -- without British
companies, with Iraqi expertise.

"One of the art schools decided that although it
wasn't the most sophisticated bridge in the world, it
was going to be the most glamorous. On the day it
was opened to the public, it was covered with
hundreds of painted flowers in the most outrageous
colors -- all over the pillars, the bridge itself, the
walkways along the sides of the bridge. People came
from all over Baghdad just to stand upon it and look
down into the Tigris.

"So instead of bringing in thousands of foreign
companies that are going to want billions of dollars,
why aren't the Iraqi engineers, electricians and
laborers being used? Thousands of people who have
no work would love to be able to rebuild Iraq; no one
is being given a chance."

Say, Americans: That's our money.
sfgate.com

CC