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A Respite, Some Good News

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  • A Respite, Some Good News

    A Respite, Some Good News

    asbarez
    Saturday, March 10th, 2012

    BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

    The last few weeks have not looked kindly on Armenians for the most
    part- court rulings, Azeri-oil-funded propaganda misrepresenting what
    happened in Khojaluh two decades ago, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
    Clinton's idiotic and embarrassing comments about the Genocide, etc.

    So, it is good that as of late night Super Tuesday (the day ten states
    held their primary election in this U.S. presidential election year),
    we are rid of the current title holder of `biggest Turkish whore in
    the U.S. House of Representatives' - Jean Schmidt (if only because
    former Speaker Dennis Hastert [of Illinois] and Dick Gephardt [of
    Missouri] are no longer in office). Just imagine what it takes to
    successfully `primary' (a member of the same party running against an
    incumbent) a legislator! How bad a representative, at least in the
    eyes of her constituents, not her Turkish masters, must she be, that
    she got knocked off! She used to have Tea Party support, but managed
    to turn even that group of often unrealistic citizens off through her
    shenanigans. I heard through the grapevine that she kept doing foolish
    things during the primary campaign. Plus, her unethical behavior
    - taking Turkish money through indirect avenues - and the scrutiny it
    got, had to hurt her - thanks to David Krikorian and the ANCA for their
    efforts on that front.

    The Congressional good news goes on. It's not just Schmidt we're rid
    of. There are others who have opposed the Genocide resolution or other
    important Armenian initiatives in Congress that are entering the
    dustbin of Congressional has-beens. Dan Burton of Illinois is retiring
    (he saw he couldn't win this time and took the `honorable', less
    embarrassing, exit). Ron Paul of Texas, is also retiring while running
    as a quixotic Republican presidential candidate. Dan Boren of Arizona,
    co-chair of the Congressional Azerbaijan caucus, is retiring. Wally
    Herger, a former supporter of the Genocide resolution who then
    withdrew and kept his distance is doing the same. Connie Mack of
    Florida is another one. Finally, and this is mixed good-bad news, Jeff
    Flake, of Arizona, is not running for the House of Representatives,
    instead opting to run for the Senate seat. This gives us a chance to
    support his strongest opponent and make sure Flake's kept out of
    power, period.

    Moving to the other end of the building, Senators Feinstein and Brown
    introduced the legislation calling on the Secretary of State to press
    Turkey to return confiscated (polite for `stolen') church properties
    to their rightful owners. You'll recall an identical measure passed
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee last summer. This is not only good
    news in and of itself, but because it represents the newest phase of
    our struggle. We have, at long last, started to demand reparations,
    not just recognition, on a practical level.

    Crossing the `pond' to France, there's also the good news that
    President Nicolas Sarkozy has pledged to reintroduce the bill
    criminalizing genocide denial that was recently rejected by France's
    (in this case conflict-of-interest-ridden) Constitutional Council.
    Even better news is that Sarkozy's main opponent in the French
    presidential election, Francois Hollande, is on board to do the same.
    It seems timing-wise, it's not possible to get the legislation in
    before the election takes place. So we'll have to wait and see whether
    the winner delivers on his promise.

    Finally, there's a twisted bit of good news. Don't blame yourself if
    it didn't register when you read the headlines about the anti-Armenian
    rallies held in Turkey calling us bastards and threatening to invade
    Yerevan, followed by various Turkish government leaders' comments on
    this matter. The hidden good news is Prime Minister Erdogan's
    reference to the demonstrators as `raving racists'. Of course, this is
    a very clever political ploy, so let's not let him get away with it.
    He's `distancing' himself from clearly reprehensible utterances. But,
    it was his government that allowed the explicitly anti-Armenian
    actions to go off across the country. This way, he both slakes and
    stokes average Turks' hatred of Armenians, while simultaneously
    painting himself as oh-so-enlightened, humanist, and `European'!

    Be heartened by the good news, and use that energy to battle the bad
    and affirmatively push forward the Armenian agenda on all fronts!



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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