There are important moments of the nations. For example, John Marshall's smart decisions made the Supreme Court of the USA one of the branches and made the government system very significant among the other nations.
Turkey is experiencing a significant moment of his history. make it harder to ban political parties and easier to prosecute military officials in civilian courts. The proposed changes largely focus on the judiciary and the military, still the strongest pillars of the secular state establishment, which remain suspicious of the government’s conservative, religious politics.
Turkey is under the list of the partly free countries. I think that Turkey is becoming more democratized and will be one of the powerful countries in the international political arena.
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Turkey voters appear to favor constitutional changes
Early results show 58% of voters OKd reforms covering gender bias, civil liberties, workplace rights and prosecution of coup leaders, giving Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his party a boost.
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By Borzou Daragahi, Los Angeles Times
September 12, 2010|3:18 p.m.
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Reporting from Istanbul, Turkey —
Turkey's ruling Islamist party and its charismatic leader appeared to have scored a resounding victory Sunday in a divisive and closely watched referendum on constitutional changes that pitted the country's two main cultural camps against each other.
Preliminary results showed 58% of Turks approved and 42% rejected changes to a constitution crafted by a military junta after a coup in the early 1980s.
Both government and opposition activists had elevated the referendum into a vote on Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, leader of the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, which espouses a blend of liberal democracy and Islam that rattles many secular Turks.
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Erdogan said in a televised appearance before enthusiastic supporters that the country "passed a historic threshold" on its way democracy and vowed to seek more changes to the constitution, according to local media. "Supporters of military intervention and coups are the losers tonight."
The voting results slightly exceeded polling data and the AKP's expectations, giving Erdogan a boost ahead of general elections next year.
"The issue in this election was do you approve of Erdogan or not," said political scientist Ustun Erguder, founding director of the Istanbul Policy Center at Istanbul's Sabanci University. "And I think he'll sleep better tonight."
The 26-item package of reforms includes amendments to bar gender discrimination, bolster civil liberties, expand workplace rights, increase privacy rights and lift immunity from prosecution for those military leaders responsible for the 1980 coup.
But it also includes more controversial measures that grant elected officials and ordinary judges more power over the composition of the senior judiciary, which Erdogan and his allies regard as the last bastion of a fading secular elite. Opposition leaders see the changes as a power grab and warned of a civilian coup.
Despite a day of heavy rain, Turks turned out in droves for the referendum, with polling places at schools in the main cities swarming with voters from both camps. Officials said 77% of eligible voters participated despite a boycott call by Turkey's main ethnic Kurdish opposition party.
In the Fatih district of Istanbul, elderly men and women walking with canes labored up steps with the help of younger relatives to cast their ballots.
"We're voting to change our nation," said Vadullah Yasar, a 41-year-old businessman in the working-class district who went to the polling booth with his veiled wife. "This is the first step to change a constitution made by a military regime and not by the people."
In the upscale Bebek suburb, voters appeared equally determined to make their voices heard, creating a tangle of Range Rovers and Mercedeses in front of one balloting center.
"Nobody can deny they are working hard," Selin, a 30-year-old interior designer who declined to give her last name, said of Erdogan's party, which has overseen a period of dramatic economic growth since it came to power in late 2002. "But I don't think they're doing something good for the country. They want to put the judiciary system under their control."
Electoral maps on television screens showed a divided country: a secular Eurocentric crescent along the southwestern Aegean and Mediterranean seas largely opposed to the reforms and a pious, populous interior stretching deep into Turkey's eastern borders with Iran, Iraq, Syria and the Caucasus that for the most part backed Erdogan's changes.
Meanwhile Turkey's minority Kurds in some southeastern provinces largely heeded a call by the main Kurdish opposition party to boycott the vote, despite Erdogan's last-minute attempt to woo them by paying a rare visit to the Kurdish heartland. Local news outlets reported clashes at polling places in Kurdish provinces between supporters and opponents of the boycott.
Tens of thousands of Turks and Kurds have died in the quarter-century war between the government and Kurdish rebels, and the militant Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, has vowed to resume its ongoing insurgency later this month after a brief halt.
"If you look at the distribution of the vote I think it shows how polarized Turkey is," said Gareth Jenkins, a senior fellow with the Silk Road Studies Program affiliated with Johns Hopkins University in Maryland. He has lived in Turkey for 21 years. "One of the challenges for the party is to decrease the tensions not only with the secular opposition but with the Kurds."
Sunday, September 12, 2010
it is complicated....
What about the expiring the Bush tax cuts?????????
The world’s biggest economy has begun a much needed transition. The USA is dealing with the economic problems and there are a lot of criticize about Obama’s decisions and there are a lot of expectations from him to recover the economy. In 2009, USA economy was shrinking by 2.4% and we are expecting 3% grow this year. High Unemployment, and millions of foreclosed homes making people to save and people are becoming thriftier. Property developers are building smaller and simpler houses. Most people are trying to save their money. For example, when people were changing their tires once in a year, they are driving them until they really get old.
Bush tax cut giving breath to people in the bad economy conditions but Obama opposes any compromise that would extend the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy beyond this year. When people's net pay is reduced from the expiring tax cuts there will be even more people shrinking from the local economy. Less revenues for business, more layoffs, more companies closing their doors, more people going to the government for assistance, taxes being eaten up from the assistance provided.
This is a complicated point of the USA economy.
I really wonder: Will this make a difference in the November elections? We'll have to wait and see, won't we (and go out to vote, as well!) to see how that turns out.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
I don't think that it is right time to withdrawal the combat troops!!!!
"Operation Iraqi Freedom is over, and the Iraqi people now have lead responsibility" (Obama) In Iraq war, since 2003, American soldiers are saperated from their families and some of them could't come back to their home. Huge amouunt of Money spent during the war. After all USA effords in the area, Iraq started to transform from monarchy to democracy. People in iraq had their army, their elected governemnt and they learnt the freedom. Even if, a lot of things changed in the country, there are a lot of things are still in process. Obama's made a logical decision, but it is early for now.
It is like; a teacher starting to teach to students, but he is telling students, after a moment, it is their responsibility to understand, learn and experience the topic and he is leaving the students lonely in the classroom. The USA is a teacher of the Iraq and I think that he is leaving his student lonely early.
I think that terrorist attacks in Iraq supporting my idea. For example, over 100 people died and injuring 350, in attacks in Iraq in 2010 and it is the highest death toll for a single day. The USA needs to stay in the Iraq until Iraq becomes ready for governing themselves.
You may say that There are going to be USA soldiers to advise them but I don't think that it is enough. We will see what is going to happen!!!!! Obama's decision will make him a hero or one of the bad presidents. I hope he is doing the right thing because I know that he is a smart person.
News about "combat mission' in Iraq:
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/09/20109101446128150.html
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/09/01/iraq.transfer/index.html?hpt=T1
It is like; a teacher starting to teach to students, but he is telling students, after a moment, it is their responsibility to understand, learn and experience the topic and he is leaving the students lonely in the classroom. The USA is a teacher of the Iraq and I think that he is leaving his student lonely early.
I think that terrorist attacks in Iraq supporting my idea. For example, over 100 people died and injuring 350, in attacks in Iraq in 2010 and it is the highest death toll for a single day. The USA needs to stay in the Iraq until Iraq becomes ready for governing themselves.
You may say that There are going to be USA soldiers to advise them but I don't think that it is enough. We will see what is going to happen!!!!! Obama's decision will make him a hero or one of the bad presidents. I hope he is doing the right thing because I know that he is a smart person.
News about "combat mission' in Iraq:
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/09/20109101446128150.html
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/09/01/iraq.transfer/index.html?hpt=T1
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