North King said:Yes, they are left out.
The Kurds are an ethnic group. They are Muslims, they can be represented just as well by the crescent.
me thinks you too readilly dump the plight suffered by many ethnic minorites in your own crusade for what you consider "politically neutral" and forget that different situation call for different remidies.
Irag is devided into two ethnic groups; the Arabs, a semitic group, and the Kurd, and Iranian (Aryan) based people, and both have ties to the area well into the ancient Akkadian period. As such, both peoples have a right to be represented, but as the Arabs for such a huge majoirty in iraq, they themselves need no symbol of inclusion at all, rather it is the main ethnic minority, the Kurds, the same people who have been targeted for years, who need soem recognizable symbol of inclusion in the state, and can be used a s symbol for any other ethnic minorities in Iraq.
"In the Box" thinking such as yours that dictates that every situation should be ahndled the same in that obviouslly, the standard of full equality dicated either one unified symbol of nation hood, or no symbol at all only ensures faileur- the cours eof action taken by the flag is likelly the best one to fit the situation, given the factors involved. Though of course, it isnt our flag, and likewise, we dont really have any grounds over which to critique what it has on it or not, as, obviouslly, we will know soon enough if the people of Iraq like it, and thats the real final authority on the matter.