Only a few forlorn souls are still trying to keep up "the Green Revolution". But then, there were never all that many of them. It was just that they had easy access to the Western media, who looked at those spoilt little rich kids stamping their feet at not getting their own way, and who saw themselves at that age.
I wish that Ahmadinejad had not won. But he did. The North Tehran Trendies, whose opinions were the only ones sought by bone idle Western reporters in the run-up to the election (or, indeed, since), did not vote for Ahmadinejad. The BBC set up an entire "service" to instruct people not to vote for him. So the election must have been rigged. Mustn't it?
Those who cheered on the demonstrators in Iran, what would be and is your view of student demonstrations in your own country? What did you think of the teenagers on the Countryside March or who protested against the Iraq War? I happened to agree with them on both occasions, but I bet you didn't on the second point, and I bet a lot of you didn't on the first.
All sorts of ideas circulate in universities, so these people could have been anything, not least since all manner of people could be, would be and are opposed to the current government of Iran. Being around traditional-age undergraduates is very energising, and I have no doubt that it has done me the world of good following my several major operations over the last couple of years. Their open-mindedness is quite splendid most of the time. But not all of the time. The flip side of youthful open-mindedness is callowness. Come on, we all know this. We were all that age once.
So, who, exactly, are these Iranian dissidents with their student followings, assuming that they still exist at all? What, exactly, do they want? How can we know that that would pose what the current regime poses to us, namely absolutely no threat whatever, however little it may be to our taste? Or that it would continue to provide guaranteed parliamentary representation to our Assyrian and Armenian fellow-members of Christendom, as well as to Jews who could at least broadly be categorised as ultra-Orthodox, and who will therefore be denaturalised in Israel, as will the Arabs there, once Lieberman's loyalty oath comes into effect? Saying "better the devil you know" does not deny that the devil is the devil.
Anyway, is Iran the devil? The regime may be one of the world's nastier, but it is far from the worst, and it certainly bears comparison with our dear friends in the Gulf and in Central Asia. From one of the former came the 9/11 attacks. Not from Iraq, as Americans were told. Nor did Iraq have WMD, as ninety per cent of Britons cottoned on at the time. And nor did Iraq feed prisoners into paper shredders, as alleged by those now making outlandish claims about the treatment of prisoners in Iran. Be not deceived.
The Harry's Place post on this went up at 5:41 and still has no comments.
ReplyDeleteSays it all, really.
ReplyDeleteJust saw a glossy documentary on HBO about the Green Revolution. I will look out for a similarly glossy documentary about the next time factory workers, public employees, or peasants protest neoliberalism. I probably shouldn't hold my breath, huh?
ReplyDeleteAlso, if I may, here is a link to an excellent article from "Foreign Policy" about the Iranian election.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/06/14/whos_really_misreading_tehran
Basically, nobody can prove that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad stole the election. It appears that he was indeed the legitimate winner.