page 3Yes I am sorry I did not make that point in my post. I heard that on fox news sunday plus thats posted online and I did like that point and found it very valid.
6/16/2009 12:46:37 AM
^ But you'd give credit to Obama, not Bush, right?
6/16/2009 12:49:45 AM
Am I allowed to be glad that helped without being glad we went to iraq in the first place? If so, kudos to Bush. Thats how I view it.
6/16/2009 12:52:00 AM
Okay.
6/16/2009 12:53:52 AM
6/16/2009 12:58:06 AM
hooksaw and dnl: not everything is caused by american foreign policy.
6/16/2009 1:12:30 AM
^ My comments were within the context of addressing the "Bush broke the world" haters. It's becoming more and more apparent that Bush did nothing of the sort, and he is more responsible than anyone for spreading democracy in a region that many thought would never see it--the beginnings of the war in Iraq be damned.
6/16/2009 1:24:52 AM
iran should be a perfect example of how democracy doesn't mean anything in itself.and i'm curious where ANYONE mentioned bush's foreign policy.[Edited on June 16, 2009 at 1:27 AM. Reason : .]
6/16/2009 1:25:42 AM
cause=/influence
6/16/2009 1:26:59 AM
i'd say our help in fucking the economy did a lot more to spur unrest in iran than anything else. i'll give you that international sanctions probably helped as well.but jesus. please. can we please keep this thread free of discussion of american politics? just ONE thread. this thread is about iran. if you're talking about america's response, cool. otherwise move it elsewhere.[Edited on June 16, 2009 at 1:29 AM. Reason : .]
6/16/2009 1:28:28 AM
^ LOL! Unlike some of you, I have no trouble leaving a thread--I'll bow out.But if you think Iran's politics operates beyond America's politics, then you're sadly mistaken. The politics of the two countries have been intertwined for decades, and I don't see this Gordian knot unwinding anytime soon.
6/16/2009 1:48:56 AM
^^ I'd say us helping overthrow their elected gov't probably has more to do with their unrest today than anything else. I'd also wager that our selling of weapons and material to Iraq during the 80s might have a bit to do with how they feel about us now, too.
6/16/2009 7:23:17 AM
6/16/2009 12:44:41 PM
here's another great set of pictures, including from protests around the worldhttp://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/06/irans_continued_election_turmo.html
6/16/2009 6:29:42 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBp2p3MGJqw
6/16/2009 6:38:31 PM
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/blogs/index.php/category/contentions/contentions?author_name=tottenhttp://raymankojast.blogspot.com/This is an Iranian run website with information directly from inside Iran.
6/16/2009 9:47:05 PM
6/17/2009 12:34:00 AM
I recall during the 2008 election cycle having an argument here about Obama's proposal to speak directly to Iran. My position was that it made no sense for a duly-elected American president to directly engage a figurehead puppet with no real power, as if he were an equal. Robert Baer, former CIA operative, writes today:
6/17/2009 2:14:29 AM
Maybe the youth will learn how to make molotov cocktails and zip guns and wipe out the government.Seriously though, it seems like there are a hell of a lot of people protesting. They're staying civil now, even though the government is beating/shooting many of them to death, but I wonder how long their patience will last.
6/17/2009 3:20:57 AM
This guy said. . .. . .Our officers will crush any unrest. --Esmaeil Ahmadi Moqaddam, Iran's national chief of policehttp://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=7849084&page=1Know what? With a hat like that, I damn sure believe he will try to crush any unrest.
6/17/2009 4:18:05 AM
That hat is massive.
6/17/2009 9:24:09 AM
That hat alone could crush any unrest.
6/17/2009 9:24:50 AM
Reminds me of the Iraqi Information Minister.
6/17/2009 10:01:15 AM
^^ lol
6/17/2009 1:49:21 PM
pretty funny cartoon about the protests:http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200906u/iran-election-protests
6/19/2009 4:29:30 PM
So Khameini has spoken, endorsing the results and warning the protesters.I guess the protests will just die down and the Irani people will have to learn to live with Ahmedinejad for another 4 (5?) years.The revolution will have to wait until then.
6/19/2009 8:37:25 PM
it's starting to look like it
6/19/2009 8:42:29 PM
is it? the protests have been getting bigger by the day.and apparently there was some tracking down of the basij militia people in their homes.
6/19/2009 9:40:46 PM
seems all there is now is lots of blood to go... though that doesn't look good for ahmenajad to mow everyone down or start taking relatives into custodybut i guess that is the course of most revolutions
6/19/2009 10:26:23 PM
hahaha that comic was good
6/19/2009 10:30:55 PM
This whole thing has CIA fabrication written all over it.
6/20/2009 5:55:34 PM
^Does it? What evidence do you base this comment on? Care to cite any similarities with other recent post election revolutions to bolster your claim?
6/20/2009 7:31:38 PM
^^Just like the holocaust.
6/20/2009 7:35:33 PM
saw a video today of a girl who had been shot in the chest and dies whilst people rush to help her. blood spews everywhere.saw a video a couple days ago of a man who had been handcuffed and was still being beaten like a bag in his restraints. one of the riot policemen held his baton by the opposite end as to hit him with the pointed end of the handle and did so a number of times against the back of his shoulder.these, other stories, and an understanding of all else that must be going on that hasn't been caught on camera or reported brings me to tears.
6/20/2009 10:25:32 PM
Freedom isnt free.
6/20/2009 10:32:13 PM
that'd be crazy if they're able to overthrow the President and the Supreme Leader..... I guess they'd have to get through the army to do that, though, or some of the army would have to join the revolutionaries
6/20/2009 10:46:46 PM
6/21/2009 2:10:46 AM
Herpes are free.
6/21/2009 10:22:53 AM
6/21/2009 11:11:30 AM
^Even if the clerics had the most open and transparent system of elections in the world, free of stifling influences, Iran still wouldn't be a democracy, or anything close to it. It's my understanding that in a democracy, the people are the primary source of power and sovereignty. In Iran, no matter how many elections they hold, there is still some source of power -- the so-called Supreme Leader -- to whom the people are subjugated.These elections really show how dangerous it can be to give people the illusion of democratic power. When their candidate wins, great. But if their candidate loses, then there's always sufficient room to doubt the outcome because some power greater than the people controls the electoral process.In a functioning democracy, people have to have faith in the process as much as in the results. There has to be transparency. There have to be rules, designed by the people who vote in the election, as to how it proceeds. There has to be a system -- no matter how slow or byzantine, as Minnesota shows us -- for providing ultimate veracity to the results.Iran can never provide any of that, not even down to the most basic level. Because every single element is subject to short-circuiting by a higher authority than the people -- or the perception of it, which is effectively the same thing.
6/21/2009 12:59:43 PM
6/21/2009 1:05:56 PM
the iranian president is ultimately a powerless figure head present to give the people an illusion of democracy which is why even if mousavi were elected nothing would change.shit, he had to pass an ideological and political litmus test to even be allowed to run.that's change the iranians can believe in![Edited on June 21, 2009 at 1:14 PM. Reason : .]
6/21/2009 1:11:30 PM
This is how the protests can have an effect:If the protesters keep protesting, a few people keep dying, the Supreme Shithead gets tired of it, and orders the forces to crack down hard shooting people on sight. Then, his forces of thugs might revolt, saying they won't kill their own people en masse. The Supreme Shithead might call for some unity government in that case, or call fresh elections, or even step down himself.But before that happens, the people will give up protesting, I think.
6/21/2009 6:52:47 PM
Sadly I think that too. I really hope we are wrong though.
6/21/2009 7:02:22 PM
I hope so too. But, if the protests yield nothing, and if a conservative is elected again after4 years, the protests then would definitely give rise to a proper revolution, no doubt about it.
6/21/2009 7:27:18 PM
6/21/2009 8:42:53 PM
A good read on CNN about a phone interview with an Iranian student protestor.
6/22/2009 12:12:03 PM
wow...that's pretty crazy!!
6/22/2009 1:24:06 PM
not too hard to see the main differences between the protestors and the gov't supportersprotesters - young, partially English-speaking, tech-savvy, men and women:gov't backers - bearded Muslim men:http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/06/a_troubled_week_in_iran.html
6/22/2009 2:29:25 PM
Call me crazy, but I see plenty of young men in both pictures. In fact, both crowds look about the same (note the last picture is out of place).
6/22/2009 7:30:26 PM