Dissention Boils In Iran Despite Brutal Suppression.

Here’s another classic DO NOTHING, SAY NOTHING moment for our ‘do nothing of substance’ President, as the people of Iran struggle to throw off the brutal yoke of repression as represented by the Islamo-Fascist regime of Ali Khamenei. This week has seen more unrest and demonstrations throughout the country, following the death (it is reported) by natural causes of dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri seven days ago.

Iranian police opened fire killing several people, among them the nephew of presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi. Witnesses said they saw a sniper on a building shoot Sayad Al Hossein Mousavi, 35. Later reports from a hospital indicated he had been shot through the heart.

Creating instant martyrs, the killings took place on Ashura, the highest of holy days for Shi’ite Moslems. The day commemorates the death of the grandson of the prophet Mohammad in battle. The ongoing and brutally repressed unrest, which began with the disputed and highly questionable presidential election results of 2009, resulted in more than 100 deaths and the arrest, imprisonment and torture of over 4000 people has never been entirely quelled. Unrest has been percolating just below the surface. With dissidents marking currency, chanting from rooftops after dark, graffiti on walls and incidents of violence here and there, it is apparent that all it would take to spark more mass unrest would be an incident such as this.

With Iran’s radical Islamo-Fascist regime on their fast march to obtain an atomic weapon and its increasingly belligerent stance towards the US, Israel and the west, such unrest at home should prove to be an opportunity for us to support the freedom-seeking people of Iran in their struggle.

Except that we have a leader of no character or strength who will stand passively by, as this murderous dictatorship slaughters its own citizens in the streets and in the dungeon torture rooms of its prisons. One cannot help to contrast this weak, insipid presidency to that of the great Ronald Reagan who challenged the arch-dictator of the Soviet Union to “tear down these walls”. But that would take a man with the courage of his convictions. Barack Hussein Obama  has none.

Semper Vigilans, Semper Fidelis

© Skip MacLure 2009

 

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Enabling the Iranian regime to portray the brave men and women

who have taken to the streets in protest as Western puppets and dupes helps the cause of freedom exactly how?

By crushing it, to answer the

By crushing it, to answer the rhetorical, presumably so the right can keep Iran around as an enemy.

But surely you couldn't have clicked on a MacLure post on the subject of Iran and expected anything better than the learned commentary of a half-wit child on the subject of quantum physics.

Reply John Smith: Romans 8:28

http://bible.cc/romans/8-28.htm

"And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose."

I do not think anybody is buying it. People have been asleep to propaganda in the US for years ... Now that we see daily demonetization of good and honest people people are awaking to the fact of propaganda.

Conservatives have been called racists for dissension - haters - Farwell has been called a Terrorist. The teaparty movement has been called astroturf or "GOP puppets." The political right has been slapped around ... now it is awake to what is happening in Iran.

Those who are active feel alive, they have grapped onto something bigger than themselves.

Nice comparision

 

Bush was more like Ahmadenijad in his theocratic world view and the Teabaggers & the right wing extremeists are more like the Revolutionary Guard BEFORE they overthrew Shah and brought in their conservative revolution in the 70s.

But Obama is no Shah and saner young Americans are not the Iranian student revolutionaries of the 70s.

 

 

Mir-Hossein Mousavi Che Guvera hahaha!

 

Do you now that he is a leftist?!

Mousavi and his followers are leftists, who are fighting the Iranian conservatives!

They aren't the sissy Teabaggers BTW! :

Different This Time

June 17, 2009,

As many commentators have pointed out, this is not the first time the Iranian students have protested the repressive regime.

The Iranian government tolerated student-led uprisings in 1999 and 2003 for only a few days before unleashing fearsome crackdowns, sending Basij vigilantes onto campuses, where they flung a few students from the windows; bloodied as many heads as they could with bricks, chains or truncheons; and jailed scores.

 

 

Three things seem different this time.

  • From 2005 to 2008, mobile phone subscriptions in Iran grew by more than 375 percent. By 2008, six of every 10 Iranians were mobile subscribers. Most of these phones have Internet access. This creates an alternative media channel that the government cannot control
  • In 2003 the middle and professional class would give the students tacit support by honking their horns near demonstrations. Now they are joining the demonstrations. This morning there was a mass resignation of the faculty at Tehran University to protest the beating of the students in their dorms last night.
  • In 2003 it was a "leaderless" rebellion and so after ten days it petered out. Now there is a leader and Moussavi's earliest political hero was Che Guevara. He is a street fighter and I don't think he's going to slink away without a major confrontation.

 

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/2009/06/17/different_this_time/

 

rant rant rant

Obama gets criticised on certain things for talking and not doing; except for Iran where he saying nothing and doing . . . who knows? Obama could very well be doing things in the back ground and merely playing his cards close to the vest.

I don't know that, but Obama is letting the Iranian people do what they do. And many dissidents have said he is doing the right thing. If they deserve more democracy or a different form of government, then they should fight for it.

Shut up and find a new topic to rant about. And let the Iranian people decide thier own fate!

 

 

 And let the Iranian people

 And let the Iranian people decide thier own fate!

And that is the point, as you say. The Iranians do not want us to interfere with their country. If we interfere, then all Iranians will be against us. So it is better for us to let them solve their own problems.