Neda: A Lesser Evil is Still Evil
It seems like the talk of the blogosphere today is the death of an Iranian protestor, apparently gunned down with a shot to the heart by a Basij militiaman. It appears she is being prepared for martyrdom by the media for having her death captured on video [warning: graphic]:
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 09:09 PM
Comments
And yet, when you hear the roar of so many in the streets --it's hard to ignore the visceral impact of -- you wonder how to interpret that primal urgency. Are we guilty of projection? Likely so.
Posted by: Joan of Argghh! at June 21, 2009 10:29 PM (/RNEi)
Posted by: Rhymes With Right at June 21, 2009 10:56 PM (euXjQ)
Posted by: Adriane at June 22, 2009 12:18 AM (W7nzI)
Our principles about freedom of expression and freedom of the press should be applicable to everybody, even to people who do not think like us.
If we are going to demand them for us we should be ready to demand the same thing for other people.
Don’t forget that the free exchange of ideas bring about reform and more freedom.
Posted by: TF at June 22, 2009 12:30 AM (UICYs)
This is not a protest between freedom and tyranny, but tyranny and another tyranny. Much ado about nothing it seems.
Posted by: Jayne at June 22, 2009 01:16 AM (dwIL0)
The government of Iran is the problem, not the common man. The propaganda fed to the people does not give them any reason to trust or connect with Americans, or the West. Do not hold that against them!! These people are rebelling against the shackles of fundamental Islam, which they probably feel is excessive. That is not to say they are rejecting Islam, just not wanting to be subjected to an extreme government enforced version of it.
Posted by: bl at June 22, 2009 01:53 AM (EG0zA)
Posted by: UNRR at June 22, 2009 08:36 AM (2D++g)
At this point, the protests may be taking on a life of much more freedom, rather then just as one backing Mousavi. We'll have to wait and see.
Posted by: William Teach at June 22, 2009 08:47 AM (7yTel)
By standing up to Khamenei, I contend that Mousavi is far better than just a lesser evil. His action has tipped the scales. The jig is up for Khamenei. No Iranian believes he is divinely inspired, and every Iranian knows no one elected him king.
Posted by: George at June 22, 2009 09:28 AM (WA19M)
Think about the wars that have been fought in the name of "religion" in Europe in past centuries. Most of those wars weren't about "freedom". They were about which brand of Religious zealots would control the population.
As a Christian, I thank God that our nation's founders had the foresight to include in our Constitution provisions that clearly separate the roles of the Church and the state in our society. I realize that some people will argue with me on that topic. Nevertheless, it's a fact.
There are people in our very own country who would impose their brand of "religion" on all of us if they could and make their particular religious beliefs the law of the land.
Again, I think that the struggle that we're seeing today in Iran cannot be compared to what we think of as a struggle for "freedom". We have to face the fact that many parts of the world don't think like we do nor do their societies want our brand of freedom.
I suppose time will tell what the Iranian people, as a whole, really want. At this point, I'm not sure.
Posted by: Dude at June 22, 2009 11:01 AM (byA+E)
The straw that broke the camels back.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
The situation is at boiling point, this may be the catalyst needed to gain the all important first step towards a better freedom. Will it be all enclusive? No, will it be what we consider total freedom? No, but it will be the beginning. We can't let our guard down eiter way but it is a start.
Posted by: Retired Navy at June 22, 2009 11:25 AM (y67bA)
Posted by: Tyrconnell at June 22, 2009 12:13 PM (12g1Z)
What we do know is the nature of those who murdered her - sheer evil. I'm not talking the bang-the-high-chair, piss-your-diapers tantrum lefties like to throw while denouncing their infantile view of evil, i.e. a Republican holding public office. Her killers are the kind of evil that means nobody holds public office, that no citizens have any rights because there are no citizens, only subjects. She was killed by the same state that dispatched children into Iraq killing zones to clear minefields. Actual evil, not "OMG somebody on teh Int4rw3bz disagrees with me! Fascist!" That is probably why Obama took so long to state thay maybe, just maybe (and I'm not meddling here, understand) it's not the best course for a government to murder its people. At the most basic level Obama and his socialist circle have no real quarrel with the underlying assumptions of the mullahcracy, only "concern" over a few of its tactics.
It isn't necessary to support whatever kind of twisted anti-semitic terror sponsoring state rises from the ashes to denounce the present one that randomly kills its own people to hold on to absolute power.
Posted by: Steve Skubinna at June 22, 2009 02:39 PM (Vcyz0)
Just to play devil's advocate . What would this blog post be like if she had been shot by an Israeli soldier in Gaza or an American in Fallujah. Would you be trying to expose it as fake or even ridiculing the victim as was done with Rachel Corrie?
Posted by: Brian at June 22, 2009 08:02 PM (znAs1)
Posted by: Bob at June 22, 2009 08:11 PM (4Nh8T)
Posted by: mbvfruwm at June 24, 2009 07:32 AM (gnwwA)
Posted by: Kutcholis at June 27, 2009 11:35 AM (hUVY6)
Posted by: DoorHold at June 28, 2009 02:42 PM (M7V2r)
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