Booman Tribune

The Future of Iran Won't Include an Azure Curtain

by stormbear
Tue Jun 30th, 2009 at 08:01:14 PM EST

Somewhere in Iran, there are terabytes of data - unseen photos, unwatched videos and unread words that have captured events that have yet to be seen by those of us in the "West."

The Ahmadinejad regime has struggled to tamp out communication among the Iranian people, now keeping it to a very slow drip. Hardly anything comes out from Iran these days, unlike the deluge that we have seen in the past. Keep in mind, Iran is the biggest blogging nation in the world outside of the United States. The culture there, with a majority of the population being young, is a wired culture. Hell, we are a wired planet, so why should Iran be any different?


Inside Iran blogs are down, tweets are non-existent, cell phone service is a joke and the web is a firewalled ghost town. But here comes the problem - the Ahmadinejad regime knows the people of Iran are pissed beyond belief and the people know what the government did to the people - those images of Neda are NOT going to go away anytime soon. The regime also knows that they are sitting on a powder keg of frustration and their only move is to keep the internet out of the hands of the people. It isn't a question of blocking the West, the incriminating data is inside the country - on cell phones, cameras and camcorders and all sorts of digital recording devices. The data is stored in Iran and the regime cannot afford to allow it to leak to the West or even to the west side of Tehran. An Azure Curtain, an analogy to the Soviet's Iron Curtain, has to fall across Iran and the regime has to hope that will be enough, but it won't.

The Ahmadinejad regime is screwed long term (maybe even short term). They cannot hope to keep a smart, empowered population like Iran in the dark for long. Data will start flowing with the use of USB drives, CDs and home produced DVDs that will contain unseen images - all of which will spread like a virus. But knowing Iranians, this is probably already underway. Then someone will sneak a thumbdrive out of the country and more stuff will be dumped to the web.

Iran cannot hope to remain a modern country without the web. Hospitals, educators, manufacturers, banks, shopkeepers, everyone in that country benefits from the web and the only way the Ahmadinejad regime can keep control is to shut off the web and drive their population to the level of North Korea - a complete sequestration of Iranians from the world and each other - that is the regime's only viable step.

The regime cannot stay in power when a huge swath of their population are bloggers and citizen journalists. Benjamin Franklin would be proud, Khamenei is probably horrified.



Display:
by Oui on Wed Jul 1st, 2009 at 03:23:47 AM EST
Iran's crisis and Ali Khamenei

it seems that there are two explanations for the absence of a direct challenge to the supreme leader:

  • Most of the current ruling Shi'a clerics in Iran are following a quote from Imam Ali, the first holy successor to the Prophet Mohammed: "A tyrant is better than trouble." They figure it is better to maintain the status quo with an unjust ruler than create chaos in their own system by challenging him

  • "Preservation of an Islamic Republic is more essential than any religious duty." This phrase was  coined by Ayatollah Khomeini; it is now repeatedly quoted by his successors to the dissatisfied candidates, as a way of asking them to end their protest for the sake of the entire regime. This phrase prescribes that it is legitimate to stop Islamic duties such as praying daily, being truthful and honest and even accepting fraud - if it is in the best interest of the regime.

A pretty f*cked up culture, if you ask me: European thought already had the idea that the people have the right to overthrow a tyranny with Locke's Two Treatises of Government, published in 1689 (!). (Interestingly, Locke's motivation for writing that work were the worries of a Protestant about tyranny of a Catholic king.)

by Alexander on Thu Jul 2nd, 2009 at 08:06:18 PM EST
In reply to "a pretty f*up culture", please watch this:
A Friend from Japan has Sent this Very Beautiful Song

* I have already told you about all the beautiful songs written in honor of the Green Movement toward a full-fledged democracy in Iran. I would like to open this window with one of my favorites - because it is not about the cruelties that have happened but about hope. It is called "zemestun sar umad" which means "The winter has ended." It is a new arrangement of an old and popular song. The images you see on the clip are from Mr. Mousavi's campaign, his visits to the war front during the eight-year Iran/Iraq war, and some earlier images from the 1979 revolution. One of the goals of the clip is to demonstrate Mr. Mousavi's deep roots in the Iranian social and political tradition. Enjoy!


The source is here ... and there's more here.

And here's a few other links well worth following:

first, a very sad blog: Iran Body Count

NIAC

Iran News

Tehran Bureau

by Gene on Fri Jul 3rd, 2009 at 11:34:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I just discovered this rap.

"Spring of Iran - Mass uprising - Coup d'etat against Iranian people by Khamenei-Ahmadinejad - A song by Shahin Najafi Iranian rap singer."

Via Iran Watch Canada

by Gene on Sat Jul 4th, 2009 at 12:52:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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