Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Revolution inside the Revolution

Decked out in his signature blue-collar jacket, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, looked completely at ease as the camera bulbs flashed. "I am the president of all Iranians," he told the gathered reporters last Sunday. Dismissing fraud allegations as not important and claiming the elections were free and real, Ahmadinejad likened the ongoing street protests in the Iranian capital to the unrest after a soccer match. "Some people are emotional and get upset if their team didn't win," he said with a quick smile. "Well, your team didn't win."
Mahmoud, there is a bit more to this than just the sulking of the losing team supporters; and I have a feeling that you will find this out the hard way. There is a groundswell in Iran that will continue to build until it reaches critical mass. Then there will be a new revolution and you and your dictatorial cronies will be swept away with the tidal wave, just like 1979, when the Shah was toppled. If there was no fraud in the election why is there so much unrest and rioting? Could it be that the ordinary man and woman in Iran feels that they have no say in how they run their lives, and that despite the teachings of the Quran, they have almost no real freedom?

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