The innocent young men in the photos were beaten, humiliated, and arrested for wearing Western clothing and hairstyles. It is in the public interest to spread these photos far and wide. The images should be seared onto the global conscience...
Question: Will these photos be blared across the front pages of the international media with as much disgust and condemnation as the photos of Abu Ghraib or the manufactured Gitmo Koran-flushing riots?Turns out she mischaracterized the photos. We'll get to that in a moment. But even if we were to take her assertions at face value, Malkin has ignored what we may call the "Matthew 7:4 factor."
The atrocities at Abu Ghraib were paid for by American tax dollars. You (presuming live in the United States) and I bear responsibility for those acts. The sins of the Iranian police do not burden our souls. But we are responsible, in large measure, for the tortures inflicted by the Shah's brutal forces back in the 1960s and '70s, because our CIA placed the Shah in power after toppling Iran's elected leader.
Malkin's ability to ignore the lumber in her own eye socket reminds me of the arguments right-wingers offered back in the day, when the USSR was still a going concern. "Why do you leftists always talk about human rights abuses in Guatemala or the Philippines? Why don't you talk about what's going on in Eastern Europe?" The answer, of course, was that our government supported the dictators in Guatemala and the Philippines. As for Eastern Europe: Our tax dollars paid for a nuclear arsenal pointed at the USSR, and any further expression of disapproval always struck me as superfluous.
It turns out that Malkin has, for propaganda purposes, misidentified the photos on her site. They do not depict Iranians who have violated any dress code:
But the man in the photograph, according to widespread Iranian news reports, was one of more than 100 people arrested recently on charges of being part of a gang that had committed rapes, robberies, forgeries and other crimes.Of course, this post must not be taken as an apologia for the Iranian government. Years ago, I knew an Armenian lady whose family had immigrated here from Iran, and she had plenty of stories about the Draconian measures inflicted by the Iranian "justice" system. (As I recall, she reported that a woman guilty of a morals infraction might be made to "wash the dead.") On the other hand, her family felt that Iran's problems all stemmed from the CIA's intervention in the 1950s. Although they felt grateful for the asylum provided by this country, they could not blind themselves to history.
By the way: Malkin drew her misidentification from this New York Times story. Here's the NYT's apologia:
In this case, The Times relied on an interview with a researcher for a nongovernment agency that no longer operates within Iran who said the photograph was evidence of a more visible police role in public crackdowns on what the authorities consider immoral behavior. The reporter then wrongly interpreted what the researcher said as applying to a crackdown on dress, and incorporated the erroneous interpretation into the body of the article, without giving any indication of the source for it.The nongovernment agency is obviously the MEK, which others, including our own State Department, label a terrorist group. The MEK was allied with Saddam Hussein. In her update, Malkin makes clear that she considers the group credible.
4 comments:
The CIA and the US gov are not the only culprits in "Operation AJAX", it was originally conceived by the British but Truman refused. When elected, Eisenhower agreed to participate when the brits asked him. It was executed by the CIA and it was their first "regime change" operation. Its success combined with the relative low cost inspired them to do it again (like in Guatemala a year afterward).
That's the kind of knowledge that makes me want to throw up when I hear the neocons talk about spreading democracy around the world. I hope they don't think the rest of the world is that dumb and they don't know what the US government has been doing around the world since the WW2.
Sometimes, I fear that Americans don't WANT to hear the truth, they prefer the fantasy world crafted for them (apart from the reader of this blog, of course :). They prefer to arrogantly delusion themselves in thinking that their country is the beacon of freedom on this planet... when confronted with reality, their reaction is often to plug their ears and shout "I don't hear you, I don't hear you !"
Battle of the Dicks:
The Iranian Government uses the same methods to hold its public "dumbed down" as the US.
Every time the US or the Europeans tighten the noose, the Iranian Gov cracks down on civilian decent in the name of " in the time of potential war with the great Satan" we can't have this kind of dis-obedience.
The result is as always, a crack down on all that is democratic.
The problem with the likes of Michelle Malkin is that they do not recognize that there is a law of action and re-action in play.
The powers that are in Iran are not beyond greed or power-mongering, they just don't believe that the US is all that.
It's kind of like, let's put the dicks up on the table and may the biggest one take all (as in the battle of big dicks).
The losers are the American and the Iranian public...dahhhhh!
Now the leaders care a lot about whose dick is bigger, however; the public just wants to earn a living and raise their kids.
People like Michelle malkin play the game with their dicks( not literally) tucked safely in an un-disclosed buncker, while they cheer on the "dick-heros".
I believe the Right are pathologically incapable of self-criticism. Malkin's thinking seems to bear me out on this.
CNN reported in April that US troops in Baghdad were protecting supply runs for the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq (MEK) -as I think you noted then.
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