This bitch has been following the post-election protests in Iran. Thank the gods for Twitter, because Lawd knows that traditional media outlets aren’t breaking news on this one.
That’s not surprising.
The selection-based Iranian election and protests that have followed aren’t the kind of quick hit and then move on story that traditional media is currently set up to deliver. That explains why even the Sunday chats were full of talking heads trying to spin whether the election results in Iran…the same results that are being disputed…are good or bad for President Obama.
It would be too much like right for them to explain how politics function in Iran, who has taken to the streets and why, who the key players are, and why we should all give a damn about this…to cover protests instead of assuming nothing will come of them, to document the crack down instead of smugly discussing how predictable it is and to explore the possibilities even though the current regime says that the election is over.
Sigh.
As Gil Scott-Heron said, the revolution will not be televised.
The revolution will be live.
Mayhap there is a revolution in that too.
Tweet on, people.
Tweet on…
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
The Gumdrop Stage of Grief ...
So many of you have shared condolences and support after the death of my beloved brother Bill from COVID-19. I wish I could thank you indiv...
-
I was slightly illish this weekend and took to my bed Saturday, but I did rally for Brother Rob Thurman’s fantabulous cookie decorating part...
-
So many of you have shared condolences and support after the death of my beloved brother Bill from COVID-19. I wish I could thank you indiv...
-
Okay, so most of you know that this bitch has some evil assed fibroids . Most of them were successfully murdered with full premeditation se...
9 comments:
Where are you getting your information? Oh.. that sounds snotty and it wasn't meant to be snotty. My curiousity is sincere though. Who do you follow on twitter that is presenting news on the protests? I have not heard much on them.
"The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" is such an appropriate cultural comparison to the Iranian election protests/riots/craziness.
Ady - start with searching "cnnfail" through Twitter and you'll find a lot of folks covering this. You can also search "Iran" and "Iranian election"...but the cnnfail results appear to be specific to news that CNN is failing to cover.
Television frames everything within the status quo. In Guatemala recent massive protests were organized via twitter, My Space and Facebook, to the extent that they started arresting tweeterers!
It's so dysfunctional that we won't get the real dirt on what's going down in Iran, if you think how important the developments of hostile countries with nuclear weapons are to us as a nation ... especially as the warmongering nation that we've become ...
I don't use twitter, but a post I read this morning pointed me at twitter users persiankiwi and Change_for_Iran for tweets from Iran. It's been enlightening following them.
you know, i *want* to hate twitter, for all the useless self-aggrandizing hipsters who masturbate with it, but --
but.
like any technology, it can be used for Good as well as E-ville.
so right on.
tweet, people. tweet to your revolutionary hearts' delights.
Look for the hash tags #GR88 and #IranElection.
I'm following the two mentioned above, as well as PD90, TehranBureau, and a couple others. Once you've found those folks, it's easy to see who they are following to find others in Iran.
I think Obama is right to keep arm's length from what's going on in Iran. Is it legit? May very well be -- but if so, the Iranians will do best to sort it out without Western interference.
I'm not too young to remember that the CIA meddled in a democratically chosen outcome back in the 1950s in Iran, nor that some pretty scary wingnuts have had strong Iran ideas all along. This has included supporting and arming Saddam Hussein to do their dirty work against Iran.
If what's going on there is genuine, then I say stand back and let it happen. But unfortunately, the US has meddled too many times in Iran's history to be trusted to be involved this time around. Iranians must choose for themselves what is best for Iran -- and we must trust them to do so.
Thanks for the insight sis. This is precisely the kinda of critical analysis that is missing in the dialogue. The revolution is live.
Post a Comment