Wishful thinking from Tehran

Since the revolution, academics and pundits have predicted the collapse of the Iranian regime. This week, they did no better

Iran is a deeply religious society. Of the Shah's mistakes nepotism, autocracy, and repression were fought by communists and liberals for decades with no success, but it was his attack on the religious establishment that led to his almost overnight demise. Full Story »

Posted by Kaizar Campwala

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Review

Kaizar Campwala
4.6
by Kaizar Campwala - Jun. 15, 2009

This is a highly recommended opinion piece. Barzegar points out a history of the west not understanding the dynamics of the Iranian polity. He claims that western observers miss the deeply religious nature of the Iranian people, and the attraction of Ahmedinejad as a corruption fighting everyman.

Of course, the rather real possibility of voter fraud exists and one must wait in the coming weeks to see how these allegations unfold. But one should recall that in three decades of presidential elections, the accusations of rigging have rarely been levied against the vote count. Elections here are typically controlled by banning candidates from the start or closing opposition newspapers in advance.

The Facebook campaigns and text-messaging were perfectly irrelevant for the rural and working classes who struggle to make a day’s ends meet, much less have the time to review the week’s blogs in an internet cafe. Although Mousavi tried to appeal to such classes by addressing the problems of inflation and poverty, they voted otherwise.

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Kaizar's Rating

Overall
4.6

Very good
from 13 answers
Quality
4.6
Information
3.0
Insight
5.0
Style
5.0
Context
5.0
Expertise
3.0
Originality
5.0
Relevance
5.0
Responsibility
5.0
Popularity
4.5
Recommendation
4.0
Credibility
5.0
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