Last week, Iran had a sham election. Tens of millions of paper ballots were counted in minutes, giving the Presidential election to Ahmadinejad once again. During the week, protesters filled the streets proclaiming election fraud. Despite the Iranian police firing at the crowd, the people still protested. The Ayatollah Khamenei ordered a phony partial recount, again, declaring Ahmadinejad the winner. Still, the people protested.
Prior to the 1978 revolt, where Ahmadinejad helped to overthrow the Shah, Iran was actually one of the most westernized nations in the Middle East. Deep within Iran, the seeds of freedom are still planted and even with the Islamic fervor instilled on them by their government, many of the regular people still believe. They know of the days when women were almost considered equal. They know of the days when the government had little influence over their daily life. They remember what it was like to be free… and next door, they saw a tyrant overthrown and a country divided begin to come together under freedom. Not only that, but the wife of Ahmadinijad’s opponent played a prominent role in his campaign.
The people began to question. They collectively began to remember. And they’ve decided that it is, once again, time to reclaim their freedom.
The same freedom you and I take for granted. The same freedoms we’re letting slip through our fingers as the government begins to nationalize our banks, transportation and health care. As the Iranians seek to reclaim their freedom, we’ve become so lazy, so accustomed or our lives, that we’re willing to give it away without even a challenge… because it’s so much easier to let a government control us than it is to take responsibility and control for our own lives.
I use this quote from our Declaration of Independence frequently, because it is so true…
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its pwers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
I don’t know if the uprising of freedom loving students, women and men in Iran will succeed or fail… but I do know what thing. I stand with them and I hope all Americans will do the same.
For all of those that crowed about our overthrow of Saddam Hussein, just keep in mind, it caused Muammar al-Gaddafi of Libya to renounce terrorism and halt his weapons program… and it would be surprising if it didn’t have just a little bit to do with what is going on in Iran right now. Yes, the plan to rebuild Iraq had problems… but, what would everyone say about, how would history judge, George W Bush if his decisive action actually toppled the dominoes which turned the Middle East into a peaceful region?
Iranians… thank you for your example. May you enjoy the freedoms you seek and may it remind us to appreciate the freedoms we have, before they slip away.
PL <phantomlord@rochesterconservative.com>
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We Surround Rochester
Aug 28, 2010, Washington DC





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2 responses so far ↓
1 Valuable Internet Information » What we could learn from Iran // Jun 21, 2009 at 2:30 am
[...] View original here: What we could learn from Iran [...]
2 phantomlord // Jun 21, 2009 at 3:53 pm
I know it’s a bit of a long read, but there are a lot of great parallels to what we’re seeing today
Ronald Reagan, June 8, 1982 in an address to the British Parliament:
I was 5 then and I’m pretty sure I didn’t hear the speech live, though I do remember reading it somewhere between then and now… but 27 years later, the Gipper can still bring a tear to my eye. Obama likes to portray himself as a Lincoln, but where his Emancipation Proclamation to the people of Iran? He likes to claim the heritage of FDR, but where is his willingness to stare down tyrants? He thinks of himself as a modern day JFK, but where is his will to free the people from the oppression of taxation? He tries to come of as Ronald Reagan, but where, where is his steely resolve, his bold character that embodies the best of American valies, our virtues and our desire to lead a world away from tyranny and to freedom? By the way, Mr Obama, none of those Presidents voted “present” as you are trying to do. You aspire to be likened to them because they actually DID great things, yet you refuse to do anything. What does that say about you?
The signs in Iran are largely in English. Much as the hill on the city shone down upon them, they are trying to send a message back to us… and it’s not, despite the claims of their dictators, “death to America,” it’s that they too, want freedom and the right to self-determination. After 31 years of dictatorship, they turn to us and the rest of the free world, under live gunfire, claiming that they stand with us. Are we now going to turn out back on them? We don’t need to invade Iran to help them, we can use our leadership and unite the free world to support the Iranian people while they overthrow their tyranny. Were it not for the help of the French, would we have been able to overthrow Britain?
Obama, it’s time to fill the empty suit. It’s time to become a leader. The time for your own campaigning has come to an end, it is time to campaign on behalf of not just America, but all of western philosophy. I stand with the people in Iran who will die for their right to be free. Where do you stand?
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