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Reply to "Did I miss the thread on the current revolution going on to free Iran?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Interesting explanation as to why our media is ignoring what is happening in Iran: [twitter]https://x.com/detahmineh/status/2009680255091405074?s=46&t=X605tXq86EtH5m7JHoGWFQ[/twitter][/quote] Nonsense. "Liberal" western outlets have covered the Iran protests extensively, including the parts where demonstrators criticize the Islamic Republic, burn mosques, reject clerical rule, or chant against compulsory religion. Major publications — from the BBC and Reuters to the New York Times, Guardian, AP, DW, and CNN have repeatedly reported: - attacks on regime‑aligned mosques - slogans rejecting theocracy - anger at clerics and the morality police - the broader revolt against the Islamic Republic’s religious authority None of that has been hidden or downplayed by the media. The real reason coverage fluctuates is simple: news cycles, not ideology. When protests surge, coverage surges. When the regime cracks down and demonstrations become harder to document, coverage naturally drops — the same pattern seen in Hong Kong, Sudan, Belarus, and elsewhere. There’s no evidence that Western journalism is suppressing the story because protesters criticize Islam. In fact, the opposite is true: Western outlets have been some of the only institutions consistently documenting how Iranians challenge the regime’s religious authority. These constant smears of "liberal" and "western" media are not grounded in facts or reality and can only come from or play to people who themselves live in their own tiny echo chamber of restricted media consumption.[/quote] +1. And can we also discuss the practical reason? [b]The international press is not widely allowed in Iran. The Iranian government controls and restricts internet access. That's why you keep seeing the same five videos and why you don't have a lot of "man on the street" interviews. The government of Iran is restricting the ability to report.[/b] And this is the third or fourth time since 2009 that Iran's government was going to fall. The gov't of Iran has a strategy/plan - let the citizenry let off some steam, agree to lessening of some strict rules, then start cracking back down over time. Lather, rinse, repeat. I very much want this to be the time that the gov't of Iran falls, but just because a moderate Muslim woman from the Iranian diaspora says it's so doesn't mean it's so. Her claim that the Western mind can't absorb the Iranians rising up because it's also an uprising against Islam is bizarre. [/quote] Damn girl, you just described Israel and how the IDF is knocking off every reporter in Gaza. Iran and Israel, two-sides of the same coin. [/quote] Nobody cares about bogus reporting by pro-Palestinian apologists and propagandists, who have little to do with Iran apart from how they are funded as part of Iran's anti-Israel crusade which you are happy to fall in behind. When Iran falls, Gaza will have to finally fend for itself, learning to live alongside its neighbor or not, as it chooses. [/quote] If Israel thinks Gaza is truly linked to Iran per Netanyahu’s claims, they are in even bigger trouble than Ever. Iranians and Gazans don’t even speak the same language. Iran needs interpreters for speaking Arabic. Gazans would need interpreters for Farsi. The average Gazan is likely more fluent in English or Hebrew than Farsi[/quote]
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