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#1 2009-12-01 12:05:50
Good morning, all.
I noticed some stunning similarities between this article in today's Wall Street Journal, and a situation closer to home.
http://online.wsj.com/article/S81000142 … 66194.html
Wouldn't a certain BoS love to be able to act toward us, as Iran did in the first three paragraphs of the piece?
And please, do NOT mention the formation of a police unit to fight "insults and the spreading of lies" on the internet. Wouldn't want to see any BoBos hauled away, now would we?
And that last sentence can be rewritten, of course:
"...all the (computer audits), blustering rhetoric and menacing threats cannot drown out the fact that the (BoS in wareham) is terrified of men and women typing on computers"
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#2 2009-12-01 12:44:51
OK, those friendly folks at the WSJ will not allow the link, so I copied and pasted the article below.
Ahmadinejad, the Blogger
Iran's president has taken a note from the playbook of Yasser Arafat...By DAVID KEYES
On Nov. 18, two Iranian Internet activists, Ali Behzadian Nejad and Omid Lavassani, were sentenced to six years in prison. Their crimes? Mr. Lavassani had the audacity to design a Web site for the leading opposition figure Mir Hossein Mousavi. Mr. Nejad is being jailed for "published comments" written by others on his blog, and "propaganda against the system."
Iranian laws about the Web are purposely kept vague. Ahmed Batebi, the dissident who recently escaped Tehran after eight years in prison, told me that "The regime can arrest people and bloggers for any reason precisely because the laws are not clear."
A journalist in the city of Yazd recently reported several cases of bloggers being shut down or involved in lawsuits due to readers' comments. And on Nov. 14, local Iranian press reported that a new police unit was formed to fight "insults and the spreading of lies" on the Internet—another phrase which effectively bans any criticism of the regime.
It's hard to believe in light of this Internet repression, but Iran's president is himself a blogger. "Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's Personal Memos" is the place where he goes to vent and stay in touch with the common folk. He says he allots himself 15 minutes a week to write on his blog, but admits that at times he exceeds this limit.
Ahmadinejad wrote of his blog that "The magnitude of the reception and acclamation from the viewers was beyond expectations." It is a half truth at best. The English version of the site is full of scathing critiques by readers. Nicholas from the United States writes "You're one of the most stupid president [sic] ever. I'm sure about half of the comments posted on this blog are just totally fake and used as propaganda." Gary from Great Britain adds "Why would anybody want to listen to you. You're suppressive." Jack opines: "I hope someone puts a bullet in your head very soon."
What sort of tyrant allows for open debate and harsh critique on the front-page of his own blog? Someone who has clearly studied the playbook of Yasser Arafat. The Palestinian leader mastered the art of offering platitudes about peace in English while simultaneously rallying his people to jihad in Arabic.
I asked one of Britain's leading Iranian bloggers to help me translate the Farsi version of Ahmadinejad's Memos. His homepage in Farsi contained not a single negative comment by readers. The closest one gets to criticism is "Homayan" who wrote prior to the June election: "Last night by seeing your supporters in the streets I realized that you will win. I wanted to say as someone who opposed you to congratulate you . . . I had a lot of criticism but I feel none of them are that important to stop me from voting for you. It's interesting to me how you turned your opponent into your supporter." One Canadian-Iranian student gushed: "I am proud to be the citizen of a country who has a brave President like Ahmadinejad."
Though the Islamic Republic of Iran desperately wants to be seen as a world power, all the military parades, blustering rhetoric, and menacing threats cannot drown out the fact that the government in Tehran is terrified of men and women typing on computers.
Mr. Keyes is the director of Cyberdissidents.org and the coordinator for democracy programs at the Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies in Jerusalem.
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