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Thursday, June 18, 2009
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Silent Revolution
by Paul Greenberg
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I knew about the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia in the glorious year 1989, when the Iron Curtain crumbled. I can even remember the Singing Revolution in Estonia about the same time. But this is something new: a Silent Revolution. The huge throng that marched through the Iranian capital last Monday spoke nary a word, Theirs was a silent vigil for a liberty not so much lost as never gained, from Shah to Ayatollah.

Whenever someone in the crowd would shout a slogan, others hushed him. The organizers of the march had prepared signs that read only: SILENCE! Only the sound of marching feet could be heard, like the oceanic wave of a people patiently rising, till the inevitable gunshots rang out as a confrontation was sparked.

After the silence of the day, people gathered on rooftops under cover of night to shout Allahu Akhbar! and Death to the Dictator. It was a prayer and call to action at the same time.

The big question about the latest "election" in Iran isn't whether it was rigged. The candidates were screened by the theocracy from the start, and the more active members of the opposition jailed before the first votes were cast. The big question is whether Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his gang stole the election or just inflated his margin of victory into a blowout.

We'll probably never know, as anybody can testify who has studied the history of elections in Cook County, Illinois, or of Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, where the Ahmadinejad of his time and place was named Leander Perez. Rigged votes are scarcely confined to the Islamic world.

But the vote-stealing in Iran lacked the discreet charm of political bosses like Mayor Daley I in Chicago, who had enough restraint in 1960 to hold his ballots back till he knew just how many Jack Kennedy would need to overcome the Republican vote downstate. In Iran, the mullahs were less subtle. Any election in which almost 40 million paper ballots are tallied in only a matter of hours, and the winner declared before the votes could possibly have been counted, is bound to raise suspicions.

The electoral fraud was so obvious that even the ayatollah-in-chief had to qualify his earlier announcement that Mahmoud the Rabid had won by saying there would be an investigation and a recount of the more suspect votes. His Holiness may be willing to countenance a few score million stolen votes, but not a landslide.

Meanwhile, as days passed, the White House practiced its own form of silence. Things have changed since a president of the United States could be counted on to at least voice a protest when another people are cowed. Finally, finally, our president voiced some tepid concern, acknowledging that his silence was the kind that gives consent -- to tyranny. Or as he put it, "it would be wrong for me to be silent about what we've seen on television over the last few days." There was no would-be to it, it was wrong. When it comes to Iran, the president of Change and Hope became the president of stasis and resignation. Only slowly, grudgingly does he stir in defense of freedom in Iran even now.

There was a time, though it grows harder and harder to remember, when an American president was also known as The Leader of the Free World. If anyone uses that sobriquet these days, it's usually ironic.

The crushing of popular opinion in the mullahs' realm was so obvious this time that even Europeans, even the French, even the German chancellor protested. That would be Angela Merkel, who's starting to sound like Margaret Thatcher, aka The Iron Lady in her heyday. And the Germans may be Iran's biggest trading partner. The lady's got moxie.

Even the Spanish foreign minister voiced some mild concern about the election results in Iran. ("There is a need to clarify the situation and to express our concern that a sector of the population are having difficulties in expressing its opinion.") His statement was in the best/worst tradition of the late, unlamented Francisco Franco, who managed to thread his way between the Axis and Allies for years, always coming out on the currently winning side.

Happily, the opposition in this country is still at large and free to say what it thinks. Mitt Romney, demonstrating that the GOP is not entirely moribund, didn't have to wait days to comment on events in Iran. "The election is a fraud," he observed as soon the first dubious returns were being announced. "The results are inaccurate, and you are seeing a brutal repression of the people." How refreshing it can be to hear a politician dare say the obvious. Nor was it surprising to see John McCain echo those sentiments; he's never been known for kowtowing to dictators.

For that matter, there are still Democrats of conscience, too. Joe Lieberman, that reliable maverick, denounced the official vote count out of Teheran almost as soon as it was fabricated, demonstrating that the freedom-loving spirit of the late great Scoop Jackson is still alive somewhere in the Democratic Party -- even if you have to look hard to find it.

As for the White House's statements on the Iranian election, tardy and fearful as they were, nobody expects Barack Obama to cancel his next apology tour of the exotic East in response to a little election fraud or even a lot of it -- after all, he's from Chicago -- but he could have made it clear that America is still on the side of freedom in the world. Especially when ordinary people are showing extraordinary courage as they speak up for it in Teheran itself.

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Mmm
Hard core. It really aches to see us come to this. The hypocrisy of all of the Bush bashing of the last 8 years comes home to roost.

This is what liberalism is all about. How do you protest totalitarianism when it's actually your own goal as well?

Who cares
What a dumb article.

Obama can't swoop in and change the results.

Conservatizers fake outrage is a joke.

Obama doesn't want to set a precedent
If he takes a stand against rigged elections, how will he have any chance of winning a second term????

I don't see
much difference between the elections in Iran and Amerika.

There were millions of illegal votes for Obama.
We'll never know how many.

OBAMA, IRAN & THE BUSH DOCTRINE
Click my name and read my piece: Bush, Iraq and Iranian Contempt for Obama and the Anti-War Left

Obama on the side of freedom?!
Perhaps the Annointed One isn't "making it clear that America is still on the side of freedom in the world" because *he* isn't on the side of freedom anywhere; not even in America, let alone the rest of the world.

Tyler
'You' are a joke!

Phineas J.
Your exactly right!

Vincent and LD35
You're both onto something. Like most career politicians, Obama prefers the known and orderly to the unknown and disorderly. Bush 41, for example, probably would've liked to see the Baathists continue running Iraq without Saddam Hussein, but his second choice was Baath rule with Saddam.

Obama has other issues, however. His presidential campaign was an utter fraud that depended on suppressing every iota of information that might cast popular doubt on his eligibility for the presidency. (That he probably _is_ technically eligible is a separate matter. He deemed his own background sufficiently troublesome to warrant a very expensive deception.) His strategy for winning caucuses was evidently to bus supporters across state lines. He campaigned unabashedly on foreign soil, and he apparently amassed great sums of prohibited foreign money. His victory depended, in part, on support from illegals, felons, serial voters, and the dead. He has a long, strong association with ACORN, a criminal enterprise that has turned electoral irregularity into a science. In return for its help, he is pumping millions, perhaps billions, of taxpayers' dollars into its treasury and setting it up as his _de facto_ Census Bureau. His AG has winked at voter intimidation by racist gangsters. On a weekly basis he arrogates powers not granted by the Constitution. He and his pals in Congress are busily laying plans for perpetual one-party rule.

The last thing Obama wants is a vigorous national debate on honest campaigns, free elections, and the legitimacy of regimes.

Tyler
I care, and so do most Americans.

You know, you're absolutely correct that "Obama can't swoop in there and change the results." And I never expected him to do so. However, it was ol' Hoosey himself who, while the election was going on, stated that he, with his Cairo speech, had single-handedly opened "meaningful and vigorous debate" in Iran which would lead to new freedom and liberty there. And he was going to effect regime change in Iran with just his soaring words.

You're also right that it's a joke. A joke on Obama. He is daily turning into Hoosey the Clown.

No outrage from this conservative. I'm LMFAO at Obama and his brain dead followers like you.

Palecon
I love your commentary. I was going to make the exact point. What was Obama going to say? Election fraud is wrong. He's a Chicago community organizer for gosh sakes. I am sure he could have given some pointers to the Iranian dictatorship how to commit real voter fraud.

Quote: ":I am a patient man."
Ah, it’s just a pre-Ramadan assembly in June. Fasting brings the best out of Muslims. A time when humans communicate with god. Fasting is meant to teach the person patience, sacrifice and humility.

I wonder...
... how many ballots for Ahmadinejad magically turned up in car trunks just as the official count was winding up?

At least Iran's not likely to end up with a snarky unfunny "comedian" from Minnesota in their parliament.

But I certainly think Obama could offer AA & his mullah pals some tips on how to do it with more finesse. For instance, you have the dead folks vote IN the election; you don't kill voters afterwards...

Oh, & ain't it nice that John McCain stood up for Iranian freedom & denounced tyranny? Ya think he might figure out one day that freedom of speech/press including robust unrestricted political debate is one of the foundational pillars of _American_ freedom, & the 1st Amendment does not have any clause that nullifies its provisions if a dollar changes hands somewhere in the process of making & disseminating the free speech? Don't you wish the GOP you see & hear when it's out of power is the one you get if you bust your tail to put it in power?

Tyler
What do you mean "who cares?" Who cares about Kent State? Or Tiananmen Square? Or any place else people like you and me have dared to stand up. No Obama can't swoop in and change things. And sometimes all you can do is stand there in front of the column of tanks. But sometimes, dammit that's what you have to do. He's President. He can't vote "present" any more.

Send the commoners...
...guns and the writings of Thomas Jefferson and Ayn Rand.

....
yea who ever needed another country to step in a help a revolution to free oppressed people. Thank god the French stayed out of our business during our revolution.
Obama the knee shaker NEEDED to stand up and say, We support you and your fight to the bloody end. Just a sad sad little man... to bad he cant just promiss something for nothing this time.

Greenberg wrote
"Theirs was a silent vigil for a liberty not so much lost as never gained, from Shah to Ayatollah."

Actually, under the mullahcracy initiated by Khomeini Iranians lost some of the few rights/liberties they had actually HAD under the absolute monarchy of the Pahlavis.

"Any election in which almost 40 million paper ballots are tallied in only a matter of hours, and the winner declared before the votes could possibly have been counted, is bound to raise suspicions."

The political cartoon on TH about that was probably not far from on-the-nail. The booth voting boxes probably really WERE connected to a shredder while the ones shown for counting were stuffed with an exact number/percentage of ballots for Nejad (a tactic actually used in the Indian crimepit state of Bihar, revealed to West in 1991 edition of WaPo; no need to explain why this would be even easier in dictatorship than in crimepit state).

Greetings, Palmetto Staters
Jason: Thanks. I may be wrong, but I try to call 'em as I see 'em.

Don't Tread on Me: Yeah, I'll bet that the prez could teach the ayatollahs a thing or two about vote-rigging. He might even lend them a planeload of Black Panthers to observe the recount.

our electios are so much more civilized.
the mullahs stuff ballot boxes. how crude. here in the usa, we pay millions of loafers every month to obligate them to vote for democrats. same result as iran, but we are so much more sophisticated.

Vote suppression
Paleocon: "He and his pals in Congress are busily laying plans for perpetual one-party rule."
I applaud your message, but take issue with the word "laying" plans. I contend they are busily implementing plans at a speed that is breathless to behold.

We'll be lucky if there is an election in 2010. Too many illegals already registered to vote, and no voter-ID to weed them out.

The Big Question
"The big question about the latest "election" in Iran isn't whether it was rigged. The candidates were screened by the theocracy from the start, and the more active members of the opposition jailed before the first votes were cast. The big question is whether Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his gang stole the election or just inflated his margin of victory into a blowout."

________________________________________________

The big question about the latest election in the United States isn't whether it was rigged. The candidates were screened by big media from the start and the more effective members of the opposition effectively marginalzed before the first vote was counted. The big question is whether Barak Obeyme and his band of partisan hacks stole the election or just manipulated a majority of an illiterate electorate into buying the lies.

01341684685
Neo-Conservative strategy:

Resort to chaos. In order to achieve that objective, you must meddle so the regime can have yet another excuse to garner enough populous support to employ a more harsher tactics in cracking down on the opposition. And by that, the neo-cons would have their victory.

The change comes from within and any foreign intrusion only serves as a boast for the Mullahs to oppress with more vigor -- a legitimacy that is much needed to validate their feign rumors of "Western-backed forces are at the verge of toppling the revolution."

Salty
"I applaud your message, but take issue with the word "laying" plans. I contend they are busily implementing plans at a speed that is breathless to behold."

You're right. I stand corrected.

Shrinque
Dead on. Thank you for your tactful response to stupid virulent liberal rage. You're a credit to the conservative movement.

Chuck
Maestro!

Caution
While I am encouraged by the protests in Iran, I am cautious in my optimism. Democracy only puts forth the will of the people.

If the people of Iran are Muslim hard-liners, we could be looking at less of a substantive change, and more of a stylistic one.

STOP the Silence!
I have a great deal of respect for the Iranian people going against their government for stuffing the ballot box. I guess "we the people" need to follow their example and vote with our feet and our words. Too bad our leaders don't have any BACKBONE left.

Can we sue our Congress individually for not performing their duty? GM bondholders come to mind. How did Obama's friends get away with that trick.
Can we sue our Congress individually for not reading the bills that they pass?
Can we sue our Congress individually for leaving their SPINES at home?
Their must be some way to load them down with paper work. They do it to us all the time. We need to follow their example. Anyone out there have an ideas? knowledge? forms?

Nancy
Obama doesn't care about democracy in Iran. Except as it benefits him, he doesn't care about democracy in the United States. He's unlikely to sympathize with foreigners who want to change leadership, for he probably fears that he'll have to deal with mass discontent here before long. He's already made nice with Ahmedinejad. And if someone new takes over, he'll have to send a flunky down to Dollar General for another basket of cheap presents. So don't expect him to encourage the dissidents.

One irony of this situation is that nothing may be the best thing he can do for them. If he came down too hard on their side, they'd immediately lose favor with the sizable anti-American faction.

The last four paragraphs of your post bring to mind the works in which Frank Herbert (author of _Dune_) created a world in which government was so swift and efficient that it created a Bureau of Sabotage to slow its progress toward tyranny. Such a development will never happen in real life, of course. But there are many kinds of monkey-wrenching.

Put This In UR Pipe And Smoke It!
Obama playing hardball on Walpin as key Dem calls foul:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/obama-playing-hardbal l-on-walpin-as-key-dem-calls-foul/" target="_blank">http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/obama-playing-hardbal l-on-walpin-as-key-dem-calls-foul/

Rural Democrats differ with Barack Obama:


Americans are souring on Obamanomics:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/hope-and-change-new-w sj-poll-shows-america-souring-on-obamanomics/

Democrats dodge ban on cash from lobbyists:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/obama-playing-hardbal l-on-walpin-as-key-dem-calls-foul/" target="_blank">http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/obama-playing-hardbal l-on-walpin-as-key-dem-calls-foul/


Obama makes token concession to gays, hopes they’ll leave him alone now:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/video-obama-makes-tok en-concession-to-gays-hopes-theyll-leave-him-alone-now/

PETA miffed at Obama for swatting fly:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/inevitable-peta-miffe d-at-obama-for-swatting-fly/


Sebelius’ double talk on public plan:

http://hotair.com/archives/2009/06/17/video-sebelius-double -talk-on-public-plan/


http://www.politico.com/reporters/JonathanMartin.html

Chuck Todd: 'Honeymoon coming to an end'

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0609/23865.html



ShaneRoach
"This is what liberalism is all about. How do you protest totalitarianism when it's actually your own goal as well? "
Right on brother!
And make sure everyone you talk to knows it.
Shout it out in the streets.
Don't let the roaches scurry away from the light cast on them by reports of the suffering and death caused around the world by their old, failed, miserable policies.

COMING TO America too_ yes we can !

THE 'Silent revolution" is growing and building in the USA TOO..

ENOUGH, of the insantity, the perpetual hoax after hoax to steal our wealth, our freedom, our rights.

YES WE CAN ! throw the bums and this corrupt criminal administration O U T

http://www.ourcacus.com

AND be there July 4th for the freedom marches
from sea to sea to DC


NANCY, has to be a recall petition

EVERYONE should check with their state to
determine what the proceedure is to RECALL

Senators
Congressmen

then begin the petitions, 10 people to get 10 people to get 10 people to sign them and so on until you have the required number for a special election! or whatever is required.

WE CAN throw the bums OUT

http://www.ourcacus.com

spread this around so that we get the "SILENT" majority to take the action needed.

Obama and Iran
The weak response of Obama and other leftist leaders to events in Iran shouldn't be a surprise. At their core, leftists are totalitarian. As such, they have a soft spot for other totalitarians.
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