Best forgotten.
The news media has marked the approach of a significant anniversary - that of Iran's revolution, and it should come as no surprise to anyone who bothers to read this blog that they are leaving a lot out of the story. My main source on this is NPR, and while I don't set out to single them out (as a news organization, they're better than some, worse than others), they do have a remarkable capacity, by and large, to hew to the center of political and economic power in the United States. Their perception seems generally representative of that of the current administration at any given time.
Anyway, there was the usual stories about boys choirs singing "Death to America!", the "Down with Israel" chants, etc. (Probably could hear that in Times Square if you listen hard enough.) One report I heard on NPR's Morning Edition on the 35th anniversary celebration in Teheran made passing mention of the eight-year Iran/Iraq war in the 1980s. Here's an excerpt:
I don't want to be unfair, but seriously - if reporters don't know or acknowledge history, we are bound to repeat the bad parts again and again.
luv u,
jp
Anyway, there was the usual stories about boys choirs singing "Death to America!", the "Down with Israel" chants, etc. (Probably could hear that in Times Square if you listen hard enough.) One report I heard on NPR's Morning Edition on the 35th anniversary celebration in Teheran made passing mention of the eight-year Iran/Iraq war in the 1980s. Here's an excerpt:
INSKEEP: Although we should remember this 35th anniversary marks the overthrow of a ruler who was supported by the United States and who was regarded by many as very repressive.Given the context, you'd think it might be worth mentioning our role in that "long and bloody war". For those who don't recall, we - the Reagan administration, that is - sided with Saddam Hussein, providing him with substantial economic and logistical assistance, treating him as a top-shelf client, even allowing him to get away with shooting up the U.S.S. Stark during the tanker war phase late in the conflict. If Inskeep and Kenyon think that honoring the dead from the Iran - Iraq war takes people's minds off of America, they're smoking crack.
KENYON: That's right. Again, they see that as an official government policy, not something necessarily being generated by the American people. So they do make that distinction. And this holiday is important across the country partly because of people who want to support the Islamic revolution and also because it was followed by a long and bloody war with Iraq. And many people simply turn out on February 11 to remember the young people who gave their lives in that cause.
I don't want to be unfair, but seriously - if reporters don't know or acknowledge history, we are bound to repeat the bad parts again and again.
luv u,
jp
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