Unqualified Offerings

Looking Sideways at Your World Since October 2001
« « Live by the roof, die by the roof | Main | And you thought your job sucks » »

December 23, 2007

A holiday downer

By Thoreau

The latest LA Times has a profile of an Iranian dissident who had spent time in an infamous prison. Three things leap out. None of these things are new, not even to me, but they are important, and so worth reinforcing again and again.

1) They fear him. Though they have power and oil money and guns, they fear a non-violent student who dares to say things that they don’t like. Speech and ideas are powerful. And that should give all of us hope. Though our situation is nothing like his, though we live under a regime that is (usually) less openly brutal to its citizens, a place where speech of every kind is (usually) far less risky, we also despair that there is nothing to be done. Perhaps we are right to despair. Perhaps our regime is stronger than the one he lives under because ours does not fear speech.

But just when I start to despair that nothing can be done, that perhaps IOZ is right, I remember that even our regime works (more subtly) to narrow the range of acceptable discourse. In the end, I think our regime fears ideas just as much as Iran’s. The difference is that our regime has found more subtle responses to speech and ideas, and is better at (usually) ignoring speech and ideas. Still, deep down they fear it. That means something. Perhaps it doesn’t mean enough, but it means something. And I will cling to it.

2) Their interrogations aren’t so different from the stories that have leaked out from our secret prisons. OK, they differ from the water-boarding stories that have gotten so much attention, in that these interrogations are far less clinical and controlled than the waterboarding procedures that have been given so much deliberate attention. But go beyond the rare and high profile stories, and look at all of the people who have been beaten, put in stress positions, and driven crazy with all sorts of psychological tricks, and you’ll see yet another example of the same tactics at work. This is nothing new, but like many well-known points it needs constant reiteration. The same regime that claims to be so superior to Iran seeks the unchecked power to behave like Iran’s secret police.

3) They know that what they are doing is wrong.  Which means that they have no excuse.

Before he left Evin his interrogators asked him to pardon them for their sins. He scoffed.

“Here is the sentence I told my interrogators on the last day: ‘If I had seen you in the streets before I was arrested, I would not consider you qualified to carry manure.’ I told them they understood nothing of Islam and I could not pardon. ‘That’s not important,’ they said, but their faces were filled with anger.”

We are often told that the people who do our government’s dirty work are patriots who reluctantly do these dirty deeds for the good of all, while the people who do the dirty work of other regimes are unrepentant thugs. The truth is that they are busy lying to themselves; they are just desperate men in denial. Zamanian saw the cracks in the armor. He saw how desperate they were for an excuse. This goes back to the fact that they are afraid of speech and ideas.

None of these things are new. They aren’t new to others. They aren’t even new to me. But they’re important, and hence worth pointing out again and again.

Anyway, time to get ready for my Festivus party. I have some grievances to air, but I’ll stay away from the hardcore downers.

Posted by Thoreau @ 3:52 pm, Filed under: Main

« « Live by the roof, die by the roof | Main | And you thought your job sucks » »

2 Responses to “A holiday downer”

  1. Comment by Dave W.
    December 24, 2007 @ 12:29 pm

    they fear a non-violent student who dares to say things that they don’t like. Speech and ideas are powerful. And that should give all of us hope.

    Hear, hear.

    Remember, like Daniel Johnston sang: Don’t let the sun go down on your greivian-CES / respect LUV of the HEART over lust of the flesh / do yourself a favor / become your own Saviour and . . .

    some people think Daniel is a lunatic. he is (see that inetrview with Gibby at in the DVD extras of Devil and DJ if you don’t believe me), but he’s still was right (and righteous!).

  2. Comment by Carl from L.A.
    December 24, 2007 @ 3:44 pm

    A third thing caught my attention. The incarceration and mistreatment of this one person, which called for such a lengthy article in the L.A. Times, lasted forty days.

    Forty days, not year after year as at Guantanamo. Then, they let him go. There are prisoners at Guantanamo, as I am sure you know, who are innocent of anything, and are still held there for years.

    I guess it’s reached the point where it’s okay that we’re worse than the Iranian Mullahs, worse than Saddam. How long before it’s okay to be worse than Hitler?

  3. (Comments automatically closed after 21 days.)