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Showing posts with label Iran protests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iran protests. Show all posts

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Quick Thoughts on Iran

I've been having this heretical thought for a few days now, and it was interesting to see it confirmed by Jerry Pournelle:

We know that the Tehran demonstrators claim the election was rigged and that their man won. We don't know a lot more.

Suppose...just suppose: despite the overly hurried ballot counting and the appearance of corruption in the election process, that the ballots were actually recounted by a reasonably neutral third party and it turns out Ahmadenijad really did win the election. Win or lose, I must argue against John McCain and others who say that we "must" support the protestors simply because they appear to support things that we want. Or, more to the point, it appears that they don't support our enemy, Ahmadenijad. If honestly counted ballots were to turn against them, we might sympathize, but we cannot say unequivocally that the protestors in the streets are right.

This is why "We are friends of liberty everywhere, but guardians only of our own" matters. We do not need to be putting the prestige of the U.S. government behind uncertain election results. It is not our responsibility to get in the middle of every crisis that erupts in the world, especially when that crisis is in a nation that has steadfastly disliked and fought an undeclared war against us for 30 years. When your enemy is in the process of hurting himself, stand back and let it happen.

The outcomes are numerous, but range from triumph of the dissidents to a recount to a coalition government to a vicious crackdown of the protestors to something else that we haven't thought of yet. It would be bad form and bad policy to stick our noses in where they didn't belong. The very act of intervention could turn the result against us, and leave us in an even worse situation (imagine it's possible, because it is) with whoever comes out on top of the ensuing struggle. This is Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle as applied to politics: you can either observe the position or the trajectory of a situation, not both, and the mere act of observing could change the outcome.

Does this mean do nothing? No. We can and should do everything we can to keep the lines of communication open, especially from private citizens using the internet. If the Ahmadenijad/Khamenei government continues cracking down on protests and communications with the outside world, there are things we can and should do within the U.N. and the Persian Gulf region to ensure that information continues to flow and the outcome is more to our liking. But we really need to sit this one out. If it was our job to right every wrong and dethrone every tyrant in the world, Ahmadenijad would be out of office already, as would many of his neighbors and allies. A political party and ideology was roundly defeated recently because of a counterinsurgency following a victorious war against another dictator. Does Obama really want to extend the Bush Doctrine in that way? I don't think so.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Potpourri LIV

Despite a week away from the home computer, I found little that required my readers' attention. Be grateful: I probably had a few hundred emails to sift through. Still, I thought I would share the following. Enjoy.

News from Hu:

  • The Augustine Human Space Flight panel is coming to Huntsville/Decatur to visit Marshall Space Flight Center (the Ares Projects) and the United Launch Alliance (ULA) plant to check out the Delta/Atlas production lines. The visit is making life at MSFC very exciting, to say the least. Fortunately, I missed most of The Swirl (as I call it) because I was on travel.
  • The $400M budget cut to Constellation is still in NASA's 2010 budget.

From Lin, who has a new web site:

  • The American Thinker opinion site has an article on fusion. I love the notion of fusion power. Unfortunately, like space solar power, it's always been "just 20 years away." And we've been working on fusion for something like 50 years, SSP for 40.
  • Another American Thinker editorial on gun control in India.
  • A new hydrogen-electric car developed in an "open-source" fashion. Fascinating, but tiny. It'll get you places, and maybe a friend, but don't plan on taking anything with you.
  • An obituary for Common Sense. I'd better tell my mom. She'll be all kinds of upset.

From Melissa, a video of a guy with seriously scary acrobatic skills.

From my Google news feed, a couple stories on Ares I-X:

From Yohon: a service called eScrip, that allows you to automatically donate 5% of your total restaurant bill to a community group.

And while I've been out of the loop on the news, it's been hard to ignore the massive protests going on in Iran. The Obama administration has wisely kept their nose out of it, for the most part. Maybe someday the U.S. will relearn the value of John Adams' dictum that "We are friends of liberty everywhere, but guardians only of our own." I wish the lovers of freedom well, but hope, if they succeed in unseating the tyranny in their country, that they will back off the virulent anti-Semitism and anti-Israel stances that have characterized Mahmoud Ahmadenijad.

That's it for now.