Then Again…
I just pulled this off Andrew Sullivan’s blog and Matt Steinglass seems to present a counter argument to the question I raised in my earlier post:
Iran has an electoral system that is similar in some respects to China’s or Vietnam’s. Elections are held periodically, but the lists of candidates are carefully vetted by the real controlling power structure — in Vietnam or China’s case, the Communist Party; in Iran’s case, the clergy — to ensure ideological compliance and loyalty. Moussavi passed through this system of ideological control; he’s no radical reformer. But what’s happened is that simply by representing an alternative, Moussavi became a vehicle for the expression of the hopes of people who are far more radical in their reformist hopes than anyone in the dominant power structure. Even though the players in the Iranian elections were all screened for their personal views, the simple fact of an election became a forum in which radical and unacceptable political views could express themselves and ultimately co-opt one of the candidates.








Winslowalrob
This is all well and good, but whatever happened to the whole ‘haitus to write the book’ thing? You are worst than I am!
PS did you read the Times piece on the ‘death’ of traditional history? I am going to do a writup on it (although Tim Burke already beat me to the punch the cheeky bastard) and I was curious as to what your take was on it.
Jun 17, 2009 @ 1:01 pm