19,351,769 members doing good!

The Politics Cause

293,233 people care about Politics




Select names from your address book   |   Help
   

We hate spam. We do not sell or share the email addresses you provide.

Iranians Protest Election of Ahmadinejad

43 comments Iranians Protest Election of Ahmadinejad

Sunday, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, joined by thousands of supporters, held a rally celebrating his presidential victory over Hossein Mousavi , but through sporadic news escaping through the state’s communication blackout, protests continue throughout the country.  Below are the highlights of Iranian election coverage:

The Daily Dish by Andrew Sullivan and Nico Pitney at the Huffington Post have been providing regularly updated posts throughout the Iranian elections and the aftermath. Both are posting video, Twitter updates, and other kinds of non-standard news sources.

Twitter has finally emerged as a crucial news source throughout the Iranian election in the U.S. thanks to the lack of live weekend coverage by the cable news networks CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News.  Here are some of the accounts to follow:  @iranelection09, @iranelection, @tehranbureau, @stopahmadi, @Change_for_Iran, and @iranriggedelect. Pitney posted a list of Iranians on Twitter.

SIGN the Care2 Where Is My Vote Petition in support of the Iranian protesters!

If you’re on Twitter, change you’re avatar to a green square in solidarity with Iranian protesters (you can still it from me).

Here are some of the best videos coming out of Iran since Saturday:

Filling the night with chants of protest

CNN’s report on Saturday

Saturday protest in Tehran

Motorcycle policeman is protected by protesters after his was pushed from his motorcycle

Protested in Tehran destroying a police motorcycle

Iran Tonight, they are shouting “Death to the Dictator” according to Andrew Sullivan

Read more: , , , , , ,

Photo courtesy of Shahram Sharif

quick poll

vote now!

Loading poll...

43 comments

+ add your own
3:36PM PDT on Aug 17, 2009

As long as the ayatollahs are in charge, protests won't change anything in Iran. Sad to say that protests will only result in an increase in political prisoners & more shootings of dissidents by the Iranian government.

6:18AM PDT on Jul 12, 2009

Issues debated in this episode, one of he many in Iran's rather turbulent recent history, are democracy, freedom of expression, modernisation and the kind of religion that Iranian society wants.

I believe all Iranians are good Muslims, by and large.

I also believe that, in the name of Islam and its so called values, the selfish clergy has deviated from the holy Quran; it has not changed despite the injunction of 'Ittjehad' that Islam, in the spirit of time and evolution of society, must change. The clergy has refused to change because it fears loosing its absolute control over Iranians' lives.

The Mullahs seem to consider democracy, freedom (from clergy), evolution without decadence of various human values and individual choice (as opposed to clergy's diktat) as sinful. How else would one explain justification of the oppression unleashed by the government in the face of informed opposition. Imagine Ayatollah Khameini ordering a recount but declaring in advance that 'though a recount has been ordered, it will not change the result of the election'.

I believe the Iranians wish to be allowed choice rather than being told who and what to choose; in this process, they protested peacefully and the State apparatus responded with all the force at its command to suppress dissent as well as informed and genuine opposition.

My heart goes out to our brave Iranians brothers and sisters who have valiantly tried to salvage democracy from the ruins created by the clergy's dic

6:06PM PDT on Jun 22, 2009

Vox Pupuli Vox Dei....
i think its democratic proses...give some space to oposition...and stop all the human rape....

9:10AM PDT on Jun 20, 2009

It's not just happening in Iran either. People need to believe it's possible.

"The most powerful weapon in the arsenal of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed"

I believe they can do it. I'm sorry to say it will and has cost lives - but until someone can explain to me, how else to deal with dictatorships, that's the way it will be - because the brainwashed protectors of the state with fight and kill to defend their rule, as they have shown. I don't know how the Iranian people can get through to them.

12:57AM PDT on Jun 20, 2009

Dear Sahar, change is happening. People are not afraid of dictator anymore... it will take time, but Iran is changing!

3:24PM PDT on Jun 19, 2009

I hope we will change and we will make it green.

8:36AM PDT on Jun 19, 2009

Dear Alison, I can not believe what you are writing down here! Ahmadinejas, the man who send his guard to beat the students in their campus, shooting on them, throwing them in jail and tortures them... is a good man???
I am shocked to see how few you people know about the supression in Iran. My people are giving their lives/blood for just a little bit freedom and you say Ahmadinejad is the best for Iran????

5:47AM PDT on Jun 19, 2009

It is actually 11 (eleven)million votes. Is it possible to rig by such a margin? It is true that the opposition has got support in Iran, but those supporters for the present government are more.

5:43AM PDT on Jun 19, 2009

The Protests will not change anything. Tell me, how on eatrh can elections be rigged by 1 million votes. Honestly, the USA and the West do not like certain governments on some countries and they therefore do everything they can to distabilise those countries. It is not the petitions signed by non-Iranians that will pull down a democratically elected president in Iran. It is upto the people of Iran to come up with their own solutions. Americans and Westerners you interfere too much in the internal affairs of sovereign states, and you want to preach your own democracy to the rest of the world. This sickens a lot.

3:14AM PDT on Jun 19, 2009

I don't think it is our place to interfere in Iran's internal affairs.

add your comment

20
20 log in or sign up to start earning Butterfly Credits today!


Disclaimer: The views expressed above are solely those of the author and may not reflect those of
Care2, Inc., its employees or advertisers.

ads keep care2 free

Recent Comments from Causes

Carol, you definitely need to go back to school. Criminal trespass is the act of entering a property…

I agree with Pam and BMutiny absolutely.

From an article on cbc.ca: "A lot of times when you go climb these mountains you sign what's called a…

meet our writers

Tracy Viselli Tracy Viselli's is the Community Manager for ACTion Alexandria, an innovative online civic... more
Story idea? Want to blog? Contact the editors!

customize your newsletter

This newsletter will be sent daily and will feature updates on all the causes you care about. Which causes would you like to include?

Copyright © 2012 Care2.com, inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved