Iran: Where Did the Campus Outrage Go? The Deafening Silence Exposed

iran-protest

The Selective Megaphone Of Student Activism.

Campus protest culture loves to brand itself as fearless, moral, and uncompromising. When a cause fits the approved narrative, tents appear overnight, chants echo across quads, and social feeds flood with righteousness. But when reality complicates the story, the megaphones vanish. Nowhere is that silence louder than in the face of Iran’s ongoing repression—and the uncomfortable parallels it exposes with the extremist movements some students rush to excuse or romanticize.

Iran’s Reality Check Nobody Wants To Share

Let’s talk facts, not slogans. In Iran today, basic freedoms Americans take for granted are outright forbidden. You can’t listen to certain music in public. You can’t walk your dog in the capital. Women don’t choose what they wear. The internet and social media are shut down at the whim of the regime. Peaceful protest is answered with bullets. Hospitals fill with demonstrators shot for demanding dignity. Religious choice, free elections, and open communication with the outside world are fantasies, not rights.

This isn’t theoretical oppression. It’s daily life under an authoritarian theocracy that enforces state religion, polices behavior, and controls information with brute force.

The Narrative Problem No One Wants To Admit

So where are the campus rallies? Where are the urgent sit-ins for Iranian women, students, and dissidents bleeding in the streets? The answer is uncomfortable: acknowledging Iran’s brutality shatters a carefully protected narrative. It forces a reckoning with the reality that political Islam, when fused with state power, produces repression—not liberation.

The silence isn’t accidental. It’s strategic. Condemning the Iranian regime would require admitting that systems built on enforced ideology, censorship, and violence are not “anti-imperialist alternatives,” but authoritarian nightmares. Just as the Soviet Union was once defended until it collapsed under its own lies, Iran’s rulers cling to power by exporting chaos abroad while crushing their own people at home.

Moral Consistency Shouldn’t Be Optional

If outrage is real, it must be consistent. Human rights don’t depend on whether the oppressor fits a fashionable worldview. Students who claim to stand for freedom can’t avert their eyes when the facts contradict their politics. Silence, in this case, isn’t neutrality—it’s complicity.

Bottom Line

If campus activism only speaks when it’s convenient, it’s not activism at all. It’s performance. And the people suffering under real tyranny know the difference.

If you don’t have the guts to protest real killers, killing innocent oppressed people, shut the fuck up and go home.

We are so screwed.

— Steve

Thank you for visiting with us today. — Steve 

 

“The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” — Marcus Aurelius

“Nullius in verba”– take nobody’s word for it!
“Acta non verba” — actions not words

A smiling man wearing sunglasses, a cap, and casual outdoor clothing outdoors in front of trees, representing citizen journalism and free speech advocacy.

About Me

I have over 40 years of experience in management consulting, spanning finance, technology, media, education, and political data processing. 

From sole proprietorships to Fortune 500 companies, I have turned around companies and managed their decline. All of which gives me a unique perspective on screwing and getting screwed.

Feel free to e-mail me at steve@onecitizenspeaking.com

Categories ((Clickable))
Archives ((Clickable))