…must be in response to the CPRF admitting that Khrushchev’s secret speech was wrong and bad…
immuredanchorite
I appreciate your perspective and effort.
I am not an expert and don't really have a firm grasp on internal Iranian politics, but I am skeptical the Iranian people wouldn't have supported something like this against 'israel' the first time they were attacked...
Part of my thinking behind this is how moved so many in the imperial core were by witnessing the genocide. I know people make a lot of rightful criticisms about the working class and the left in the imperial core, but that thinking tends to gloss over the historic gains too- for the first time since the us war in vietnam era there is a mass anti-imperialist movement. And even more interestingly, it isn't simply an anti-war movement driven in part from fear/anger over the draft/american deaths. The USian movement for Palestine has shifted a huge number of younger, working class libs towards a distinct anti-imperialist consciousness... I only bring this up to say, I can't imagine those images are less stirring or less provocative in Iran. I would think they would also be less censored than they are in burgerland. Where anti-imperialism is likely to be more viscerally rooted in peoples consciousness, and people could conceivably make the connection between their own history of confronting US imperialism and the nightmare in Gaza that is also a product of the US. then again, I am sure Iran's working class has contradictory politics, and there is probably a ton of nuance I am missing. I just don't really see Iran as being such a weak state that it could be toppled so easily... but I admit I don't really have any good understanding of whether that is true- i am mostly basing things off of how Iran has endured every conceivable attempt by the US to undermine it. I think only Cuba and the DPRK have been subject to the same level or more subterfuge than Iran. (of the existing states the US is hell-bent on destroying)
I was just remembering how the apartheid state had occupied a whole new swath of Syria, including the tallest mountain in the region. Is there a possibility of Iranian attacks extending to the occupation forces there... like, would that help ease pressure on Hezbollah and any resistance forces in Syria, or is that all moot at this point. I could see why the Iran would want to focus on tel aviv and the entities core military/industrial/energy facilities, but wouldn't it also be more difficult for the entity to defend its periphery and potentially lead the entity to make a caluculated retreat from the area?
On another note, this whole thing is really making it feel like Iran could have ended all this a long time ago by responding this way the first time around. I know hindsight is 20/20 but if all this was going to be made inevitable, it would have been better to go whole hog on the resistances terms rather than Israel's. Like if Hezbollah was still fighting and taking out the entities defensive infrastructure, Iran would probably have even more unfettered ability to strike targets deep in Israel, no?
dc was only a few weeks ago— it will probably be months or even in the coming year by the time the us security state has shifted its weight in the direction of the movement and set up as many cointelpro style operations as possible… the idea that nothing has happened yet, so it won't happen is silly… things are just gearing up
so it sounds like they want to make a distinction without a difference.. but china and the us may both be upset- the us for having 100% of its parts manufactured in china still… china for trying to “leave china” to avoid tariffs… the cost of moving assembly might still be expensive and take time to occur. anything that takes more than a few business cycles, let alone 4 years when the political situation could change. apple has deep pockets from all the chinese labor they have exploited, so maybe they could get away with that, but what would it even accomplish?
I don’t think it will actually happen. They have been saying for some time that it would take at least a decade to move the supply chain out of china- and I think that is an overly optimistic one given that they are probably basing their predictions off of how things went in china, where they are used to effective state support and a highly educated workforce. … there are other issues, like how all of the glass utilized in smartphones is made by like, one factory/company in china…. China could also just utilize the infrastructure there to sell what is effectively the iphone but without the rentier rates charged by apple… that isn’t even getting into the mineral resources smartphones require- like rare earth metals that china controls the production of
idk, maybe they are saying that to get trump off of their back, or help him save face… and/or ease skittish investors
I get what you are saying and agree mostly, however I think it is important to understand that war is generally deeply unpopular with working class people (who aren’t fascists and/or settlers with reactionary brainworms) and fundamentally, communism is the anti-war perspective. It is true that anti-imperlialist wars and wars of liberation ultimately serve the anti-war cause, but the people fighting and dying on both sides will be the working class- and unlike other systems, Socialist power and authority ultimately is rooted in the opinions of the masses… not to mention the toll the entire world pays from nuclear holocaust. The US unfortunately had unchallenged nuclear arms for a few critically important years. The first open conflict between the socialist world and capitalist class after WW2, The US war in Korea, for example, began a little less than a year after the Soviet Union got the bomb, and we don’t really know what would have happened if the USSR got atomic weapons later or not at all. Would the DPRK even exist?