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"An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last."
Sir Winston Churchill

8.09.2007

So Much for the Brotherhood of Workers

With Iranian workers protesting against the Tehran regime, why have no U.S. labor organizations noted their plight, much less come to their aid?

Amir Taheri has well explained the regime’s fear of Iranian workers, who have staged a dozen major strikes and nearly fifty protest demonstrations in less than half a year, and on May Day tens of thousands of workers marched all over Iran, in at least nineteen cities, even though they knew they would be treated harshly. Taheri reports that, according to the head of the Contractual Workers’ Union, more than 25,000 members have been fired in the last four months, and more than 1,000 workers are being purged every single day. This is part of the mullahs’ vicious campaign against every possible source of open dissent against the regime. As you would expect in such circumstances, more and more workers are dying in “accidents,” some of which are not at all accidental, but cover-ups of assassinations.

We shall see whether Western workers’ organizations are capable of once again demonstrating real solidarity with their Iranian brothers and sisters. A year ago there was sufficient energy to shame the mullahs into releasing Osanloo, and then permitting him to travel abroad, where he exposed their cruelty. The regime is in the midst of a wave of repression that has reminded Iran watchers of the worst bloodletting during the early years of the Islamic Republic, and the country’s leaders will be extremely reluctant to back down. The dreadful campaign extends from brutality against workers, teachers and journalists to arrests and torture of students and women.

These are the people with whom so many American — and the overwhelming majority of European — pundits and “statesmen” want us to negotiate. This hymn of appeasement has taken its toll on Western leaders, not one of whom speaks out against the daily brutality. Italy, in one of those exceptions that eloquently proves the rule, has gotten into a bit of a tiff with the Iranians over the near-epidemic of public executions, deploring the use of the death penalty in any circumstance. But then the Italians lambaste us as well, demonstrating a singular inability to distinguish between legal procedures in the United States and the Islamic Republic.

If the West had the courage of its past convictions, every leader would denounce the terror in Iran, and every trade unionist would be shouting in front of Iranian embassies.


The answer should be obvious: they're to busy kissing the ring on Kos' pampered hands to bother with the Iranian workers being beaten, imprisoned, and slaughtered.

Of course, American labor has a rather checkered history regarding brutal oppression of workers. When they weren't doing it themselves, they were cheering on their Soviet brothers in so doing.

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