Iran: Some History from Ennis & Moore
Jun. 18th, 2009 02:11 amI've been watching the events in Iran--what one can find out through the web, because the networks are blind--and was reminded of some work by Garth Ennis and Alan Moore that, at least in scraps, helps give a little bit of context to our historical place in this whole mess.

I get annoyed with some crazies on the right suggesting we should intervene in what's going on in Iran. Our intervention was partly at the root of everything since, and it might finally be over and done--if we do not get our dirty fingers on it.
Sigh. Such people need context. Sadly, you can read, so you're not one of them. But you may find this interesting and diverting anyway. Someone else posted an individual Iranian's perspective from PERSEPOLIS. Here is an introduction to the broad political outlines of our rather regrettable history there.
The first is from Garth Ennis & Killian Plunkett's UNKNOWN SOLDIER, and an allegorical view of how we put the Shah into supreme power in the 1950s. For Unknown Soldier, of course, read CIA. Helping, among others, BP.




Secondly, Alan Moore & Bill Sienkewicz' history of the CIA, BROUGHT TO LIGHT, and some material about the Hostage Crisis and Iran-Contra.




Unknown Soldier(c)DC Comics. Brought to Light (c) Alan Moore & Bill Sienkewicz.
And please support the protesters. I'm sure you can see now it's the least we can do.

I get annoyed with some crazies on the right suggesting we should intervene in what's going on in Iran. Our intervention was partly at the root of everything since, and it might finally be over and done--if we do not get our dirty fingers on it.
Sigh. Such people need context. Sadly, you can read, so you're not one of them. But you may find this interesting and diverting anyway. Someone else posted an individual Iranian's perspective from PERSEPOLIS. Here is an introduction to the broad political outlines of our rather regrettable history there.
The first is from Garth Ennis & Killian Plunkett's UNKNOWN SOLDIER, and an allegorical view of how we put the Shah into supreme power in the 1950s. For Unknown Soldier, of course, read CIA. Helping, among others, BP.




Secondly, Alan Moore & Bill Sienkewicz' history of the CIA, BROUGHT TO LIGHT, and some material about the Hostage Crisis and Iran-Contra.




Unknown Soldier(c)DC Comics. Brought to Light (c) Alan Moore & Bill Sienkewicz.
And please support the protesters. I'm sure you can see now it's the least we can do.

Re: "Well, Sir, you are NOT an American Soldier."
Date: 2009-06-18 08:36 am (UTC)Re: "Well, Sir, you are NOT an American Soldier."
Date: 2009-06-18 10:14 am (UTC)And yes, do!