A dictator like the Shah would be welcomed in today's world. Time is relative and the old story "It Could Be Worse" comes to mind.
Ask the Iranians whether the Shah would be welcome or not. Such statements hold great arrogance.
Unfortunately, those Iranians who would have welcomed the Shah of Iran were killed during the revolution.
My ex husband's father was one of them. He was an Admiral in the Iranian Navy.
Many of our friends who went back home to Tehran, were also killed, sadly.
Now who is arrogant?
Come on JS...
Most people living in a free world or not, want nothing more than to live. They were swiftly killed by the آية الله----(Ayatollah.)
Did you tell these folks that the original revolution was led by the Iranian middle class of merchants? By 1979 the Shah was very hated in Iran. There were mass demonstrations and shopkeepers and small businessmen were amongst those who loathed the man.
I'm not saying Khoemeni was great. That's a strawman and you may sacrifice it all you like. But the Shah was hated, and was a tyrant as well as a murderer. There is little doubt of that, and the people who'd like to have him back are the very few who profited from his wealth.
Well, Js one man who is "hated" isn't equal to another man who is feared, especially if there aint much a person can do to control either outcome. It's not like there was a democratic vote on the issue.
Indeed, JS< Khomeini was much worse. Remember the story; It Could Be Worse" ? Well, those of whom you speak had no real clue of how bad it was going to get. (The frog in the hot water analogy.)
Follow my tune to the ends of the earth.....I know you want to. You hate, afterall, right?
ahhh, GOT Ya.
Iranians did not have the freedom to chose whom to "hate more" or less like we do in this country.
Only those who were able to understand the reality of the situation --those who were living outside the Perian culture---on American soil at the time, knew that things were actually going to be better under the regime that was so "hated:".
Women were at least able to speak up, find a voice back then, JS..... albeit one baby step at a time..but it was progess at it's slowest and best . . of that I know for a fact.
Sometimes all of this makes me wonder just how much we really understand in terms of the depth of "help" the US has given in the direction of the Iraqis with this "war". I would love to ask Iraqi-American citizens how they truly believe their country is faring. .
FOr some reason Americans have one of two extreme trains of thought;
a) Oh,those poor bastards in the "other" world---they have not seen the "light" if they can not or will not grasp democracy as it has been served to them on a gold patter !
b) Well, of course every nation, every culture, has every right to do what they feel is best for themselves. Why interfere?.....let a country be.
Ok, well, they got what they DIDN'T SEE COMING....just like Hiter, imo.
The interests of the Iranian free thinking (on the verge of understanding democracy and what it felt like to be free in so many ways) instead traveled...no dive bombed back centuries in exchange for that poor bad ass apple(the Shah) that folks hated and rallied against.