A curtain of silence has gone down over Iran.
Not so uncommon around the world these days... a few countries other then North Korea and Iran with far less media attention... who disallow foreign journalists and what-not.
What was already a iron-handed police state is quickly devolving into a barbarian kingdom.
Death squads and soldiers/police given the green light to put down the protest/rebellion/dissidents/whatever it is now with force.
Not so uncommon either around the world either. You just never hear about it in the media and if you do, it just doesn't generate enough of a buzz like Iran.
Iran may or may not have Nukes... and the media attention given to Iran even before the elections/revolutions.
So, would we even know or care about what is happening in Iran now... if there was no media attention to begin with... and how quickly and efficiently Iran put up the blackout?
Well, there is the video of Nede. What would that have done? Without the media attention it has now? Would YouTube have allowed it to stay up for being 'graphic'? Would it be seen as a hoax? Or would it have propelled Iran into the front page news?
Personally, I wouldn't classify it as a barbarian kingdom, though, maybe your definition of it is different from mine... What are you trying to say? Are you saying that there is some sort of chaos? That there are 'mass'(statistically >.>) killings of some sort?
It still has structure, gov't troops are, from what we can tell from here, from the outside, are still following a chain of command.
Its not a fight against minority groups, it is against a wide range of people from different sub-cultures and backgrounds.
For those who haven't heard, a few days ago a sixteen year old girl was shot to death by the riot police. She's one of possibly a hundred people already killed in response - what makes her special is that her final, bloody moments were captured in multiple angle cell-phone camera footage, which ricocheted across Iran and around the world. The establishment handed the protesters the greatest advantaged they could have - a martyr. At the same time, the Supreme Leader has obviously been convinced that no other country is going to take action, overt or otherwise, regarding the violence there, and has stopped voicing even the pretense of democratic process or reconciliation.
>.> Seems naive to say it that way. A media martyr, yes. A rallying cry for people outside of Iran, yes.
But, inside Iran? It may be some other person, she may just be another name on the list...