Monday, November 7, 2022

Fresh Protests Erupt In Iran

DW: Iran: Fresh protests erupt after death of Kurdish student 

Demonstrators in the northwestern city of Marivan are angered by the reported killing of 35-year-old Nasrin Ghaderi. 

Iranian lawmakers, meanwhile, urged severe punishment for "rioters." Fresh demonstrations occurred in the northwestern Iranian city of Marivan on Sunday, following the death of Kurdish student Nasrin Ghaderi. 

The latest flare of protests comes as anti-government demonstrations in Iran continued for a seventh week in one of the biggest shows of dissent in years.  

Read more .... 

WNU Editor: The death toll from these protests continues to rise .... More than 300 People Killed In Crackdown On Protests, Rights Group Says (IranWire). 

More News On The Unrest In Iran  

Fresh protests erupt in Iran’s universities and Kurdish region -- The Guardian/AFP  

Protester Deaths Mount in Iran's Border Provinces, Groups Say -- Bloomberg  

Iranian lawmakers demand ‘no leniency’ for protesters as mass demonstrations continue -- CNN  

Iran’s Deadly Protests Unite a Nation Behind an Old Struggle -- Bloomberg

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

At some point killing all these people will affect factory output directly or because relatives or friends, will show up to work and do as little as possible as a protest or due to depression.

You can threaten people to work harder and sometimes it works. and sometimes you get a V2 that explodes on the launch pad due to slave labor.


In marketing we were given the 16/4 rule. If you have good product, the user will tell 4 people. If you have a bad product they will tell 16 people. the exact numbers are not as important as theory relative quantity or strength.

So 300 x 16 = 4,800

The ayatollahs have made at least 4,800 die hard enemies. That is on top of the enemies they already have (i.e. every one, who is not a relative or associate getting a cut of the graft).

Some overlap with people, who already hated them before, but the hate will be much greater now obviously.

Caecus said...

Liberal arts students are not exactly the type to work in factories