What might have been the outcome of the 1979 Iranian Revolution had it been seen on YouTube?
Just take a look at this clip from YouTube contributor houmank of recent demonstrations in the city of Shiraz, Iran. Notice how many video cameras and cell phones are out taking pictures and video! They are everywhere!
No doubt many of those cell phones are out because scenes of burning cars and masked demonstrators makes for compelling souvenier photographs. But many are also out purely for the reason of documenting Iran's political protest... just in case. One never knows whene the Revolutionary Guard or their militias will come running from around the corner wielding batons, or start shooting from rooftops.
Iranians understand the power of the web in expressing their grief, gathering disparate groups and individuals together for a protest, and sharing with the world their struggles. Just take a look at these tweets from Twitter user Persiankiwi:
everybody try to film as much as poss today on mobiles - v\imptnt - these are eyes of world
gov now worried - anything could happen 2day - e\body be very carefull - stay in big groups
anyone with camera or laptop is attacked in street
Compelling, is it not?
The ability of YouTube to expose violence and injustice in less than democratic states if not new to Iran (though the demonstrations post-Iran election may be a tipping point of sorts).
Witness the cold blooded murder of Japanese reporter Kenji Nagai covering political demonstrations in Rangoon, Burma in 2007.
According to the BBC, "TV footage has emerged which raises the possibility that the 50-year-old may have been deliberately targeted rather than caught in police cross-fire." And if so? Japan ordered an investigation into the incident and rescinded some of its aid to the Burmese regime.
Or, sometimes nothing much happens when a country's journalists are killed... Intrepid independent journalist Brad Will, for one, was gunned down by plainclothes federal policemen in Oaxaca, Mexico in October, 2007--and yet to the best of my knowledge, the United States issued no sanctions against the Mexican government, nor withdrew foreign aid and assistance. Would the U.S. have acted differently if Will had worked for The Washington Post? (The video of Will's death is readily available online, but too real and graphic for me to post here).
The effect of Twitter and YouTube on political demonstrations in Iran and elsewhere is still to be determined. No doubt the mediums are influencing the masses in Tehran and worldwide, but to what extent? And how long can the interest outside of Iran be sustained by soundbite interested Americans, for instance? It remains to be seen, but the results of this phenonomenon are sure to be interesting on so many levels.







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