As a nominal democracy (keyword: nominal), Iran isn’t high on my list of desirable nations, at least not as far as the government is concerned. Imagine my consternation as I stumbled across a report from the AP outlining Iran’s new restructuring of social sciences programs deemed as inconsistent with Islamic law (ie, derived from Western principles of thought):
The list includes law, philosophy, management, psychology, political science and the two subjects that appear to cause the most concern among Iran’s conservative leadership — women’s studies and human rights.
No new programs in the listed areas will be accepted in Iranian universities, and current programs are to be severely revised by the government.
Go figure. Ayatollah Khamenei and Ahmadinejad can’t like the fact that a cross-section of relatively well-educated young liberals drove the anti-government protests last year, and what better way to squelch dissent than to restrict access to scholastic disciplines the Supreme Leader and President view as threatening to their regime?
Say what you will about the United States (and trust me, I have a veritable slue of castigations for our own government), we will likely never see something like this happen in our country, Christine O’Donnell’s eventual rise to the presidency notwithstanding. Then again, what a low bar to set for a nation.



