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Selective Outrage and the Collapse of Moral Consistency

One of the defining failures of contemporary political discourse is the widening gap between proclaimed universal values and their selective application. This contradiction is starkly exposed by the global reaction to the recent nationwide uprising in Iran, a movement driven not by symbolic identity politics but by economic collapse, systemic corruption, and long-accumulated rage against an entrenched theocratic dictatorship. The protests, spanning hundreds of cities and involving workers, students, shopkeepers, professionals, and the urban poor, represent one of the broadest challenges to the Islamic Republic in decades. Yet once again, the international response - particularly among segments of Western progressivism - has been hesitant, muted, or conspicuously restrained. The recent Iranian uprising is not a marginal disturbance nor a replay of earlier protest cycles. It is a society-wide revolt born of spiraling inflation, a collapsing currency, mass unemployment, and the open plund...

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