یک هفتهای از سالگرد تولد هیچنز در 13 آوریل میگذره،روزی که مصادف ِ با تولد توماس جفرسون (در تقویم قدیم البته) اونجور که خودش دوست داشت یادآوری کنه.
این مقاله رو داشتم میخوندم درباره سفرش به ایران در سال 2005 و توصیف درخشانش از ایران و جامعه ایران که گفتم بی مناسبت نیست بیارم در اینجا.
این لینک به متن کامل مقالهست ،این هم بخشی از مقاله که بنظرم جالبتر اومد:
Iran today exists in a state of dual power and  split personality. The huge billboards and murals proclaim it an Islamic  republic, under the eternal guidance of the immortal memory of  Ayatollah Khomeini. A large force of Revolutionary Guards and a  pervasive religious police stand ready to make good on this grim pledge.  But directly underneath these forbidding posters and right under the  noses of the morals enforcers, Iranians are buying and selling videos,  making and consuming alcohol, tuning in to satellite TV stations,  producing subversive films and plays and books, and defying the dress  code. All women are supposed to cover all their hair at all times, and  to wear a long jacket, or manteau, that covers them from neck to knee.  But it’s amazing how enticing the compulsory scarf can be when worn  practically on the back of the head and held in place only by hair  spray. As for the obligatory manteau, any woman with any fashion sense  can cut it to mold an enviable silhouette. I found a bootlegger on my  arrival at Tehran’s airport and was offered alcohol on principle in  every home I entered—Khomeini’s excepted—even by people who did not  drink. Almost every Iranian has a relative overseas and is in regular  touch with foreign news and trends. The country is an “as if” society.  People live as if they were free, as if they were in the West, as if  they had the right to an opinion, or a private life. And they don’t do  too badly at it. I have now visited all three of the states that make up  the so-called axis of evil. Rough as their regime can certainly be, the  citizens of Iran live on a different planet from the wretched,  frightened serfs of Saddam Hussein and Kim Jong Il.
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Tehran is in fact more or less uncontrollable by anybody. It’s the  Mexico City or Calcutta of the region: a vast, unplanned, overpopulated  nightmare of all-day traffic jams and eye-wringing pollution,  tissue-paper building codes, and an earthquake coming like Christmas.  It’s also the original uptown-downtown city, built on the steep slopes  of the snowy Elburz Mountains, which, on a good day, one can sometimes  actually see. In the northern quarter, there are the discreet villas  where the members of the upper crust keep their heads down and their  wealth unostentatious. At the bottom of the hill, you can lose yourself  in the vast bazaar, whose tough stall owners were the shock troops of  the 1979 revolution. “Beware of north Tehran,” one is invariably told.  “Don’t take its Westernized opinions at face value.” So I didn’t.  Indeed, at one party, where the women by the interior swimming pool  didn’t have a scarf or a manteau among them, and where the butler handed  me a card printed in English that advertised special caviar supplies,  and where the bar went on for a furlong, I met a sleek banker who, full  of loathing for the regime as he was, defended Iran’s right to have  nuclear weapons. In fact, his was the most vociferous defense that I  heard. (Like all the others who ask so plaintively why Israel and  Pakistan can have nukes and not Iran, he temporarily chose to forget  that the mullahs keep denying that they have such weapons, or even seek  them.)
...
Despite the terrifying culling of its youth in the 1980s, Iran is once  again a young country. Indeed, more than half of its population is under  25. The mullahs, in an effort to make up the war deficit, provided  large material incentives for women to bear great numbers of children.  The consequence of this is a vast layer of frustrated young people who  generally detest the clerics. You might call it a baby-boomerang. I am  thinking of Jamshid, a clever young hustler whom I part-employed as a  driver and fixer. Bright but only partially educated, energetic but  effectively unemployed, he had been made to waste a lot of his time on  compulsory military service and was continuing to waste time until he  could think of a way of quitting the country. “When I was a baby, my  mother took me to have my head patted by Khomeini. My fucking hair has  been falling out ever since,” he said. You want crack cocaine, hookers,  pornography, hooch? This is the downside of the “as if” option. There  are thousands of even younger Jamshids lining the polluted boulevards  and intersections, trafficking in everything known to man and paying off  the riffraff of the morals police. Everybody knows that the mullahs  live in luxury, stash money overseas, deny themselves nothing, and  indulge in the most blatant hypocrisy. Cynicism about the clergy is  universal, but it is especially among the young that one encounters it.  It’s also among the young that one most often hears calls for American  troops to arrive and bring goodies with them. Yet, after a while, this  repeated note began to strike me as childish also. It’s a confession of  powerlessness, an avoidance of responsibility, a demand that change come  from somewhere else.
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Every now and then you can sit in on late-night discussions where young  people wonder when the eruption will come. Perhaps the police or the  Revolutionary Guards will make an irrevocable mistake and fire into a  crowd? Perhaps, at a given hour, a million women will simply remove  their hijabs and defy the authorities? (This discussion gets more  intense every year as the summer approaches and women face the  irritation and humiliation of wearing it in heat and dust.) But nobody  wants to be the first to be blinded by acid, or to have their face  lovingly slashed by some Hezbollah enthusiast. The student activists of  the Tehran “spring” of 1999, and of the elections which seemed to bring a  reformist promise, have been picked off one by one, their papers closed  and their leadership jailed and beaten. What else to do, then, except  tune in to the new Iranian underground “grunge” scene, or kick back in  front of the Italian soft-porn channel or one of the sports and fashion  and anti-clerical channels beamed in by satellite from exiles in Los  Angeles? As if …
...
و اینجا هم روایتش درباره ج.ا و بخصوص رفسنجانی خواندنیه:
It is a few miles from this triumph of civilization and culture that  the Islamic republic, hostile to every form of modernity except advanced  weapons and surveillance techniques, has decided to dig a huge, ugly  tunnel into a hillside, the better to conceal its ambitions to become a  nuclear state. The tunnel, along with some other “facilities” at Natanz  and Bushehr, has been laboriously exposed in the course of a long,  dreary inspection that has caught the regime lying without conscience,  and also lying without fear of reprisal. The Bushehr reactor was  actually begun in the time of the Shah, and it’s a good thing that he  slightly outlived his mad kingly ambitions, because if he’d completed  the work then the mullahs would have inherited a nuclear capacity  ready-made.
 And it is unlikely that sanctions will be lifted  while the regime also continues to harbor so many wanted criminals, not  just on its territory but among its leadership. Consider the repellent  figure of Ali Fallahian, a former minister of “intelligence,” who faces  an arrest warrant from a court in Berlin for sending a death squad to  murder Iranian Kurds in the Mykonos restaurant in 1992. We also have the  names of those Iranian officials who are wanted for blowing up a Jewish  community center in Buenos Aires in 1994 and the Khobar Towers housing  complex in Saudi Arabia in 1996.
 All of these crimes were  committed, without conscience and (so far) without reprisal, during the  presidency of Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who was also the local star  of the Iran-contra arms-for-hostages racket, the last time that an  Iranian connection threatened to bring down an American president. 
 On  the first occasion when I managed to breathe the same air as  Rafsanjani, he was addressing a conference of Iranian women, who were  made to sit swaddled in heavy clothing while he took his sweet time  making some tedious observations about females and the Koran. One of the  women’s magazines in Tehran is run by his daughter, but then, there is  hardly an enterprise in the country, from the pistachio-nut monopoly to  airlines and oil, in which Rafsanjani doesn’t hold an interest. The  second time I was able to drink in his words was at “Friday prayers” at  the university, the weekly grandstand from which the mullahs address the  masses. 
 On this occasion, Rafsanjani was bursting with sound  and fury and insult about imperialist threats to Iran, and swelling like  a turkey-cock. (He’s a short guy, and is regularly lampooned on the  street for his inability to grow a proper beard. In 2002, the last time  he ran for election in Tehran, he came in below the bottom of the  already fixed “list,” and some deft work was required to show him  registering in the poll at all.) Demagogy aside, everybody knows that if  a deal is to be done with Europe and the Americans, then it will  probably be Rafsanjani who brokers it. He’s been on both sides of  everything, all of his life, through war and revolution. He supported  Khomeini in prolonging the war with Iraq, and then persuaded him to  accept the U.N. resolution that ended it (and that may have killed the  older man). He railed against the Great Satan, yet welcomed Reagan’s  shamed envoys when they brought the cake and the Bible and offered to  deal arms for hostages. He’s what our lazy press means when it describes  some opportunist torturer and murderer as a “moderate,” or a  “survivor.” I even met Iranians, completely sickened and disillusioned  and ready to boycott any sham vote, who wearily said that Rafsanjani  would be an improvement. 
 
	 
	
	
"Democracy is now currently defined in Europe as a 'country run by Jews,'" —Ezra Pound