It is hardly surprising that there is silence. There is silence about the persistent subordination of workers to the power of their particular employers and to the power of employers in general. There is silence about the history of how workers became employees and how others became employers. Silence is one of the weapons of the class of employers and their representatives.
Thank you Louis, for posting this!
Readers may want to check an Amnesty report, titled, “Iran: More than 100 protesters believed to be killed as top officials give green light to crush protests”
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2019/11/iran-more-than-100-protesters-believed-to-be-killed-as-top-officials-give-green-light-to-crush-protests/
Also, this article by Mina Khanlarzadeh is well worth a read (it was posted on Marxmail):
The Silenced Screams Fighting Impoverishment in Iran
https://zcomm.org/zblogs/the-silenced-screams-fighting-impoverishment-in-iran/
Comment by Reza — November 23, 2019 @ 9:57 pm
It is hardly surprising that there is silence. There is silence about the persistent subordination of workers to the power of their particular employers and to the power of employers in general. There is silence about the history of how workers became employees and how others became employers. Silence is one of the weapons of the class of employers and their representatives.
Comment by The abolitionist — November 27, 2019 @ 3:28 pm