The recent protests in Iran have once again reignited calls for revolution, regime change, and foreign intervention. But these narratives repeat the same historical mistakes — and they offer no real solutions. This video presents a systems-level perspective on Iran’s challenges. Not revolution. Not new leaders. Not outside interference. Instead, I explore the idea of cultural and structural evolution — an internal transformation of values, incentives, social organization, and economic systems. Real change does not come from swapping rulers. It comes from changing how a society organizes itself. #iran #iranprotests #middleeast #middleeastconflict #middleeastpolitics •Evolution over revolution •Systems thinking over ideology •Internal cultural development over external force Iran’s future — like any society’s — cannot be imposed from the outside, nor dictated from the top down. If we want lasting peace, stability, and human flourishing, we must think beyond power struggles and toward evolutionary social design.
The whole evolution/revolution wordplay is sooo overused, it’s not even funny anymore.
Also, the only reason Arjang Jameh doesn’t want revolution in Iran is because he’s parroting chinese and russian talking points, and they don’t want their allied regime to lose it’s control on power.
Edit:
Yup.
The first thing he says is to discredit all opposition leaders, since they might be western-aligned, and proposes harmless “living in the now” attitudes among protesters, neutralizing any sort of threat they might have towards the regime.
The Iranian popular revolt is all about that, they want a secular democracy because they are tired of these old islamists enforcing medieval believes on them. An RBE is of course nice as well, but a secular democracy with basic freedoms is the foundation for such a transition.
The video doesn’t mention the cruelties of the regime either. Not even the thousands that were killed in the last few weeks for protesting.