The Iranian regime’s brutal crackdown on protesters who’ve grown angry with its repressive, theological governance has ignited calls for international pushback.
So with the U.S. men’s soccer team match against Iran in the World Cup on Tuesday, it was unsurprising to see many Americans go full-on jingoist and invoke a “good vs. evil” framing.
The U.S. Soccer Federation even got some jabs in, going as far as temporarily altering the Iranian flag on its social media accounts as a show of support for Iranian protesters.
But as a country, we need to be careful not to let our love for international sports, and our desire to be seen as liberators, lead us to unearned arrogance. Even as we stand against Iran’s repressive regime, it’s worth noting the United States is facing a crisis of conservative religious fundamentalism as well.
To make this point clear — and to revive a comparison that then-President Barack Obama aptly made in 2015 — let’s play a quick game of “whodunit”: the GOP or the Iranian regime.
Which group’s de facto leader disparaged human rights protesters and supported military-style violence against them?
Answer: The GOP and the Iranian regime.
(In 2020, then-President Donald Trump endorsed violence against anti-racist protesters in Minneapolis, whom he decried as thugs, after the police killing of George Floyd. This month, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, vowed that “the evils” protesting in Iran “will be undoubtedly finished.”)
Which group includes a lawmaker who once floated a conspiracy theory suggesting that Jewish-aligned forces used laser beams to intentionally start wildfires in California?
Answer: The GOP.
(Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.)
Which group is associated with a nationwide abortion edict that has been denounced by United Nations experts?








