A letter from Robert Glazer  Founder & Chairman of the Board, Acceleration Partners From United States to me



A letter from Robert Glazer  Founder & Chairman of the Board, Acceleration Partners From United States to me

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Friday Forward - Clear Lines (#520)
Sometimes the line between good and evil is clear
Robert Glazer
Jan 23






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I used to believe there was an objective definition of good and evil. But for many today, that clarity has been clouded by tribalism, politics, and biased narratives. Too often, we let our moral compass be defined by outside forces rather than by our values.

For weeks now, millions of Iranians, most armed only with their voices and bare hands, have taken to the streets in a desperate fight for freedom. They are resisting a theocratic regime that has ruled with violence and repression for nearly 50 years. This government has stripped away individual rights—especially from women—silenced dissent, and enforced rigid religious and cultural mandates. It stands in direct opposition to democratic values like liberty, equality, and freedom of thought.

At the same time, while many Iranians face economic hardship, their government continues to spend billions supporting terrorist organizations and exporting violence across the region and beyond. Instead of helping its citizens, the regime props itself up through fear, censorship, and brutality.

So it’s no surprise that the regime has deployed extreme tactics to quell these protests: shutting down internet access, bringing in foreign militias to attack unarmed civilians, and using targeted violence to instill fear. Protestors have been shot in the face and eyes. Tens of thousands have been killed. Hundreds of thousands have been injured, imprisoned, or disappeared.

This isn’t a complicated policy debate or a performative protest. It is a raw, grassroots movement led by ordinary citizens risking everything for a better future. Many are paying the ultimate price. When all is revealed, the crackdown in Iran will likely represent one of the worst acts of state violence against peaceful protestors in the last half-century.

What Iran’s citizens have shown is as clear a definition of courage as you’ll find. The kind most of us have never witnessed, could not summon, and may not fully understand.

And yet, so many institutions and individuals who regularly speak out on justice and human rights have been silent or slow to respond. Global organizations such as the UN, Amnesty International, and the Red Cross, which present themselves as moral leaders, responded with minimal urgency. Their statements were delayed, muted, carefully worded or absent altogether.

That silence is not harmless. These organizations help shape public discourse, especially given how much their content is amplified on social media. When they are quiet or vague in moments like this, those decisions distort our collective understanding of what matters and why. Silence sends a message too, and a loud one.

We need to ask harder questions about how attention is distributed today. Why do some stories go viral while others disappear? Who gets labeled a freedom fighter and who is ignored? Who determines what suffering is amplified as morally unacceptable, and which atrocities are filtered out of our headlines and feeds?

Too much of our media ecosystem today is designed to persuade, not to inform. Content is tailored to reinforce our worldview, not to challenge it. Gradually, we outsource the formation of our beliefs to algorithmically mediated talking points, rather than our values. And when we stop thinking critically, we lose our ability to recognize simple truths.

So here is one simple truth: if human rights and empathy mean anything, then the courage of the Iranian people should be impossible to ignore, and the cruelty of their government should be impossible to excuse. That so many organizations that our society views as tone setters and leaders in human rights have overlooked or downplayed this reality raises questions about both their intentions and their credibility.

Sometimes the world is not complicated. Sometimes the line between good and evil is clear. The only question is whether we are willing to see it and speak the truth, especially when others are hesitant to do so.

I’ll close with a quote from Iranian-American writer Tahmineh Dehbozorge, who has been sharing updates from people on the ground:

“This regime will fall—and history will remember who stood for liberty and who looked away.” - Tahmineh Dehbozorge

Have a great weekend!

-Bob

robertglazer.com

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