
The Black Myths Podcast Myth: "I Stand With the Iranian People…BUT" w/ Bikrum Gill
Mar 12, 2026
Bikrum Gill, scholar of international political economy and anti-imperialist academic, argues that separating the Iranian people from the state repeats imperialist logic. He traces the 1953 coup, the 1979 revolution, and how sanctions and foreign intervention shape crises. He discusses Iran’s regional role, deterrence, and why opposing sanctions and standing for sovereignty matter now.
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Listening Requires Structural Context Not Just Voices
- "Center Iranian voices" is hollow unless you specify which class or political project those voices represent.
- Gill warns Western audiences often amplify diaspora voices aligned with imperial aims while delegitimizing domestic voices seen as 'under authority.'
Historic Pattern Of Economic Siege And Subversion
- Western destabilization tactics repeat across eras: blockades, sanctions, paid agitators, and covert coups to prevent sovereign development.
- Gill connects 1950s British siege and Operation Ajax to contemporary sanctions and funding of protests.
Oil Nationalization Threatened Capital's 'Rights'
- Mossadegh's nationalization aimed at reclaiming oil revenues and sovereign development, threatening investor 'rights' used to justify intervention.
- Imperial powers framed nationalization as assault on international law to protect capital's privileges.





