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Conspirituality

Bonus Sample: The Philosopher, The King, & The Holy Man

Conspirituality

Derek Beres, Matthew Remski, Julian Walker

Social Sciences, Philosophy, Society & Culture, Science

4.02.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 April 2026

⏱️ 9 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When the exiled Ayatollah Khomeini received Western media in a small French village in 1978, he sat cross-legged in his robes and black turban under an apple tree in the garden. They described him as “on another planet,” with “eyes of steel,” and compared him to an Eastern sage or ascetic guru. French philosopher Michel Foucault, most famous for his penetrating analysis of power, knowledge (and punitive coercion) was there as well. He called the holy man “an old saint in exile” who had no personal political ambitions. Visiting Iran during the revolution, the philosopher was captivated by what he called a new form of “spiritual politics” that he saw as “advancing toward a luminous and distant point.” Foucault dismissed Iranian feminists who warned of the true dangers of an Islamic state being established once the autocratic king—the Shah—had been overthrown. Today, as the reckless and destructive American and Israeli war against the Iranian regime continues, Julian revisits the political history of Iran and the complex regional power struggles between nationalists, monarchists, communists, and Islamists that played out on the Cold War stage. He examines the connections between the controversial 1953 CIA coup d’etat and the hugely popular 1979 Islamic Revolution, which led to the one-party totalitarian theocracy that dominates the Iranian people to this day. How did so many within Iran and in the West, including the most influential radical philosopher of his time, misperceive Khomeini and his ruthless intentions? Show Notes Foucault: What Are The Iranian’s Dreaming About Did Foucault Disregard Iranian Feminists? Dr. Taimur Rahman’s Red Star Lectures The CIA Coup That Never Was Iran’s Decade of Assassinations Bayandor: Iran and The CIA Foucault’s Iranian Folly Foucault and the Question of Orientalism The Shah, by Abbas Milani Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Once upon a time, there was a revered French philosopher, famous for his critique of coercive power and manipulative discourse in the West.

0:12.0

Captivated by developments elsewhere, he waxed poetic about a revolutionary movement that would depose a king and put a holy man on his throne,

0:23.4

saying it carried the pure vitality of the spark of life itself.

0:30.1

Then this happened.

0:32.3

Yesterday's demonstration was the nearest thing to an anti-Homeni rally yet.

0:36.8

The imposition of Islamic law here has started with an order to

0:39.3

women to cover their heads in government offices.

0:42.3

Many are furious, only a minority in Tehran already follow the instruction.

0:47.3

But the issue has provided an escape valve for many of the men here

0:52.3

who for days have been spoiling for trouble.

0:54.8

Led by a few Islamic zealots, several hundred men eventually attacked the protesters.

0:59.4

Several of the women who stood their ground with considerable courage was stabbed as they chanted

1:03.9

slogans for equal rights.

1:05.9

That was a news report on the ground from Tehran.

1:08.9

On March 8th of 1979, International Women's Day.

1:13.4

It was less than a month after the Islamic Revolution declared victory.

1:18.2

It is estimated that 100,000 women came out to protest the legal imposition of the Shadur,

1:23.7

or hijab, as well as the looming abolition of the family protections law, which had in 1975

1:31.0

raised the legal marriage age to 18 for women. That law had also given women equal divorce

1:38.4

rights and limited the number of wives a man could marry. As you heard, those women were met over the six days of the protest

1:46.8

by groups of Islamist men who beat and stabbed them and even brandished and fired guns.

1:54.3

These men formed the first iteration of what would come to be called Hezbollah, or the party of

...

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