| > The "more or less" applied to "continuous", not "independent." Does that make a difference? You are either continuously independent or not continuously independent. > But if you really want to argue that independence is a simple binary decision... you're just flat out wrong. No, seriously. No. You either are independent or not independent. It's basic logic. > Let's take what should be a simple example: Canada. When did Canada become independent? Well... Wikipedia lists no fewer than three separate dates, and that's really understating the matter. Should be a clue to you that canada isn't independent. No country that worships the queen of another country is. I never considered canada an independent country. > Now, for bonus points, take the same criteria and ask if places such as Greenland, Bermuda, Taiwan, Palestine, Abu Dhabi, or Federated States of Micronesia are independent or not. None of these are independent countries. Not sure about abu dhabi as I don't know about about it. Nice little distraction you took us on. Funny how you completely ignored the part about iran being invaded and conquered. Instead of accepting that you were wrong, you decided to double down and take us on a tangent. Nice. I can see where this is going. That iran has not been "more or less" continuously independent nation isn't a matter of debate. It's a matter of historical and political and military fact. |
The historical fact is that an Iranian state composed predominantly of Iranian peoples and ruled by Iranians has existed for 2 and a half millennia. And honestly, rather like China, even when Iranians are being ruled by non-Iranians, Iranian culture is still a prestige culture, especially in the Abbasid caliphate. The Iranian nation-state cannot be a mere product of British/Russian influence when it predates the existence of either of those nations (not even countries, nations), and the British and the Russians played no part in effecting the creation of said nation-state, at best merely temporarily disestablishing it.
And this is why I said "more or less continuously." I'm not denying that there are disruptions to continuity--were I to do so, I would not need to modify "continuous." Instead, I'm denying that those disruptions actually matter for the political analysis.