"The real war is not between the West and the East. The real war is between intelligent and stupid people"
About this Quote
Satrapi blows up the tidy map of global conflict and replaces it with something more embarrassing: a war that runs through every border, household, and head. Coming from an Iranian-born artist whose work ("Persepolis") is basically a long dismantling of Western caricatures of Iran and Iranian state propaganda about the West, the line reads less like a hot take than a refusal to be drafted into someone else’s narrative. East vs. West is the story governments, pundits, and generals need because it’s scalable, fundable, and easy to chant. Intelligent vs. stupid is the story ordinary people recognize because it’s intimate and repetitive: the same bad arguments, the same fear-driven myths, the same lazy certainty, just wearing different flags.
The sting is in how she uses "war" as metaphor and diagnosis. She’s not praising a clean meritocracy of IQ; she’s indicting a culture that rewards simplification. "Stupid" here isn’t a permanent identity so much as a behavior: surrendering curiosity, choosing tribal comfort over complexity, letting slogans do your thinking. That’s why the quote works: it redirects moral urgency away from geography and toward cognition, implying that the most destructive allegiance is to certainty.
As an artist, Satrapi’s authority isn’t policy expertise; it’s the ability to show how ideology turns people into symbols. The subtext is a warning: when you accept the East/West script, you become a prop in a performance staged by the loudest, least thoughtful actors.
The sting is in how she uses "war" as metaphor and diagnosis. She’s not praising a clean meritocracy of IQ; she’s indicting a culture that rewards simplification. "Stupid" here isn’t a permanent identity so much as a behavior: surrendering curiosity, choosing tribal comfort over complexity, letting slogans do your thinking. That’s why the quote works: it redirects moral urgency away from geography and toward cognition, implying that the most destructive allegiance is to certainty.
As an artist, Satrapi’s authority isn’t policy expertise; it’s the ability to show how ideology turns people into symbols. The subtext is a warning: when you accept the East/West script, you become a prop in a performance staged by the loudest, least thoughtful actors.
Quote Details
| Topic | War |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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