"Its clearly obvious this is the work of the CIA. I took a class on it, I know the CIA's fingerprints."
6/24/2009 7:25:12 AM
UK and Iran expel eachother's diplomatshttp://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/06/24/2607563.htm
6/24/2009 11:47:52 AM
The Jews, Americans, and the Brits aren't cutting it anymore? They should probably just go ahead rally their people behind the threat of invading, telepathic squid monsters.
6/24/2009 12:56:01 PM
Theres no real concrete evidence the election was rigged and all other candidates have since came out and conceded defeat. Census data lags and new voters that weren't accounted for in voter numbers caused turnout to seem too high. Mousavi lost in his home province...so what? 3 million people.5000 protesters in the streets of tehran and cnn spins it as "the battle for iran". The opposition to the government is mad about losing the election but they've made it clear that they don't want outsiders meddling in this affair. The funniest thing is that Mousavi was one of the main guys pushing for a nuclear armed Iran. The only goal is destabilization regardless of who you are empowering, which fits the CIA. Laugh all you want but I'm not the first to make the claim. Also, what better stage to learn about the CIA and political situations than academia? (unless of course you're in the CIA or state dept which none of you are) Google and it doesn't matter if people know the CIA did it because people know what they want to believe and if somebody allows them to believe what they want to believe then they will ignore everything else. Especially when the media machine promotes it. Its happened countless times in history. Talk of sanctions to somehow "defend the people of IRan" is crazytalk because sanctions make quality of life go down.
6/24/2009 2:50:58 PM
5000. ok
6/24/2009 2:55:25 PM
6/24/2009 3:07:14 PM
6/24/2009 3:24:37 PM
http://www.iranhumanrights.org/2009/06/list/list of missing people
6/24/2009 8:14:57 PM
the footballers who wore the green wristbands have been 'retired' from the national team and told they will never represent the country ever. and their passports have been taken away.if nothing else pointed to the illegitimacy, injustice, violence, and defensiveness of the regime, this surely does.wearing green wristbands is not against the law, nor does it have any uniform standard meaning.this regime is murderous and unjust. and it should be removed from power. they maintain power using fear and manipulation, and are extremely paranoid.i hope they die off... along with the regimes of a few several other countries, such as NK, Israel, Africa, China, Russia, Arabia, etc.
6/24/2009 8:54:32 PM
all of africa. really?
6/24/2009 9:01:11 PM
pretty much, yeah. 90%? 80%?
6/24/2009 9:12:56 PM
o damn they went and messed with futebol... i give their government until World Cup 2010 AT MOST.[Edited on June 24, 2009 at 9:19 PM. Reason : pretty sure in Brazil all the high ups would be executed by now for that.]
6/24/2009 9:18:18 PM
6/24/2009 9:22:25 PM
6/24/2009 9:27:55 PM
6/24/2009 9:29:33 PM
Economic sanctions are designed to deprive/punish the nation and hopefully put pressure on the government as people blame them for being sanctioned but the part we didn't think through is that there is a much higher likelihod of the people blaming the sanctioning government as opposed to the sanctioned government ala post ww1 Germany (those sanctions worked out well).I cannot for the life of me understand the way some Americans tick. As an American traveling in Europe, I was often prejudged but pretty much every young person you come across seems logical with the exception of Americans theres a strange sense of intolerance. "If a nation is not ran as ours then it is wrong. Our rights and laws should be required everywhere and we should bomb any government that does elsewhere" Lastly, people have been shot, killed beaten for breaking petty laws in many nations including the US. In the event of a civil disturbance in the US, governments would issue curfues and maybe a state of martial law. They would make clear that no one is to be on the street (was done in Iran Friday) and violators would be labeled as looters, etc. Not very long ago, we were going through a much more severe situation in the US and people were being killed on the streets quite often. The point is that nations go through phases and grow from them.
6/24/2009 9:57:21 PM
I do not support the embargo on Cuba nor did I approve of our invasion of Iraq or any other military intervention where the US tries to play world police. Unless they are legitimately a threat to our country or attacking one of our significant allies than i'd rather my Tax payer spent on welfare queens and liberal wet dreams.
6/24/2009 10:04:10 PM
^^want to run this by you. this is the us using iran to take light away from how fucked up the 2000 election was here?
6/25/2009 12:18:03 AM
The Iranian Media is now airing continuous broadcasts of interviews done with "protestors" after they've been arrested where they confess to violent behavior and bizarre acts such as a lady carrying hand grenades with her child, hoping to use them against the government. Also in the boardcasts they repeatedly bring up the "fact" that the protests were masterminded by foreign powers and that Khamenei again stresses the urgency to stop these protests at once.
6/25/2009 7:05:39 AM
mambagrl, there is a significant difference between how social unrest is treated here and how it is being treated in Iran: 'free' press. Government agents in Iran could detain and then execute a hundred people and no one but the executioners would know. Here in America we would know who was arrested, where they were taken, and who is holding them, with reporters demanding to know when they can be interviewed. It is not government policy that makes us free, if it were I'm sure some politician would change it. It is a cultural norm which causes a police officer to sit up and take notice when someone declares "I'm a reporter and I demand to know!"
6/25/2009 9:50:21 AM
No questions. Where are your papers?Then you wake up hanging by your ankles from the ceiling. Just another day in Iran!
6/25/2009 9:57:52 AM
My hat protects me from the CIA's mind control beams
6/25/2009 10:01:19 AM
I've been looking through a few blogs and twitter accounts. Also, Mousavi has an active campaign on facebook. It is amazing to see the flood of media presented by the people through these channels, because there is an overwhelming passion and immediacy coming from the people, that isn't usually found with the regular foreign journalism. The regime has no chance to combat all of these media outlets with their own propaganda. The rest of the world is not fooled, but for now it seems the rural and outlying residents of Iran are.http://shooresh1917.blogspot.com/2009/06/letter-from-tehran-hospital.htmland then you have this gem
6/25/2009 1:40:38 PM
6/25/2009 1:43:18 PM
in the first days after the election i felt really helpless too.I figured the least, absolute least i could do was to setup my computer as a proxy so they can continue to post updates/pics/videos online.i think a search for "setup proxy iran" in google will get you what you're looking for.
6/25/2009 1:45:09 PM
yeah. i suppose that might be an okay outlet. of course, you should only do that if you really know what you're doing. seems like a pretty big security risk if you don't know what you're doing.
6/25/2009 2:25:02 PM
yea i suppose so, but short of flying over to Iran and joining people in the streets, i figured helping them get their information out was the next best thing.
6/25/2009 4:00:43 PM
^x6 Yeah, Shaggy, this is fun!This is not a hat brim--it's an awning.
6/25/2009 5:12:38 PM
i wonder if this has something to do with some of the patently absurd claims coming out of the gov't
6/25/2009 6:08:41 PM
two more actual Iranians who agree the US needs to stay the fuck out of the middle of this messhttp://www.thedailyshow.com/video/index.jhtml?videoId=231561&title=reza-aslanhttp://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/06/25/hooman_majd/print.html
6/25/2009 10:25:04 PM
Well, it's depressing, but everything seems to have come to a stand still. I'm not sure what the next course of action is, for either side. I wonder what sorts of events will turn when Ahmadinejad is confirmed president, will that cause people to take to the streets again? I hope it coerces other nations to step up and take the appropriate steps in doing business with Iran.
6/26/2009 9:31:20 AM
6/26/2009 12:20:20 PM
intervene does not necessarily equal military intervention
6/26/2009 1:13:57 PM
^^ I'm not sure that's what salon was suggesting.....of course, the critics like McCain and Graham aren't saying that either, but they're not exactly saying what they would prefer. All they're doing is opposing or nay-saying whatever Obama is doing, without saying what they would prefer insteadso, who's using a straw-man now? [Edited on June 26, 2009 at 1:16 PM. Reason : . ]
6/26/2009 1:15:27 PM
I've got a strawmanremembert this song?BOMB BOMB BOMBBOMB BOMB IRAN
6/26/2009 1:29:56 PM
6/26/2009 5:15:22 PM
^ yep, if i recall the 3/7/40 day mourning periods gave momentum to the '79 revolution too, and of course neda is predicted to have a similar impact.I have read on some blogs that Rafsanjani is attempting to gain support from the assembly of experts to dismiss Khamenei. That would seem to be a huge move if its true.
6/27/2009 10:57:19 AM
Hey - what if the United States clandestinely supported the resistance movement in Iran? We don't have to invade - we just need to arm the revolutionaries! Then we'd have a legitimate, stable, pro-US government in Iran and no American casualties. How could it go wrong?
6/28/2009 8:56:01 AM
^ lol sounds like a perfect plan to me
6/28/2009 10:10:19 AM
6/28/2009 9:56:21 PM
I fear the fate of a world that suddenly believes everything it sees on twitter, youtube and facebook. When credible sources are siting botfeste social networking sites as their source for news, Help us.
6/28/2009 11:01:40 PM
I guess we should take the word of that fantastic Iranian press, then, right? The that said there were only 5000 protestors. The one that said Neda wasn't really dead, and then said she was killed by terrorists? riiightpeace out, troll
6/28/2009 11:07:23 PM
aw come on guys oppressive regimes can't be all false reports especially when compared to the propaganda of twitter.
6/28/2009 11:12:56 PM
6/28/2009 11:18:00 PM
Gen Ray Odierno: Iran Still Supporting Iraq Militants
6/30/2009 4:26:52 PM
Yeah, let's believe the guy.'Many' of the attacks are funded by Iran? Almost all attacks are by Sunnis. So now Iran is making Sunnis blow themselves up?Oh, and: "I think". Well, I think you should go fuck yourself, good General. If you have proof, cough it up, otherwise, STFU.
6/30/2009 5:55:16 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/05/world/middleeast/05iran.html?_r=2&ref=world
7/5/2009 4:23:26 PM
so there hasn't been much word of anything lately. will it pick up again for the Neda 40 day mourning?
7/5/2009 4:29:13 PM
Anyone that goes against the Supreme Leader is an agent of the US. Period.
7/5/2009 4:29:54 PM
There will be calm and then spurts of demonstrations. At least thats what happened last time.The problem is that the current government knows exactly what was done during the first revolution and probably knows the best way to stop it.
7/5/2009 6:06:13 PM