Do You Listen To
Music In Your Car?
Is there something
unusual about listening to music?
Should listening to
music be considered as a crime & banned?
Should music lovers be
punished, beaten up and arrested?
NO
********************************
Unless you live under the
repressive
rules of the Islamic
repugnant of Iran.
********************************
Armin Ibrahimnejad aged 19
&
Bahman Abbasszadeh aged 20
were just listening to
music in their car in Tabriz, Iran.
These young men paid the
price and ever since no one
knows of their mental or
physical conditions ever since.
They were pulled out
of the car, beaten up by the revolutionary
thugs until blood was
everywhere.
Beaten up, kicked and
dragged. The Islamic way to arrest suspects in Iran.
Take them to jail for
further beating or take them to hospital?
Savagery beyond
imagination
These are the typical
rouges, rascals and hooligans that
regime of the British
backed Mullahs execute every week
of the every months in
Iran.
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Pictures:
Iran Press News &
sarbazane.vatan
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Lord Treisman of
Tottenham
The British Parliamentary Under-Secretary
for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office:
"Britain will oppose regime
change in Iran
and will continue it's policy
of engagement".
In an interview with the
BBC Radio 4
London - April the 8th,
2007.
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I wonder
what Lord Treisman and the
rest of
the Iran haters in Britain would think
of their
beloved Islamic regime in Iran if a
member of
their family received such treatment?
Can
someone put this question to Lord Treisman
and the
rest of these arrogant bustards?
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_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
In Iran, Feeling the Heat
By: Jim Hoagland
The Shah blamed London much more
than he blamed Washington
for his fate. The Americans had been
children playing at complicated games of power and espionage, while imperial
Britain purposely mounted the plot to win favor with the ayatollahs. Or so the
shah asserted.
Sunday, April 15, 2007; 2007
Dying from cancer a quarter-century ago,
the deposed Shah of Iran pressed on me a fundamental point about his nation
that has become even more vivid over the past two weeks. What the Shah said,
and almost said, then sheds light on the current confrontation between Iran
and the world's great powers.
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi died weeks after our 1980
conversation in Cairo. It has taken the ayatollahs and other Islamic radicals
who followed him to reveal how far backward, and forward, stretched the deeper
meanings of the words he spoke, which had to be condensed into a conventional
news story on that May day.
Iran is after all a place where reality usually comes not in words but in
meaningful details that underlie -- and often belie -- the words. Fooling
foreigners and adversaries is an ancient Persian art form. Saying exactly what
you mean is a crude and dangerous way to talk, or to negotiate.
Such a telling detail lay beneath the Shah's
descriptions to me of how, in his opinion, the British and American
governments deliberately helped Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini bring down his
regime in 1979. His bitter Anglophobia came to mind again
the other day as I watched film of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad blustering
his way through the histrionic release of 15 British military captives and
then, in the days that followed, defying the world anew over Iran's nuclear
ambitions.
The detail was that the Shah blamed London
much more than he blamed Washington for his fate. The Americans had been
children playing at complicated games of power and espionage, while imperial
Britain purposely mounted the plot to win favor with the ayatollahs. Or so the
shah asserted.
The 15 captives grabbed by Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Iraqi waters
on March 23 simply may have been targets of opportunity. But I doubt it. They
were almost certainly seized as bargaining chips. In any event, Ahmadinejad
played up their nationality in ways that suggest the imprint of the colonial
era has not faded much from the Iranian political subconscious since the days
of the shah. It still pays to twist the British lion's tail, even in nations
where imperial control was largely indirect and economic.
Cultural history also plays an important role in the confrontation over Iran's
determination to control uranium enrichment on its own soil despite
international fears that Iran's secret goal is to develop nuclear weapons.
Every discussion I have had with Iranian officials on the nuclear program has
included a pointed reminder that it was the shah -- with American and French
encouragement -- who started the nuclear energy program that Ahmadinejad and
the ayatollahs are carrying forward. These
officials leave hanging unspoken this political fact of Iranian life: Their
giving up control of the enrichment of uranium would open them to charges of
being less nationalistic than was the shah.
The historical force of past intervention in Iran's
affairs is obviously no justification for kidnapping British sailors and
marines; for pursuing nuclear weapons; or for supporting terrorism in Iraq,
Israel and elsewhere. But it is important for
Americans to recognize how deep is the imprint of the past and how demagogues
exploit it when they are in trouble. It will take broad
and sustained campaigns of political and economic pressures to force change in
the behavior of any Iranian regime.
Consider the bombast of Ahmadinejad and his aides in grabbing hostages again,
in threatening to pull out of the Non-Proliferation Treaty and in saying they
will cut off negotiations if the United Nations continues to condemn Iran's
nuclear program. The meaningful detail in Iranian threats not to talk to the
West is that the Iranians are still talking to the West, however theatrically
and unconvincingly. They stall, but they remain engaged, trying to fend off
impending isolation.
This demonstrates that the financial and diplomatic pressures orchestrated by
the Treasury and State departments are taking their toll on Ahmadinejad's
regime. They should be continued and intensified where possible. Among those
voting against Tehran on the latest Security Council censure were South
Africa, which often breaks with the West on political issues to bolster its
nonaligned credentials, and Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim
nation.
Those votes were body blows to Tehran's pretense that the nuclear dispute
reflects a continuing victimization of Third World peoples and resources by
the rapacious British and other Westerners. So is the visible irritation of
Russia's Vladimir Putin with Iran's refusal to consider his offers to
guarantee Iran access to peaceful nuclear energy.
The diplomatic effort to assemble a united international front against Iran is
paying off. One sign: President Bush displays no sense of urgency about having
to decide on military action, recent visitors to the White House report.
History, ancient and recent, shows that his best option is to continue on the
high road of multilateral, peaceful pressures.
"What happened in
Iran was a very well
orchestrated
conspiracy from the outside".
The late Shahanshah's
exact words In an interview with David Frost in April 1980, Panama.
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