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Why Cannes screening of Persepolis, angers Iran

Nima Sharif
Is it not just a movie? Well, not if you were a Mullah. 

As reported by various news agencies, the Iranian Mullahs’ have once again exposed to the world their limited tolerance for views that might be slightly different than theirs. 

Apparently, Iran has sent the French Embassy in Tehran a letter of protest regarding the screening of an Iranian film maker’s movie, Persepolise, at the Cannes Film Festival in France. 

The movie is about a child growing up in Iran after the Islamic Revolution.

The letter sent by the state-run Farabi Foundation in Iran reads, "This year the Cannes Film Festival, in an unconventional and unsuitable act, has chosen a movie about Iran that has presented an unrealistic face of the achievements and results of the glorious Islamic Revolution in some of its parts."

In other words, the Mullahs are trying to say, “Hey, we did not have a chance to cutup pieces that we didn’t like you to see, before you got to see it.”

Iran – Here comes Sahraroodi

Mousa Afshar
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad"The international community must recognize participation rights of all countries, especially when it comes to problem solving for the whole world. They cannot eliminate one or two countries," Manouchehr Mottaki, the Iranian foreign minister stated on Iranian media on May 4, 2007.

This was the mullah’s foreign minister’s assessment of the recent Sharm El-Sheikh Conference. This conference has been the largest international gathering about Iraq so far. The mullahs complain they were excluded from the conference even though they were allowed to attend.

The head of the Guardian Council, the top council above parliament, mulla Jannati made an even bigger objection and called the Sharm El-Sheikh conference “invalid”. He said: "Do the people of this region want their guardians to be from the US and the UK?  Do they want these countries to make decisions for Iraq?" 

Iranian assassin, member of delegation to Sharm El-Sheikh

Sahraroudi in egypt

Iranian delegation to the Sharm El-Sheikh Conference. Sahraroudi can be seen at front to the left of the picture.

Stop Fundamentalism, May 16 – Iranian opposition sources reported today that a member of the Iranian delegation to the Sharm El-Sheick Conference in Egypt, May 3-4, had an international warrant issued to his name for taking part in 1989 assassination of Iranian Kurdish dissident leaders in Vienna, Austria.

“Mohammad Jafari-Sahraroudi was sent by the Mullahs regime to attend the international conference and was seated on the same table with about 50 Foreign Ministers of different countries,” the Naitonal Council of Resistance of Iran reported today on its website www.ncr-iran.org.

Sahraroudi attended the conference as the delegation’s number two. 

Has MySpace Become MyBully

Jeffrey A Solochek
MySpace has recently gone out and shut down any US based company that had software addons for helping people to use MySpace. One company they shut down was Spacepromoter which had software to allow marketers to create multiple MySpace profiles. Shutting down a company like this makes a lot of sense because in their terms they say you are only allowed to have one MySpace profile.

Iraqi Dinar rising slowly against Dollar

The New Iraqi DinarStop Fundamentalism, May 15 – Iraqi Dinar closed just above 1261 Dinars per Dollar Tuesday at Iraq’s Central Bank Auction. 

Moving up slowly for the past two months, the exchange rate of the Iraqi Dinar has risen significantly at the expense of Dollar since the start of the daily auctions at Iraq’s Central Bank and the introduction of new Iraqi Dinar. The currency has demonstrated great potential in gaining value against Dollar.

Why Iran wants War

Ahmadinejad & Co. starring in Armageddon

Slater Bakhtavar

Ahmadinejad Loves America

Source: www.coxandforkum.com

“The Iranian nation will wipe the strain of regret on the foreheads of those who want to bring about injustice”, President Ahmadinejad scorned at a recent rally in the province of Zanjan. Iran “will cut off the hands of any aggressor”, any attack would be met with a response that is double-fold including suicide attacks across Europe and the United States, he warned. “Israel should be wiped off the map”, the predominately Jewish nation “cannot survive” and is headed “towards extinction” quipped the fanatical President.

If one were to listen to his rhetoric alone, even the most astute political intellectuals would think Iran is a nation equipped with the most dangerous military arsenal capable of hallenging any nation. But Iran’s rhetoric has little to do with their outdated and dismal military, their fledging economy or their detested government. The root of the government’s fiery tone may be traced to their Shi’te ideology messianic belief in a mysterious, mystical twelfth imam who ventured into hiding over a thousand years ago.

The Spring of Discontent In Iran

Ali Safavi
iran discontentSpring in Iran was marked by the outbreak of protests nationwide by virtually every sector of Iranian society, beginning with demonstrations and strikes by tens of thousands of workers in March. By April and May, the level of discontent had escalated dramatically as tens of thousands of workers kept their pledge to turn out en masse.

More than one hundred thousand staged a rally in Tehran on May Day, making it one of the largest protests in Iran in the past two decades. Chanting "death to oppressors" and "freedom is our inalienable right," they displayed their burning desire for change.