Please fight Ahmaghi supporter from your PC open a browser and go to these links and let your pc be on, you will be sending requests to IRI servers till they are on their knees, the only site that is still on is this
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The Arab agents are running back to their ancestoral homes in Arabian countries
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Wherever there is voting there is cheating!
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Needless.to.say,.people.are.complaining.to.me.that.they.are.
having.trouble.reading.my.posts..
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man yek mohandesse computer hastam. beh man pule zeyadi dadeh shod keh yek barnameh virussi barayeh computer entekhabat vared konam keh haar yeki dar miyan entery be nameh namzad digar vared shavad be hessab aghaye ahmadinejaad beravad
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VIEW
A military coup to impose Ahmadinejad
Large-scale manipulation of Friday's presidential election in Iran was to be expected, but few could have predicted that Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had a military coup in mind. By declaring incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the winner, Khamenei conveyed a clear message to the West: Iran is digging in on its nuclear program, its support to Lebanese Hezbollah and Palestinian Hamas, and its defiant regional policies. In the streets of Tehran and other major cities, riot police, members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Basij militias are battling reformist demonstrators who are protesting the results. The government has cut Internet connections and cellphone service and jammed foreign satellite TV and radio broadcasts
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Is Moussavi worth the sacrifice
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COUP
The aftermath of Iran's presidential election
The actual results of the 2009 presidential elections in Iran may never be known factually. But the actual tallies of the votes cast may have never had anything to do with anything in the first place. This does not mean that, in the aftermath of the announcement of the election results, the outrage displayed on the streets by the supporters of the reformist candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi, America's favorite horse in the race, does not indicate real hurt. Those Americans who, to this day, are still bitter about the non-election of Al Gore in the 2000 debacle, can get an idea of the Iranians' sense of betrayal if they take their outrage at the clearly stolen outcome in 2000 and intensify it by a factor of ... oh, about a million
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