سهراب مختاری از قتل پدرش میگوید
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In my experience, “Iranian” and “organization” just don’t go together – which is good and bad
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Ahmadi's photo as plaintiff against Salam Newspaper which sparked the other 18 Tir (1378) and murder of student protesters
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یک دولت فدرال یک پارلمان فدرال از همه ملت های آریایی و تورانی تنها میتواند مارا در برابر ابر قدرتها حفظ کند و ما را در راه ترقی و پیشرفت علمی و فرهنگی بیندازد
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IDEAS
Who are these leftist intellectuals who question the social uprising in Iran?
by Hamid Dabashi
When a political groundswell like the Iranian presidential election of June 2009 and its aftermath happen, the excitement and drama of the moment expose not just our highest hopes but also our deepest fault lines, most troubling moral flaws, and the dangerous political precipice we face. Over the decades I have learned not to expect much from what passes for "the left" in North America and/or Western Europe when it comes to the politics of what their colonial ancestry has called "the Middle East". But I do expect much more when it comes to our own progressive intellectuals -- Arabs, Muslims, South Asians, Africans and Latin Americans. This is not a racial bifurcation, but a regional typology along the colonial divide
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PLAN B
There are other means of pressure
by Michael Singh
Six weeks before Iran's descent into electoral chaos, the hardline Iranian cleric Ahmad Khatami rebuked the United States in his Friday sermon, stating, "You do not want talks!" Ayatollah Khatami (no relation to former president Mohammad Khatami) is clearly not a keen observer of the Washington scene. Given the persistence of American efforts to engage the Iranian regime in dialogue over the last 30 years, and the resilience of the Obama administration's own commitment to engagement, the one constant in American policy toward Iran seems to be that we do indeed want talks.
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