TRAVELER
Photo essay: Not a bad place to crash after you've been robbed
by
Jahanshah Javid >>>
فصلی به کام ِ دوزخ و دین، کارساز ِ مرگ
اینجا کسی به فکر درختان باغ نیست
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TRAVELER
Photo essay: India and Nepal
by
Marznak >>>
NUCLEAR
So how should we confront Ahmadinejad?
Why would anyone be shocked by the so-called revelation that another uranium enrichment facility exists somewhere near Qom? It amazes me how even Iranians of the Diaspora, who know the Islamist regime well, seem distressed by it all. I am not claiming to have known any more than anyone else about this, but I certainly never believed that the Iranian government was capable of being transparent about anything, least of all about its nuclear program. Deception is a form of negotiation. And transparency is as alien a concept to this regime as fairness and justice
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INTERNET
در اینترنت ما با افراد پراكنده و بسیار آسیب پذیر طرفیم
ایدئولوژی اینترنت فردگرا و دمكرات و حتی بی سالار است ولی از نزدیك كه نگاه كنید میبینید كه این فقط همان ایدئولوژی كار است نه حقیقتش. این وسیله در عمل به هیچوجه مروج توسعهٌ یكسرهٌ آزادی فردی نیست و در شبكهٌ وسیع اینترنت فرد بسیار تنهاتر و بی دفاع تر از آنیست كه تبلیغ میشود. این تصور كه وسیله ای تكنیكی پیدا شده كه كار سیاسی را آسان یا بی مخاطره میكند، جای كوشش و سازماندهی در صحنهٌ جامعه را میگیرد و آنرا نالازم میسازد حرف مفت است. دمكراسی با این تكنیك و آن تكنیك تضمین نمیشود، فقط با همت و هشیاری مردم است كه شكل میگیرد و بر پا میماند
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POINT
They have proven this time and again they have no respect for women
I was one of the thousands of protestors who gathered in front of the United Nations on September 23 to say NO to Ahmadinejad and yes to democracy in Iran. We were not 400 people as CNN claimed. There were thousands of us, from different groups that had gathered at Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, from the Mojahedin and the royalists to the green movement supporting Mir Hossein Mousavi and Karroubi and independents like me, who came together or rather, appeared at different stages to show our support for a righteous cause, to support our people’s quest and struggle for democracy
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OBSERVER
The Three Iranian Sopranos
Since they were children in Iran, the sisters Shirin and Nasrin Asgari dreamt of becoming opera singers. They spent their playtime pretending be Julie Andrews in
The Sound of Music. Later they made friends with Kamelia Dara, who had also been training to sing since early childhood, and practiced together. Yet hard work and ambition could only take the aspiring artists so far. They quickly realized they needed better training than they could find in Iran. Opera is rooted in Europe; you can’t perfect it in Tehran any more than you can perfect the Persian
radif of music in Vienna. So the three came to Austria on tourist visas, hoping they could pass the auditions to be admitted as students
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