MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI -MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI - MARG BAR JOMHURIYE ESLAMI
I assert that only with bloodshed shall this Revolution come to fruition. Only when the blood of the islamic regime is spilled in the streets, as so done with the blood of the countless innocent Iranians, shall Iran wash away the stanching memory of 30 years of tyrannical theocracy; self termed the islamic republic.
Now, lets make a list of names that must be publically executed in the name of Justice:
1. Ayatollah Khomeini (DEAD)
2. Ayatollah Khamenei
3. Ayatollah Rafsanjani
4. Ayatollah (fill in the name)
5. Ahmadinejad
6. Rajavi(s)
7. Moussavi
PLEASE ADD TO THE LIST…TIA
___________________________________________________________________________________
Since the elctions were fraudulent to begin with, I guess the rest of the matter is mute... so additional fraud is just icing on the islamic yellow cake. - AK69
•The most influential case for the stolen election has come from Salon contributor professor Juan Cole. The official results, Cole points out, have Ahmadinejad winning areas where he didn’t plausibly have majority support. It seems unlikely that he carried his rivals’ hometowns, or regions dominated by ethnic groups of which challengers Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi were members, and Ahmadinejad was not. It’s as if George W. Bush had edged out John Kerry in Massachusetts. In fact, according to the official returns, Ahmadinejad performed relatively evenly across the country. This too is implausible, at least by historical standards. “In past elections there have been substantial ethnic and provincial variations,” Cole writes. Not only are the Interior Ministry numbers suspiciously smooth, but they were produced too quickly: usually, a three-day delay.
•If Cole’s is the most influential critique of the election results, then the most influential person to publicly voice doubts has certainly been Vice President Joe Biden. Said Biden, echoing Cole on Sunday's "Meet The Press," “Seventy percent of the vote comes out of the city, that's not Ahmadinejad's strong place," Biden said. "The idea he gets 68 or whatever percent of the vote in a circumstance like that seems unlikely.”
•Before the election, it was thought that the only way Ahmadinejad would survive was for pro-reform voters to fail to turn out, points out the New Yorker’s Laura Secor. “If the current figures are to be believed, urban Iranians who voted for the reformist ex-president Mohammad Khatami in 1997 and 2001 have defected to Ahmadinejad in droves.”
•Ahmadinejad was polling in the mid-30s, notes a dubious Michael Tomasky in the Guardian. “If you've managed the economy that badly and the electorate bulges by about 28 percent (roughly speaking, 40 million to 29 million), I don't care how adept you are at religious demagoguery, you are not getting 65 percent of that 28 percent.”
•The government “didn’t even attempt to disguise the fraud,” writes Andrew Sullivan of a graph of the seven batches of votes reported over the course of the night. The graph purports to show each wave of ballot counting breaking down nearly identically, about 2-to-1 for Ahmadinejad.
•Hold on, writes Nate Silver. This may just be how elections look; in fact, it’s not hard to produce a similar graph of the 2008 election. “The apparently extremely strong relationship is mostly an artifact of the exceptionally simple fact that as you count more votes, both candidates' totals will tend to increase.” But don't assume the election was fair just because that graph fails to prove fraud. Sniffing around survey data, Silver's colleague Renard Sexton smells a rat. Ahmadinejad outran his numbers by too much, and the minor candidates didn't register the support we'd have expected. (Most remarkably, Mehdi Karoubi earned paltry vote totals in his native Lorestan and nearby Khuzestan -- which he won in 2005 with 55.5 percent and 36.7 percent, respectively.) "These figures would suggest that Ahmadinejad's reported 65 percent of the national vote is at minimum outside of the trend.
Recently by AK69 | Comments | Date |
---|---|---|
Dear IR Supporters | - | Sep 13, 2009 |
DON'T Come By Busses, Planes, Trains, Or Automobiles! | 40 | Sep 08, 2009 |
Peaceful Legal Reforms Are Illegal Under The islamic Constitution | 1 | Sep 07, 2009 |
Person | About | Day |
---|---|---|
نسرین ستوده: زندانی روز | Dec 04 | |
Saeed Malekpour: Prisoner of the day | Lawyer says death sentence suspended | Dec 03 |
Majid Tavakoli: Prisoner of the day | Iterview with mother | Dec 02 |
احسان نراقی: جامعه شناس و نویسنده ۱۳۰۵-۱۳۹۱ | Dec 02 | |
Nasrin Sotoudeh: Prisoner of the day | 46 days on hunger strike | Dec 01 |
Nasrin Sotoudeh: Graffiti | In Barcelona | Nov 30 |
گوهر عشقی: مادر ستار بهشتی | Nov 30 | |
Abdollah Momeni: Prisoner of the day | Activist denied leave and family visits for 1.5 years | Nov 30 |
محمد کلالی: یکی از حمله کنندگان به سفارت ایران در برلین | Nov 29 | |
Habibollah Golparipour: Prisoner of the day | Kurdish Activist on Death Row | Nov 28 |
Ohhhh Feisty!!!!
by AK69 on Tue Jul 28, 2009 01:40 PM PDT- Me likes'em feisty :-)
Cheers!
♥ ♥ ♥ AK69 ♥ ♥ ♥
Bar Labe Goore Man, Avaz Bekhan
'Darlin'.... dont even THINK to do your dirty work in my name
by javaneh29 on Tue Jul 28, 2009 10:47 AM PDTI want nothing to do with continuing the legacy of Iran for being 2nd in the worlds highest number of executions.
Put them in prison, prosecute them for crimes against the people, murder, torture, wrongful imprisonment, corruption ... whatever but not execution.
And yes, the price of freedom for those IN Iran is high, but theres no need for them to loose integrity as well as shed their blood.
Javaneh
javaneh29 Jaan, Please Don't Be Shocked
by AK69 on Tue Jul 28, 2009 12:23 AM PDTDarlin' the only hope of Freedom Iran has, is people like me. Someone needs to do the dirty work so others, like you, have the ability to give freedom a chance. Freedom comes at a price; much too high for some to accept or even acknowledge.
♥ ♥ ♥ AK69 ♥ ♥ ♥
Bar Labe Goore Man, Avaz Bekhan
Ignorance is Bliss [They Say]
by AK69 on Tue Jul 28, 2009 12:07 AM PDTThere is no struggle my friend, I accept ignorance and the ignorant as a given and care not of their perception or understanding. For we both know that they could not add anything meaningful to this critical discourse. However, you on the other hand have the ability to generate discourse from points well off topic for this blog entry. Cheers!
And as to fear of perceived ignorance, well…
” Pretend inferiority and encourage their arrogance.” - Tzu
-AK69
Bar Labe Goore Man, Avaz Bekhan
Eliminate Ignorance not the Ignorant
by Anvar on Mon Jul 27, 2009 03:57 PM PDTDear *AK69* - Thank you for that meaningful quote. You should’ve also emphasized the portion where he said “…through the cultivation of altruism, of love and compassion...” I’m sure we’re both quoting Dalai Lama, not necessarily because he is a religious figure, but because he’s from Tibet and personally familiar with human rights violations in his own, as you said “enslaved”, country. If you are truly following what he said, then you need to understand that he is talking about the elimination of the concepts and the causes of ignorance, selfishness, and greed. Not the elimination of individuals who possess those characteristics.
Your struggle against ignorance is admirable but you may want to be careful that your methodology, itself, doesn’t come across as ignorant.
Anvar
Anvar Jaan...
by AK69 on Mon Jul 27, 2009 09:18 AM PDT"True happiness comes from a sense of peace and contentment, which in turn must be achieved through the cultivation of altruism, of love and compassion, and elimination of ignorance, selfishness, and greed."
- Dalai Lama
I am simply following something else he said. It is ufortunate that the Dalai Lama's country is enslaved just as our Iran.
-AK69
Bar Labe Goore Man, Avaz Bekhan
Give Life A Chance!
by G. Rahmanian on Mon Jul 27, 2009 01:05 AM PDTIt's amazing that thirty years of bloodshed in Iran has not helped some to consider giving life achance!
Spirit of Reconciliation
by Anvar on Sun Jul 26, 2009 08:39 PM PDT*AK69* - I wish you would not lower yourself to the level of an AK47.
Perhaps, the philosophy behind this partial quote explains why the vast majority of the posters here do not agree with your rationale or proposal.
“... When we face problems or disagreements today, we have to arrive at solutions through dialogue. Dialogue is the only appropriate method. One-sided victory is no longer relevant. We must work to resolve conflicts in a spirit of reconciliation and always keep in mind the interests of others. We cannot destroy our neighbors! We cannot ignore their interests! Doing so would ultimately cause us to suffer. I therefore think that the concept of violence is now unsuitable. Nonviolence is the appropriate method." - Dalai Lama
Anvar
AK69, You Are An Idiot
by Mort Gilani on Sun Jul 26, 2009 07:56 PM PDTYou have written six paragraphs arguing the votes were rigged, or stolen from Mousavi. Then you hint the fraud angered you so much that now you'd like to kill Mousavi! Where is the logic in that? Perhaps, you could be more useful selling phones instead of bloodshed revolution.
//twitpic.com/bdt99
AK69. You've proven that...
by Ostaad on Sun Jul 26, 2009 04:48 PM PDTyou're a killer just like the IRI goons, but you haven't given the chance yet.
I hope you never get that chance.
Beware of the IRI goons - their moto: divide to rule
by Shazde Asdola Mirza on Sun Jul 26, 2009 04:22 PM PDTEvery voice counts! Every action counts!
You do...
by ex programmer craig on Sun Jul 26, 2009 03:30 PM PDTI am simply asserting that, as
proven by history and that of study of human psychology over our
existence upon this rock, we need a clean slate to begin a new Iran.
You do need a clean slate to begin a new Iran. That doesn't include summary executions and mass imprisonments. Your hands will be just as dirty as those of the mullahs, and who will clean YOUR slate? And how long will it take for the next revolutionaries to show up?
Don't worry AK69!?
by Abgousht on Sun Jul 26, 2009 03:11 PM PDTWhen the time comes and you can rest assured it will come, Iranians will NOT leave a single mullah and bacheh mullah alive! In fact, the very reason the mullahs are hell bent to kill the last Iranian before they give in is due to the fact!
May we see that day sooner than later!
shocking ....
by javaneh29 on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:56 PM PDTIm really shocked that you have the gall to suggest continuing executions ..... what hope has freedom got in Iran if people think like you. The whole point of these protests seem to have passed you by....
Give freedom a chance ♥
Javaneh
Dear MEHRNAZ SHAHABI
by AK69 on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:35 PM PDTI am simply asserting that, as proven by history and that of study of human psychology over our existence upon this rock, we need a clean slate to begin a new Iran. For this foundation must shall be solid; democratically and secularly so.Thanks for asking MEHRNAZ SHAHABI ; but my intent with the blog was to garner torts/replies/arguments to the stated contrary instead of false accusations of allegiance from others.So tell me yours and I’ll tell you mine; we all get a say in a democracy.Cheers!
AK69
cycle of death
by David ET on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:32 PM PDTبه امید روزی که به جای مرگ به زندگی فکر کنیم
Wishing for a day that instead of death, we think about life
Yeah Dead on Sherlock Mort
by AK69 on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:28 PM PDTI find your ignorance amusing. If you term me by old reference then, by all means prove your assertions since you know far more than the mere standard ignorant comment makers on this site.
Tell me why is those, like you, that judge and assume without due diligence to task, which are actually the same a-hole archetypes found in real life?
So perplexing!
KMPA
Let us hear your vision for the future AK69
by MEHRNAZ SHAHABI on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:17 PM PDTWe heard of your thirst 4 wanton bloodshed. Let us hear more of your vision for the new Iran ...
Sick
by The Shepherdess on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:14 PM PDTThe content of this blog makes me sick. When will we ever learn?
Ayatollah 69
by Mort Gilani on Sun Jul 26, 2009 02:16 PM PDTThis doozy (Ayatollah 69) is probably an Islamic Republic goon.
blood-thirsty
by Little Tweet on Sun Jul 26, 2009 01:34 PM PDTI never thought anyone would be even worse than akhounds, but now here you are!