And their various allegiances are fascinating. Speaking of which, I know one person who is following all of this with intense interest.
polystyle desu;190394News crawl : 'Rev Guard threatens to sue Web sites' - oh my ![/QUOTE said:Ha, they should come to England, libel tourism is popular here. Presiding, Judge Eady.
In a sign of the divisions in Iran's leadership, the interior ministry today ordered an investigation into an attack on university students allegedly carried out by militia and police. A day earlier, Iran's influential speaker of parliament, Ali Larijani, condemned the assault on the dormitory of Tehran University.
I do not carry out research in Iran’s cities, as do foreign reporters who otherwise live in the metropolises of Europe and North America, and so I wonder how they can make such bold assertions about the allegedly extensive rural support for Ahmadinejad.
Take Bagh-e Iman, for example. It is a village of 850 households in the Zagros Mountains near the southwestern Iranian city of Shiraz. According to longtime, close friends who live there, the village is seething with moral outrage because at least two-thirds of all people over 18 years of age believe that the recent presidential election was stolen by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
When news spread on Saturday (June 13) morning that Ahmadinejad had won more than 60 percent of the vote cast the day before, the residents were in shock.
Twitter Co owner on State Dept's request ...
http://theplumline.whorunsgov.com/mi...us-what-to-do/
There are two forces in the world. Socialism, and capitalism. The first is good, the second is bad.
You just fucking know that this is going to be painted as some kind of reactionary counter-revolution by the Zizek reading blogregore.
Can anyone tell me the whole of the quote (it's a hadith) where Muhammed says that three things are good: "water, greenery, and a beautiful face"?