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MediaGuy 09-28-2010 08:08 PM

The Usual Lies About Iran and Ahmadinejad
 
I don't agree with Iran's government and political and cultural philosophy, but we have to open our eyes to what our own "journalistic" media reports on what that country and it's leader says:

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.p...t=va&aid=21198

Quote:

The Iranian leader did not accuse the U.S. of conspiring to murder thousands of its own people to create a pretext for launching wars as conveyed by the US media.
....

On Sept. 25, the Times published a correction: "A headline on Friday with an article about an incendiary speech in the United Nations General Assembly by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran summarized his remarks about the Sept. 11 terror attacks incorrectly. In his speech, Mr. Ahmadinejad asserted various theories about the origin of the attacks, including the possibility that they had been planned by the United States. He did not say that the United States had planned the attacks."
But just like with the Iranian non-weaponized nuclear energy policy, lies and misquotes are all about pre-disposing the world and the US population to another attack or pre-emptive "war" in the name of Big Oil and to the profit of the military industry... sad, man.

:D

papill0n 09-28-2010 08:18 PM

you know what time it is :thumbsup

DaddyHalbucks 09-28-2010 08:43 PM

MockMood OckMaddinNutjob is certifiable.

Now on to happier things, like this piece from today's Washington Post:


Pioneer Iran blogger sentenced to 19 years prison

By NASSER KARIMI
The Associated Press
Tuesday, September 28, 2010; 12:36 PM

TEHRAN, Iran -- An Iranian court sentenced the founder of one of the first Farsi-language blogs, credited with sparking the boom in Iranian reform bloggers, to more than 19 years in prison for his writings, a news web site reported Tuesday.

Iranian-Canadian Hossein Derakhshan, 35, was a controversial figure among Iran's blogging community. Writing his blog from Canada, he was initially a critic of Iran's clerical leadership, and in 2006 he visited Israel - Iran's archenemy - saying he wanted to act as a bridge between the two countries' peoples.

But he later became a vocal supporter of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, praising him for standing up to the West and criticizing regime opponents. Derakhshan then visited Iran in 2008 and was arrested. Over the next two years, he was often held without communication with family or lawyers, according to rights groups.

Paris-based advocacy group Reporters Without Borders said in a statement that "never has such a tough sentence been handed to a blogger in Iran."

"This case, fabricated from start to finish, shows that part of the regime wants to make Hossein Derakhshan into an example."

The group's statement said Derakhshan was paying the price for "internal rivalries and struggles for influence inside the regime. We ask Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to intervene personally to free him as soon as possible."

Mashreghnews.ir, which is close to Iran's presidential office, reported on Tuesday that Derakhshan was convicted on charges of cooperation with hostile countries - a reference to the Israel visit - spreading propaganda against the ruling establishment, promotion of counterrevolutionary groups and insulting Islamic thought and religious figures.

The court sentenced him to 19 1/2 years in prison, the report said, adding that Derakhshan can appeal. It was unclear if he would benefit from time served.

Derakhshan helped ignite blogging in Iran by posting simple instructions online on how to create sites in Farsi in 2001. The flourishing of blogs by Iranians at home and abroad that resulted gave the country's reform movement an online platform that has helped it survive heavy crackdowns at home - though authorities tried to block many, including Derakhshan's.

His later embrace of Ahmadinejad angered many reform bloggers. Before returning to Iran, Derakhshan on his blog dismissed worries he could be arrested for his previous writings.

The Iranian government has stepped up its crackdown on opponents since Ahmadinejad's 2009 re-election, which opponents say he won by fraud, a claim the president denies.

Authorities shut down two pro-reform newspapers - Andisheh-e No daily and Bahar Zanjan - for publishing articles in which they had insulted officials, another newspaper, Shargh, reported Tuesday. They were the latest in a string of newspapers to be banned since the election.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...801521_pf.html

DaddyHalbucks 09-29-2010 08:30 PM

Do any of you guys.. blog?

tony286 09-29-2010 09:43 PM

we cant afford to go into another war.


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