by Sam Razi | Sep 26, 2010 | From the Web, Human Rights, Interviews, Opinion, Politics
Charlie Rose | September 23, 2010> A look at Iran with Haleh Esfandiari of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Farnaz Fassihi of ‘The Wall St. Journal,’ Abbas Milani of Stanford University and Karim Sadjadpour of The Carnegie Endowment...
by Sam Razi | Aug 6, 2010 | Exclusive, Featured, Human Rights, Opinion, Politics
As the main stream media slip back into their pre-2009-Iran-presidential-election coma of blissful ignorance, the story is no longer about the courageous Iranian protesters facing their government and revealing to the world how their government torments and terrorizes...
by Sam Razi | Jul 6, 2010 | Featured, From the Web, Human Rights, Opinion, Politics, World
The Washington Post | July 6, 2010 By Fred Hiatt As America this weekend celebrates the birth of its liberty, in much of the rest of the world freedom and democracy are in retreat. Over the past decade, authoritarian rulers have refined their techniques to stay in...
by Sam Razi | Jul 4, 2010 | Exclusive, Featured, Must Read, Opinion, Politics
The Iran opposition website, Rahesabz, has reported that the dispute between Ahmadinejad and Iran’s Parliament has ended. Apparently, Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani met with Ayatollah Khamenei (the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Leader), where an agreement was...
by Sam Razi | Jun 12, 2010 | From the Web, General, Human Rights, Opinion, Politics
FreakOutNation | June 12, 2010 by Anomaly100 It was one year ago today that protests broke out against the disputed Presidential election in Iran which was the catalyst for the daily protests ever since. The passion of the protesters won the hearts of many and we’ve...
by Sam Razi | Jun 9, 2010 | Exclusive, Featured, General, Human Rights, Must Read, Opinion
The U.N. Security Council just passed sanctions on Iran, supposedly aimed at the government and Revolutionary Guards, because of Iran’s so-called intransigence on its nuclear program. Aside from the fact that these sanctions are diluted to the point of impotence...