Excerpt: “His first impulse was to dismiss the ominous email as a prank, says a young Iranian-American named Koosha. It warned the 29-year-old engineering student that his relatives in Tehran would be harmed if he didn’t stop criticizing Iran on Facebook. Two days later, his mom called. Security agents had arrested his father in his home in Tehran and threatened him by saying his son could no longer safely return to Iran. ‘When they arrested my father, I realized the email was no joke,’ said Koosha.”
BBC Persian on Niac and its Right-wing Detractors
See the video here.

Maz Jobrani on “Going Iranian”
See the video here.

Occupied Berkeley: The Taking Of Wheeler Hall
California Students Protest Massive Tuition Hikes
Here’s the local TV coverage of the showdown yesterday. Here’s the NYT’s article. What’s the next step? Does anybody know?

NIAC: Setting the Record Straight
NIAC: “Myth: NIAC is a lobby for the Islamic Republic of Iran. Fact: NIAC is not a lobby for the Islamic Republic. NIAC is an American organization that represents the majority viewpoints of American’s of Iranian descent, as reflected in numerous polls. NIAC is funded exclusively by the Iranian-American community and grants from major US foundations, such as the Ploughshares Fund and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. NIAC has repeatedly criticized the Iranian government’s human rights abuses and called for greater freedoms. During the June Iranian Presidential elections, NIAC played a key role in educating the US public and decision makers on developments in Iran and the Iranian people’s demands for their votes to be counted and their rights to be respected. NIAC has also been on the forefront calling for Washington to address Iran’s human rights record in its diplomatic engagement with Tehran. Those accusing NIAC of supporting the Iranian government do so not on the basis of any evidence, but due to their disagreement with our support for diplomacy with Tehran, opposition to war, and support for a negotiated resolution to the nuclear stand-off. As Andrew Sullivan of The Atlantic has said, ‘The implication that [Trita Parsi] is somehow a tool of the regime is unfair, untrue and malicious.'” To read on, click here.
Shariati Speaks
“.اگر مثل گاو گنده باشي،ميدوشنت، اگر مثل خر قوي باشي، بارت مي كنند، اگر مثل اسب دونده باشي،سوارت مي شوند… Ùقط از Ùهميدن تو مي ترسند”

Iran Student Criticizes Khamenei in Person
Excerpt: “An unassuming college math student has become an unlikely hero to many in Iran for daring to criticize the country’s most powerful man to his face. Mahmoud Vahidnia has received an outpouring of support from government opponents for the challenge – unprecedented in a country where insulting supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is a crime punishable by prison… The session began with a speech in which Khamenei told the students the “biggest crime” was to question the results of the June 12 presidential election that returned hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power. Khamenei himself declared Ahmadinejad the victor despite opposition claims of widespread fraud. After the speech, Vahidnia raised his hand, then for 20 minutes he criticized the Iranian leader over the fierce crackdown on postelection protests, in which the opposition says 69 people were killed and thousands were arrested… In brief excerpts broadcast on state TV, the thin, bespectacled Vahidnia was shown standing behind a podium, gesturing at times for emphasis. ‘I don’t know why in this country it’s not allowed to make any kind of criticism of you,’ said the student, wearing a long-sleeved blue polo shirt and appearing calm. ‘In the past three to five years that I have been reading newspapers, I have seen no criticism of you, not even by the Assembly of Experts, whose duty is to criticize and supervise the performance of the leader,’ he said, referring to the clerical body that chooses the country’s supreme leader.”
The 30th Anniversary of the Embassy Takeover – Protests for and Against the Regime (Video)
Welcome to Iran’s bipolar disorder: Protests for the regime & protests against.

5 Friendliest Nations On Planet Earth
Iran ranked #4: “Iran’s most precious jewel is its people. Lonely Planet calls them warm and fascinating people, and Will Hide, a London-based travel journalist writing for the Times, has concluded after returning from his trip to Iran that this country has the friendliest people in the world. The hospitality of ever-smiling Iranians is sincere and simple – they are always eager to help travelers, offer a cup of tea, pay for your lunch or invite home for dinner.”
Obama Administration Toes Israeli Line on Settlements (Video)
Making a u-turn on Israel’s illegal and relentless settlement building. See the video here.

The Daily Show: Anna Baltzer and Mustafa Barghouti
“Pretty Women of Iran” – Video
Jessica Mudditt, the creator of the video, sent me the youtube link. (See the video here)Â I like the fact that the video does not focus exclusively on a certain type of women but incorporated numerous, how should I put it… “styles” of women doing all sorts of things. It made me really miss Iran. I was there 3 years ago for nearly 3 months and hope to go back again sometime in the near future, maybe even this summer. Enjoy.

Bill Maher On The Year In Ridiculous Republicans (VIDEO)
See the video here.
US cuts funding to Iran opposition
BBC News: “In an apparent shift from the Bush administration’s efforts to foster regime change in Iran by financing opposition groups, the Obama White House has all but dismantled the Iran Democracy Fund. While the move has been criticised by neo-conservatives in the US, it has been welcomed by Iranian human rights and pro-democracy activists. The controversial program was initiated by the Bush administration in an effort to topple the clerical regime in Tehran by financing Iranian NGOs. While heralded by some in Washington, reactions in Iran to the program were overwhelmingly negative. Critics like Iranian dissident and journalist Akbar Ganji have maintained that the program made virtually all Iranian NGOs targets of the hardline government in Iran: ‘The US democracy fund was severely counterproductive. None of the human right activists and members of opposition in Iran had any interest in using such funds, but we were all accused by Iran’s government of being American spies because a few groups in America used these funds.’ The secretiveness around the program – the recipients of the funds remain classified – has added to the dilemma, Iranian human rights groups maintain. They say it has enabled the Iranian authorities to accuse any Iranian NGO of having received funds from the US.”