Monday, September 20, 2010
Claiming A Netroots/Grassroots Leadership Role With Iran Democracy Movement
I am doing that. I am claiming a leadership role.
There is no election for this leadership role. I have no plans to launch an organization, or a NGO. It is just me and my digital tools. But what I do requires more than internet access, way more. I am the only digital ninja/commando of my kind on the planet. I have a track record. I have done this once before.
I have come up with a set of principles, a suggested road map. It worked in Nepal, it will work in Iran. It will work everywhere where there is no democracy. That road map is no secret sauce. All my methods thrive on openness and transparency. I want to clone myself many, many times and get those clones busy for the cause of democracy everywhere. That is the idea. What I have done is special, but it is no secret. It can be done again and again and again. Others can do it. That is the idea.
Total Transparency With My Iran Work
The First Time I Heard The Obama Name
My methods are like in the Matrix movies. You use the Internet to transport yourself to the many theaters of action. When I was doing the democracy work for Nepal it felt to me like I sat on the central committees of all political parties in Nepal. Members of all political parties were on my mailing list. I had penetrated all the media houses, and the human rights NGOs, and the diaspora organizations. And to top it all, I had a very public blog. You did not have to be on a mailing list to access that.
There can be no compromise on non violence. We have to stay non violent. And there can be no compromise on the goal of regime change to put in place an interim government with the mandate to hold elections to a constituent assembly. But other than that we have to seek allies everywhere. We have to reach out to governments and media houses and any and all. People anywhere regardless of who they are can support the cause of democracy in Iran.
My claim to leadership is the principles and the road map I have to offer. It is that I have my super political instincts and kinetics to offer. All I really have is my ability to persuade people to do what needs to get done, in very public conversations where they always have the option to talk back. I have my ability to ride the waves of human action when people on their own are already doing what needs to get done. I have my ability to stay around like a watchdog, just in case. And I have the ability to step aside once the work is done.
Iran
Democracy Success In Iran Could Be A 1989 Repeat
Image via WikipediaWhen the Soviet Union was around it felt like it was going to stick around forever. Compared to what the Soviet Union was, Iran is nothing, Saudi Arabia is nothing. When the Soviet Union finally collapsed, it collapsed like a house of cards. It felt so easy and inevitable.
At some level it feels to me like if the democracy movement is done right in Iran, we could see a 1989 repeat. The War On Terror does not have to stick around for half a century. We can conclude this one fast. But the democracy movement has to be done right.
So far it has been crowds of people hooting and hollering in a soccer stadium to make a cup of coffee. The people of Iran have done what they were asked to do. But they have been failed by the leaders and the organizations and the diaspora and the global netroots/grassroots.
We have to remobilize. We have to do it all over again. We have to do it right.
I envision a resource rich movement. We have to raise money. Lots of it. There are enormous logistics involved in a democracy movement done right.
Iraq and Afghanistan have been progressive failures. The progressives in America did not think the cause of democracy in far away countries like Iraq and Afghanistan were their business. So the neocons stepped in and waged war and spent trillions of dollars. The progressives still don't have billion dollar ideas to take democracy to the other Arab countries. I say let's start with Iran.
The global netroots/grassroots has to mobilize, it has to raise money. It has to help the Iranian diaspora organize and coordinate.
Mousavi's leadership role is not certain. He could see personal growth and agree to a change of goal for the movement, or he has to step aside. For now I am for sticking with Mousavi as the mascot of the movement and trying our best to get him to see that the goal has to be changed. Mousavi as mascot allows us to take advantage of the fissures in the Iranian state structure. We have to exploit those to the max.
But the goal no longer is holding elections all over again. The goal is regime change. The goal is ending the theocracy. The goal is a new democratic constitution.
A democratic Iran is going to be a proud Iran. A democratic Iran is going to speak vociferously for its interests in the global arena, as it should. A democratic Iran is going to talk in terms of nuclear energy. A democratic Iran is going to talk for justice for Palestine. Sure. Why not?
But the bet is that democracies don't go to war with each other. And so a democratic Iran and Israel will be able to live in peace. That part is science. Turn the Arab neighborhood into one of democracies, and the war clouds depart.
At some level it feels to me like if the democracy movement is done right in Iran, we could see a 1989 repeat. The War On Terror does not have to stick around for half a century. We can conclude this one fast. But the democracy movement has to be done right.
So far it has been crowds of people hooting and hollering in a soccer stadium to make a cup of coffee. The people of Iran have done what they were asked to do. But they have been failed by the leaders and the organizations and the diaspora and the global netroots/grassroots.
We have to remobilize. We have to do it all over again. We have to do it right.
I envision a resource rich movement. We have to raise money. Lots of it. There are enormous logistics involved in a democracy movement done right.
Iraq and Afghanistan have been progressive failures. The progressives in America did not think the cause of democracy in far away countries like Iraq and Afghanistan were their business. So the neocons stepped in and waged war and spent trillions of dollars. The progressives still don't have billion dollar ideas to take democracy to the other Arab countries. I say let's start with Iran.
The global netroots/grassroots has to mobilize, it has to raise money. It has to help the Iranian diaspora organize and coordinate.
Mousavi's leadership role is not certain. He could see personal growth and agree to a change of goal for the movement, or he has to step aside. For now I am for sticking with Mousavi as the mascot of the movement and trying our best to get him to see that the goal has to be changed. Mousavi as mascot allows us to take advantage of the fissures in the Iranian state structure. We have to exploit those to the max.
But the goal no longer is holding elections all over again. The goal is regime change. The goal is ending the theocracy. The goal is a new democratic constitution.
A democratic Iran is going to be a proud Iran. A democratic Iran is going to speak vociferously for its interests in the global arena, as it should. A democratic Iran is going to talk in terms of nuclear energy. A democratic Iran is going to talk for justice for Palestine. Sure. Why not?
But the bet is that democracies don't go to war with each other. And so a democratic Iran and Israel will be able to live in peace. That part is science. Turn the Arab neighborhood into one of democracies, and the war clouds depart.
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Sunday, September 19, 2010
Hillary's Latest On Iran
Haaretz: Clinton Urges Iran To Reject Military Expansion: In an interview for broadcast Sunday on ABC's This Week, Clinton said many Iranians are also worried ..... she has "grave disagreements" with the Iranian Revolution. .... "But the early advocates of it said this would be a republic. It would be an Islamic republic, but it would be a republic. Then we saw a very flawed election and we've seen the elected officials turn for the military to enforce their power," she said. ..... many Iranians, even those who were originally sympathetic to the revolution are starting to have serious second thoughts about the direction their government has taken. ...... "I can only hope that there will be some effort inside Iran, by responsible civil and religious leaders, to take hold of the apparatus of the state."This is a strange coincidence for me personally that just when I should challenge Hillary to a Nobel duet, I should come across this unusually strong statement for someone who is Secretary of State. (Competing With Hillary Now)
Although her statement is more likely to do with the fact that Iran is a hot button issue, and the UN thing is about to happen. But I still took note.
I have been reading up on and writing to Prominent Iranian Americans. I figured prominent Iranian American academics might pay some attention to my claim to the butterfly effect. (The Hammer Effect, The Butterfly Effect)
For once Hillary and I are on the same side. She has really gone out on a limb with this statement of hers.
Iran is a political problem. It is not primarily a military problem. If the political problem is taken care of, the military issue vanishes like magic. And the political solution is to take the democracy movement to success. I think that goal can be achieved by the end of 2011. But I need to be able to work full time on it from now till then.
Fundraising is the not sexy part of political work. At least for me it is. But it is necessary, and I am working on it. In my own digital ways.
Haaretz: Olmert: Bush Offered To Absorb 100,000 Palestinian Refugees If Peace Deal Reached: the United States would be willing to absorb some 100,000 Palestinian refugees immediately as American citizens ..... "I think that if the refugees - many of whom are already second or third generation [Palestinians] living outside of the territories – were given a choice between returning to Israel or the United States, we could guess what they would choose" ..... every ruling Israeli government must accept the fact that peace negotiations would be based on the establishment of a Palestinian state along the 1967 borders and would include a land exchange. Still, he stressed that both sides must realize that neither Palestinians or Israel would ever have full sovereignty over Jerusalem.
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States Will Interact With Each Other
Image via WikipediaStates exist. There is a state in almost every country. There are one or two countries that feel stateless. Even in those countries there are semblances of the entity, the state. A state is a political entity. States interact with each other.
The US state has a close relationship with the Saudi state. A lot of people in the Arab street take that to mean the US is a hypocritical power that talks about democracy but shakes hands with an autocratic state like Saudi Arabia.
I preach governance literacy to the netroots/grassroots that put Barack Obama into power in 2008. They were more excited before Obama got into power than they have been since he has been in power. It is almost as if they miss being in opposition. That comes from a lack of governance literacy.
If America had a declared policy that should Saudi Arabia become a democracy like Turkey, it would impose economic sanctions upon that new democracy, then I would agree that America is an evil power that not so secretly is for autocracy. But America has no such policy.
America was not opposed to the people of Iran coming out into the streets. America is not opposed to the people of Saudi Arabia coming out into the streets. America is not opposed to the people of Egypt and Syria coming out into the streets.
America can not be, is not opposed to democracy movements. America as a country was born with a mission. That mission is a total spread of democracy. But the American state has to deal with states as they exist, not as it wished they were. I am 100% sure President Obama and Secretary Clinton fantasize about Egypt being a democracy, and Saudi Arabia and Syria being democracies, but it is their job to deal with Egypt and Saudi Arabia and Syria as they exist today. They get paid by the American people to deal with those states as they exist today. A soldier gets paid to fight. A president gets paid to run a country.
The vast, mysterious apathy of the Saudi masses is the reason there is no democracy in Saudi Arabia. The US is not to be blamed.
As for the global arms trade, I have my thoughts and feelings about that, and drug trafficking and human trafficking. I have my thoughts and feelings about a world free of nuclear weapons. President Obama also wants a world free of nuclear weapons. He said that in a speech early as president. But then there is the goal and there is the road map to that goal. I do think his road map takes too long. But I am glad for the shared goal.
One big reason I feel strongly about democracy in Iran is because I hope Iran will set an example, and people will flood the streets also in Cairo, in Riyadh down the line. I am hoping for a domino effect.
What excites me is that I think the global netroots/grassroots is sufficient unto itself to bring about fundamental political change in these countries.
But I am pragmatic about getting help from any and all actors. There can be no room for violence. Other than that I am for raising a lot of money. I want money from private individuals, from NGOs, from states, if possible. Heck, I will take money from the CIA, as necessary. As long as the basic goals and methods are not compromised, I do envision a resource rich movement for Iran.
Actually that has been one of my consternations. The US executed a trillion dollar military plan to bring democracy to Iraq. Why will it not think of a billion dollar grassroots/netroots non violent plan to bring democracy to Iran? I'd help shape that. I have done this before for Nepal. I can do this again for Iran.
Eisenhower talked of a "military industrial complex" as did Gorbachev. There are powerful people who stand to make a lot of money when weapons are sold to the Saudi state. That geopolitical detail does not take away from the democracy movement in Iran. The grassroots work for democracy must go on.
In The News
New Turkey Huffington Post (blog) While European societies are mired in recession, paralyzed by self-doubt and divided by rising social conflicts, Turkey is hurtling toward the future. ..... This year Turkey's economy is projected to grow by more than 11 percent, second only to China. ..... Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb of Finland saluted Turkey as "a truly global player" and "one of the top five countries in the world today."
Jewish Minority Influential In Iran NPR the country's estimated 25,000 Jews. .... They feel very Iranian. They've been there longer than anyone else, really, going back 2,800 years. .... there are minorities in Iran and the fact that it is not a monolithic society. ..... Iran is 97 percent Shia-Muslim .... there is a Jewish member of parliament. There's a Zoroastrian member of parliament. There's a Christian member - two Christian members of parliament..... Jews are free, yes. ... They're allowed to drink, for example, in a country where alcohol is banned. ....... They can have a member of parliament, but they can't become a minister, for example. You have to be a Muslim. That's part of the constitution. ....... when it comes to expressing any kind of sympathy for Israel or the idea of a Jewish homeland, no, they are not free to do that. ...... It is a perfectly democratic system, so long as everyone does what they're told. .... if you're a Muslim who decides to convert - well, that's punishable by death. ..... the whole idea behind the challenge to Ahmadinejad and the challenge to the system subsequent to the election was that the experiment has gone wrong.
$60 billion arms deal between United States and Saudi Arabia Party for Socialism and Liberation . Under secret negotiation since 2007 .... the largest arms deal in U.S, history. .... up to 84 Boeing F-15 fighters and upgrade 70 others .... 70 Apaches, 72 Black Hawks, and 36 Little Birds. ..... the U.S. military-industrial complex has increased its share to more than two-thirds of all foreign armaments deals ... No elections have ever been held in Saudi Arabia, and the country has a horrendous human rights record.
Did Iran really do so well out of the Iraq war? The Guardian The Americans ... spent over a trillion dollars, lost more than 4,000 people, tarnished their reputation in the region and failed to control Iraq's oil wealth...... Iran can arm and fund militias till kingdom come, but at the end of the day, in Iraq, it is ballot papers, not bullets, that decide who stays in power and who gets the boot. .... When Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's highest-ranking Shia scholar, fell ill during the summer of 2004, he tactically avoided travelling to Iran for treatment. ...... The Iraqi army continues to go from strength to strength, the Iraqi intelligence is ever more capable of gathering information and Iraq will soon catch up with the region in oil exports
Only Democracy For Iran calls the International Criminal Court to action. Iran Press Watch
What the Hiker Release Says About Iran's Internal Power Struggle TIME a level of chaos and political infighting inside the regime ..... what was most notable about Shourd's release was the rebuke it involved for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the hands of his own judiciary..... Iran's judiciary — controlled by rival conservatives who are loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei but antagonistic to Ahmadinejad ...... insisted on the bail payment of $500,000 .... . The infighting in Tehran is really vicious right now, and more publicly visible than it's ever been..... a degree of chaos in the regime rather than easily defined factional battles ...... There have even been signs of open conflict between the President and the Supreme Leader ...... a system that puts final executive authority in the hands of an unelected clergy ..... "Ahmadinejad is asserting the autonomous powers of the presidency in a way we haven't seen before, even pushing back against the Supreme Leader. And some see that as heresy."
India develops a new axis with Iran and Russia Daily News & Analysis
Why Ayad Allawi is Iraq's greatest political survivor Telegraph.co.uk a land where a politician's status can often be measured by often someone has tried to kill them ..... Despite general improvements since the US-led troop surge in 2007, he feels the country is still teetering on the edge of the abyss. ..... London, where he spent decades as an opposition leader after defecting from Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath Party during the 1970s. ..... still maintains strong links with the British govermen and spent part of last week meeting the new Foreign Secretary William Hague ...... Sectarianism, he claims, is still rife in Iraq, within both the security forces and the political establishment. ....... His party has a strong following among Iraq's Sunni minority, although he himself is from a wealthy Shia family ..... His grandfather helped to negotiate Iraq's independence from Britain ...... the fears voiced recently by the Iraqi military chief of staff, General Babakir Zebari, that its armed forces will not be fully ready until 2020 .... the West should begin talking to the Taliban and Mullah Omar in Afghanistan, just as Britain and America ended up talking to Shia and Sunni insurgents in Iraq
Freedom, democracy and human rights in Syria Independent A country cannot be built on past grudges. We have to forgive – I don't know about forget – and we have to live together, all Syrians who believe in democracy and human rights, to have a new era. The Berlin Wall fell, the Soviet Union collapsed. Syria will change." ..... he wants Syria to break its relations with Iran ..... Damascus is the West's gate to Iran, Bashar is the middle-man between Washington and Tehran. ..... We are campaigning internationally for a new Syria.
The US state has a close relationship with the Saudi state. A lot of people in the Arab street take that to mean the US is a hypocritical power that talks about democracy but shakes hands with an autocratic state like Saudi Arabia.
I preach governance literacy to the netroots/grassroots that put Barack Obama into power in 2008. They were more excited before Obama got into power than they have been since he has been in power. It is almost as if they miss being in opposition. That comes from a lack of governance literacy.
If America had a declared policy that should Saudi Arabia become a democracy like Turkey, it would impose economic sanctions upon that new democracy, then I would agree that America is an evil power that not so secretly is for autocracy. But America has no such policy.
America was not opposed to the people of Iran coming out into the streets. America is not opposed to the people of Saudi Arabia coming out into the streets. America is not opposed to the people of Egypt and Syria coming out into the streets.
America can not be, is not opposed to democracy movements. America as a country was born with a mission. That mission is a total spread of democracy. But the American state has to deal with states as they exist, not as it wished they were. I am 100% sure President Obama and Secretary Clinton fantasize about Egypt being a democracy, and Saudi Arabia and Syria being democracies, but it is their job to deal with Egypt and Saudi Arabia and Syria as they exist today. They get paid by the American people to deal with those states as they exist today. A soldier gets paid to fight. A president gets paid to run a country.
The vast, mysterious apathy of the Saudi masses is the reason there is no democracy in Saudi Arabia. The US is not to be blamed.
As for the global arms trade, I have my thoughts and feelings about that, and drug trafficking and human trafficking. I have my thoughts and feelings about a world free of nuclear weapons. President Obama also wants a world free of nuclear weapons. He said that in a speech early as president. But then there is the goal and there is the road map to that goal. I do think his road map takes too long. But I am glad for the shared goal.
One big reason I feel strongly about democracy in Iran is because I hope Iran will set an example, and people will flood the streets also in Cairo, in Riyadh down the line. I am hoping for a domino effect.
What excites me is that I think the global netroots/grassroots is sufficient unto itself to bring about fundamental political change in these countries.
But I am pragmatic about getting help from any and all actors. There can be no room for violence. Other than that I am for raising a lot of money. I want money from private individuals, from NGOs, from states, if possible. Heck, I will take money from the CIA, as necessary. As long as the basic goals and methods are not compromised, I do envision a resource rich movement for Iran.
Actually that has been one of my consternations. The US executed a trillion dollar military plan to bring democracy to Iraq. Why will it not think of a billion dollar grassroots/netroots non violent plan to bring democracy to Iran? I'd help shape that. I have done this before for Nepal. I can do this again for Iran.
Eisenhower talked of a "military industrial complex" as did Gorbachev. There are powerful people who stand to make a lot of money when weapons are sold to the Saudi state. That geopolitical detail does not take away from the democracy movement in Iran. The grassroots work for democracy must go on.
In The News
New Turkey Huffington Post (blog) While European societies are mired in recession, paralyzed by self-doubt and divided by rising social conflicts, Turkey is hurtling toward the future. ..... This year Turkey's economy is projected to grow by more than 11 percent, second only to China. ..... Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb of Finland saluted Turkey as "a truly global player" and "one of the top five countries in the world today."
Jewish Minority Influential In Iran NPR the country's estimated 25,000 Jews. .... They feel very Iranian. They've been there longer than anyone else, really, going back 2,800 years. .... there are minorities in Iran and the fact that it is not a monolithic society. ..... Iran is 97 percent Shia-Muslim .... there is a Jewish member of parliament. There's a Zoroastrian member of parliament. There's a Christian member - two Christian members of parliament..... Jews are free, yes. ... They're allowed to drink, for example, in a country where alcohol is banned. ....... They can have a member of parliament, but they can't become a minister, for example. You have to be a Muslim. That's part of the constitution. ....... when it comes to expressing any kind of sympathy for Israel or the idea of a Jewish homeland, no, they are not free to do that. ...... It is a perfectly democratic system, so long as everyone does what they're told. .... if you're a Muslim who decides to convert - well, that's punishable by death. ..... the whole idea behind the challenge to Ahmadinejad and the challenge to the system subsequent to the election was that the experiment has gone wrong.
$60 billion arms deal between United States and Saudi Arabia Party for Socialism and Liberation . Under secret negotiation since 2007 .... the largest arms deal in U.S, history. .... up to 84 Boeing F-15 fighters and upgrade 70 others .... 70 Apaches, 72 Black Hawks, and 36 Little Birds. ..... the U.S. military-industrial complex has increased its share to more than two-thirds of all foreign armaments deals ... No elections have ever been held in Saudi Arabia, and the country has a horrendous human rights record.
Did Iran really do so well out of the Iraq war? The Guardian The Americans ... spent over a trillion dollars, lost more than 4,000 people, tarnished their reputation in the region and failed to control Iraq's oil wealth...... Iran can arm and fund militias till kingdom come, but at the end of the day, in Iraq, it is ballot papers, not bullets, that decide who stays in power and who gets the boot. .... When Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's highest-ranking Shia scholar, fell ill during the summer of 2004, he tactically avoided travelling to Iran for treatment. ...... The Iraqi army continues to go from strength to strength, the Iraqi intelligence is ever more capable of gathering information and Iraq will soon catch up with the region in oil exports
Only Democracy For Iran calls the International Criminal Court to action. Iran Press Watch
What the Hiker Release Says About Iran's Internal Power Struggle TIME a level of chaos and political infighting inside the regime ..... what was most notable about Shourd's release was the rebuke it involved for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the hands of his own judiciary..... Iran's judiciary — controlled by rival conservatives who are loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatullah Ali Khamenei but antagonistic to Ahmadinejad ...... insisted on the bail payment of $500,000 .... . The infighting in Tehran is really vicious right now, and more publicly visible than it's ever been..... a degree of chaos in the regime rather than easily defined factional battles ...... There have even been signs of open conflict between the President and the Supreme Leader ...... a system that puts final executive authority in the hands of an unelected clergy ..... "Ahmadinejad is asserting the autonomous powers of the presidency in a way we haven't seen before, even pushing back against the Supreme Leader. And some see that as heresy."
India develops a new axis with Iran and Russia Daily News & Analysis
Why Ayad Allawi is Iraq's greatest political survivor Telegraph.co.uk a land where a politician's status can often be measured by often someone has tried to kill them ..... Despite general improvements since the US-led troop surge in 2007, he feels the country is still teetering on the edge of the abyss. ..... London, where he spent decades as an opposition leader after defecting from Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath Party during the 1970s. ..... still maintains strong links with the British govermen and spent part of last week meeting the new Foreign Secretary William Hague ...... Sectarianism, he claims, is still rife in Iraq, within both the security forces and the political establishment. ....... His party has a strong following among Iraq's Sunni minority, although he himself is from a wealthy Shia family ..... His grandfather helped to negotiate Iraq's independence from Britain ...... the fears voiced recently by the Iraqi military chief of staff, General Babakir Zebari, that its armed forces will not be fully ready until 2020 .... the West should begin talking to the Taliban and Mullah Omar in Afghanistan, just as Britain and America ended up talking to Shia and Sunni insurgents in Iraq
Freedom, democracy and human rights in Syria Independent A country cannot be built on past grudges. We have to forgive – I don't know about forget – and we have to live together, all Syrians who believe in democracy and human rights, to have a new era. The Berlin Wall fell, the Soviet Union collapsed. Syria will change." ..... he wants Syria to break its relations with Iran ..... Damascus is the West's gate to Iran, Bashar is the middle-man between Washington and Tehran. ..... We are campaigning internationally for a new Syria.
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- US says arms deals serve 'national interest' (alternet.org)
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- Saudi Arabia's juggling act on homosexuality | Brian Whitaker (guardian.co.uk)
- Israel's silence over Saudi arms deal speaks volumes (theglobeandmail.com)
- "Why Does Saudi Arabia Need $90 Billion in Weapons?" and related posts (defensetech.org)
- Analysis: Saudi wants bigger role in Iraq to counter Iran (reuters.com)
- Pentagon proposes huge sale of warplanes to Saudis (sfgate.com)
- Iraq withdrawal: power vacuum to stay as neighbours vie for political foothold (guardian.co.uk)
- Arms deal: Saudi Arabia and US put 9/11 behind them (guardian.co.uk)
- Analysis: Saudi deal could be first of more Gulf U.S. arms pacts (reuters.com)
- U.S. Goverment Makes $60 Billon Arms Deal with Slave-Loving Saudi Arabia (humantrafficking.change.org)
- Israel's silence over Saudi arms deal speaks volumes (theglobeandmail.com)
- Obama to ink $60bn Saudi arms sale (guardian.co.uk)
- (9/2010) Syrian Influence Returns To Lebanon (basilandspice.com)
- $60b deal steps up arms race in Gulf (nowpublic.com)
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Twitter For Fundraising
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My latest push for my fundraising goal for my Iran democracy work has been this list: Prominent Iranian Americans.
If I can get 200 prominent Iranian Americans to give me $1,000 each, that is all I need. That has been my thought. I am still thinking along those lines. But then earlier today I went on Twitter, did a search on "Iran democracy," and sent reply tweets to about 10 people talking about Iran, each time linking to my main Iran democracy page - bit.ly/irandem - and already there is some welcome chatter.
Now I think my preferred method is to get 2,000 people on Twitter to give me $100 each.
I should keep this fundraising two track. I should try both ways.
These two tracks beat trying to get the CIA - the thought did cross my mind; think Bourne - or the State Department, or some NGO to give money. I am saying no to any kind of paperwork. You look at my blog posts and you donate. That's it. Anything more is way too complicated.
My work is a netroots/grassroots thing. We netroots/grassroots people are not big on hierarchies. We want Obama to make as much data public as possible. We don't want to go to the White House. We want the White House to come to us, wherever we are. That's the spirit of grassroots governance.
That is the absolute best way to work on Iran democracy.
I have no desire to launch an organization. No NGO, nothing. So the contributions are not tax deductible.
I want to keep things simple. I have already stated where the 200K will go. And I will report periodically on how much I raise. That much transparency is all you get. And that ought to be enough.
There is no other political challenge on earth I salivate over more than the Iran democracy movement. This is what I want to put most of my time into until a regime change in Iran.
It is possible, or I would not be looking into it.
Let's go raise some money. Help me out.
Of the two stated methods, the Twitter method is perhaps the better one. You talk to people who are already explicitly interested in Iran democracy. That is a good starting point. They are interested enough that they are talking about it.
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Tweet 1
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My latest push for my fundraising goal for my Iran democracy work has been this list: Prominent Iranian Americans.
If I can get 200 prominent Iranian Americans to give me $1,000 each, that is all I need. That has been my thought. I am still thinking along those lines. But then earlier today I went on Twitter, did a search on "Iran democracy," and sent reply tweets to about 10 people talking about Iran, each time linking to my main Iran democracy page - bit.ly/irandem - and already there is some welcome chatter.
Now I think my preferred method is to get 2,000 people on Twitter to give me $100 each.
I should keep this fundraising two track. I should try both ways.
These two tracks beat trying to get the CIA - the thought did cross my mind; think Bourne - or the State Department, or some NGO to give money. I am saying no to any kind of paperwork. You look at my blog posts and you donate. That's it. Anything more is way too complicated.
My work is a netroots/grassroots thing. We netroots/grassroots people are not big on hierarchies. We want Obama to make as much data public as possible. We don't want to go to the White House. We want the White House to come to us, wherever we are. That's the spirit of grassroots governance.
That is the absolute best way to work on Iran democracy.
I have no desire to launch an organization. No NGO, nothing. So the contributions are not tax deductible.
I want to keep things simple. I have already stated where the 200K will go. And I will report periodically on how much I raise. That much transparency is all you get. And that ought to be enough.
There is no other political challenge on earth I salivate over more than the Iran democracy movement. This is what I want to put most of my time into until a regime change in Iran.
It is possible, or I would not be looking into it.
Let's go raise some money. Help me out.
Of the two stated methods, the Twitter method is perhaps the better one. You talk to people who are already explicitly interested in Iran democracy. That is a good starting point. They are interested enough that they are talking about it.
New York Times: Message to Muslims: I’m Sorry: Muslims are one of the last minorities in the United States that it is still possible to demean openly, and I apologize for the slurs. ..... “Sorry for Portraying Muslims as Human.” ..... Must coverage of law-abiding Muslims be “balanced” by a discussion of Muslim terrorists? ..... should reporting of Pope Benedict’s trip to Britain be “balanced” by a discussion of Catholic terrorists in Ireland? ..... I also want to defend America against extremists engineering a spasm of religious hatred. ...... Japanese did attack Pearl Harbor and in the end killed far more Americans than Al Qaeda ever did. Consumed by our fears, we lumped together anyone of Japanese ancestry and rounded them up in internment camps. The threat was real, but so were the hysteria and the overreaction. ...... Radicals tend to empower radicals ..... We’ve mostly learned that about blacks, Jews and other groups that suffered historic discrimination, but it’s still O.K. to make sweeping statements about “Muslims” as an undifferentiated mass.
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- To Iran, With Love (3) (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- Shopping Around For Iran (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- Iran Feelers To The CIA And The California Society For Democracy In Iran (democracyforum.blogspot.com)
- Iran, Iran, Iran (democracyforum.blogspot.com)
- Iran Democracy Organizations (democracyforum.blogspot.com)
- Jewish Minority Is Influential In Iran (npr.org)
The Ayatollah: Guilty Of Blasphemy
Image via Wikipedia
Crisis: Opportunity For Greatness For Obama
Secular Democracy In Iran: Hedayat (famous Iranian writer): What Islam Brought to Iran: Our Customs were not of burying our daughters alive..... They “taught” us how to wipe our bottom and how to use the bathroom...... a true Muslim is who in hopes of superstitious sensual joys of after life would live a life of poverty to gather the luxury and pleasures of life for the leaders of his faith, live cherishing the dead and living under the grim rules from thousands of years ago, which animals would not even follow. ...... Their business is to argue their doubts and differences from dawn till sunset instead of consuming time on inner thoughts, arts and philosophy. ..... Enemy of mankind’s inner joy for success, innovation and advancement, has narrowed down to the tactic of holding their swords against throats to stop what they despise. ...... Destroying our magnificent works of art.In medieval Hinduism women were burnt alive along with their dead husbands. The Islamists' Islam is medieval. Their version of Islam can not be taken into the future. Islam has to survive and flourish, but not its medieval version. Democracy is about social progress, and you necessarily have to attack medieval religious beliefs to get there. You have to attack with words their leaders, their thoughts, their organizations. You have to wean away the masses from their false prophets. The villains who run Iran today give Islam a bad name. They misuse the name of God to rule and rampage and plunder. They misuse the name of God to bring suffering upon their own peoples. They should be socially outcast for thus misusing the name of God. The Ayatollah has been committing blasphemy on a daily basis. That can not be tolerated. That part is nothing to do with politics, or democracy or elections. That part is strictly religion. The people of Iran need to snatch Islam from the Ayatollah. The Ayatollah is an Islamofascist who is a follower of Hitler, not the Prophet Muhammad. The Ayatollah has been mercilessly going after his own peoples for close to two years now. The people of Iran have a right to peacefully protest, they have a right to speak, they have a right to shout out Allah O Akbar from their rooftops. Those rights can not be taken away by some blasphemous, bearded, good-for-nothing mullah. In every age in human history there have been so-called priests who symbolize religious corruption. In this day and age that would be the mullahs of Iran. These are not religious people, let alone religious leaders. These are blood thirsty tyrants who come out at night to drink the blood of their own peoples. These people think of nothing the tactic of using violence to try and suppress their own peoples. Islam does not belong to them, never did. The people of Iran do not belong to them. These mullahs speak neither for Islam, nor the peoples of Iran. These corrupt priests need to be dragged out of the mosques never to be allowed back in, for they give God a bad name. What is at stake in this movement is more than a political system, Iran's very religion is at stake. Faith is fundamental. Family is fundamental. Justice is fundamental. Work is fundamental. All those are at stake for the people of Iran in this movement. The green revolution has only one conclusion: victory. There can be no other conclusion. We will worry about elections later on. First the people of Iran need to reclaim their religion.
Crisis: Opportunity For Greatness For Obama
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- Iran calls for Terry Jones' arrest (mojoey.blogspot.com)
- Taking stock of radical Islam (cbc.ca)
- -Ayatollah Khamenei Commands All Muslims to Follow His Orders (answersforthefaith.com)
- The problems of blasphemy (thinkerspodium.wordpress.com)
- Iran Backs Off Stoning,But Not the Execution (foxnews.com)
Friday, September 17, 2010
The Movie Business
If I were not a Third World guy who felt an obligation to save the world - for me the word is not change, it is save, think malnutrition, think infant mortality - I think I might have gone into the movie business. I really like movies. But instead I have put time into politics, which I am really, really good at, and I have put some time into tech. When I have not had the option for tech entrepreneurship - like now - I have focused on tech blogging. Even tech for me has always been politics by other means. I have consistently talked of internet access as the voting right for this 21st century.
I keep having this thought that I want to befriend someone like Matt Damon and say, look, buddy, I don't have the time on my hands to do what you do, but I need you to insert me in your movies, about a minute per movie. That way I can have my cake and eat it too. I can be in the movies while still primarily trying to save the world.
I kid you not, in the Fall of 2007, I spent some considerable time wanting to cut a video clip of me reenacting that early scene in Scarface where Tony is being interrogated. I went ahead and bought the DVDs for study purposes. I should have either not had the strong, recurring thought, or I should have gone ahead and made the video clip and avoided myself a whole lot of hassle eight months later.
In the scene I had in mind, I had Hillary people interrogating me. I had the Obama 08 sticker on my cheek, and that was my scar. I had the DVDs, I had a few Obama 08 stickers in stock just for the purpose. I had my video camera.
“Watch your thoughts, for they become words.
Watch your words, for they become actions.
Watch your actions, for they become habits.
Watch your habits, for they become character.
Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny.”
I won a best actor award in middle school.
How My Grandfather Became Mayor The First Time
One thing I do hope to do a bunch of down the line is video blogging. Vlogging, for short.
I keep having this thought that I want to befriend someone like Matt Damon and say, look, buddy, I don't have the time on my hands to do what you do, but I need you to insert me in your movies, about a minute per movie. That way I can have my cake and eat it too. I can be in the movies while still primarily trying to save the world.
I kid you not, in the Fall of 2007, I spent some considerable time wanting to cut a video clip of me reenacting that early scene in Scarface where Tony is being interrogated. I went ahead and bought the DVDs for study purposes. I should have either not had the strong, recurring thought, or I should have gone ahead and made the video clip and avoided myself a whole lot of hassle eight months later.
In the scene I had in mind, I had Hillary people interrogating me. I had the Obama 08 sticker on my cheek, and that was my scar. I had the DVDs, I had a few Obama 08 stickers in stock just for the purpose. I had my video camera.
“Watch your thoughts, for they become words.
Watch your words, for they become actions.
Watch your actions, for they become habits.
Watch your habits, for they become character.
Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny.”
I won a best actor award in middle school.
How My Grandfather Became Mayor The First Time
One thing I do hope to do a bunch of down the line is video blogging. Vlogging, for short.
Newt Gingrich: Monkeyface
If the creationists in the Deep South needed proof that we did indeed descend from the apes, well, Newt Gingrich just opened his mouth.
New York Times: G.O.P. Uses Obama ‘Otherness’ As Campaign Tactic: Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker, who this week accused Mr. Obama, whose father was a Kenyan economist and spoke out against the occupying force in his country, of exhibiting “Kenyan, anticolonial behavior.”
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Prominent Iranian Americans
Academia/Science
Source: Wikipedia
- Shahriar Afshar, physicist, namesake of Afshar experiment
- Siavash Alamouti, CTO Broad Band and INTEL fellow, inventor of Alamouti Code, code-communication engineer
- Abass Alavi, Professor of Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and neurology; University of Pennsylvania.
- Nima Arkani-Hamed, physicist from Harvard
- Mina Bissell, scientist and biologist, LBL.
- Hamid Dabashi, Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies, Columbia University in New York.
- Raymond Vahan Damadian, inventor of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Richard Danielpour, Professor of Composition, Manhattan School of Music
- Nader Engheta, Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania.
- Haleh Esfandiari, Middle East Scholar
- Nariman Farvardin, Provost of University of Maryland
- Reza Ghaffarian, NASA senior research scientist
- Vartan Gregorian, President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York
- Ali Javan, physicist, inventor of gas laser, Professor Emeritus of Physics at MIT.
- Sepandar Kamvar, computer scientist, Stanford University.
- Mehran Kardar, physicist, MIT.
- Ahmad Karimi-Hakkak, Founding Director of Center for Persian Studies, University of Maryland.
- Farid Masrour, philosopher, Harvard University, previously in New York University
- Bahram Mashhoon, General Relativity physicist
- Abbas Milani, Director of Iranian Studies Program, Stanford University.
- Maryam Mirzakhani, Stanford University Professor.
- Roxana Moslehi, DCEG post-doctoral fellow at National Cancer Institute, adjunct assistant professor at George Washington University.
- Mohsen Mostafavi, Dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Design
- Hossein Khan Motamed, Famous Iranian surgeon and founder of Motamed Hospital in Tehran, Iran 1936
- Hamid Mowlana, Director of the Division of International Communication at American University
- Firouz Naderi, NASA director of Mars project.
- Majid M. Naini, computer scientist, former Professor at University of Pennsylvania, Rumi expert.
- Kayvan Najarian, Associate Professor of Computer Science, Virginia Commonwealth University.
- Seyyed Hossein Nasr, philosopher, George Washington University.
- Vali Nasr, Middle East Scholar and Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
- Camran Nezhat, Director, Stanford Endoscopy Center for Training & Technology.
- Jahan Ramazani, Professor of English Literature, University of Virginia
- Kaveh Pahlavan, Professor of Computer and Electrical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
- Behzad Razavi, Professor of Electrical Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles
- Nouriel Roubini, one of the leading economists of our age, professor of economics at the Stern School of Business, New York University and chairman of RGE Monitor
- Alia Sabur, Youngest professor in the world.
- Homayoun Seraji, Senior Research Scientist, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- Ghavam Shahidi, IBM Fellow, Director of Silicon Technology
- Manuchehr Shahrokhi, Craig Fellow/Professor & Editor of Global Finance Journal California State University, Fresno. Executive Director, Global Finance Association.
- Vahid Tarokh, leading communication theorist Harvard University.
- Ray Takeyh, Middle East Scholar and Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
- Hamid Jafarkhani, leading communication theorist University of California, Irvine.
- Cumrun Vafa, String theorist in Harvard.
- Ehsan Yarshater, Hagop Kevorkian Professor Emeritus of Iranian Studies, Director of Center for Iranian Studies, Columbia University, Founder and Editor in Chief of Encyclopaedia Iranica.
- Lotfi A. Zadeh, Mathematician and computer scientist, and a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley; father of Fuzzy Logic.
- Hossein Zonnoor, Economics, Princeton UniversityAlumni, Shiraz University.
- Nasir Gebelli, Programmer.
- Fereidun Qajar Jorjani, awards winner motion picture director, producer, writer. ( Story Of Islam ) amozon.com best seller, award winner documentary.
- Bijan Pakzad noted fashion and perfume designer
- Amir Mokri, director of photography
- Shohreh Aghdashloo Academy Award-nominated film/television actress
- David Ackert, actor and writer
- Dan Ahdoot, stand-up comedian
- Jonathan Ahdout, actor
- Reza Badiyi, TV director
- Fairuza Balk, actress, Iranian father
- Nadia Bjorlin, TV/soap opera actress
- Nazanin Boniadi, television and film actress
- Mehri Danielpour, sculptor: sculpturebymehri.com
- Danny Huston, actor and director
- Maz Jobrani, comedian
- Cyrus Kar, film director
- Andre Khabbazi, actor, semi-professional tennis player
- Rosie Malek-Yonan, actress, author, director, and documentary filmmaker
- Marshall Manesh, actor
- Mozhan Marno, actress
- Emud Mokhberi, Academy Award nominated director/animator
- Amir Naderi, film director
- Amin Nazemzadeh, actor
- Cyrus Nowrasteh, screenwriter and director
- Adrian Pasdar, actor
- Nasim Pedrad, actress, comedian
- Artemis Pebdani, actress
- Behnaz Sarafpour, fashion designer
- Sarah Shahi, model and actress, Iranian mother?
- Bahar Soomekh, actress
- Massy Tadjedin, screenwriter
- Elie Tahari, fashion designer
- Shaun Toub, actor
- Bob Yari, Academy Award winning film producer
- Shiva Rose McDermott, actress
- Habib Zargarpour, the famous Iranian-American computer operator that has been candidate for Oscar 2 times
- Anousheh Ansari, first female space tourist, leading telecommunication entrepreneur, and namesake of the X Prize
- Ali Asghar Abdullah Zadeh Nsrabady (EXPERT ccie cissp Head of Institute of Technology(PERSIAN DATA) WINNER Olympiad ACM
- Hamid Akhavan, CEO of T-Mobile International.
- Shahram Dabiri, video game producer, lead producer of World of Warcraft
- Ben Fathi, Senior Vice President at Cisco, formerly, Corporate Vice President of Development, Windows, Microsoft.
- Vartan Gregorian, President of The Carnegie Corporation of New York.
- Omid Kordestani, Senior Vice President of Google
- Salar Kamangar, vice president of Google's web applications
- Taraneh Razavi, Doctor of Google headquarters in Mountain View,
- Reza Behforooz, Software engineer at Google
- Mike Jazayeri, Google Product Manager
- Shirin Oskooi, Associate Product Manager at Google
- Shamim Samadi, Product Manager at Google
- Maryam Kamvar, Ph.D. in Computer Science and currently a research scientist at Google.
- Francis Najafi, chief executive of Phoenix-based real estate developer and investor Pivotal Group
- Pedram Keyani, The engineering manager for the site integrity team at Facebook.
- Isaac Larian, CEO of MGA Entertainment, manufacturer of Bratz dolls
- Manny Mashouf, founder and Chairman of bebe stores
- David Merage, co-founder of Chef America Inc., manufacturer of Hot Pockets
- Paul Merage, co-founder of Chef America Inc., manufacturer of Hot Pockets
- Sam Nazarian, CEO of the SBE Entertaintment Group
- Farzad Nazem, former CTO of Yahoo!
- Reza Mirkhani, President, & CEO of Pervasive Semiconductor Systems
- Houman Haghighi, Senior Manager of Qualcomm
- Mansour Jabalameli, Senior Network Designer Telecom
- Mehrdad Nikoonahad, founder & CEO, Nikoo Technology, Inc.
- Pierre Omidyar, founder of e-Bay (born to Iranian parents).
- Sina Tamaddon, Senior Vice President of Applications for Apple Computer.
- Ramin Rostami, CEO & founder, Technocel. CEO, Sensotech. CEO & founder, American Investment Group
- Mostafa A. Aghazadeh, Vice President, Technology and Manufacturing Group Director, Chandler Assembly Technology Development
- Mohsen Alavi, Vice President, Technology and Manufacturing Group Director, Product Quality and Reliability
- Nasser Bozorg-Grayeli, Vice President, Technology and Manufacturing Group Director, Corporate Quality Network
- Babak Sabi, Vice President, Technology and Manufacturing Group Director, Assembly Test and Technology Development
- Banafsheh Akhlaghi, Former Western Regional Director of Amnesty International
- Susan Irene Etezadi, San Mateo County Superior Court Judge
- Babak Hoghooghi, Former Executive Director for the Public Affairs Alliance for Iranian Americans
- Tamila Ebrahimi Ipema, San Diego County Superior Court Judge
- Cyrus Mehri, One of Washington's Ten Most Feared Lawyers
- Nema Milaninia, 2008-2010 President of the Iranian American Bar Association
- John Tehranian, Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law
- Reza Aslan, writer
- Mahnaz Badihian, poet
- Najmieh Batmanglij, chef, writer
- Firoozeh Dumas, author of Funny in Farsi: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America
- Roya Hakakian, writer
- Rosie Malek-Yonan, author of The Crimson Field
- Azar Nafisi, writer
- Majid M. Naini, writer, speaker
- Shahrnoosh Parsipour, writer
- Dalia Sofer, writer
- Bobak Zonnoor, writer
- Mahbod Seraji, writer
- Christiane Amanpour, CNN chief international correspondent
- Davar Ardalan, NPR producer of Morning Edition
- Rudi Bakhtiar, FOX news anchor, former CNN lead anchor
- Shmuley Boteach, rabbi, radio and television host, author
- Babak Dehghanpisheh, Middle East Correspondent, Newsweek
- Farnaz Fassihi, journalist, Wall Street Journal
- Alireza Jafarzadeh, FOX News Channel Foreign Affairs Analyst
- Parisa Khosravi, Senior Vice President of CNN Worldwide
- Arash Markazi, journalist, Sports Illustrated
- Azadeh Moaveni, journalist, Time Magazine
- Asieh Namdar, former CNN anchor
- Atoosa Rubenstein, former Seventeen (magazine) and CosmoGIRL! editor-in-chief
- Roxana Saberi, photojournalist whose 2009 arrest in Iran became a cause celebre (Iranian Father)
- Jahan Salehi, President, Agence Global, Inc. syndicate
- Reza Sayah, CNN International Correspondent
- Ramin Setoodeh, Newsweek Associate Editor
- Cyma Zarghami, president of Nickelodeon and MTV Networks Kids & Family Group
- Lily Afshar, female classical guitarist
- Pouyan Afkary, synthesizer musician, member of Scary Kids Scaring Kids
- Axiom of Choice, world music group
- Leila Bela, Avant-garde musician, actress, writer and former member of Pigface
- Cyrus Bolooki, drummer of New Found Glory
- Richard Danielpour, composer, Professor of Composition, Manhattan School of Music
- Deep Dish, electronic music group
- Moe Rock, American Pop Singer
- Ramin Djawadi, composer
- Rostam Batmanglij, keyboard player of Vampire Weekend, music producer.
- Anousheh Khalili, vocalist
- Lotfi Mansouri, opera director
- Daron Malakian, guitarist/vocalist of four-piece Alternative metal band System Of A Down(Armenian-Iranian mother)
- Tony Petrossian, music video director
- Ali Tabatabaee, one of the lead singers of Orange County, California-based pop-punk band Zebrahead
- Kourosh Zolani, composer, soloist and inventor. Zolani is best known for designing and playing the world's only playable Chromatic Santour.
- Goli Ameri, U.S.& Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs, former U.S. delegate to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, former U.S. public delegate to the United Nations General Assembly, and former Republican candidate for the United States House of Representatives from the 1st district of Oregon
- Hushang Ansary, former Iranian Minister of Finance and Chairman of National Finance Committee of Bush-Cheney 2004 Campaign
- Michael Benjamin, 1996 Republican candidate for the U.S. House from the 8th district of New York, and 2004 United States SenateRepublican Primary candidate from New York
- Jimmy Delshad, Mayor of Beverly Hills, California
- George Deukmejian, former Governor of California (1983–1991)
- Ross Mirkarimi, Member of San Francisco City Council from the Green Party.
- David Safavian, disgraced former Chief of Staff of the United States General Services Administration
- Faryar Shirzad, former Deputy National Security Advisor and White House Deputy Assistant for International Economic Affairs to President George W. Bush
- Andre Agassi, retired championship-winning American tennis player, father is Iranian.
- Esfandiar Baharmast, World Cup referee, FIFA Instructor, known as Esse Baharmast
- Farzad Bonyadi, world champion of poker
- Shawn Daivari, professional wrestler and manager, better known by his stage names of Sheik Abdul Bashir or simply Daivari
- Hamid Dastmalchi, world champion of poker
- Antonio Esfandiari, champion poker player
- Alecko Eskandarian, American soccer player
- Andranik Eskandarian, former soccer player
- Matt Ghaffari, Olympic silver-medal winning wrestler
- Afshin Ghotbi, soccer coach, former assistant coach of Korea Republic national football team and LA Galaxy, currently coaching Iran national team
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh, NFL wide receiver for the Seattle Seahawks, father is Iranian.
- King Kamali, IFBB pro bodybuilder
- George Malek-Yonan, Iran's "Champion of Champions" in Track & Field and Pentathlon
- Amin Abraham Paul Nikfar, Shot Put for the Iranian National Team and 1st Iranian Asian Indoor Champion 2004
- Amir Sadollah, Professional mixed martial artist and winner of the ultimate fighter 7
- Behdad Sami, First Pro Iranian Basketball player to play in USA history.
- Michael Shabaz, tennis player, 2005 Wimbledon boys' doubles championship
- Amir Vahedi, professional poker player
- Leila Vaziri, The current world record holder of the 50 m women's backstroke
- Khosrow Vaziri, retired professional wrestler, better known by his stage name of The Iron Sheik
- Aravane Rezaï, tennis player, 2010 currently ranked 19th in the world.
- Farhad Rostampour, The first Iranian-born pilot to complete a record setting flight around the world
Source: Wikipedia
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