A Window to the Fatherland/Dr. Nourizadeh/July 2

We begin tonight’s edition of A Window to the Fatherland with Dr. Alireza Nourizadeh reading one of his poems from the book of his collected works.

Dr. Alireza Nourizadeh:

We continue the program with focusing on the comments of the cleric Mohammad Javad Hojati Kermani, one of the leaders of the regime of repression and ignorance in Iran, as he has now described the state of the regime as being sick and suffering from the cancer of corruption and illegitimacy.

Hojati Kermani used to be a Zoroastrian but all along has kept his good Zoroastrian beliefs. He and his brother Ali had been active revolutionaries and spent years in exile and in prison.

In the years past, Jamshid Chalangi and Reza Emami and I used to listen to hissermons as he very effectively communicated with the young people of Iran.

He was very close to ayatollah Khomeini as well as ayatollah Montazeri and always supported Mohammad Khatami. However, he and his brother were the targets of the conservatives’ purges and could not even get elected to the Assembly of Experts.

Now, 40 years after the revolution in which he played an important role and having been sidelined by the regime he has vented his grievances and has asked forforgiveness from the Iranian people for promising them freedom and prosperity, but instead delivered a hellish life for them.

Rouhani has claimed that foreign powers have not allowed the Iranians to bear the sweet fruits of the nuclear deal! That is a big lie. The one party that has been responsible for this is the regime in Tehran and its proxies across the Middle East.

The billions of dollars of the money that the nuclear deal brought back to Iranwere squandered among the regime’s proxies in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen to continue with their nefarious and destabilizing activities.

Only yesterday the Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Al-Mahdi ordered the disarming and dissolution of Hashad Al Shabi, which has been acting as the regime’s proxy in Iraq.

Later in the program we will discuss how the Saudis and Russians have joined forces to become the dominant players in the OPEC.

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