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Censorship The Internet

Man Attacked In Ohio For Providing Iran Proxies 467

David Hume writes "electronicmaji is reporting on the Daily Kos that the individual known as ProtesterHelp (also to be found on twitter) was attacked in Ohio for providing network security for Twitterers in Iran, setting up private networks to provide secure proxies, calling for media networks to remove the Iranians Twitterers' information from their broadcast, and providing counter-intelligence services (including Basiji and Army Locations) within the Twitter community. ProtesterHelp was allegedly attacked by a group of men while walking to class in Ohio. The men, who appeared to ProtesterHelp to be either Iranian or Lebanese, drove up beside him and threw rocks at him while shouting, 'Mousavi Fraud.' ProtesterHelp further reported that his personal information has been leaked, and is currently being spread both online and inside of Iran amongst the government." Relatedly, Wired is also reporting that Google and Facebook have rushed out support for Persian. This move has allowed many pro-democracy groups to connect and translate their message to a broader audience.
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Man Attacked In Ohio For Providing Iran Proxies

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  • Waiting for it... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by R2.0 ( 532027 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:22PM (#28395077)

    A man on US soil gets attacked by agents of a foreign government.

    Slashdot response: "It's the US's fault".

    Discuss.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:23PM (#28395101)
    That post would be a troll if it didn't have some truth to it.
  • by necro2607 ( 771790 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:27PM (#28395159)

    Well, not that I mean to be insensitive, but when you're messing with that kind of stuff, you want to be as anonymous as humanly possible.

    Like, purchasing hosting somewhere else in the world, with a one-time VISA/MasterCard cash card that you bought at a corner store with cash. You know? Uploading everything from your laptop while you're chilling at a coffee shop well distanced from your home.

    Maybe I'm just paranoid, but man, I would not be dealing with this kinda scenario where people are getting killed in the night and shit, unless I was doing it ultra un-traceable style. Because I would absolutely anticipate this kind of harsh backlash from the same crazy fuckers that are doing the same thing in Iran.

    I actually considered setting up an anonymous web-form -> twitter gateway, but it was just not worth the hassle to set that kind of thing up with the kind of anonymity I would require to be OK with doing that. :P

  • by gbarules2999 ( 1440265 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:29PM (#28395183)

    if only they allowed concealed carry on campuses, we'd have a few less rock throwers in this country.

    Yeah, they should lift the ban on concealing rocks.

    . . .provided the fact he has a gun, and knows how to use it of course

    Oh. Never mind.

  • No, this stops (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BigSlowTarget ( 325940 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:30PM (#28395223) Journal

    No. This stops now.
    I don't have any money, but I am glad to provide a proxy or whatever if anyone is so crazed that they will attack people across international lines just to silence their speech. I don't have family and I'm not afraid of whatever they think they can do. Such people are scum and not worth fearing.

    I need help. I don't know the specific systems, steps and processes necessary to support these people. What do I do or where do I go to find out what to do?

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:31PM (#28395247) Journal
    I'd be inclined to suspect, pending further information, that the guys who pulled this are your basic freelance nationalists, rather than actual agents. A few guys in a car, throwing rocks to no apparent effect, isn't exactly 007 stuff. A "car accident" (or heck, a standard homicide, those are common enough, just nick the guy's wallet so it looks apolitical) would have been much more professional.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:35PM (#28395303)
    Apathy/laziness has always been highly correlated with cowardice.
  • by msgmonkey ( 599753 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:36PM (#28395319)

    For a start Irans shia form of islam means that it will never be seen as a force representing the majority of the muslim world and whilst to an outsider iranians may seem extremely religious they are n't, just look at the youth who are leading this thing.

    Islam as the reason for the way things are in Iran is a red herring, the people at the top are basically filthy rich and use the argument of "Gods will" against anyone who they sea as a threat to them, hence the use of the word "devine" by the ayatolla to describe the result.

  • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:38PM (#28395355) Homepage Journal

    Yes, Islam is a religion of peace, but that didn't stop some Muslims from flying planes into the WTC, nor does it stop them from strapping on bombs and blowing people up.

    Christianity is a religion of peace, but that doesn't stop some from murdering abortion activists. Every group has its extremist nutjobs.

  • by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo ( 1000167 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:38PM (#28395357)

    Apathy/laziness has always been highly correlated with cowardice.

    Coming from an AC that means almost nothing

  • by pluther ( 647209 ) <pluther@uCHEETAHsa.net minus cat> on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:39PM (#28395369) Homepage

    If they tried to hide the reasons for doing it, it would completely defeat the purpose.

    Attacks like this are never just, or even primarily, to silence the one guy hit. They're to scare all the rest of the people thinking about doing the same thing.

  • and... (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:40PM (#28395379)

    protesting is considered low-level terrorism now..

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:41PM (#28395405)

    a religion of peace

    There is no such thing.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:44PM (#28395457)

    ...and blamed it on a White man. Al Sharpton even got in on it, and never apologized for it after it was proved false. So then, what was your point?

  • by msimm ( 580077 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:49PM (#28395515) Homepage
    Is no way to scare people into silence. A suspicious suicide or burglary would still work better.
  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:51PM (#28395545) Homepage
    What an interesting world, where misconfiguring a proxy in America gets someone in Iran killed.
  • by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @04:55PM (#28395605) Homepage

    I'd be inclined to suspect, pending further information, that the guys who pulled this are your basic freelance nationalists, rather than actual agents.

    Really. My first thought is that they're just your average every day violent assholes, who in this case just happen to be Iranian Ahmadinejad/Khaemeni/establishment supporters in America.

    I don't think we need to resort to international conspiracy to explain this.

  • by ender- ( 42944 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:00PM (#28395683) Homepage Journal

    Is anyone else disturbed by the fact that, apparently, a foreign government identified an American Citizen and had operatives attack that individual? On US Soil? I wonder if there will be hit squads next, or teams of operatives attempting to sabotage servers where proxies are being hosted... This is exactly why free speech is so critical - so that I can, for example, post a comment on Slashdot without worrying about thugs attacking me for it. Flames and trolls are one thing, angry guys throwing rocks at my car? Quite another.

    Seriously? Do you really think that the Iranian Govt/Hezbollah tracked down a Twitter user just to have a couple goons throw rocks at him? I find that hard to believe. If they really felt threatened enough to track him down and send people out to him, he'd be dead. At worst, this was the act of a couple mentally challenged Iranian/Lebanese ex-patriots who have bought into the BS that the Supreme Leader and his cronies have been spouting and decided to try to go scare this guy. And I'd be more likely to believe that these guys don't really even care about what's going on but stumbled on his real identity and drunkenly though it'd be "cool to go throw rocks at him and make him thing he's in big danger".

  • by Cowmonaut ( 989226 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:07PM (#28395787)
    Gasp! You mean the people in charge of Iran are basically the same (archetype) as the people in charge of the US!?! Just replace "God's Will" with "Freedom" or whatever other ideology is relevant for your country and leave the rich part in. I guess people really are the same the world over...
  • by sbeckstead ( 555647 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:09PM (#28395823) Homepage Journal
    Even what is true can be a troll if you disagree with it.
  • Re:Pro-democracy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by 2short ( 466733 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:13PM (#28395869)
    It's about democracy for me.

    "If Mousavi had won and violent protests had started in the face of electoral fraud, the press would be condemning the protesters as a violent minority clinging to a past order"

    And this theory is relevant to what? Mousavi (officialy) lost, and in the (fairly apparent) face of electoral fraud, massive non-violent protests began. Given the good evidence of fraud, the massive scope of the protests, and there generally non-violent nature, it's hardly surprising these are being cast differently than how what you describe might be.

    I don't know about anybody else, but Mousavi looks to me to be not enough better than Ahmadinejad be worth getting excited about. They're both pretty horrid from my (not terribly relevant) perspective. If anyone (western) is cheering, not for democracy, but because they like Mousavi, they're not paying attention.

    The massed populace of a country demanding that an oppressive regime recognize their democratic will? I'm psyched for that. I don't much care what that will is in the short term. In the long term, the more power the people have vs. the oligarchs/theocracy, the better it will be.
  • just goes to show (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kuciwalker ( 891651 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:21PM (#28395977)
    Google et. al. can support pro-democracy movements... when they aren't in important emerging markets like China.
  • by BJ_Covert_Action ( 1499847 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:22PM (#28395983) Homepage Journal
    Well tech savvy activists probably know and are doing just that. However you must consider that these protests have gone beyond the realm of the tech saavy user. I can't count how many "Iranian IP proxy in a box" websites I've seen pasted all over various internet forums for the past week. I have clicked at least 4 different links sending me to readme webpages relating to how you can help the digital/cyber/net/insert-internet-buzz-word-here movement against the Iranian government. The actions being taken to support this protest require at least some understanding of networking and security to be conducted usefully and safely. However, these tools are being advertised on numerous social networking sites in such a way that any political trend lover (I am referring to the same 100 people that show up at EVERY protest in your city regarding ANY cause) can at least attempt to use them. This is going to lead to more people participating in this who don't understand the depth or intricacies of what they are doing.

    Hell, even I thought about setting up one of my boxes at home to host something useful for Iran, but, being somewhat new to the computer security world, and having just read multiple times in every security book I own that the first rule to security is that, "Security is a mindset, not a state," I realized I do not yet have a developed enough understanding of these things to aid Iran in a way that couldn't be countered or hijacked, or turned against the protesters themselves. It's not that I know there are ways those things could happen, its that I realize I would be dabbling in a game where there are far more dangerous and experienced players. So I decided my best option was to try to learn more first.

    Unfortunately, not everyone who has heard about the Iranian protest movement has this security mindset. To them, it is a chance to take actual action in something exciting happening right now. Hell, I had one of my friends who still thinks Linux is a Windows add-on used for IP tracing ask me on an instant messenger the other day if I could help them understand a guide they had found to hosting a proxy for Iranian IP addresses online. I told them I wouldn't dare help them get involved in something like this because they would just be opening themselves, their computers, and their lives up to a world that is much darker than they probably understood.

    My reward was being called unpatriotic and paranoid.

    We have at least one generation of angstful kids at computers who are itching to take action in the name of liberty. Unfortunately that same generous does not have the time or patience to learn the techniques and tools to do so effectively. Furthermore, few of them want to work hard on that kind of thing because really they would rather just go play X-box. Mix those characteristics in people and you get lazy-idealists who often can, and often do, do more harm than good to themselves and others.

    /End Rant
  • by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:22PM (#28395985) Homepage Journal

    I think it really is for the best for the US president to keep saying nothing.
    That being said have got to see if I can set up a proxy to help. At this point I think the credit must go to the Iranian people the best thing we can do is simply helo give them a way to speak.

  • by AhtirTano ( 638534 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:23PM (#28395993)
    So Democracy in Iraq, neighbors to Iran, had no influence at all on Iranians *also* wanting real elections?

    No. I had Iranian friends and roommates in grad school starting in the early 2000's. According to them, this is the most blatant the vote rigging has ever been. The guys fresh out of Iran before the last election (not the current one) told me point blank that Ahmadinajan was going to win for domestic economy reasons.

    The problem with U.S. support is NOT that the Iranian regime will crack down harder. The problem is that the US government is so unpopular there, that if we support them openly, many influential people will abandon the movement. It happened back in the early 90s with Bush Sr., and it could happen again.

  • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:24PM (#28396013)

    A man on US soil gets attacked by agents of a foreign government.

    Slashdot response: "It's the US's fault".

    If by the "the US" you mean "the US government", I'll just ask one question: who is supposed to protect people on US soil from being attacked by agents of foreign governments?

    I mean, last I looked, even those generally opposed to government doing anything else think that's the governments job.

    So, yeah, anytime that happens, its a failure of the US government. Possibly a failure that couldn't be effectively avoided without greater harms (e.g., to freedom), so one that must be an accepted risk, but a failure nonetheless. And unless you acknowledge the failure, you'll never get to the point of considering whether its a failure of the type that must be accepted, or whether it reveals a problem that can and should be addressed.

    (Even if they aren't agents of foreign governments, it is a government, if not necessarily a federal government, responsibility to effectively address violent crime.)

  • Re:Meddlesome (Score:5, Insightful)

    by religious freak ( 1005821 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:31PM (#28396095)
    I would argue that a country is not a monolithic entity as you seem to imply. A country is made up of citizens, and the rights of the citizens to voice their opinions, I would argue, is a fundamental human right.

    When we invade countries for no reason, I agree with you. But when we facilitate communication among disenfranchised citizenry, I'd say we're not meddling at all. We open the door for the individual humans in Iran trying to get to a representative democracy. They either walk through it, or don't.
  • by peawormsworth ( 1575267 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:37PM (#28396179)

    The link provided says Iran should do this:

    - remove Ahmadinejad
    - recognize Mousavi as president

    This suggestion is not democracy at all. Ahmadinejad won the election according to the results.
    From what I have seen, the Mousavi party is not meeting the legal requirements to protest the results and is instead encouraging people to protest directly through civil disobedience. One would have to guess that this is because Mousavi knows he lost and the correct process would prove that.

    As a democratic country the courts should decide where recounts are appropriate and whether fraud may have been committed.

    After all... according to this guys logic, we should have had Gore in office 9 years ago instead of Bush. I mean that whole thing went through the US supreme courts and they came to the correct decision (didn't they?)

    The problem I see with most opinions on this whole thing is that our opinions are formed on the reports from Euro/America media sources. There is a definite dislike for Ahmadinejad due to the negative and embarassing comments from him about the West. But in my opinion, the majority of what he says (in english at least) is entirely correct. Most of what I hear about Ahmadinejad comes not from his mouth, but from summarize of what others reporters say he said. Then when I hear his point of view... it is entirely different and taken out of context.

    I don't know who should be in office over there. But to assume we know what the majority of people in Iran want just because one leader suits our taste more then the other is ignorant. To pretend that you know and act upon it is to support the US propaganda machine.

    Additionally: throwing rocks at the car of someone who's political views you do not like... that is not terrorism. Although expanding the scope of 'terrorist' is a fun past-time.

  • by geobeck ( 924637 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:42PM (#28396243) Homepage

    Communication is a fundamental human right.

    Rights are not something that exist in nature. They exist only because a large number of people believe they should, and are willing to assert their belief strongly enough to ensure the continued existence of those rights.

    In the USA and some other countries, rights are spelled out in a constitutional document, which makes many people believe that they are permanent and unenfringeable. But even in countries with the most democratic political systems, a strong body of people in power are able to erode those rights.

    In countries that do not have democratic political systems or constitutional guarantees of equality, people do not have any rights other than what the government decides to give them. In many countries, for example, we support gender equality. In an Islamic theocracy like Iran, however, women are not given equal rights. We may believe they should have these rights, but they do not actually have them.

    Whether we like it or not, might is right, whether that might comes from an authoritarian system with a small number of people deciding everything, or a democratic system that is influenced by a larger number of people.

  • by Chris Burke ( 6130 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:49PM (#28396319) Homepage

    Expressing support and best wishes for the protestors gives them a boost in spirit that they need if they are to succeed.

    Yeah, and erodes their support among the people of Iran (and hell, various factions of protestors themselves) by linking them with America, and in particular with American meddling. Yes many Iranians want a more free and open government, yes many of them want better relations with the West in general and US in particular. But they do not want us meddling in their affairs. They have a very bad impression of our meddling.

    Right now, the regime is demonstrating their brutality and oppression. Terrible as it is, this works in favor of the reformists. It builds sympathy and support (and practical proof of what they're saying about the government). But you can bet there are Iranians who think the protesters are getting exactly what they deserve, and you can bet that number will increase proportionally to the amount that the U.S. sticks their nose in and makes it sound like they are backing the protesters or are trying to influence them to overthrow the Iranian government. The entire country will solidify around the hard-liners if they see that as the case.

    The best thing our government can do right now is keep their nose out of Iranian business.

  • by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:51PM (#28396345)

    So Democracy in Iraq, neighbors to Iran, had no influence at all on Iranians *also* wanting real elections?

    Probably not. Iran had a real reform movement before the US invasion of Iraq, which was largely derailed, with the aid of the propaganda boost given to the hardline elements by the belligerence of the US in the region (and the invective direct at Iran as part of an "Axis of Evil" in particular) during the last administration.

    The "Democracy in Iraq" hasn't been considered much of a showpiece for emulation outside of the same group of people in the West who were cheerleaders for the war in the first place.

    And speaking of moderate administrations, if students here and abroad are willing to take hits, perhaps the President of the U.S. should be as well. And before you repeat the mistaken idea that Iran will crack down harder if the U.S. spoke in support of the protestors, jut what do you think is happening today?

    The problem isn't that Khamenei will try to crack down harder if the US takes sides, the problem is that the US taking sides, rather than merely supporting, generally, an end to violence and fair results, validates Khamenei's propaganda that the West, particularly the US and Britain, are behind the reform movement and that it is not a genuine, broad-based, organic domestic opposition. This could well undermine support for the opposition.

    Its not a mistake that the people in the US most vigorously wanting the President to take sides are the same people that openly expressed that either Iranian candidate winning would result in Iran continuing to be an "enemy" of the United States, and even in many cases that it was better if Ahmadinejad won, since that way we'd have a clear and unmistakeable enemy rather than a "reformer" that it might seem we could work with.

    Expressing support and best wishes for the protestors gives them a boost in spirit that they need if they are to succeed.

    I think its pretty insulting to the Iranian opposition, especially given the "spirit" they have demonstrated thus far, to suggest that their morale will crack if they aren't given an explicit and direct endorsement by a foreign leader, particularly the leader of a country that has pointed to their nation as an enemy for decades.

    Even the president of France has come out strongly in favor of the protestors...

    France is not the US, or the UK, so the political dynamic with respect to Iran is different. Franco-Iranian relations have been far more friendly than those of the US or UK with Iran, which means that individual instances of French criticism of Iranian government action don't feed into easy government propaganda narratives about manipulation by longstanding enemies.

  • by Buelldozer ( 713671 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:53PM (#28396357)

    If you'd care to compare the number of Christian abortion activists to the number of Muslim car bombers I think you'll find a difference in the number of attacks.

    While it's true that all groups have "extremist nutjobs" it's only a partial story. There ARE differences in scope and frequency. Large differences.

  • by secolactico ( 519805 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @05:56PM (#28396399) Journal

    The attack was uncalled for, but do we know for a fact that they were agent of a foreign goverment?

    "Appeared to be Iranian or Lebanese". Unless they showed him their passports, physical appearance will not really tell you where they are from.

    Think about the implications. If they are really agents of a foreign goverment, would it be an act of war?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:08PM (#28396551)

    I just want to point out that the word Minnesota comes from the Dakota name for the Minnesota River.

    ps. I'm sorry you feel so victimized by some Somalian refugees.

  • by religious freak ( 1005821 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:18PM (#28396689)
    Your argument is correct in a Machiavellian, lowest common denominator kind of way, but just because power is ultimate, does not mean we, as people need to let it go unchecked.

    This is why we have built the institutions, laws, and governments we have built. Your argument says we should just accept oppression without trying to build something better.
  • by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:24PM (#28396761)
    By that logic, would the East be morally justified in destroying American nuclear weapons facilities?

    No, because the western democracies do not conduct themselves in the same way as the tyrants that run places like Iran and North Korea. Western governments don't make fist-shaking speeches that include discussions about their glorious nuclear programs and also about wiping another country and its people off the map.
  • by NonSequor ( 230139 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:32PM (#28396861) Journal

    I think that's a bit glib. At least a significant portion of the Blackwater people, at least the ones actually on the ground, are just former soldiers who traded up to an employer who would give them better body armor.

    Now if you're explicitly talking about someone who is willing to fight for anyone who pays enough money, no questions asked, then of course they don't deserve any sympathy. But I don't think there are really that many people like that.

  • by Patch86 ( 1465427 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:35PM (#28396887)

    I'm not sure that Presidential interference would be particularly productive. In fact, it's almost certainly counter-productive.

    The main opposition in Iran is doing it's very very hardest to portray itself as again the President, but not against the Supreme Leader or the Islamic Republic itself. All their rivals need is some proof that they're really no-good collaborators with an invasive foreign power, and suddenly the opposition's more moderate supporters back the flip off.

    The Western world needs to do it's absolute best to keep the common people or Iran safe and free, but it can't interfere. This is one of those things that'll need to sort itself. If the best thing we can do is keep avenues of communication open to prevent people being locked down and suppressed, that's what needs to be done.

    Much kudos, incidentally, goes to Google Translate and Facebook for both rushing out Persian language versions of their respective sites.

  • Re:Meddlesome (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Chyeld ( 713439 ) <chyeld@gma i l . c om> on Friday June 19, 2009 @06:48PM (#28397049)

    If the South still had slavery, would you have been one of the folk saying we just let the South get around to freeing the slaves on their own time?

    Sometimes, the folk in power have enough power to ensure the folk who don't (that constitute 99% of the country) won't ever get a chance to change things.

    I remember Tiananmen Square, and how very very sad I was that the only thing we seemed to be willing to do was watch.

    I'm not saying Iran is in that spot, but I'm sure as hell not going to avoid lending a hand to the ones who want to get the truth out, just because that might cause the world to label us "busibodies".

    PS. People hate the US for all sorts of reasons, but the primary still in this day and age isn't because we were busibodies but because we spent 50 years playing puppet masters who were willing to prop up even the most reprehensible leader of a country if that meant that it wasn't friends with the Soviets.

  • by geobeck ( 924637 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @07:08PM (#28397211) Homepage

    On the contrary, my argument says that you have to keep asserting your rights en masse or they'll gradually disappear.

    Look at the constant Slashdot stories about warrantless searches, unlawful search & seizure, oppression of free speech, and other denials of rights that are codified, but not respected by those in power. If it weren't for citizens fighting to protect these rights, and bring such infringements to court, they would disappear.

    The Constitution is not a magic wand. It won't ensure the perpetual existence of your rights if you don't defend them.

    But in countries that don't have such documents, those rights simply don't exist, and they won't until the people are able to convince the government to grant them.

    If a supreme ruler can ensure that those selected for the police, the courts, and the army share his beliefs, and maintain the right balance of fear and contentment among the people, it doesn't really matter what rights the powerless believe they have. If that balance is destabilized, however, as may currently be happening in Iran, that's when things change.

  • Re:Pro-democracy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Petrushka ( 815171 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @07:16PM (#28397281)

    If Mousavi had won and violent protests had started in the face of electoral fraud, ...

    Can it not be about both wanting to see a genuine democratic election and wanting to see the slightly-less-evidently-supportive-of-a-fundamentalist-religious-regime guy win?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 19, 2009 @07:35PM (#28397425)

    Now, If you are reading this and you are one of these assholes that came here and insist on forcing your culture on us, I honestly, sincerely, from the bottom of my heart, wish you would leave this country before we kill you and start a war with your homeland that you can never win.

    What bullshit. Isn't that how the US was created in the first place?

  • by glitch23 ( 557124 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @09:03PM (#28398085)

    If we were going to go the bush way, we'd have to respond by attacking Brazil.

    If we were going to go the obama way, we'd have to respond by buying Iran.

  • by glitch23 ( 557124 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @09:26PM (#28398251)

    a religion of peace

    There is no such thing.

    Yes there is. You just have to remember that the actions of the few do not necessarily represent the beliefs of the many. In the case of radicals, by definitions they do not represent the beliefs of the many.

  • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @10:53PM (#28398731)

    Whether or not that right is granted

    The Government does not grant rights! The government is granted rights by the people

    "Granted" is probably the wrong word there. "Guaranteed" would probably be a better word. While it's true that governments don't grant rights, especially in an American style of constitutional republic, in reality, the only rights you have are the ones that either you can defend yourself or the government promises to defend for you. You might think that free speech is a fundamental right (and I agree that it should be a right of everyone), a government that doesn't think so can almost certainly silence you, by force of arms if by no other means.

  • by deimtee ( 762122 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @10:55PM (#28398749) Journal
    Soon it will be.
  • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Friday June 19, 2009 @10:58PM (#28398767)

    fring is being used a lot in this too. the servers are in tel aviv.

    "go figure"

    I can easily understand plenty of Israelis supporting this effort. There's probably little that Israel wants more than a progressive government in Iran that will stop threatening to nuke them.

  • by twostix ( 1277166 ) on Saturday June 20, 2009 @12:35AM (#28399237)

    Well the rest of the world (TM) is pretty used to that coming from your direction so in a perfect world it would be a nice little wake up call to how it feels and that perhaps you should stop doing things like that to the rest of us. Of course it's only the barest of tastes as they didn't kidnap and export him to Syria or Egypt to be imprisoned and tortured for the rest of his life, or better yet simply assassinate him as your country has so often done to people who it doesn't like in other countries.

    Not even we who you consider your "allies" are immune from that!

    They're obviously amateurs anyway as they didn't even try and assassinate your political leaders or overthrow your government and install a murderous dictator and then supply him with billions of dollars of military hardware and setup and train the most brutal secret police of modern history to keep you inline at your expense - like your government did to them.

    Wherever your CIA goes tyranny follows, always.

    Unfortunately for Americans like any monster they're turning their attention toward their masters more and more these days.

  • by kdemetter ( 965669 ) on Saturday June 20, 2009 @02:19AM (#28399653)

    It depends . You have to put it in it's context.

    In Iran , and most of the Arabic world , stoning is meant a humiliating punishment.

    So , it sends the signal 'anyone who does this , deserves to be stoned' .

  • by NonSequor ( 230139 ) on Saturday June 20, 2009 @02:27AM (#28399693) Journal

    I just can't stand blanket contempt for any group, self-selecting or not, without regard for the fact that not all people within that group have the same circumstances.

    Yes I agree that the use of mercenaries systematically creates bad results. But I hate the idea of assuming that all people who sign into a bad system signed into it for bad reasons.

    You could say that I hate misdirected hate. Any form of contempt should be focused as tight as a laser beam, both to avoid any damage to bystanders and to maximize its potential for incinerating the target.

  • by MaskedSlacker ( 911878 ) on Saturday June 20, 2009 @04:21AM (#28400105)

    Weapons of Massive Discomfort?

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