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65,535 Entries
Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
I lived in Austria about 2 years about 35 years ago. They treated Turks like Americans treat Mexicans. I’m glad they lost today 🤫


Maghsoud 
07/02/24

Comments:
2-1


Maghsoud 
07/02/24

Comments:
Turkiye 2-0


Jamil Flutechi 
07/02/24

Comments:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HkmvqxqTLE


Faramarz 
07/02/24

Comments:
3-0 over Romania is really good for Holland. I hope they continue like this.


Faramarz 
07/02/24

Comments:
Turkiye is beating Austria 1-0. Minute 32. Some were saying that Austria was going to be the surprise here. Does not look it right now.


Faramarz 
07/02/24

Comments:
Zinsky jAn, the distinction here is what a President can really do versus what people think they can do. People of this country are pretty under-educated or even misguided because of the daily social engineering the propaganda that public media are engaged in. This is why if you talk to a Trumpy versus a democrat, you will get a vastly different answer to your question.


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
Someone, please educate me on the role of president. What can he/she do and how will that affect the average citizen? I mean that without sarcasm.
We always hear that people vote based on their economical pain. How does any president help/hurt the economy? Some decisions could affect the economy in long term but I don’t believe there are many policies that can help/harm the economy in 4-8 years. Same goes with inflation. What can a president really do about that?
Short term effect of the presidency is mainly on international politics and social issues. On the other hand, presidents are not truly in charge of international affairs.


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
Supreme Court is gone! They are corrupted and political. This particular ruling game all past, current and future presidents full power to do whatever they want. Out of 3 branches, two are without rules and the 3rd one is full of stupid people.


Observer 
07/02/24

Comments:
Watching the EUROS and COPA has made me totally goozpeech but not for sporting reasons
If you notice one of adverisers in both is BYD which is the  Chinese electric carmaker that is the largest in the world even bigger than Tesla.
But you may have not even heard from them since the protectionist US government has not allowed them to market their cars over here. So Americans have to put up with Tesla's junk and the overpriced German electric cars. 


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
They, more than likely, will win the next game and go to top 4.


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
Holland wins 3-0


Faramarz 
07/02/24

Comments:
On the supreme court ruling, basically over and over again, they prove that this is not a democracy. Some people just do not want to see it. It is as clear as the sky.

The 6-3 vote over and over again is another very dangerous sign of things to come. Judiciary is supposed to be independent. But if they are also voting along the party lines, why do we have it there? The supreme court should just be dissolved or be part of the parliament.


Faramarz 
07/02/24

Comments:
I cannot watch any of these, but am actually hoping that Holland can be among the contenders. They are my long shot favorites.

[image]


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
Euro 2024 continues today with the teams that are not largely considered as top contenders. We shall see.


Rahim Kamanchi  
07/02/24

Comments:
رئیس جمهور منتخب مردم باید توسط ولایت فقیه منصوب شود
https://youtu.be/KO9G5bdo2G4?si=WcEzQlx1sj3Ek4Sh


Zinsky 
07/02/24

Comments:
I heard the same argument from people in Iran.

Opponents of the regime can celebrate Friday’s low turnout as proof that most Iranians share their disgust with the entire system and do not wish to legitimize it with their vote. But now they face a dilemma. Should they boycott the second round on July 5 and allow Jalili to cruise into the presidency? Or should they cast a lesser-evil vote for the reformist Pezeshkian?

Jalili’s extremism can’t be overstated. Many conservatives concede that Iran needs to engage in talks with the West to lessen the pressure of sanctions. But Jalili leads a hard-core faction that believes Iran should mostly give up on the West. His grand foreign-policy idea during the presidential debates was selling vegetables to Russia. When he led Iran’s nuclear negotiations from 2007 to 2013, his obdurate refusal to observe the most basic norms of diplomatic talks led to stalemate. A European diplomat recently recalled to me that Jalili once spent an important meeting delivering an interminable lecture about the subject of his Ph.D. dissertation, the Prophet Mohammad’s diplomatic engagements in the seventh century. Iran is on a blacklist, held by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force, that severely limits its international trade not just with Western countries but also with China; Jalili, even according to IRGC media outlets, has used his considerable influence behind the scenes to prevent Iran from taking the transparency measures that would allow it to come off that list, where its only remaining company consists of North Korea and Myanmar.

Jalili’s domestic agenda also reeks of fundamentalism. Amirhossein Sabeti, a rising young member of Parliament and a close Jalili-campaign adviser, recently said that the security forces should attack women who refuse to abide by the compulsory veiling rules “like a war on drugs, harshly and without exception.” Sabeti has also asked for further restrictions on the internet and a crackdown on VPN technology that allows Iranians to circumvent the ban on popular apps such as WhatsApp and Instagram. Another Jalili supporter has advocated capital punishment for those selling VPN software.

Pezeshkian’s campaign and others who oppose Jalili have begun sounding alarms. On Sunday, a centrist outlet predicted that a Jalili presidency would be “politically like North Korea and culturally like the Taliban’s Afghanistan.” Pezeshkian supporters, such as former Communications Minister Javad Azari-Jahromi, have used similar rhetoric. But a negative campaign won’t be enough to overcome the deep skepticism the reformists face. Pezeshkian doesn’t have firm positions of his own to point to on issues such as the mandatory hijab. And many Iranians feel that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, together with unelected bodies, controls all political outcomes to a degree that makes voting for Pezeshkian fruitless, especially when doing so means increasing the turnout.

Amirhossein Mosalla, a reformist activist, told me he would boycott the second round just as he did the first.

 

“I won’t vote,” he said on Sunday, “because Jalili’s thinking is already being implemented and Pezeshkian has offered no strategy to counter unelected institutions such as the Guardian Council or the hard-liner-dominated Parliament.”

Some critics of the regime go further: Embracing a version of accelerationism, they argue that a Jalili presidency is ultimately better for the opposition, because the regime will grow ever more isolated and thus more prone to being overthrown.

For those of us with a longer historical memory, the July 5 election is eerily reminiscent of another contest held 19 years ago.

In 2005, a young hard-line mayor of Tehran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, surprised many by getting more votes than the main conservative candidate, Qalibaf, and making it to the runoff. There he faced Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a centrist regime stalwart. Many reformists, and others in Iran’s civil society, urged their constituents to vote for Rafsanjani in order to vanquish Ahmadinejad, calling it an attempt to “defeat fascism.” They likened the contest to the 2002 elections in France, where the left supported the center-right Jacques Chirac to defeat the far-right candidate in the second round. I remember Hossein Masoumi Hamedani, an intellectual and a literature professor, pleading with me to vote for Rafsanjani, when I was a 17-year-old leftist who would have none of it. (The voting age in Iran was 15 at the time.) Why vote for Rafsanjani, I responded, who would help prolong the regime, when Ahmadinejad could help “heighten the contradictions”?

Many young people followed this logic. And Ahmadinejad did win that year, and he did make Iran ever more isolated, sanctioned, and crisis-ridden. But this didn’t lead to democratization or regime collapse. Rather, the political repression and economic malaise got worse and worse; Rafsanjani’s political defeat gave more power to Khamenei and the hard-liners, not to the democratic movement.

Perhaps I’ve mellowed with age, but I now wish we had supported Rafsanjani back in 2005. At 76, Hamedani is calling for a vote for Pezeshkian, and he now makes more sense to me. The thought of a President Jalili holding any power at this crucial juncture in Iranian history scares me—especially when we remember that he could shape the outcome of the succession crisis that is sure to break when the 85-year-old Khamenei finally dies.


lol 
07/02/24

Comments:
This really got me goozpeech. Is he moderate or is he not?
مسعود پزشکیان، ۶ آذر۹۳:
اول انقلاب مسئول پاکسازی بودم هنوز بحث حجاب نشده بود حجاب را در بیمارستان‌ها و دانشگاه‌ها اجباری کردم
به دادگاه انقلاب گفتم بخشنامه کردم که همه باید روسری و مانتو ولباس آستین‌بلند بپوشید
دانشگاه را ما بستیم. انقلاب فرهنگی و بستن دانشگاه‌ها را ما شروع کردیم
https://x.com/hafezeh_tarikhi/status/1807704676130779281


Zinsky  
07/02/24

Comments:
I missed the game. Watched the highlights. Physical game. The call/no call was pretty close. They really need to stop players from complaining. Anyone who complains more than 5 seconds needs to be carded.


lol 
07/02/24

Comments:
رشتی جان
If at the time of cross that player who scored was in offside position it is offside regardless of the rebound. At the time of rebound and him scoring is absolutely no issue as you said. It is important to see if he was at offside position at the time of cross. It was close with VAR but to me that is just a goal and does not need to be judged میلی متری.
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