Portal Into The Unknown - Paul Wallis & Mauro Biglino Bible Translations Episode 5.What Happened To Pfizer Patient Zero Tiffany Dover? To this day no one has been able to find her.1971 - RUSSELL, HARRISON, CLAPTON, "COME ON IN MY KITCHEN" (views: 84).2002 - BELA FLECK & The FLECKTONES, "HOEDOWN" (9 mins) (views: 69).1958 - JEROME MOROSS, Theme from "THE BIG COUNTRY" (views: 105).2899a & b - Durham Sets The Path, 16 Year Plan Exposed, Founding Fathers Warned Us (a, 19min b, 53min) (views: 634) INTEL - Veteran Digital Soldier - Med Beds - Biden Fired - Trump Arrested - NE$ARA (views: 2146).10-13-22: Kerry Cassidy Interviewed by Meri Crouley About Hollywood, Adrenochrome, Sex Trafficking, And The 2020 Election (1hr 13min) (views: 352).EcoHealth Whistleblower: No Evidence That C19 Emerged Naturally (views: 152).“And that remains to be seen how far the crackdown will go, and whether the protestors can resist the crackdown that’s currently underway but - I suspect - is going to intensify very quickly in the coming weeks and months.RUMOR MILL NEWS AGENTS WHO'VE BEEN INTERVIEWED ON RUMOR MILL NEWSĢ36 Articles Displayed of 32,373 Total Messages “This is a very brutal regime, they’re not going to simply pack up and leave because of these protests, they’re going to crackdown very hard,” he said. Hasemi expects the protests to continue, but cautioned that it’s unlikely the tide will turn in their favour any time soon. “It’s a sign of panic, it’s a sign of desperation, and in fact it’ll probably embolden the protesters, because the Supreme Leader, as was expected, did not take any responsibility for his own policies that have brought Iran to this point of crisis. “This is straight out of the authoritarian leader’s playbook, chapter three: when you have a big crisis, you blame foreign enemies, you never take responsibility,” Hasemi said. and Israel instead of addressing protesters’ criticisms of Iran’s policies. Iran’s supreme leader issued his first public comments on the protests on Monday, calling them “riots” and blaming interference from the U.S. He added that decision-makers in Canada should be listening to leaders on the ground in Iran for how they could take further steps to help in this situation. “They’re symbolically very important for the protesters in Iran and also for Iranian-Canadians, who are also very upset over what’s happening back in their homeland,” he said. The value of Canada’s sanctions is more symbolic, and Hashemi expects other countries to follow suit. “You don’t want broad-based sanctions which affect innocent people who are not responsible for the policies of the Islamic Republic.” "The Canadian statement was actually much more precise and forward-looking - they actually named individuals who were responsible for repression in Iran and targeted them with sanctions,” Hashemi said. Biden announced that the perpetrators of violence would have further costs imposed on them, without specifics. President Joe Biden’s statement Monday on the situation was vague. However, he praised the specific nature of Canada’s sanctions, pointing out that U.S. “As far as I know, the head of Iran’s morality police didn’t have any plans to travel to Canada and he doesn’t have any known assets here, so the practical effect on affecting the lives of these repressive actors is quite limited,” he said. Nader Hashemi, director of the Centre for Middle East Studies at the University of Denver, told CTV News Channel that while these sanctions are important, they’re unlikely to do much to quell the unrest. On Monday, Canada officially imposed sanctions on 25 individuals and nine entities “in relation to Iran’s gross and systematic violations of human rights”, including the leader of Iran’s morality police. Protestors have been calling for greater freedoms and an end to the repression that binds women within the Islamic Republic. Iran has been the subject of protests for the past three weeks ever since the death of a 22-year-old woman, Mahsa Amini, who died in police custody after being detained by Iran’s morality police. The Iranian government’s crackdown on protesters is likely to “intensify” in the coming days despite sanctions from Canada and international condemnation, an expert says, calling Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s blaming of foreign nationals for the unrest “predictable.”
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