28 June 2009

After 2 week i can say who i am. I am the owner of Iran account on Twitter. i will put my twitter here and continue twitting. again Hello!



Comments

comment from Marco
at June 28, 2009 4:02 pm

Hi, I see you on Twitter. From Europe I support Iran people struggle for freedom. Go on and don’t give up!


comment from Seyedali.p
at June 28, 2009 4:07 pm

Thanks, there is too many distance between us but i can feel your support :)


comment from Marta
at June 28, 2009 5:21 pm

Hi!! I hope you are fine! I’m from Brazil and here we support you!! Go ahead and fight for freedom! And victory is near! :)


comment from Angel
at June 28, 2009 5:54 pm

My hope and prayer is for your peace and happiness. And that your freedom will be delivered to you. We all deserve freedom.


comment from Julie
at June 28, 2009 11:30 pm

Hello Iran. I’m following you on twitter too and keeping up on the fight for freedom. It’s so difficult for me to understand how the government can be this way. I wish there were something I could do. So for now, I am learning about your culture and the struggles.
And then all of a sudden I realize I must be very sheltered and naive in my small town in Wisconsin, USA. Thank you and your fellow Iranians for helping to open my eyes.
Hope you and your family can stay safe and weather the storm.


comment from StarKaraoke
at June 29, 2009 12:55 am

Hope you are well. CNN is beginning to cover Iran and the news again. I am glad to see you are back online. Please stay safe. I and the world are listening watching, reading your tweets. My hope is the leadership of Iran realize times have changed and the people are trying to go through channels to restore fairness and TRUTH to the election process. To force a mock election result is a terrible sham. Your protests have NOTHING to do with the west or the USA, but we do support your right to a free election to make YOUR OWN CHOICES. Once made it is not up to the state to ignore or try to rewrite those choices when they don’t like them. And then to treat their own citizens like terrorists for being GOOD citizens is outrageous! The leaders make themselves the terrorists. This should not be what they want the world to see them as but they persist in Satanizing themselves and Iran while MYRTERING their citizens. I hope they will rethink and do as wise leaders would.


comment from Mike
at June 29, 2009 1:21 am

Hi!! Hope you all are well. I’m from America and we support the Iranian people and their fight for freedom.


comment from SiNteX
at June 29, 2009 1:11 pm

Hi, Im a Swedish guy supporting you and reading your twitts… I wish you the best and also wishes that the Iranian people keep on fighting for freedom and juatice (which they so deserve)!


comment from Mike
at June 30, 2009 1:48 am

Maybe you could take a lesson from the south koreans and use molotov cocktail against the brutal police


comment from TONI1939
at July 2, 2009 8:55 pm

CAN ANYONE TELL ME HOW TO GET A MESSAGE TO SOME OF THE PROTESTERS.I WANT TO TELL THEM THAT THERE IS A WAY TO FIGHT BACK FIRST WITHOUT THE GUNS WHICH THEY CAN COLLECT IF THEY DO WHAT THEY MUST DO IN ORDER TO BRING DOWN THE REGIME. THE HANGINGS, THE THE BRUTALY AND KILLINGS, SEEING THE PHOTO OF NEDA, MADE MY BLOOD BOIL. I AM NEW ON THIS SITE SO I DO NOT KNOW HOW TO USE IT OR SENDING A MESSAGE THAT CAN NOT BE TRACED. I WOULD APPREIATE IF SOMEONE CAN GIVE ME SOME HELP WITH MY REQUEST, THANK YOU


comment from Gilmor
at July 7, 2009 12:20 pm

Hello Iran,
I’ve stumbled on some twits that were pointing at your blog. For all it may be useful, I wish that this nightmare will end soon. But I fear that words are like leaves, blown away by a wind so strong.

But I keep talking. Spreading news, as far as I can, telling to other people.

There are a lot of things I am not aware of: I’ve always lived in peace, never seen a war (if not on tv), almost never heard a firing gun. I’m one of the lucky one, born on the safe side of the barricade.

I wonder if there’s something more I can do, apart trying to spread informations and not only for a subtle sense of guiltiness.

Oh, I’m not asking you, of course. Just a semi-personal consideration.

I admire you and all the people that are putting themselves in danger (just to be “polite”) in the name of freedom.

Bye, for now.

Gilmor