Former Iranian foreign minister Javad Zarif was arrested last week by the Revolutionary Guards after holding several conversations with Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi.
Channel 14
برويد از هوش مصنوعى بپرسيد:
چرا طرفداران جمهورى اسلامى ( داخل و خارج)با ديدن اين همه فقر و اقتصاد فروپاشيده و قتل العام مردم بى گناه، باز ازش دفاع ميكنن؟؟!!
من سئوال کردم این جواب رو داد بهم که عکسشو میزارم✌🏼
#مزدوران_صادراتی#مزدوران_رژیم_آخوندی
A Commander's Daughter from inside the Islamic Republic’s repressive apparatus calls in.
She speaks of fake passports, hidden dollars, sexual violence, and orders to kill.
Translated using AI to make this testimony accessible to a global audience.
#iran#IranMassacre
Here are my three takeaways from tonight’s 3–2 Montreal Canadiens shootout win over the Winnipeg Jets, brought to you by Snap Bar Sportif in Rigaud.
1 — Finally, a complete game
The Montreal Canadiens were challenged by their coach, and they responded with elevated effort, better attention to detail, and a much cleaner performance in their own zone. The most encouraging part of their night was the way they played with hunger and a bit of controlled anger.
Yes, Winnipeg is an older, slower team that was finishing up a road trip, but Montreal actually took advantage of that and pushed the pace rather than sitting back. And how about this — they didn’t completely implode in the second period!
2 — Time to break up Matheson/Dobson
Although the pairing worked for a while, Martin St. Louis’ next move almost has to be splitting up Mike Matheson and Noah Dobson. It was a tough night for them, and it’s been trending that way for a bit. Sometimes a different look or a simple reboot is needed, and a change could also benefit Lane Hutson.
The Habs’ top pair was on for two goals against, and Dobson was, at times, more of a spectator than a participant. Yes, they take the hard minutes against top competition, but maybe Dobson’s minutes get scaled back slightly, and Hutson gets a chance to open things up more offensively at 5-on-5 with Matheson as his partner. We’ll see how much longer St. Louis sticks with the status quo.
3 — The Markov tribute was great
The Montreal Canadiens welcomed Andrei Markov home, and as always with Montreal ceremonies, it was done to perfection. His emotions were real, his speech was heartfelt, and the Bell Centre crowd got to cheer one more time for a player that an entire generation watched play more games than anyone else in their colours.
Markov had a terrific career with the Habs and absolutely deserved the moment. He spent 17 seasons with the same organization and nearly hit 1,000 games (thanks a lot, Marc Bergevin). After injuries slowed his skating, he reinvented himself and remained one of the smartest players on the ice. And how about this — during his Canadiens tenure, he played for five general managers, nine coaching changes, and two owners.
“Montreal, je t’aime.”
*All RTs and most engagement is appreciated*
Physical releases and in-store events create community and tell a fantastic, news-friendly story to a wider game-curious consumer base. Pubs putting all their focus into digital storefronts and subscriptions are leaving money & much needed attention on the table.
Just saying.