@TheIranWatcher No matter what anyone says or what they call it, there is no deal if the IRGC still exists
Nothing they say would be honored
They have no honor
@SenAdamSchiff They cheat their own voters in their own primaries
OF COURSE they will cheat everyone else too!
"Senator Bernie Sanders agreed that the Democratic party is a "threat to democracy" and also admitted that Democrats had not held a fair primary since 2008"
https://t.co/yb3n1ojUml
@SenAdamSchiff If you are Democrat 'voter,' you don't matter at all to the DNC
You are sheep from Animal Farm
"Senator Bernie Sanders agreed that the Democratic party is a "threat to democracy" and also admitted that Democrats had not held a fair primary since 2008"
https://t.co/yb3n1ojUml
@SenAdamSchiff Code of ethics for government workers requires avoiding even the appearance of impropriety
Dems FLAUNT impropriety
Where there's smoke there's fire. If it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck...
It looks like cheating
If Schiff says they aren't, then you KNOW they are
This is another example of why we can't trust Democrats and how they become rich in office: Terrorists lobbying Congress
Makes it a little clearer why Democrats sent plane loads of cash and removed sanctions on the terrorists regime. Kickbacks
A regime insider openly admits the Islamic Republic built NIAC to act as its lobby in the United States.
In a rare and unusually candid roundtable, Islamic Republic insiders dissect the collapse of their US lobbying project and name Trita Parsi directly as the figure behind NIAC.
Foad Izadi, a regular fixture in state aligned media and a hardline figure aligned with Saeed Jalili, explains why the project was fundamentally doomed from the start.
They trace the effort back to Hassan Rouhani’s push to establish an Iran lobby during his outreach to the United States, insisting it would operate their own way, meaning the Islamic Republic’s way.
Izadi lays out the core contradiction. Lobbying for a foreign government in the United States guarantees scrutiny, monitoring, and suspicion, forcing lobbyists to soften language and serve American political optics over Tehran’s real objectives.
For a regime built on opacity, deniability, and control, that contradiction is fatal.
He and others then openly concede the structural failure and explicitly compare NIAC to established lobbies, noting that Israeli and Arab lobbies operate through formal institutions, legal frameworks, disciplined structures, and transparent budgets.
This is a system the Islamic Republic attempted to bypass and ultimately could not penetrate.
NIAC was created anyway and quickly became an embarrassment, then a scandal, and ultimately a failed project, with even the JCPOA, intended as the crown jewel of this influence strategy, collapsing alongside it.
This makes clear that this is not an external allegation or political framing but the regime’s own post mortem of a failed influence operation.
The legal reality only reinforces the point. If you lobby in the United States for a foreign government, registration under the Foreign Agents Registration Act is mandatory, and these admissions remove any doubt that NIAC is not registered. There are no exceptions.
When Izadi speaks this plainly, he is describing how the regime itself understands the failure.
What he is really admitting goes beyond NIAC, that the Islamic Republic cannot function transparently inside an open system because its methods rely on ambiguity, proxy voices, and blurred lines that collapse once accountability is enforced.
Western media platforms like @CNN, @NBCNews, and @nytimes should take note.
Continuing to rely on NIAC and its affiliated network as neutral analysts or community representatives does not inform the public but instead distorts reality by laundering narratives, blurring responsibility, and shielding the regime through confusion.
@JasonMoMotoGuzi@SenWarren You mean the government that profits off of insider trading, Warren being a great example.
You mean the government that takes my tax money and hands it to their friends via NGOs?
Any other suggestions?
@JasonMoMotoGuzi@SenWarren So....
You are saying he recognized great investment opportunities and jumped on them
Seems to me you could learn from that so you don't die poor and dependent on handouts from taxpayers who DID learn to see opportunities
@SenWarren Look carefully at everything Dems are saying
From Sanders to Warren, they are talking about actions that will hurt your 401k and chances of retiring comfortably
Warren already got rich
She wants you to stay poor and government dependent
@filosophymajor@300_guns@PramilaJayapal You are just making it clear you will die poor and dependent on the government - or on someone who supports your lazy ass
Denying the opportunities available to you "is like loserest thing a loser can do."
@PramilaJayapal Notice these dishonest, disgusting pieces of human excrement always leave out how many people have great paying jobs provided by these billionaires
Their wealth is THEIR BUSINESSES!
Just one of MANY examples: From $28/hr to millionaire working for Musk
https://t.co/GKFwNWKHBI
@SenWarren What Warren is saying by her actions is, "I got mine. Fuck you."
While she 'says' Musk must be constrained, her retirement fund includes Tesla stock
Yours should too
But she won't tell you that
She say one thing and do another - that is called "lying"
This article was written by a 26 yr old college student by the name of Alyssa Ahlgren, who's in grad school for her MBA. What a GREAT perspecitve..👍🏽
My Generation Is Blind to the Prosperity Around Us!
I'm sitting in a small coffee shop near Nokomis (Florida) trying to think of what to write about. I scroll through my newsfeed on my phone looking at the latest headlines of presidential candidates calling for policies to "fix" the so-called injustices of capitalism. I put my phone down and continue to look around.
I see people talking freely, working on their MacBook's, ordering food they get in an instant, seeing cars go by outside, and it dawned on me. We live in the most privileged time in the most prosperous nation and we've become completely blind to it.
Vehicles, food, technology, freedom to associate with whom we choose.These things are so ingrained in our American way of life we don't give them a second thought.
We are so well off here in the United States that our poverty line begins 31 times above the global average. Thirty One Times!!!
Virtually no one in the United States is considered poor by global standards. Yet, in a time where we can order a product off Amazon with one click and have it at our doorstep the next day, we are unappreciative, unsatisfied, and ungrateful. ??
Our unappreciation is evident as the popularity of socialist policies among my generation continues to grow. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently said to Newsweek talking about the millennial generation, "An entire generation, which is now becoming one of the largest electorates in America, came of age and never saw American prosperity."
Never saw American prosperity! Let that sink in.
When I first read that statement, I thought to myself, that was quite literally the most entitled and factually illiterate thing I've ever heard in my 26 years on this earth. Many young people agree with her, which is entirely misguided.
My generation is being indoctrinated by a mainstream narrative to actually believe we have never seen prosperity. I know this first hand, I went to college, let's just say I didn't have the popular opinion, but I digress.
Why then, with all of the overwhelming evidence around us, evidence that I can even see sitting at a coffee shop, do we not view this as prosperity? We have people who are dying to get into our country.
People around the world destitute and truly impoverished. Yet, we have a young generation convinced they've never seen prosperity, and as a result, we elect some politicians who are dead set on taking steps towards abolishing capitalism.
Why? The answer is this,?? my generation has only seen prosperity. We have no contrast. We didn't live in the great depression, or live through two world wars, the Korean War, The Vietnam War or we didn't see the rise and fall of socialism and communism.
We don't know what it's like to live without the internet, without cars, without smartphones. We don't have a lack of prosperity problem. We have an entitlement problem, an ungratefulness problem, and it's spreading like a plague."