URGENTE!
Por favor quien este en adamuz y reconozca a este señor que es mi padre que contacte conmigo porfavor
Iba en el alvia Madrid-Huelva que ha chocado
Porfavor difusión!!
Difusión, por favor 🚨
Hola, aún no sabemos nada de mi tío, sigue desaparecido y no se le ha podido identificar. Ahora más que nunca pedimos la máxima colaboración posible. Se llama Rafael Millán Albert. Tiene 52 años. Estaba en la cafetería del Alvia que bajaba de Madrid.
Mucho ánimo y fuerza a todas las familias afectadas por lo ocurrido en Adamuz.
Teléfonos de atención a los familiares:
ADIF: 900 101 020
IRYO: 900 001 402
Un fuerte abrazo.
El Hospital Universitario Reina Sofía ha activado todos los recursos necesarios para atender a las personas afectadas por el accidente ferroviario ocurrido esta tarde en Adamuz.
El Sevilla FC desea enviar sus condolencias a los familiares y amigos de los fallecidos en el trágico accidente de tren producido este domingo en Córdoba y desea pronta recuperación a los heridos. Descansen en paz.
For centuries, monarchs ruled Persia.
Then in 1921, a military officer named Reza Khan seized power with British cash.
By 1925, he crowned himself King: Reza Shah Pahlavi.
The Pahlavis ruled the country.
But the British ruled Iranian oil.
By 1950, Iran was pumping 660,000 barrels a day (7% of global supply). Almost all the revenue went to London. Iran got pennies.
Enter "Mossy."
After the Shah abdicated during WW2 (UK and Soviets took over), a democratic window opened.
In 1951, the Iranian parliament elected Mohammad ("Mossy") Mosaddegh.
Mossy was a character. He ran the state from his bedroom, wearing pajamas. He was so fascinating that Time Magazine named him "Man of the Year" in 1951 (beating Churchill and Eisenhower).
But then he committed an unforgivable sin: He nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) to take back control of Iranian oil revenue from the British.
He became a Western pariah overnight.
The CIA was on a post-WW2 roll installing new governments here and there.
To help out the British, in 1953 the CIA launched Operation Ajax, led by Kermit Roosevelt (Teddy's grandson), to overthrow Mossy.
Toppling the new Iranian democracy turned out to be surprisingly easy.
The CIA reinstated the Shah.
The oil company AIOC whose main revenue was Iranian oil was rebranded as British Petroleum (BP).
For the next 25 years, a consortium (40% BP, 40% US oil majors - a little kicker for the CIA Shah reinstallation) once again drained Iranian oil revenues.
The Shah was a puppet. He used his secret police (SAVAK) to keep the strings attached.
Iranians wanted change.
Unfortunately Mossy was long gone.
So a 1979 revolution ousted the Shah, only for an even more extremist ayatollah to fill the Shah-shaped power vacuum.
Today, in 2026, Iranians know that the ayatollah is just the Shah with a different hat.
They know that this time Iran doesn't need another Shah.
It needs another Mossy.
During the "brutal dictatorship" of the Pahlavi era, even people tied to underground and armed opposition were not routinely executed. Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani was arrested and imprisoned by SAVAK, then released. Ali Khamenei himself was arrested multiple times under the Shah and was released alive and healthy. Many political prisoners survived prison and walked free.
That same period was one of the strongest economic eras in Iran's modern history. From the 1960s to 1979, Iran saw major development, rising incomes, large infrastructure projects, and a strong currency. Before the revolution, the dollar was about 70 rials.
Now look at the Islamic Republic.
Nika Shahkarami, 16 years old, was beaten to death for protesting. Mostafa Falahi, just 15, was shot dead by security forces for the same reason. Children are killed in the streets.
Political prisoners today don't get released. They die under torture. They are forced into fake confessions, denied lawyers, and either executed or killed in detention.
And the economy is completely destroyed. The dollar has gone from about 70 rials before the revolution to around 1,500,000 rials today. People’s savings are gone. Salaries are worthless. Life has turned into survival.
So yes, between the "brutal dictatorship" of Pahlavi where political prisoners lived, the country worked, and the economy grew, and a regime that kills children, tortures prisoners to death, and destroys the economy, I choose the "brutal dictatorship" of Pahlavi every single day.
But hey I get it. You are illiterate.
Algunos no os lo creeréis, pero los equipos existen más allá de la realidad FCB / RM. Juegan de hecho 34 partidos más, aunque os pueda parecer increíble. Incluso me atrevería a decir que tienen sus objetivos, sus dinámicas y sus propios problemas. ¡Incluso tienen aficionados!