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Oman is the only Middle Eastern country not affected

Of course buddy. You can spare the people of Arabic countries. Two guys, Bin Salman and Bin Zayed , under USA's command are doing this mess in the region. Both them want power of UAE and KSA also Trump's warranty and support for their illegal kingdoms against Arabic nations. It is an obvious fact

Yes, and the Iranian peoples, Arabs, Baloch, Turkmen, Azeri, Bakhtiari, Lurs, Kurds, Persians, Afro-Iranians, Georgians, Assyrians, Armenians etc. are held hostage by Arab Mullah's who have destroyed their country and made a 80 million big country having a smaller economy than UAE and living standards similar to war-torn Iraq that has been at war for 30 + years in a row almost.

Weakend, ready to fall apart, chaotic, at its lowest state Iran destroyed all of GCC at its peak during Iran-Iraq war.
Please man.

You destroyed nothing as you lost many more people than Iraq did. All you fought against (in your own land moreover) was Iraq with some laughable economic support from the GCC. You even had Libya and Syria supporting you (key support).

After 1982 Khomeini thought that he could defeat the 3.5 times smaller Iraq and 3 times less populous Iraq yet he was not able to even incorporate 1 inch of Iraqi land. You think that you stand any chance against KSA, let alone the GCC and entire Arab world?:lol:

You are the country that is most hated in the Arab and Muslim world after Israel and the US. The only nation in the world that has a majority positive view of you is Pakistan and that is quickly dwindling looking at the reactions on PDF.
 
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Yes, and the Iranian peoples, Arabs, Baloch, Turkmen, Azeri, Bakhtiari, Lurs, Kurds, Persians, Afro-Iranians, Georgians, Assyrians, Armenians etc. are held hostage by Arab Mullah's who have destroyed their country and made a 80 million big country having a smaller economy than UAE and living standards similar to war-torn Iraq that has been at war for 30 + years in a row almost.
Huh, stay happy with propaganda. With 80 million people, we still have good per capita. I am not saying that it is brilliant but with all those sanctions and barriers we still have a good economy.
You should worry about the poor people of peninsula, Al-Saudi goons gave away their 0.5 trillion dollar for a bunch of useless military equipments.

any questions about oman.
here is relevant authority lol ask me
Why do i like Oman? :D
 
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You destroyed nothing as you lost many more people than Iraq did. All you fought against (in your own land moreover) was Iraq with some laughable economic support from the GCC. You even had Libya and Syria supporting you (key support).

After 1982 Khomeini thought that he could defeat the 3.5 times smaller Iraq and 3 times less populous Iraq yet he was not able to even incorporate 1 inch of Iraqi land. You think that you stand any chance against KSA, let alone the GCC and entire Arab world?:lol:

You are the country that is most hated in the Arab and Muslim world after Israel and the US. The only nation in the world that has a majority positive view of you is Pakistan and that is quickly dwindling looking at the reactions on PDF.

Lol, All of GCC gave their support to Saddam, The west was supporting Saddam, even USA gave Saddam chemical weapons and yet you arabs couldn't take an inch of our lands. It was US policy to ensure that Saddam would not lose this war. Even UN Council pressured Iran to give away land. But still here we are and we are now 1000 times stronger.

You said it yourself. We are the most hated country in the Arab world. But what can you do about it? Nothing.

Put KSA in Irans situation with sanctions and everything, wonder how that would work out. ;)
 
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Huh, stay happy with propaganda. With 80 million people, we still have good per capita. I am not saying that it is brilliant but with all those sanctions and barriers we still have a good economy.
You should worry about the poor people of peninsula, Al-Saudi goons gave away their 0.5 trillion dollar for a bunch of useless military equipments.


Why do i like Oman? :D

So ground realities and economic facts is "propaganda" now? That's news to me. Anything that puts your beloved Arab Mullah's in a bad spotlight, you will deem as propaganda. After all it is your religious obligation to support them and give them 20% of your money like a good Wilayat al-Faqih follower and Twelver.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)

Propaganda I tell you!

Can you imagine that the economy of tiny Qatar is almost 50% as big as your 80 million big nation despite Qatar having much fewer resources?


Almost 10 million Iranians cannot read or write their own names as well!

Lol, All of GCC gave their support to Saddam, The west was supporting Saddam, even USA gave Saddam chemical weapons and yet you arabs couldn't take an inch of our lands. It was US policy to ensure that Saddam would not lose this war. Even UN Council pressured Iran to give away land. But still here we are and we are now 1000 times stronger.

You said it yourself. We are the most hated country in the Arab world. But what can you do about it? Nothing.

Put KSA in Irans situation with sanctions and everything, wonder how that would work out. ;)

Sure. KSA, Kuwait and UAE mainly and it was a very limited sum of money and only economic support as neither Saddam nor the Mullah's were well-liked by the Arab world.

Your were supported by Libya (almost same amount of money), Syria and the West too. Even Israel. Both sides received support and weapons from abroad.

Not only that Iraq is a 3.5 times smaller country and had a 3 times smaller population. Unlike Iraq, you also had the newest US weapons as your Shah was the greatest ally of the US in the region after Israel and the biggest weapons importer. Yet you could not win the war, lost many more people and could not conquer a single inch of Iraq after 1982 where you were the aggressor or rather your Khomeini cultist.

Most hated country in the Arab and Muslim world. Only country in the world that has a favorable view of you is Pakistan.

Here is a source for you. Please don't scream propaganda.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1190179

Anyway if you want a regime change in Iran, which I believe that most sane Iranians want, you should make your Arab Mullah's attack KSA (Bilad al-Haramain). This will give you a regime change. Trust me on that one. KSA should continue to provoke the Arab Mullah's and watch them take the bait and crumble.:yay:Another revolution is long overdue in Iran and a clash between all the different ethnic, political, social etc. layers in society. Wonder if those that will take power will massacre their political opponents in the 10.000's again? Or maybe the new dynasty in power will copy the Safavid genocide within Iran?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safavid_conversion_of_Iran_to_Shia_Islam

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1988_executions_of_Iranian_political_prisoners
 
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Not only that Iraq is a 3.5 times smaller country and had a 3 times smaller population. Unlike Iraq, you also had the newest US weapons as your Shah was the greatest ally of the US in the region after the US and the biggest weapons importer.

All our weapons were old.

Most hated country in the Arab and Muslim world. Only country in the world that has a favorable view of you is Pakistan.

Here is a source for you. Please don't scream propaganda.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1190179

I am aware and again, Im saying, you hate us so much, but what can you do about it? Nothing..
 
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So ground realities and economic facts is "propaganda" now? That's news to me. Anything that puts your beloved Arab Mullah's in a bad spotlight, you will deem as propaganda. After all it is your religious obligation to support them and give them 20% of your money like a good Wilayat al-Faqih follower and Twelver.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)

Propaganda I tell you!

Can you imagine that the economy of tiny Qatar is almost 50% as big as your 80 million big nation despite Qatar having much fewer resources?


Almost 10 million Iranians cannot read or write their own names as well!
I told you then, 80 million is almostequal with whole GCC population.
Spare me from your propaganda. There were 70-80 years old men women who were not educated well but nowadays only 3-4% is remaining and they really don't want to learn. I have seen many teachers that begged old men to come into سواد آموزی classrooms but they refute.
Why not speaking of this?
http://www.worldatlas.com/articles/countries-with-the-most-engineering-graduates.html
1234.JPG


We have higher rate in producing engineers compared with USA.

I am aware and again, Im saying, you hate us so much, but what can you do about it? Nothing..
He really really hates Turks and Persians. Queen of copy-paste.
 
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I told you then, 80 million is almostequal with whole GCC population.
Spare me from your propaganda. There were 70-80 years old men women who were not educated well but nowadays only 3% is remaining and they really don't want to learn. I have seen many teachers that begged old men to come into سواد آموزی classrooms but they refute.
Why not speaking of this?
http://www.worldatlas.com/articles/countries-with-the-most-engineering-graduates.html
View attachment 403000

We have higher rate in producing engineers compared with USA.


He really really hates Turks and Persians. Queen of copy-paste.

Ground realities and official data is propaganda now. Facts too. Hilarious.

Sure, keep telling yourself that.

December 29, 2013
MP Talks With Rooz:

Fifteen Percent Illiteracy in Iran is a Disaster

Niusha Saremi

About 10 million of Iran’s 67 million people who are over the age of six can neither read nor write, according to a literacy official. Also, according to UNESCO, Iran’s 86th among the world’s 164 countries in literacy. The head of Iran’s literacy program announced these figures and added, “15 percent of Iranians continue to be illiterate.” Speaking to Rooz Online, a member of the education and research committee of the country’s parliament Ataollah Soltanisaboor characterized the illiteracy situation in Iran as “catastrophic” and said, “The illiteracy movement has digressed from its original goal and has been lost in the bureaucracy of education programs.”

According to Soltanisaboor the illiteracy movement is now confined to just an office in the ministry of education and is facing its death. The lawmaker expressed his concerns in these words, “No accurate numbers on this are presented. The [Majlis] research center says 88 percent of qualified individuals receive education while the ministry of education puts the number at 98 percent. This shows a ten percent difference. If we accept the Majlis’s numbers then 13 percent of qualified individuals have been held away from education which is really painful and sad. If we accept the ministry of education’s figures than only 2 percent of should be students are not being educated, which is not a small and must be reduced to zero.”



In addition to illiteracy, inadequate literacy is also an issue in the country. According to published figures by the United Nations in 2010, about 61 percent of women and almost 43 percent of men above the age of 25 have education levels of about middle school.



Ali Bagherzadeh, the head of Iran’s literacy movement recently said that return to illiteracy is a more important issue now than illiteracy itself and added that there are some ten million people with low education in the country, meaning that they have school decrees no higher than elementary school. He fears that they are under threat of falling back into the illiteracy category and says that those who acquire basic skills but do not use them and do not have the means to continue their education gradually lose their basic literacy skills.



Earlier, an education specialist in Iran had told Rooz Online that while literacy rates in Iran are not accurate, officials act weak regarding identifying illiteracy. According to him, while literacy polls or surveys are conducted, many people may not acknowledge their illiteracy. He added that anyone who could just read the Quran was usually considered a literate person even if he could not read a single sentence in any other text.



Illiteracy: A Public Shame

More than three decades have passed since the literacy movement began its programs with the goal of eradicating illiteracy but the literacy situation has yet to pass the critical stage. Again, Soltanisaboor told Rooz Online, “So long as the literacy organization was not an independent agency and did not have its own separate budget there would be no hope for a drop in illiteracy figures.” “Illiteracy is not compatible with the ideals of the Islamic republic. The current number of illiterate people is a catastrophe for us.” And while he believes education policies in Iran must change, he says the most important way to control illiteracy is for the ministry of education to reduce the number of young children who are deprived of education to zero. But he also points to a more fundamental issue and says, “Most families who deprive their youngsters of education have low regard for the education of their children and do not view studying a necessity,” he said.



He views the elimination of cultural poverty to be an effective way to reduce the number of illerates in Iran and recommends that, “The media come into the field in this regard and should help create the incentive and interests among people for this. It is now for a while that there are no special programs at the state-run national radio and television specifically on illiteracy. Because of its reach, this national media can be very influential in this regard.”



According to this member of Majlis’s education committee, incentives for literacy and social deprivations for illiteracy should be enacted. “We treat those who take their compulsory military service equally whereas a cost could be associated for illiteracy such as adding an extra six month period for those are illiterate or a some reward could be provided to those who are literate. Such rewards exist for those who have PhD degrees, but these are not sufficient,” he explained. And he goes even further and says illiteracy should be made a public shame for youth.



According to Shirzad Abdollahi, a specialist on education issues who wrote in an article, age ten is viewed by the literacy movement organization to be the literacy age and the most important age group for its work is the 10-29 age bracket, and then the 29-49 age group. The latter is really the productive age group in the country and in this group the issue is no longer illiteracy. He too attributes one of the problems on literacy to be lack of accurate figures, something that existed before the 1979 revolution as well and has continued. According to him, when the literacy movement was created (from a bureau) in 1979, there were about 14 million illiterate people from amongst a population of some 36 million people. According to the 2006 census, 16 percent of Iran’s population was completely illiterate and could not read or write. This percent does not include those who have low literacy. Specialists believe that despite the work of the literacy movement, some 20 percent of the population is illiterate. So even though the percentages have changes since the revolution, the actual number of illiterates has remained more or less the same, which is about 10 million people.



Soltanisaboor believes that so long as there are no accurate statistics on literacy and illiteracy rates, proper planning and policy making that will have an impact on illiteracy cannot take place.



Reading and Writing Alone Do Not Constitute Literacy

As society, its needs and ways of life have changed, so has the definition of literacy. In the traditional definition, any person who could read in one language was considered literate. But things are different today. An education specialist explained to Rooz that because of the progress in the way human beings live today, reading and writing alone could not be classified as making a person literate. “Today the standard for a literate person is that in addition to having the ability to read and write, the person must also have some specific skills so that he can effectively participate in public life, progress and improve the quality of his life. In advanced societies, a citizen has he need for greater specialized training and skills, particularly in new information and communication technologies, and also in foreign languages. In some places today, a person who cannot use the Internet is considered to have low literacy skills,” he explained.



Iran seems not only to have a low position globally, but even in its own region lacks behind such countries as Turkey, Azerbaijan, Qatar and Kuwait. Ironically, Iran’s national plan envisions that Iran would be on top of the regional countries in science and technology by the year 2014, while the government’s fourth development and fifth development plans also envision complete literacy for the country.


http://www.roozonline.com/english/n...percent-illiteracy-in-iran-is-a-disaster.html

Nice try. Not at all. I have nothing against Turkish people. I am neutral. Same with the real Turks in Central Asia. As for Iranians, I only dislike the anti-Arabs among them and braindead Arab Mullah supporters such as you. Remember that there are millions of Arabs in Iran and even a bigger number of Prsianized Arabs that just don't know it yet. Nor have I anything against Assyrians (our cousins), Georgians, Armenians, Kurds (Kurds and Arabs have a long history in common and we even have significant number of people of Kurdish ancestry in KSA and the descendants of Saladdin who live in Hijaz and Jordan and elsewhere in the Arab world), Turkmen, Baloch, Lurs, Persians (GCC is home to a significant number of Sunni Persians from Southern Iran next door) etc.

You on the other hand hates Arabs, Jews, Westerners and everyone almost.
 
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Ground realities and official data is propaganda now. Facts too. Hilarious.

Sure, keep telling yourself that.

December 29, 2013
MP Talks With Rooz:

Fifteen Percent Illiteracy in Iran is a Disaster

Niusha Saremi

About 10 million of Iran’s 67 million people who are over the age of six can neither read nor write, according to a literacy official. Also, according to UNESCO, Iran’s 86th among the world’s 164 countries in literacy. The head of Iran’s literacy program announced these figures and added, “15 percent of Iranians continue to be illiterate.” Speaking to Rooz Online, a member of the education and research committee of the country’s parliament Ataollah Soltanisaboor characterized the illiteracy situation in Iran as “catastrophic” and said, “The illiteracy movement has digressed from its original goal and has been lost in the bureaucracy of education programs.”

According to Soltanisaboor the illiteracy movement is now confined to just an office in the ministry of education and is facing its death. The lawmaker expressed his concerns in these words, “No accurate numbers on this are presented. The [Majlis] research center says 88 percent of qualified individuals receive education while the ministry of education puts the number at 98 percent. This shows a ten percent difference. If we accept the Majlis’s numbers then 13 percent of qualified individuals have been held away from education which is really painful and sad. If we accept the ministry of education’s figures than only 2 percent of should be students are not being educated, which is not a small and must be reduced to zero.”



In addition to illiteracy, inadequate literacy is also an issue in the country. According to published figures by the United Nations in 2010, about 61 percent of women and almost 43 percent of men above the age of 25 have education levels of about middle school.



Ali Bagherzadeh, the head of Iran’s literacy movement recently said that return to illiteracy is a more important issue now than illiteracy itself and added that there are some ten million people with low education in the country, meaning that they have school decrees no higher than elementary school. He fears that they are under threat of falling back into the illiteracy category and says that those who acquire basic skills but do not use them and do not have the means to continue their education gradually lose their basic literacy skills.



Earlier, an education specialist in Iran had told Rooz Online that while literacy rates in Iran are not accurate, officials act weak regarding identifying illiteracy. According to him, while literacy polls or surveys are conducted, many people may not acknowledge their illiteracy. He added that anyone who could just read the Quran was usually considered a literate person even if he could not read a single sentence in any other text.



Illiteracy: A Public Shame

More than three decades have passed since the literacy movement began its programs with the goal of eradicating illiteracy but the literacy situation has yet to pass the critical stage. Again, Soltanisaboor told Rooz Online, “So long as the literacy organization was not an independent agency and did not have its own separate budget there would be no hope for a drop in illiteracy figures.” “Illiteracy is not compatible with the ideals of the Islamic republic. The current number of illiterate people is a catastrophe for us.” And while he believes education policies in Iran must change, he says the most important way to control illiteracy is for the ministry of education to reduce the number of young children who are deprived of education to zero. But he also points to a more fundamental issue and says, “Most families who deprive their youngsters of education have low regard for the education of their children and do not view studying a necessity,” he said.



He views the elimination of cultural poverty to be an effective way to reduce the number of illerates in Iran and recommends that, “The media come into the field in this regard and should help create the incentive and interests among people for this. It is now for a while that there are no special programs at the state-run national radio and television specifically on illiteracy. Because of its reach, this national media can be very influential in this regard.”



According to this member of Majlis’s education committee, incentives for literacy and social deprivations for illiteracy should be enacted. “We treat those who take their compulsory military service equally whereas a cost could be associated for illiteracy such as adding an extra six month period for those are illiterate or a some reward could be provided to those who are literate. Such rewards exist for those who have PhD degrees, but these are not sufficient,” he explained. And he goes even further and says illiteracy should be made a public shame for youth.



According to Shirzad Abdollahi, a specialist on education issues who wrote in an article, age ten is viewed by the literacy movement organization to be the literacy age and the most important age group for its work is the 10-29 age bracket, and then the 29-49 age group. The latter is really the productive age group in the country and in this group the issue is no longer illiteracy. He too attributes one of the problems on literacy to be lack of accurate figures, something that existed before the 1979 revolution as well and has continued. According to him, when the literacy movement was created (from a bureau) in 1979, there were about 14 million illiterate people from amongst a population of some 36 million people. According to the 2006 census, 16 percent of Iran’s population was completely illiterate and could not read or write. This percent does not include those who have low literacy. Specialists believe that despite the work of the literacy movement, some 20 percent of the population is illiterate. So even though the percentages have changes since the revolution, the actual number of illiterates has remained more or less the same, which is about 10 million people.



Soltanisaboor believes that so long as there are no accurate statistics on literacy and illiteracy rates, proper planning and policy making that will have an impact on illiteracy cannot take place.



Reading and Writing Alone Do Not Constitute Literacy

As society, its needs and ways of life have changed, so has the definition of literacy. In the traditional definition, any person who could read in one language was considered literate. But things are different today. An education specialist explained to Rooz that because of the progress in the way human beings live today, reading and writing alone could not be classified as making a person literate. “Today the standard for a literate person is that in addition to having the ability to read and write, the person must also have some specific skills so that he can effectively participate in public life, progress and improve the quality of his life. In advanced societies, a citizen has he need for greater specialized training and skills, particularly in new information and communication technologies, and also in foreign languages. In some places today, a person who cannot use the Internet is considered to have low literacy skills,” he explained.



Iran seems not only to have a low position globally, but even in its own region lacks behind such countries as Turkey, Azerbaijan, Qatar and Kuwait. Ironically, Iran’s national plan envisions that Iran would be on top of the regional countries in science and technology by the year 2014, while the government’s fourth development and fifth development plans also envision complete literacy for the country.


http://www.roozonline.com/english/n...percent-illiteracy-in-iran-is-a-disaster.html

Nice try. Not at all. I have nothing against Turkish people. I am neutral. Same with the real Turks in Central Asia. As for Iranians, I only dislike the anti-Arabs among them and braindead Arab Mullah supporters such as you. Remember that there are millions of Arabs in Iran and even a bigger number of Prsianized Arabs that just don't know it yet. Nor have I anything against Assyrians (our cousins), Georgians, Armenians, Kurds (Kurds and Arabs have a long history in common and we even have significant number of people of Kurdish ancestry in KSA and the descendants of Saladdin who live in Hijaz and Jordan and elsewhere in the Arab world), Turkmen, Baloch, Lurs, Persians (GCC is home to a significant number of Sunni Persians from Southern Iran next door) etc.

You on the other hand hates Arabs, Jews, Westerners and everyone almost.
This the newly statistics which shows that illetracy has lowered from 20% to 4% after 40 years. @Full Moon Translate it for him
بیسوادی 4 درصد جمعیت ایران
رییس سازمان نهضت سواد آموزی از بی سوادی، یک میلیون و 112 هزار نفر از جمعیت کمتر از 50 سال کشور خبر داد.
494699_306.jpg
به گزارش خبرگزاری صدا و سیما، رییس سازمان نهضت سواد آموزی امروز در نشست اعضای شورای آموزش و پرورش گیلان با فرمانداران استان گفت : طبق سرشماری سال1390 تعداد بی سوادان زیر 50 سال کشور 3 میلیون و 456 هزار نفر معادل 6 و 8 دهم درصد جمعیت بود که این تعداد امسال به 1 میلیون و 112 هزار نفر ، معادل 4 درصد کاهش یافته است.
علی باقرزاده ایجاد تنوع در روش ها ، شیوه ها و محتوای آموزش با تبیین کتاب های جداگانه برای قشرها و مشاغل گوناگون را از برنامه های مهم سازمان نهضت سواد آموزی و گفت : سالانه بیش از 500 هزار نفر در جامعه هدف برنامه های سواد آموزی قرار می گیرد.
وی گفت : بطور میانگین سالانه 150 هزار نفر در طرح های نظیر طرح مطالعه کتاب ، طرح خواندن با خانواده ، ایجاد حلقه های مطالعه و مسابقه انشاء نویسی سازمان نهضت سواد آموزی شرکت می کنند.
معاون وزیر آموزش و پرورش خاطرنشان کرد : با بکارگیری آموزشیاران در نهضت سوادآموزی 70 هزار فرصت شغلی در کشور ایجاد شد که 2 هزار از این فرصت ها سهم گیلان است.
علی باقر زاده کم سوادی و بی سوادی را از مهمترین عوامل افزایش ناهنجاری ها و آسیب های اجتماعی دانست.
استاندار گیلان نیز بی سوادی و نا آگاهی را سبب ایجاد آثار منفی غیر قابل جبرانی در توسعه هر جامعه دانست و گفت : اولویت نخست در مسیر رسیدن به توسعه پایدار و ماندگار مبارزه با بی سوادی است.
محمدعلی نجفی با اشاره به رتبه دوم گیلان در جدول نرخ باسوادی استان های کشور ، افزود : بی سوادی و بیکاری رابطه مستقیم دارند و با همت و تلاش بی وقفه همه مدیران استان باید نرخ بی سوادی استان را به سوی صفر سوق داد.
وی خاطرنشان کرد : فرمانداران و مدیران دستگاه های اجرایی استان با کمک به افزایش نرخ باسوادی ، در مسیر افزایش بهره وری گام بر می دارند.
مهدی حاجتی مدیرکل آموزش و پرورش گیلان هم کمبود فضای آموزشی استان را از مهمترین دغدغه ها عنوان کرد و افزود : شناسایی و هدف گذاری استفاده از ظرفیت خیران مدرسه ساز برای کمک به گسترش فضای آموزشی بسیار مفید و تاثیرگذار خواهد بود.
علی اوسط اکبری مقدم مدیرکل نوسازی، توسعه و تجهیز و مدارس گیلان با بیان اینکه نوسازی مدارس گلی ، خشتی و ناامن مناطق کوهستانی و سخت گذر شهرستان های تالش ، رضوانشهر ، لنگرود ، املش و آستارا از برنامه های این اداره کل است گفت : در این راستا 29 مدرسه یک تا 3 کلاسه ساخته و به آموزش و پرورش تحویل داده می شود که تاکنون تعدادی از آنها تحویل داده شد.
 
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Sure, you have family everywhere on the Arabian Peninsula expect for Oman. What a joke, lol.

Those ties are mostly among Arabs on both sides of that tiny shallow water. After all we make up the majority.
Yes I have, and you are 100% wrong.
still till today's marriage is best way to make connection and expand business. there is not marriage just b/w arabs or sunnis or shias at least in Iran.
maybe persian Gulf is tiny and shallow but still have greater history and culture and diversity in compare of your brutal najd.
ps: I am in work so I can not respond as fast as you.
 
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Yes I have, and you are 100% wrong.
still till today's marriage is best way to make connection and expand business. there is not any marriage just b/w arabs or sunnis or shias at least in Iran.
maybe persian Gulf is tiny and shallow but still have greater history and culture and diversity in compare of your brutal najd.
ps: I am in work so I can not respond as fast as you.
His job is being an internet warrior, however i admire the guy. Look how he can build an army of sectarians, would admit it
 
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All our weapons were old.

It's more detailed. In 1980 (early days of the war) Iran was stronger especially with the air force and navy considering the large fleet of F-14's which carry the extremely long range AIM-54A missile. In the end Iraq wielded a far larger force given the financial support from the Gulf.

Nevertheless, despite these differences in air and naval platforms both sides had large ground armies and the geography made it hard for either of them to move large numbers of tanks/artillery to the other side of the border.
 
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Yes I have, and you are 100% wrong.
still till today's marriage is best way to make connection and expand business. there is not any marriage just b/w arabs or sunnis or shias at least in Iran.
maybe persian Gulf is tiny and shallow but still have greater history and culture and diversity in compare of your brutal najd.
ps: I am in work so I can not respond as fast as you.

You are lying. It is very clear. As if anyone is going to believe that an Iranian and non-Arab like you has family in Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar and Bahrain. Even such a thing is a big achievement for some of the biggest Arab families, clans and tribes. Not really in fact but I am talking about nuclear family. Which is why you are clearly lying here.

Secondly there is nothing called "Persian Gulf Region". There is the Arabian Peninsula, Eastern Arabia, Arab world and Iran (Iranian Plateau).

Secondly I am not from Najd and Najd is part of the immediate region. Thirdly, Najd has been much more peaceful than the region you are talking about and has as old an history.

One of the oldest civilizations known to mankind:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Magar

http://archive.aramcoworld.com/issue/201203/discovery.at.al-magar.htm

https://scth.gov.sa/en/Antiquities-Museums/ArcheologicalDiscovery/Pages/Al-Magar.aspx

http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/middle_east/saudi_arabia_rock_art/al_magar.php

https://aratta.wordpress.com/2014/06/30/discovery-at-al-magar-arabia/

http://paleolithic-neolithic.com/overview/al-magar/

Understand that there are ties between Arabia (Eastern Arabia)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Arabia

and Southern Iran

but you have obviously nothing to do with this.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Iran

BTW it is mostly confined to Arabs on both sides of the Gulf and Sunni Persians, Sunni Baloch and tribal Lurs/Bakhtiaris. Indeed I will admit that there is a connection but this is why Arabs from GCC and Iraq do not have a problem with the average Southern Iranian and why no Southern Iranian here has a problem with us Arabs on PDF. You are obviously a Northerner just like @mohammad45

You are probably from Northern Iran. A Persianized and afterwards Turkified Caucasian. You have nothing to do with this region.

It's more detailed. In 1980 (early days of the war) Iran was stronger especially with the air force and navy considering the large fleet of F-14's which carry the extremely long range AIM-54A missile. In the end Iraq wielded a far larger force given the financial support from the Gulf.

Nevertheless, despite these differences in air and naval platforms both sides had large ground armies and the geography made it hard for either of them to move large numbers of tanks/artillery to the other side of the border.

What is your comment about this so-called half Azeri and half Assyrian persons claim of the Arab Mullah's controlling 10 Arab countries?:lol:

Do you think, just like I do, that he was under the influence of Iranian heroin or hashish while he wrote that?
 
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It's more detailed. In 1980 (early days of the war) Iran was stronger especially with the air force and navy considering the large fleet of F-14's which carry the extremely long range AIM-54A missile. In the end Iraq wielded a far larger force given the financial support from the Gulf.

Nevertheless, despite these differences in air and naval platforms both sides had large ground armies and the geography made it hard for either of them to move large numbers of tanks/artillery to the other side of the border.
Our army , like the current Saudi army , during Shah's rule , was completely dependent on American counselors. Most of F-14's were incapable to fly and operate their missions. An advanced fighter like F-14 has sensitive electronic subsystems that require replacement after every flight sorties. Most of fighters had the same situation and that was why Saddam's Ba'athi army could advance in some cities of Ahvaz during the first days of the war. Without IRGC, and shahid Chamran, Ba'athi army could have more advances. On the other hand Iraqi army had the support of both Soviets and western block, including France, UK and Italy. Remember French mirages and it's anti ship exocet missiles. Plus money of GCC region. It was a world war, we had captives of almost 40 countries. Come to Iran-Iraq war gallery for more discussion about this, it is off topic here
 
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