Hadi Mahboob

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Hadi Mahboob

Hadi Mahboob

@Block220950

#Bitcoin

San Francisco, CA Katılım Ocak 2021
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Hadi Mahboob
Hadi Mahboob@Block220950·
کوین و توکن های دیگه شاید در کوتاه مدت رشد داشته باشند ولی برای یک سرمایه گذار در درجه اول حاشیه ریسک کمتر اهمیت بیشتر داره، آلت کوین ها (اگر اسکم نباشند) استارت آپ های نو پایی هستند که در طول زمان میتونند دستخوش تحولات زیادی بشن. #نظرشخصی
ايران اينترنشنال@IranIntl

هادی محبوب، تحلیلگر بازار رمزارز در برنامه #چشم_انداز می‌گوید: افراد اگر می‌خواهند به عنوان سرمایه‌گذار وارد بازار رمزارز شوند، به‌غیر از بیت‌کوین و اتریوم، رمزارز دیگری را برای سرمایه‌گذاری انتخاب نکنند youtu.be/B3nr1rBmKHQ

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Reza Pahlavi Communications
Reza Pahlavi Communications@PahlaviComms·
Prince Reza Pahlavi, joined by prominent Iranian-American entrepreneurs, will discuss strategies for rebuilding Iran and advancing its future prosperity through industry, technology, and commerce. Saturday, May 16 - San Francisco, CA
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USAbehFarsi
USAbehFarsi@USABehFarsi·
مارکو روبیو، وزیر امور خارجه ایالات متحده: «امتناع گذشته ایران از کنار گذاشتن جاه‌طلبی‌های هسته‌ای خود و توقف حمایت از گروه‌های تروریستی نشان می‌دهد که آن‌ها افراد دیوانه‌ای هستند. آن‌ها افراط‌گرایان مذهبی هستند که هرگز نباید اجازه پیدا کنند به سلاح هسته‌ای دست یابند، زیرا دیدگاه آخرالزمانی نسبت به آینده دارند.»
Department of State@StateDept

SECRETARY RUBIO: Iran’s past refusal to walk away from their nuclear ambitions and stop supporting terrorist groups shows they are lunatics. They are religious zealots who can never be allowed to have a nuclear weapon because of their apocalyptic vision of the future.

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kooshiar
kooshiar@kooshiar·
Secretary @marcorubio Iranian immigrants have long contributed to the U.S. economy, especially in STEM, medicine and AI. Most strongly oppose the Islamic regime and support the goal of a strong and secure USA under President Trump and your leadership. Over the past few months, many have faced serious hardship due to the USCIS hold. They are here legally and often hold advanced degrees. Returning them to Iran would place them in danger and risk sending highly trained experts in strategic fields back to the Iranian regime. We would greatly appreciate it if you could revisit this decision. Thank you for your consideration.
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Shayan Eskandari, PhD
Shayan Eskandari, PhD@sbetamc·
Through a friend with a crazy proxy setup, we were able to send a message to my family in Iran, mainly be able to send a picture through, to see each other's faces after 12 days of only noisy minutes long phone calls... The amount of excitement and joy that just came from receiving an image... man... this is surreal...! I won't forget nor forgive the people that are causing us this much pain and generational trauma... and I won't forget the power of community in these hard time <3 I'm hopeful that we will see better days, hopefully soon.
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San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Chronicle@sfchronicle·
A crowd is gathered outside San Francisco's Ferry Building in support of Iran on Sunday. A mix of signs read "Free Iran," with others showing messages thanking President Trump "for supporting Iran." 🎥: Elisabeth Smith / S.F. Chronicle
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
President Donald J. Trump provides an update on Operation Epic Fury:
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
Praying for the people of Iran, who have suffered far too much for far too long under evil, sadistic leaders. Hoping this goes well for humanity
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Fardad Farahzad | فرداد فرحزاد
تلویزیون دولتی ایران هم بالاخره مرگ علی خامنه‌ای را تأیید کرد؛ احتمالا آخرین رسانه رسمی در جهان که این خبر را اعلام می‌کند. جمهوری‌اسلامی ۴۰ روز عزای عمومی و هفت روز تعطیلی سراسری در کشور اعلام کرده‌.
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Hadi Mahboob
Hadi Mahboob@Block220950·
With gratitude and happiness, - An Iranian American Thank you Israel & the United States I'll never forget your support ❤️ #ThankYouTrump
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kooshiar
kooshiar@kooshiar·
جمعیت ۴۰۰/۵۰۰ هزار نفری لازمه. تورنتو، مونیخ و لس‌انجلس باید قفل بشن. جوری که هیچ رسانه و سیاستمداری نتونه خواست ما رو تحریف کنه. ۱۸،۱۹ دی ایرانیان داخل ضربه کاری را زدند. وظیفه ماست که ۱۴ فوریه تمامش کنیم.
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Department of State
Department of State@StateDept·
.@SecRubio on why the Iranian regime cannot provide the people of Iran the quality of life they deserve: "... they're spending all their resources, of what is a rich country, sponsoring terrorism ... proxy groups around the world, exporting as they call it, ‘their revolution.’"
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Shayan Eskandari, PhD
Shayan Eskandari, PhD@sbetamc·
معرفی MoaV استک ماژولار و کدباز چند-پروتکلی برای گسترش اینترنتی آزاد و بدون سانسور. +۸ پروتکل. یه دستور. روی VPS پنج دلاری یا رزبری‌پای خونه اجرا میشه. همه پروتکل‌ها رو همزمان اجرا کن تا حداقل یکی رد بشه. 🧵 ↓
Shayan Eskandari, PhD@sbetamc

Introducing MoaV — modular, open source multi-protocol Internet censorship circumvention stack. 8+ protocols. 1 command. Runs on a $5 VPS or a Raspberry Pi at home. Run all protocols at once so at least one gets through. 🧵 ↓

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European Parliament
European Parliament@Europarl_EN·
Which topic interests you most?
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Hadi Mahboob
Hadi Mahboob@Block220950·
@thetimes it’s a massacre hidden behind silence and internet blackouts. Global silence is complicity.
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The Times and Sunday Times
Iran report says 16,500 dead in ‘genocide under digital darkness’ #Echobox=1768691896" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">thetimes.com/world/middle-e…
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Hadi Mahboob
Hadi Mahboob@Block220950·
BREAK YOUR SILENCE! 🗣️🇮🇷
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Hadi Mahboob
Hadi Mahboob@Block220950·
@brosen1501 I appreciate this deeply. The people who protested and were killed were our brothers, sisters, and friends. Thank you for not staying silent.
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Barry Rosen
Barry Rosen@brosen1501·
I am writing now because I believe many Americans who care deeply about democracy, accountability, and the limits of state power would speak out more forcefully about Iran if they fully confronted what is happening—and what their silence allows. I am not writing to accuse or to provoke. I am writing because silence, when sustained, becomes a form of withdrawal at a moment that calls for presence. I served in Iran long before the revolution. From 1967 to 1969, I was a Peace Corps volunteer. Those years shaped me profoundly. I came to know Iran not as an abstraction or a headline, but as a society with a long, proud, and sophisticated culture—rooted in poetry, history, learning, and a deep sense of dignity. My respect for the Iranian people was formed then and has never left me. Years later, I returned to Iran as an American diplomat. From 1979 to 1981, I was held hostage during the Iran hostage crisis. I experienced firsthand what it means to be stripped of rights by a regime that confuses power with righteousness and enforces obedience through fear. I share this history so you understand where I am speaking from—not as an outsider, and not as someone driven by bitterness, but as a witness. Today, the Iranian people are rising again. They are doing so not with weapons, but with courage. They are demanding what Americans often insist upon for themselves: the right to speak freely, to live without terror, and to hold power accountable. In this way, they resemble Americans who protest abuses of authority and the lawlessness of state institutions in our own country—people who believe that government exists to serve the public, not to dominate it. The response of the Iranian regime has been deliberate and merciless. Protesters are shot, not accidentally but intentionally. Security forces aim at faces and eyes, blinding young men and women permanently as a method of intimidation. They fire into crowds that include the poor, the working class, and the middle class—students, laborers, daughters and sons. Thousands have been killed. Many more have disappeared. Bodies are collected in black bags, stacked, removed, and buried without names or acknowledgment. This violence is not chaos. It is policy. And yet, despite this sustained brutality, there has been remarkably little sustained outrage in the United States among those who otherwise speak passionately about democracy and human rights. I do not believe this absence reflects indifference. I believe it reflects distance, uncertainty, and the difficulty of sustaining attention when repression is systematic rather than episodic. But democracy does not ask us to be comfortable. It asks us to be consistent. Standing with the Iranian people does not require endorsing war or intervention. It requires recognition. It requires attention. It requires the willingness to say—publicly—that when a government maintains itself by shooting, blinding, imprisoning, and killing its own citizens, that matters. I am writing not to close a conversation, but to open one. If you believe in democracy, I ask you to respond—not necessarily with agreement, but with engagement. Ask questions. Seek out Iranian voices. Talk about this with the same seriousness you bring to other struggles for justice. Show up in whatever way your conscience allows. History does not only remember governments. It remembers who spoke, who listened, and who chose not to remain absent. This is one of those moments.
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Iran International English
Iran International English@IranIntl_En·
Arshia Ahmadpour, an 18-year-old boxer from Baharestan in Isfahan, was killed by security forces during protests in the city on January 9, according to information received by Iran International. Ahmadpour, a relative said, was originally from Izeh in southern Iran, worked as a hairdresser in Isfahan, and was an athlete who practiced boxing. iranintl.com/en/202601171017
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