
Mary Draper
5.5K posts

Mary Draper
@DraperMP
Long retired but still learning. Analytical mind, respectful of others. Interested in art & history & events in Europe, China, Middle East. World traveler.


Araghchi trying to explain nuclear fuel production to Witkoff and Kushner at talks in Oman in February, because the US negotiators did not bring technical experts: Amwaj report: amwaj.media/en/article/ins… “Informed Iranian political sources familiar with the talks additionally highlighted that the lack of nuclear expertise on the part of Kushner and Witkoff, in addition to the absence of a technical team, caused consternation in the negotiations. According to the senior source, “Araghchi on several occasions explained the stages of nuclear fuel production and the difference between an enrichment facility and a reactor to Witkoff, yet the US negotiator still believed that the Tehran Research Reactor was an enrichment facility producing radio-medicines.”



This is Ali Larijani’s daughter. She just got back to Iran from the U.S., where she used to impart her “wisdom” to American students at Emory University, Georgia.






I'm seeing "She kept her silence to protect the movement" get a kind of uncomfortably neutral-to-positive gloss.




FWIW Prime Minister Takaichi was born 20 years after Pearl Harbor


Jewish faculty at UCLA recently wrote a letter effectively telling the DOJ that there is no antisemitism problem on campus. UCLA is also where I completed my graduate studies and where I experienced firsthand how dissenting views were treated. Members of the Jewish studies faculty criticized and shamed me for what they called my “Zionist activism.” After I wrote a critical piece about UCLA Hillel’s decision to host the Olive Initiative, a Jewish antizionist group that platformed antizionist libels, I lost part of my graduate funding. But what stayed with me most was not the professional consequence. It was the assumption that, because I am a Zionist, I am incapable of critical thought, that my views were dismissed as “hasbara,” shorthand for being incapable of engaging in serious and scholarly thinking. The result was professional isolation. I was effectively disinvited from academic conferences and made to feel unfit to participate in serious research. Looking back, what is most striking is the degree of power faculty can exert over young scholars. There is a kind of intellectual pressure, often intimidation, that enforces a singular worldview and punishes those who deviate from it. Ironically, the same individuals who accused me of “activism” were often themselves engaged in it — a classic case of accusation in the mirror. Many of my peers disagreed privately but chose to remain silent, knowing that their academic futures depended on it. I never managed to do that. Whether that has been a curse or a blessing, I still don’t know. There is, as @EinatWilf writes, "something stomach churning in watching a Jewish person hand over one more pound of flesh, buckling under the pressure to sell out his people as the price of ever temporary 'acceptance.'" @yudapearl @JFrgatUCLA








America’s greatest ally, Israel, has ordered the Church of the Holy Sepulchre closed amid the Iran War, with the Empty Tomb barricaded, and no plans to open during Holy Week. The Holy Fire will not be present either. It is the first time in millennia that this event has happened. Follow: @AFpost



'What the US is doing at the moment is degrading that capability of Iran, and I think that's very important,' NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said, backing US-Israeli strikes on Iran



Children of Iran's regime leaders are educating America's students at colleges from New York to Los Angeles trib.al/f9YO44l


