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August 19, 2013

Met Council taps N.Y. finance chief Frankel to replace Rapfogel

The Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty is bringing in New York City’s finance chief, David Frankel, to succeed the fired William Rapfogel as executive director and CEO.

The Met Council announced the appointment of Frankel, who has been the commissioner of the Department of Finance since 2009, on Monday. His department collects more than $30 billion in revenue for the city.

“Met Council’s work has improved the lives of many thousands of New York’s neediest people for more than 40 years, and I am honored and excited by the opportunity to lead such a respected and vital institution,” Frankel said.

Frankel will officially join the Met Council on Sept. 30.

Rapfogel, who headed the organization since 1992, was dismissed earlier this month after an internal investigation discovered financial malfeasance related to the company’s insurance policies. He is under investigation by the New York State attorney general and comptroller.

Met Council is one of New York’s largest human services agencies, providing services to 100,000 New Yorkers annually.

“We are proud and delighted to welcome David to Met Council,” said Steven Price, president of the social services agency board. “His integrity, passion for public service and understanding of the importance of our work will be extremely valuable resources for Met Council and our employees, volunteers, donors and partners as we work together to address the problem of poverty in New York.”

Prior to the Department of Finance, Frankel was a managing director at Morgan Stanley from 2004 to 2009, and he was the head of global operations for the AIG Trading Group from 1992 to 2004.

He also served as deputy commissioner of New York City Housing and Preservation and as special counsel to the commissioner for the Department of Correction. From 1978 to 1988, he practiced law at two New York firms.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Frankel “commanded the respect of anyone who worked with him because of his commitment to fairness.”

“Over the past four years,” the mayor said, “he has been dedicated to leveling the playing field for all New Yorkers by going after individuals and businesses that don’t play by the rules and protecting the ones that do.”

Met Council taps N.Y. finance chief Frankel to replace Rapfogel Read More »

Feel Well. Be Well. Act Well Workshop Proves to Decrease Stress and Increase Wellness

I recently completed my certified life coaching course which was a truly insightful and educational experience.  To complete my course I conducted a study on how meditation, yoga, and good nutrition combined with coaching effectively reduces individuals stress and increases wellbeing.  Read about my findings below and sign up for the workshop!

Individuals experience an increase in satisfaction of mind, body, spirit, and overall wellbeing through engaging in mind-­body practices. A benefit of connecting the physical body and the cognitive mind is the ability to release the anxiety of past events and manage concerns about the future, bringing ease to the present moment. This is characterized by a greater sense of calm, a decrease in stress, clarity, and promotion of positive self esteem.

The goal of the “Feel Well. Be Well. Act Well Workshop” is to provide you with tools that can help you center yourself into the present, by bringing awareness to the powerful connection of your mind, body and spirit. This can ultimately provide a greater sense of wellbeing, by teaching you to respond rather than react to stressors in your life, which can result in a lowering of psychic stress.

Mind-­Body Medicine includes practices such as yoga, meditation, breathing, massage, acupuncture, chi­‐quong, bio-­feedback, hypnotism, and holistic nutrition. Many “holistic” methodologies over promise on the delivery of health benefits, as they have not been thoroughly researched or proved to deliver on such claims.

For the purpose of the “Feel Well. Be Well. Act Well Workshop” participants are educated on only those Mind-­Body practices that have been adequately researched: yoga, meditation and nutrition focused on unprocessed, wholesome foods. The benefits of yoga, meditation and nutrition have all been shown to support mindfulness, promote feelings of happiness, lower risk of disease, and are effective in decreasing stress hormones. Research from the Shamatha Project suggests that, “focusing on the present rather than letting the mind drift may help to lower the levels of the stress hormone cortisol.”1

The workshop is divided into two segments; Mind‐Body education and coaching. Following the educational portion of the workshop, you will take part in a guided meditation in order to begin to connect with the deeper part of yourself, also referred to as your “inner knowing.” Meditation gives you the ability to let go of distressing self talk, and opens you up to the ability to set goals that are in line with your beliefs, values, and true self, rather than that of your ego‐driven fears. A study on meditation at the University of California, Davis reports, “training the mind to focus on immediate experience may reduce the propensity to ruminate about the past or worry about the future, thought processes that have been linked to cortisol release.”1 The decrease in stress and anchoring into your inner knowing creates the ideal environment in the mind to set goals and intentions that reflect your truth.

The coaching segment provides an opportunity to articulate the areas of your life where you want to increase satisfaction (topics can range from relationship, body image, financials, etc.) and create a defined action plan to attain that goal.

Participants in the workshop reported that by engaging in yoga and meditation they were able to engage in more positive self talk, which improved their ability to follow through on action plans and ultimately attaining their goals of reaching increased wellbeing, a greater sense of calm, and a feeling of being more deeply connected to their inner voice. Being connected to one’s inner voice is central to creating fulfillment and internal satisfaction rather than living a surface existence to please others or to be perceived in a certain way.

There is a measurable reduction in stress after participating in the “Feel Well. Be Well. Act Well Workshop.” In one survey, participants were asked to rate their levels of stress (0=no stress, 10=high stress) at three time-­‐points: prior to the workshop, immediately following the workshop, and a week later. Immediately following the workshop, stress decreased on average by 37% (p=0.009). In the week following the workshop, participants reported on average a further 6% decrease in stress (p=0.041), and a slight improvement in increasing feelings of wellbeing. Furthermore, participants anticipated that by continuing to incorporate mindful practice into their daily lives, levels of satisfaction, ability to accomplish goals, and general happiness would continue to rise.

The “Feel Well. Be Well. Act Well Workshop” is an effective tool in initiating a positive shift in perception of your interaction with the world. Individuals experiencing high levels of stress and anxiety report a measurable reduction of stress which indicates they are minimizing identification with their ego-­based fears. Through guided coaching and Mind-Body practices, you are able to connect with your true identity, desires, beliefs and values without the chatter of self‐criticism and judgment. The result is increased wellbeing by improving your ability to listen to your intuition, and live life in a way that is meaningful to you. Re-framing and reshaping your life takes time, commitment, forgiveness and a new self dialogue. Studies on meditation, yoga and good nutrition indicate that with commitment and mindful intention, you can retrain your mind body and spirit to shape the life you desire.

 

This workshop is offered once a month. Space is limited.  Email info@relishlifela.com for details.

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Braun said specimen collector was anti-Semite to drum up support in ’12

Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun during his appeal of a drug suspension in 2012 told players on opposing teams that the collector of his urine sample was an anti-Semite.

Braun, the son of an Israeli-born Jewish father, was suspended in July for the remainder of this season for violating Major League Baseball’s Joint Drug Agreement for his connection to the Biogenesis clinic, which provided performance-enhancing drugs to more than a dozen players.

The 2011 Most Valuable Player had been suspended in 2012 for using performance-enhancing drugs, but successfully appealed the 50-game ban and denied he ever used PEDs.

Braun called at least three veteran players to lobby for their support ahead of his appeal of the 2012 suspension, ESPN reported.

He won the appeal after proving that the specimen collector, identified as Dino Laurenzi Jr., broke the chain of custody of the sample by storing it in his refrigerator and not sending it out for 44 hours.

According to ESPN, Braun in  his calls to the players also said Laurenzi was a Chicago Cubs fan, a division rival of the Brewers, implying that the sample collector would be working against Braun.

Braun has been referred to as “The Hebrew Hammer.” His mother, Diane, a Catholic, has said, “He’s totally not Jewish.”

“I heard some organization started called him ‘The Hebrew Hammer.’ I said, ‘Oh no.’ My mother would be rolling over in her grave if she heard that.”

Braun said specimen collector was anti-Semite to drum up support in ’12 Read More »

Israel lobbying U.S., EU to support Egypt’s military government

The Israeli government is pressing its efforts to convince the United States and the European Union to support the military-backed government in Egypt.

The New York Times reported late Sunday that Israeli ambassadors in Washington and the European capitals will lobby foreign ministers, and that Israeli leaders will urge diplomats to see the Israeli viewpoint that the Egyptian military will prevent a further deterioration of the situation in Cairo.

The newspaper cited an unnamed “senior Israeli official involved in the effort.”

“If you insist on big principles, then you will miss the essential — the essential being putting Egypt back on track at whatever cost,” the official told the Times. “First, save what you can, and then deal with democracy and freedom and so on. At this point it’s army or anarchy.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered government officials to refrain from publicly discussing the situation in Egypt.

Israel reportedly has been lobbying American officials hard to sustain the annual $1.5 billion in U.S. aid to Egypt. President Obama has threatened to withhold the aid over a violent government crackdown on demonstrations in support of ousted President Mohamed Morsi that has resulted in more than 800 deaths since last week.

Last week, Obama canceled a planned joint military exercise with Egypt over the bloodshed.

Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who led the military coup that ousted Morsi, developed close ties with Israel when he headed Egypt’s military intelligence, according to the Times, and has remained in close contact with Israel throughout the recent violence and bloodshed.

Israel lobbying U.S., EU to support Egypt’s military government Read More »

The Egypt Dilemma: The Need for Presidential Sobriety

On Sunday evening I exchanged some emails with Menachem Lazar, an Israeli pollster (Panels Politics). Late last week, we sat together on a TV panel discussion about Egypt. He was there to tell us what Israelis think, and I was there to try to guess what the US administration wants– a much harder task as it’s doubtful whether the administration itself has a clue.

Lazar was armed with his latest poll in which two questions were about Egypt. The first one was:  “Are you afraid that the situation in Egypt will deteriorate into a clash with Israel?” Most Israelis seemed calm- 55% said “no” while 37% said “yes”. The second question was trickier: “If the shooting from the Sinai Peninsula into Israel continues, should Israel take action in Sinai even without coordinating it with the Egyptian government?” A plurality of 46% of Israelis said yes, but 39% said no, proving that the public has little appetite for confrontation with the Egyptian government. Having seen how ruthless the new leaders of Egypt can be, it is no wonder that Israelis don’t want to jump their guns. Having seen how ruthless the Egyptians can be, Israelis might hope that there will be no need for Israeli intervention. Apparently, a determined leader can turn the Egyptian military into an effective killing machine.

Lazar, in our short email exchange, told me, tongue in cheek, that with events moving so fast he would have asked a different question today: he would have asked about whether America's current behavior might be putting the peace treaty with Egypt at risk. Of course, no one truly suspects that the Obama administration wants to put the peace treaty at risk. In fact, its dogged refusal to acquiesce to the voices calling it to sever ties with the Egyptian regime or to cut financial assistance to the regime, is in large measure because of its desire to protect stability and the peace treaty. Still, President Obama and his administration’s policy toward Egypt puzzle Israelis. 78% of them told Lazar that peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians aren’t likely to achieve peace, yet they see the administration putting a lot of effort in these negotiations while neglecting to get its act together on the burning issue of Egypt.

One gets the feeling that Israelis have moved from suspecting Obama, even disliking him, to feeling sorry for him, to thinking of him as a clueless President. His visit to Jerusalem made it clear to most of them that the President isn’t hostile to Israel; that he wants to be a friend. So they no longer rage as they speak about him. They just mock him or dismiss him as inconsequential. When I was on a radio show this morning – once again tasked with guiding the perplexed through the intricacies of American policies – the name Carter was invoked by the anchor. Not as in 'Obama is as unsympathetic to Israel as Carter', but rather as in 'he is going to end up being a failure like Carter'. Later in the afternoon I talked to a retired Israeli General turned politician. Remember – he said to me with a smirk – when Obama was given the Noble Peace Prize?

I am trying to defend him in these occasions, I really am. Partially because mocking him is becoming almost boring; partially because I don't really like the dismissive tone – assuming that 'Obama is dumb' is as ridiculous today as assuming that 'Bush is dumb' was ridiculous yesterday; partially because people make too much out of this failure to have an Egypt-policy. Had Obama had such a policy, would it really have made a difference? Yes, it would have made the US look like less of a joke in the eyes of Middle Eastern wiseasses who always know better (let’s face it, the people of the Middle East have very little to be smug about: the joke, after all, is on them – on us). And it would possibly make the President a little more effective when it comes to the little things: getting his phone calls through, getting the leader on the other side to make a small gesture. It’s doubtful, though, whether Obama could have had much impact on the big things.  

What really happened to the Obama administration in Egypt? There are many different accounts of its confusion in which one can find differing expert opinions. And there's no agreed upon explanation for its… (I was going to write 'confusion', but there are those who don't even think it's confusion.)

The dilemma regarding Egypt and many other matters is quite obvious to everybody.

There’s option one: support the democratic process, support what the “people” want, support the winner of the election, and oppose all measures of regime brutality against the people. This option subscribes to the notion that the long term interest of the US demands that it shows true belief in Arab sovereignty and that it is ready to live with the consequences of Arab democracy. “What's happening now in Egypt – the crackdown on Islamists, the widespread bloodshed – and what's happened in Syria is going to build the new jihadist narrative of betrayal by the West,” Michele Dunne, who runs the Hariri Center for the Middle East at the Atlantic Council, told NPR. “That the United States failed to come to the assistance of the Syrian people in a timely and effective fashion, and that it failed to not only act effectively but even to withdraw assistance from the Egyptian military when it cracked down on Islamists inside of Egypt”. Buying this argument leads to a policy of support for Morsi, and of cutting ties with Sisi. It leads to a policy of willingness to pay a (hopefully) short-term price to try to get to the long-term goal of a reformed Middle East.

And of course, there’s option two: support stability and those who are willing to be the allies of America and of peace, and don't support those who represent the forces of radicalism and clerical rule, and who have questionable ties with terrorists. This option is the option of the skeptics, of those who think, in Walter Russell Mead's words that “Obama has had a rude awakening in the Middle East”. He once had a “dream” in which in the Middle East “democracy at least of a sort was just around the corner. Moderate Islamists would engage with the democratic process, and the experience would lead them to ever more moderate behavior”. But he should know now that it isn't worth it to pay a very heavy price now for a dream that might never come (a dream of Arab democracy and a liberal Middle East). So this is the policy option for those who believe that democracy is not for everyone, that it needs to be built gradually and can only survive and thrive under proper circumstances. This is the option which Israel is now promoting, more blatantly today than yesterday (see what an Israeli senior official said to the New York Times this morning), and I assume even more so tomorrow, if today isn't enough. Buying this argument means that the US is willing to be somewhat hypocritical when it talks about democratic values while turning a deaf ear to the voices of gun shots in the streets of Cairo. It leads to a policy of what-have-we-done-by-giving-up-on-Mubarak and of lets-find-someone-as-close-to-a-Mubarak-as-possible to replace him.

Some shades of gray are available to policy makers, but all in all, not many of them: The Obama team needed to make its choice, and then stick to it – not because it would dramatically alter the way Egypt's short-term events unfold, but rather because it has impact on the standing of the US in the region and beyond. Yet, it didn't. Elliott Abrams writes in Commentary that “the Obama administration is pursuing neither an idealistic foreign policy based on altruistic considerations of 'world citizenship,' nor a realpolitik policy designed to maximize American power and influence in an age of limits through careful assertions of power and the strengthening and utilization of alliances. What foreign policy is it pursuing, then?”

Abrams is kind to Obama and attempts in his article to concoct some sort of coherent worldview that might explain the President's policies. While I appreciate the temptation to find such illuminating explanations, I tend to subscribe to a less forgiving view: the Obama team's blunder isn’t about it making a wrong choice. It is about it making no choice. It is about it looking at a playing field containing two not very appealing choices – this is often the case as countries ponder their options – and instead of playing by the rules- i.e., looking for the least-worst option- deciding not to play.

It is the kind of choice you’d call juvenile if teenagers were involved, and hence the chorus of mockery it’s getting in response, including the response of many Israelis, also tends to be somewhat juvenile in tone. But what happens next in Egypt is a serious issue and the situation at hand requires adult sobriety- the ability to make do with an inconvenient yet necessary choice.

The Egypt Dilemma: The Need for Presidential Sobriety Read More »

August 19, 2013

The US

Headline: Egypt, U.S. on Collision Course

To Read: Jonah Golberg writes about the growing popularity of the 'to hell with them' mindset among Americans-

The “to hell with them” attitude is no doubt prevalent among Americans who dislike Muslims, but having animus in one’s heart is not a prerequisite for exhaustion and exasperation with large swaths of the Middle East. All you need to do is read the headlines coming out of the Middle East and feel like, “I’ve seen this movie before.” And thanks to fracking and other technological boons, the fact that we’re becoming less and less reliant on Middle Eastern oil only serves to undermine arguments that we need regional stability at any cost.

You can’t prove a negative, but my hunch is that support for Israel or South Korea, never mind our NATO allies, remains quite strong. If real friends were threatened, the American people would support coming to their aid. It’s just that there’s a growing — or, in many cases, deepening — sense that we don’t have real friends in the Muslim world.

Quote:  “Nothing has come through yet, and we haven't been given a specific date when we'll see them”, Khalid Saleh, an official of the Syrian Opposition Coalition, commenting on the fact that the US still hasn't sent the moderate rebels the Military assistance it promised them a while ago.

Number: 349, the number of suicides among active-duty U.S. troops, more than the 295 Americans who died last year in Afghanistan.

 

Israel

Headline: Report: Israel urges West to back Egypt's military

To Read: Daniel Gordis offers an interesting piece about Israeli PM Menachem Begin and about the problematic attitudes toward him among American Jews-

Given those similarities, it is worth asking why many Jewish Americans bow their heads in respect to Nathan Hale, but wince in shame at the mention of the Hebrew freedom fighters who sought precisely what it was that Hale died for. Why is George Washington, who conducted a violent, fierce and bloody campaign against the British, a hero, while for many, Begin remains a villain or, at the very least, a Jewish leader with a compromised background? Some of the difference has to do with time. We have photographs of the two British sergeants Begin ordered hanged in response to the British hanging of his men, and of the shattered King David Hotel, which he ordered bombed. We know the names of the sergeants and of the victims in the hotel attack, but not of the British young men who died at the hands of America’s revolutionaries.

Quote: “Unfortunately, because of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Israel has been weighed down by criticism and suffered from bias and sometimes even discrimination”, Ban Ki Moon admits that Israel faces bias in the UN.

Number: 1.5, the number of miles between an intense Syrian battle currently fought in the city of Breiqa and the nearest Israeli village.

 

The Middle East

Headline: Gunmen kill 24 Egyptian police in Sinai ambush

To Read: Turkish Journalist Mustafa Akyol gives the Muslim Brotherhood some advice on how to survive the coup and restore Islamism in Egypt, based on Turkey's past experience-

Still, how the Islamists of Turkey survived the coup and ultimately defeated it is worth looking at. Their secret was not defiance, let alone radicalization, but moderation. The reformists within Erbakan’s party, such as Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Abdullah Gul and Bulent Arinc, realized that while nothing could justify the coup, some of the provocative and triumphant rhetoric among their own people helped provoke it. That is why they decided to launch a “renewal” movement in the party, which gradually evolved into the Justice and Development Party (AKP). Founded in 2001, the AKP made a clear break with the Islamism of Erbakan, using a pragmatic rhetoric which promised good governance and “respect for all lifestyles.”

Quote: “I’m still against the regime, but now if you think about the fall of the regime, it’s dangerous. The Islamists, the jihadis, they have stolen our revolution”, Anas Gabiah, one of many Syrian rebels who have become alienated from the struggle due to the increased role of radicals.

Number: 70,000, the number of Palestinians who have fled from Syria to Lebanon in the past two years.

 

The Jewish World

Headline: Antwerp haredi schools forced to choose between censorship and subsidies

To Read: A congregational Rabbi shares his thoughts on a central change in modern day religion in America-

The primary thesis of institutionalized American religion used to be, “How do we serve God?” Today it has increasingly become, “How do God and religion enhance my life?”

Purveyors of religion used to say, “Do such and such because God says so.” They told us that our function is to be here to exalt, praise, adore, bless, obey, worship and believe in God. But American religion in recent years, while certainly not negating the worship of God, has increasingly emphasized what God does for us. Like anything else we select or buy, religion is good for us.

Quote: “I’m proud of what the house has become. I think it has fulfilled its cycle”, 0-year old Naomi Szulman, whose family's home in Argentina has been turned into a replica of Anne Frank's hideout.

Number: 300, the percent increase in complaints of discrimination against Sephardic girls in Ultra Orthodox schools in Israel.

August 19, 2013 Read More »

Wake up America, boot Iran’s Supreme Leader off social media!

Back in December of last year I was utterly shocked and disgusted that several American based social media websites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Youtube had permitted Iran’s totalitarian fundamentalist Islamic Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to start his own pages and have a presence on their sites. As an Iranian American journalist, I am horrified on a daily basis to learn about the constant harassment, torture, imprisonment and cold blooded killings of journalists and bloggers in Iran face when they post stories or blog postings that the regime’s leadership in Iran does not approve of or deems “subversive of their reign”. Since 2009 Khamenei and his notorious “Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corp” (IRGC)—a terrorist organization have spent millions of dollars to cut the Internet service or purchased software that blocks access to popular sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube for average people in Iran. It is indeed ironic that the very man that has blocked and censored the people of Iran from using American social media sites, is now himself using these very sites to spread his own fundamentalist Islamic propaganda and anti-Semitic rhetoric. Moreover, I am still baffled at how the current Obama administration has continued to permit Khamenei, the leader of the IRGC–  a known terrorist organization, to even have a presence on American social media sites when U.S. federal laws specifically prohibit the use of U.S. servers for the purposes of advancing terrorism! Shame on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube and other U.S. based social media websites for not holding Khamenei and his terrorist sponsoring thugs to same standards and rules as any other users who wish to perpatuate their terrorism and radical Islamo-fascist ideology through social media sites.

Since late last year, thousands of individuals have “liked” Khamenei on Facebook in hopes of starting a dialogue with the notorious dictator, but it is obvious to many of us that follow the Iranian regime that he is using U.S. social media sites to only advance his own agenda and spread his message of hate to the West. Since the social uprisings against Iran’s fraudulent election in 2009, student activists and political opposition groups have tried to use social media sites like Facebook and Twitter to get their messages out and organize some sort of an organized movement that criticizes Iran’s current dictatorial regime. Yet these bloggers and activists have been shut down by Khamenei’s IRGC that has launched an all-out cyber war against these democracy activists and cracked down on them harshly. According to bloggers and activists in Iran that I am in touch with, the Iranian regime has recently even created a type of “Facebook police,” that is also in charge of searching people’s pages on Facebook for “offensive” comments and even photos of women in Iran who are not wearing the compulsory Hijab or head scarf! Still some activists and journalists in Iran have learned to bypass the censorship through proxy sites and software. But the Iranian regime has not let up on crushing nearly every single voice of opposition using social media sites to oppose them. Late last year, Sattar Behesti, a 35-year-old Iranian blogger based in Iran was allegedly tortured to death by the Iranian regime’s thugs after he continuously criticized the regime on his blog and on his Facebook page. Where was the U.S. and European media’s coverage and outrage over this heinous killing of Behesti who was merely voicing his opinion? How do the major western media outlets and social media sites like Facebook and Twitter have the audacity to continue allowing Khamenei to spew his garage on their sites, but fail to uplift and support bloggers and journalists using words to fight an oppressive regime that they live under? It seems as if journalists and bloggers worldwide who enjoy the freedoms of expressing themselves and speaking out when wrongs may have occurred, are now asleep at the wheel when it comes to Iran’s leaders cracking down on journalists and bloggers in Iran!

While some may have thought that Khamenei and his IRGC clowns may have gotten away with spewing their garbage on U.S. social media sites, one sole Iranian human rights activist has kept the spotlight on their hypocrisy. That man is Roozbeh Farahanipour, a former Iranian student activist and founder of “Iranians for a Secular Iran” which is based in Los Angeles. Kudos to Farahanipour who started an online campaign to get Facebook to remove Khamenei's page and  circulated a diagram and step-by-step directions in English and Persian on how to report the page to Facebook! It seems as if this sole former journalist and human rights activist is only one willing to hold Khamenei accountable and motivate an online campaign to force Facebook and similar sites to boot this tyrant dictator off U.S. social media sites. Those interested in joining his campaign can visit the “Kick Khamenei Off Faceb00k” page here.

Perhaps once average journalists, bloggers and freedom loving users of Facebook worldwide raise their voices in opposition to Khamenei’s presence of these social media sites, he will finally be booted off Facebook. Until then, we as Americans and those who cherish democracy must not remain silent while such a heinous dictator crushes the voices of opposition who yearn for freedom and denies the people of Iran the use of the same sites to express their desires to be free.

Wake up America, boot Iran’s Supreme Leader off social media! Read More »