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2007-01-11 19:42:40 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in News & Events Current Events

6 answers

If the children out there want to move backwards in time that is there own misery in planet of apes.
Ever wonder how they were following The Mummy with two hands stretching out blindly searching the way back to the grave yards and bringing all those poor children along too in planet of apes.
Ever wonder how the blind were leading and guiding the blind in planet of apes.
Look at the mess in Afghanistan and Iraq?

2007-01-11 20:19:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I visited Iran when I was 21 in 2000 with a bunch of friends. We drove a truck from London to Kathmandu and spent a couple of months in Iran staying in Tabriz, Bam (before the earthquake that destroyed the citadel), Tehran and Zahedan.

I found the Iranian countryside to be beautiful, far more diverse than I had imagined, with snow in the mountains, acres of olive groves and plenty of green grass, forests and some of the best rivers I ever showered in.

Some of the best souvenirs of my travels were in Iran, partly for the magnificent diversity of the countryside but also for cities such as Tehran, which I found comparable with Paris (I live in Paris nowadays) - I visited the mausoleum of the Grand Ayatollah Khomeini on the outskirts of Tehran and was absolutely dumbstruck not only by the size, majesty and reverence of the place but also by the friendly welcome that both clerics and worshippers offered to me in the form of giving me a guided tour in the case of the former and playing us at football in the carpark with the latter!

This is what struck me most about Iran - it is a country full of young people striving to succeed, the level of english was excellent, whether I was talking with a student in Tehran or a carpet trader in Isfahan.

My idea of Iran as a country is that it is one of the finest countries I've ever visited with possibly the richest history on the planet, a history that dates back to the dawn of man and a people that somehow manage to live with a smile in the midst of a political landscape in which, I believe, religion has too much influence.

2007-01-11 20:58:54 · answer #2 · answered by Diarmid 3 · 1 0

I think Iran is a great country and while it has it's problems, the people there will be able to deal with them. I've heard so many good things about the people of Iran that I feel our government should stand clear of them. I don't think they plan on nuking anyone, their land has so much history and they don't want it damaged either. The younger population there will eventually take over and Iran will again be a land to be proud of to all people.

2007-01-11 21:10:20 · answer #3 · answered by Nort 6 · 0 0

I found the Iranian countryside to be beautiful, far more diverse than I had imagined, with snow in the mountains, acres of olive groves and plenty of green grass, forests and some of the best rivers I ever showered in

2007-01-11 23:23:32 · answer #4 · answered by Robert P 1 · 0 0

I found the Iranian countryside to be beautiful, far more diverse than I had imagined, with snow in the mountains, acres of olive groves and plenty of green grass, forests and some of the best rivers I ever showered in.

2007-01-11 21:45:51 · answer #5 · answered by Sonu G 5 · 0 0

not good.

2007-01-12 17:57:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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