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npr:

Is Iran anywhere near collapse?

Amir Mohebbian doesn’t think so. The conservative Iranian political thinker and news editor said so in Tehran, even though U.S. economic sanctions have blocked most of the refined oil and other imports on which Iran relies. “The situation in the economy is not good,” he said, “but not so bad that [it will] kill us.”

The United States has been hoping the “maximum pressure” campaign launched after President Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Iran nuclear agreement will force Tehran to change its foreign policy in places from Lebanon to Syria to Yemen. To this idea, Mohebbian shrugged: “Why should we?”

It would be easy to dismiss Mohebbian’s analysis as Iranian spin. Yet seven days of interviewing dozens of people in Tehran and its surroundings this month offers at least some evidence to support his confidence, for the moment.

Tehran, a megacity of more than 14 million, appears vibrant. Stores are well stocked, though prices have soared through inflation. New stores and restaurants have opened to serve the elite, even if they’re not always full of customers. New buildings are under construction, even if the progress of some has been slow. Monday evening of last week, the night before a holiday, it took three hours for NPR’s vehicle to move about 10 miles through the city; streets were choked with cars as people drove out of town toward their ancestral homes or vacation.

Reporter’s Notebook: Here’s How Iran Is Functioning In The Face Of Sanctions

Photos: Marjan Yazdi for NPR

ex0skeletal:
““ Pale Horse by Martin Wittfooth
This artist on Facebook // Twitter
” ”

egypt-museum:

Mummy of a Falcon

Mummified animals were quite common in Egypt and included all sorts of animals and birds thought to represent various divinities. 

The mummy of a falcon represents the god Horus. The falcon is wrapped in the shape of a human mummy. 

The head is covered with a falcon-shaped mask, which consists of several layers of linen with a thick coating of painted stucco. The linen bandages intersect to form lozenge shapes. 

The mummy wears a wig and a pectoral, a large piece of jewelry that is worn on the chest. The inlaid eyes are painted in red.

Late Period, ca. 664-332 BC. Now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. JE 91451

Photos: Sandro Vannini

everythingfox:

“The derp thickens”

(Source)

liberalsarecool:

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Unions would not let this happen.

workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 26 August 1919, former garment worker Fannie Sellins who became an organiser with the United Mine Workers of America was murdered by company thugs and sheriff’s deputies during a coal strike in Pennsylvania. She...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 26 August 1919, former garment worker Fannie Sellins who became an organiser with the United Mine Workers of America was murdered by company thugs and sheriff’s deputies during a coal strike in Pennsylvania. She attempted to intervene when a miner was being beaten, and was shot and killed. Her killers were never punished. Episode 7 of our podcast is about miners’ struggles in the US at this time, check it out here: https://workingclasshistory.com/2018/06/09/wch-e7-the-west-virginia-mine-wars-1902-1922/
Pictured: Sellins during a previous arrest https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1196896753828806/?type=3

classichorrorblog:

The Crater Lake Monster
Directed by William R. Stromberg (1977)

liberalsarecool:

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The popular vote will destroy the Republican Party.

More registered voters, more time to vote, and more secure elections are all threats to the GOP.