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Who is a Real Prince?Only HRH Reza Pahlavi

 
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patriot



Joined: 08 Mar 2004
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 16, 2004 9:33 am    Post subject: Who is a Real Prince?Only HRH Reza Pahlavi Reply with quote



http://groups.yahoo.com/group/shahineazadi

Who's The Prince?
There is enormous news these days about Prince William (son of Prince Charles), heir to the English Crown. The lad has hit twenty-one. He's a man now, or so we hope. There's a stamp made in his honor already.

Of course, every English journalist is cashing in on the story. "He resembles his mother, Diane," they say, remembering how much they raked in off her! Well it may be. But is this a good thing for England?

The Queen years ago referred to Diane as an "adventuress," and more recently a Conservative Party minister called her "a loose cannon." Charles showed very poor judgment all the way around. Young William's disdain for the Royal customs indeed reflects that of his mother's.

One crusty old British commentator last night on TV said that he had never seen in the history of a royal family any father that had been so totally involved in the training of his son. Let's hope not! Let's hope the boy shows more sense than his father has, at least when it comes to women.

And this is where it ends. The English are entitled to idolized their beloved royal family. However, there is some objectivity needed in this continued media frenzy.

The most well trained prince in the world is Reza Pahlavi, son of the great Shahanshah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

Reza Pahlavi
By the age of 21, Reza had already become an accomplished jet fighter pilote. At only 17, he said that all his endeavors were for his people. "I must know their wants and desires. To have an idee fixe and prevail upon the people in spite of their instincts is something I am totally against. There must be a system where everyone can have his say and make his feelings known." Peter Louis Templeton, The Persian Prince (1979), pp.51, 52. Imagine such maturity, at such a time, at such a young age.

I think he is one of the most qualitifed human beings in the world. He could lead any country wisely. I told him as much a couple of years ago, when I sat down with him. "You should really become President of the United States," I said. "You could work wonders." He and is staff got a kick out of such a remark. I was actually serious, though. I know that Persians are incredibly talented. The Prince recognized that my compliment was most sincere.

"Well," he humbly said, "one has to be a native-born citizen..."

"Oh, well," I continued, "these are liberal days. Look at Clinton. Anyone can make it!"

The Prince answered, "I suppose if I could re-define citizenship the way he has re-defined sexuality, maybe I have a chance!"

His book Winds of Change (Regnery, 2002) should be read by everyone, really. It is about democracy, and he doesn't mean Communism. I just want to see what the Persians (Iran) would do with real democracy. Reza says Iran simply doesn't have the practical experience of working with it.

World-renown Iranian scholar Seyyed Hossein Nasr says, "Persia from time immemorial has played this role of imposing unity upon the multiplicity of ideas, forms and motifs that have entered its borders from East and West, thereby bringing into being a new creation fresh and profoundly Persian." Roloff Beny, Persia Bridge of Turquoise (McClelland and Stweart Ltd, 1975), p.34.

So lets see it. Let's see how the Persians manage true democracy. My hunch is that we will all learn much from it. I've suggested it before. I'm patiently waiting.

Posted by David Yeagley at 12:28 PM | Comments (5)
June 20, 2003
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reza



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PostPosted: Tue Nov 16, 2004 10:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

nobody said william was the best prince. in fact most peple i know think he is a pansy daddy's boy who gets everyhing done for him. and believe me, nobody idolises the british royal family - we're all too cynical. Plus they are all inbred morons anyway. The only royal family worth respecting is the persian one. And reza pahlavi is the light - truly he is a king among men. I would not be suprised if his name goes down in history as reza the great.
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Iranian Boy



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PostPosted: Tue Nov 16, 2004 6:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thank you Patriot!!
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Long live the memory of Shahanshah Aryamehr.
Long live Shahbanou Farah Pahlavi
Long live Reza Shah II
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patriot



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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2004 4:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thank you everyone for your kind feelings!

I have already put the original article in shahineazadi in the media folder of our link section!

I just wanted to show you how people in the world see our Majesty!

They introduce his Majesty Cyrus Reza shah II as the most well-trained prince of the world who deserve this title the most!

dear Reza and Iranian boy, thank you for your beautiful sentences! you sound both like true patriots!

-------------------
these are the comments to this article in that journal magazine:

Journal Weblog
Comments: Who's The Prince?
5783 http://texas-hold-em-w.fateback.com
texas hold em
online texas hold em

Posted by http://texas-hold-em-w.fateback.com at October 31, 2004 10:31 PM
As a member of the above stated cultural organization, I am very pleased to see the content of these dialogues. I would encourage anyone who would like to share their visions of the true Iranian way to visit our website, (although it is still under construction.)

www.geocities.com/soarandenvision/aryana.html

Posted by Aryan International League at October 22, 2004 04:07 PM
Dear people,
Hello and peace be with you!

I am a young Iranian and would like to appriciate your wonderful article and opinions about our amazing King his Majesty Reza shah II and in fact he deserves to sit on the throne of King cyrus The Great!
I have a fair skin and dark hair but you should consider that Aryans weren t only be recognized as what you call it WHITE !
For instance king Yazdgird and king shahpur(2000 ago) didn thave also any Blond hair but they had the aryans blood and heritage!
If you look to the ancient ruins of Iran you can obviously understand that Iranians still are Aryans and will stay !
Aryans was just the title of our great-grand fathers who settled in Iran long time ago and they called themselve aryans which means friendly and loyalty people which are united with each other!
This is the meaning of Aryans people and it is still the fact about Iranian people because they are kind,hospitable and friendly!
We are the only nation that after so many centuries still remember our ancient language and culture!
And about Prince william I myself personaly have a respect for him but I hope that he won t be like his father and grand mother and try to think more about the honesty and humanity !
Our Majesty Reza shah II and his father and grand father our the pride of our homeland and I hope to welcome him one day so soon in our homeland
for people who are intrested in Pahlavi dynasty I suggest them to join us in this group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/shahineazadi

Long Live Reza shah II


Posted by Persian at March 31, 2004 06:31 AM
Welcome Nora! What a splendid debut! We need some "healthy" European opinion here on BadEagle.
There are so many things to address, like religion, aristocracy, the general public trends, etc.

I will tell you that, today, under the Islamic regime especially, but also even before, Iranians feel a kinship with Germans. It is the Aryan thing. Iranians are the original Aryans. Hitler sought them out.

When I was in Iran, one of my hosts was a retired engineer, who spoke no English, but only German (and of course Farsi). He looked like a Norse god. A large, older man, with a deep voice, and with spectacular white hair. Imagine him speaking German! There are still many, many very white Iranians, who somehow were no so affected by the Arabic intermarriages over the years.

Iran is like the America of the Middle East, very cosmopolitan, together with its original race(s).

I really believe the young Reza Pahlavi is a very special man, and will have a role in the world soon. Many Iranians still feel the betrayal and the pain of the regime of his father, but, I think Reza is above all this. He is sincere. I've sat and talked with him! He is a most pleasurable man.

So, welcome Nora!

Posted by David Yeagley at August 13, 2003 10:28 PM
Although I'm a bit to young to have been actively involved, I remember well the time when the Shah of Iran was the symbol for the evil in the world and the currently leading political class in Germany is an offspring of the 1968 protest generation.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1250944.stm

As a conservative by nature who was brought up and, albeit benignly, brainwashed by leftist parents, I am currently going through a somewhat painful transition back to my natural inclination. So I am glad to hear that Prince Reza Pahlevi is doing so well. Considering the current political climate in Germany, it is probably not all that amazing that we hear nothing about him and his family here.

Of course the Windsors are, literally and metaphorically, much closer to home for us and Princess Diana is one of my pet peeves. It will never cease to amaze me how a lousy wife, unworthy mother and counter-productive Princess-of-Wales-job-filler could become a role-model for 95% of the contemporary female population. How a traitor to her own and simpering sucker-up to the middle classes, a cunning and malicious schemer who had done immeasurable damage to the family that made her, how somebody like that managed to pose with credibility as a "victim". How a jet-setter with a money-spending habit of obscene proportions could have not just gotten away with it but become an icon and ray of hope for the underprivileged of this world.

Prince Charles himself and his brother Andrew have been both in the Navy, the latter actively took part, and saw combat, as a helicopter pilot in the Falklands. I suppose the touchy-feely image of Prince William is due to his mother's damaging influence, not so much on the boy himself, but on the attitude of the Royal Family who tries this way to suck up to the general public. (Needless to say that it will rather add to their decline than the opposite!)

Prince Charles is a good and kind man with a social conscience, as his grandmother put it in a not widely published interview "a nice boy who doesn't know his ass from his elbow". (I LOVED that woman!)

She, too, found the right words for the contemptible relationship Diana had with the playboy son of a discredited Egyptian businessman (by the way, I am adamant that it was a publicity stunt and that she was PAID for it). The old lady said (I quote from memory) that he was a man "in whose company no Christian woman ought to be seen, even one of such a doubtful reputation." Of course what she meant was "white".

Posted by Nora at August 13, 2003 06:36 PM
So then, you'd say capitalism (i.e., competitive journalism) had added to the erosion of the Throne?

The Monarchy was long divested of its political power, it seems. It is a terribly expensive museum piece at this point. The only service paid it is the attention through the media. Do people really take the throne seriously? What else is there to take seriously, but the lives of those on it? This all feels rather tragic and futile. The English were known the world over for discpline, determination, and accomplishment. That the token of power, the Throne, should now become the seat of family dysfunction is most regretful. (Truth is, royal families have often been such centers of failure. Therefore, I have over-dramatized.)

Reza Pahlavi wants democracy, however, not monarchy (unless the people want it). He also is totally against violence. He speaks repeatedly against another violent revolution. He doesn't want it to come about by force, but by the will of the majority. This will ensure the future.

Posted by David Yeagley at June 23, 2003 10:20 AM
As far as Reza Pahlavi, I'm sure that he's everything that he should be. I remember reading that, within one year of Khomeini's Islamic "revolution", his minions had killed as many people as the old Shah's Savak had killed in it's entire history.

Iran would be much better off with someone on the Peacock Throne supervising an elected Majles, ensuring not only continuity but adult behavior.

As to the House of Windsor, I'm a long-time and very faithful fan of HRH Prince Charles. As far as his marriage goes, there were two damaged people trussed up together. When one lives ones life in a fishbowl, in a nation with a very active tabloid press, one is apt to be pushed into illogical alliances.

As it is, they had two rather well grounded sons, and their father has always been involved rather intimately in their upbringing. His father, Prince Philip, not known as the model father, has been for William what Lord Louis Mountbatten was for Charles: a mentor and friend. The relations in that family might not be perfect, but they ain't the Kennedys or the Osbornes by any means.

As it happens, Prince Charles has an active social conscience, is very active in public affairs, and might just make a decent king.

As to Diana, almost until the day of her death she was regarded as a feckless creature, what the Brits in London refer to as a "Sloane", for the airy, idle women who frequent the expensive shops in fashionable Sloane Square. The outpouring of grief at her death -- my family and I were living in England when she passed, and watched it unfold on BBC -- was rather disconnected to all previous reality. It was a venting, a dropping of the stiff-upper-lip, emoting on camera the way Americans and others might.

In the public eye, she was a celebrity, little more. Still, she was as good a mother as Charles was a father. He was just photographed at it less often than she was.

The British public has been, bit by bit, been sold on the expense and irrelevance of the House of Windsor. Mostly, the nay-sayers are worthless socialists, newspaper hacks, and euro-wannabees. Without the Windsors, Britain would be little more than...than...well...France.

Heaven forfend!

-- B




Posted by Bodvar at June 22, 2003 09:44 PM
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2004 5:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default.asp?NewsCode=22075&NewsKind=CurrentAffairs

For those of you who had not had a chance to read "Winds of Change", might want to look at this book review.
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 18, 2004 7:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm so proud of HIM Reza Pahlavi. He is everything that is good about us Iranians.
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 19, 2004 1:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Reza Pahalvi is one of the best things to come out of the last 25 years of h.e.l.l.!
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 21, 2004 9:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
dear Reza and Iranian boy, thank you for your beautiful sentences! you sound both like true patriots!

considering our past quarrels thats very kind o you to say, but we all know that you are the most admirable patriot on this site
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 21, 2004 11:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lone live HRH!
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patriot



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PostPosted: Tue Nov 23, 2004 4:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

[size=18]Dear Reza,

Every single Iranian who has a respect for his Majesty Cyrus Reza shah II, is in my view a true Patriot Iranian.

Because the most admirable patriot Iranian is his Majesty Cyrus Reza shah II Pahlavi .

I wonder if you have ever seen the speech of his majesty for being king when he was 21 .

While he was talking about his late father and the marters of Iran who were killed in the jail of mullas during that time in 1979, his voice sounds so sad that you start to cry with his very young sad voice!

Even during his interview in NITV for the first time, I saw his majesty s sad eyes when he talked so proud of his youth time in Iran; when he said that he would never supose that once a small weak country like Iraq would dare to attack his people in Abadan especially! and then he got silent like he wanted to tear up for his people and the destiny of his country which acrossed such tragedy....

I feel the patrionism into the heart of his Majesty Cyrus Reza shah II Pahlavi and I see it in his eyes.....

I love Iran and I defend the history but his Majesty is staying behind Iranian with all kind of believes, thoughts and backgrounds....

Maybe I do not like Iranians who are muslim or believe in none-Royalty but his Majesty was the first one who expressed his condolence for the dead of Dariushe Frouhar who had been fighting against his father for years....

Because his majesty is a true Patriot Iranian whose love for his people is equal....

That s why he is my patern in life....
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/shahineazadi

Payandeh iran
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 23, 2004 9:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

i understand friend Cool
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 26, 2004 6:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The words and quots of His Imperial Majesty Aryamehr, Shahanshah of Iran




I can not help but belive that the oil companies and an organization like the CIA were somehow behind this revolution.

**********
How could I go to a place (USA) that had undone me?
Increasingly, I began to believe that the United States had played a major role in doing just that.


**********
... for the last year and a half, American promises had not been worth very much.
They had already cost me my throne and any further trust in them could well mean my life.


**********
I will make the iranians life standard, equal the europeans life standard in the next 10 years, and in the next 20 years, our life standard will go past the life standard of the american people.


**********
If there are anyones who are going to invade Iran, they must go over 35 million iranians bodies first.


**********
We will not attack any other countries with our strong millitary force.


**********
We have always been first out to be friends with the west and the east.


**********
We no longer want a "lord" for our country.


**********
50 % of our people are under 15 years old.
Imagine what kind of flowering we will have in 10 years.


**********
If you cut my hands I will not sign the independence of Azerbajdjan.


**********
The west wants us to always be poor and hungary.


**********
I want my people to have happines, welfare, security and justice.
To give them that, I will give my life.


**********
My heart bled at what I saw happening to my country


**********
The Communists are waiting for Khomeini to lead my country into chaos and poverty.


**********
Is it necessary to add that Iran has no more reason to tolerate terrorism than the italians have to tolerate the activities of the Red Brigades or the Germans the demands of the Baader Meinhof gang?


**********
I am devoted to my country and that is the most beautifull thing that could happen me.


**********
We have all kind of freedom in our country, except the freedom of betraying our country.


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I wanted nothing for my self.
All my thoughts and goals was to ensure Irans future, so Iran and my people could always live free and independent.
My goal was not a dream or satanic.


**********
Our support is our great value, which is our youths.


**********
I can not help but belive that the oil companies and an organization like the CIA were somehow behind this revolution.


**********
These so called Islamic tribunals are an insult to the exalted principles of the Holy Koran.


**********

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