بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
الحمد لله
واخيراً انكشف الزنديق الخميني فوالده اسمه ويليام ريتشارد ويلامسون، من مواليد مدينة بريستول البريطانية من أصل إنجليزي وأمه هندية كشميرية .
وقد كان يضحك على عوام الشيعة مثل ما يضحك عليهم الأن السكستاني او (( ابوصويلح القادم ))
وانظروا أخواني الى صورته قبل اللحية قبل أن يكون من أهل البيت وبعد أن ترك لحيته ليصبح من
أهل البيت ، فهؤلاء التماسيح من المجوس واخوانهم اليهود اجتمعوا ليستمتعوا بعقول سذج العرب من
الشيعة لنهب أموالهم بحجة الخمس والأستمتاع بنسائهم بحجة المتعة .
وليست هذه حادثه جديده فقد ادعى الكوراني الشيعي المعروف بالكذب أن الملكه اليزابث من اهل البيت
Root of Islamist Fascism:
freedom , 03.05.2004 04:37
* * * * *
Khomeini’s real father, William Richard Williamson, was born in Bristol, England, in 1872 of British parents and lineage.
Khomeini’s real father, William Richard Williamson, was born in Bristol, England
The Clerics Lash Back As Iranians Question Their Legitimacy
Iran - By Alan Peters, Contributing Editor
Vigorous attacks on the credibility and legitimacy of the clerical leadership in Iran have continued to mount since the February 20, 2004, Majlis (Parliament) elections, which, despite the removal of so-called “reformists” from the ballot, still failed to attract a meaningful voter turnout. The elections showed the extent of electoral fraud to which the clerics were forced to turn, highlighting their tenuous hold on power. There are now signs that the underpinnings of the clerics will be attacked still further, especially as evidence is now available showing even that their claims to religious authority are open to question.
The late Soviet leader Joseph Stalin once said: "It's not who votes, but who counts the votes", a maxim which has found resonance in the February 20, 2004, Iranian national elections. A substantial cadre of ballot officials, directly answer- able to the hard-line clerical leadership of Supreme Leader Ali Hoseini-Khamene, “counted” the votes and issued results which almost nobody in Iran or abroad really believed to be accurate. 2
The credibility of the February 20, 2004, elections was essentially further under- mined when observers saw already half-filled ballot boxes "stuffed with fake votes" transferred into polling stations on election day, and artificial crowds created by reducing the number of available ballot boxes at each location to create long lines and the appearance of a large turnout. This deception was bolstered by “rent-a-crowd” groups of black “chadored” women who were called into action when any one of the 300 foreign journalists, covering the elections, appeared at a polling station.