Iranian community of Iranian has horns reactions to US military attacks

Roozbeh FarahaniPour stayed in the Blue-Green Glow of Green RestaastrAustria A.0-Galon Aquarium of 220-Galon Saltwater Waltwater Violence, his voice is expressed.
It was a week in the morning, and the world was forgotten in the last century that American soldiers were flooded, climbing a family beginning nine days before Israel attacking their Middle East.
The anger and hatred of the Uranian State – I have it, but I’m trying to manage it, “FarahaniPour, Delphida Greek Restaurant and two other nearby two things. “I don’t think anything good will come out of this. If, for any reason, the state will be changed, whether we face another Iraq or Afghanistan, or we will see the Balkan state.”
Farahanipour, 53, who was a political activist before fleeing Iran, and explode a series of questions like Shark yellow and made lazy sites in the tank behind. What can be possible for citizens in Iran when the US attack creates a more broad war? What about the loss of Israel’s lives? And Americans too? After such questions, he asked another organized person: “What is another price of petrol tomorrow?”
Such a life in the American American American Ear Angeles, Diaspora that consists of the Iranese majority of Iran outside Iran. FarahaniPour, like Iranese Americans interviewed, explaining the “moods” that mixed in the problem in Iran, which took the three-time Israelite sites there, to join the Israelite desire.
About 141,000 Americans live in La County, according to Iranian Data Dashboard, managed by UCCA CENERS NEW Lessons and Mpumalanga. The public edentecter is Westwood, where the Boulevard neighbor’s neighborhood is covered with the Storefronts covered in the Persian text.
On Sunday morning, the reaction to the conflict was sent to a “teffrangeles” – referred to the capital of Iran – after Iranese emigrants in the mid-1979 Islamic Revolution. In some stores and restaurants, journalists from CNN, Spectrum News and other transfers, Iranian activists. At Tarich Sandwich Shop, known as its flag of a cow, the pre-Irani’s Irani Iranian flag is near the currency register – but no food wants to provide an interview.
“No thanks; [I’m] Not politically politically, “said somebody that was a middle-year-old man with a smile.
Kevan Harris, Professor accompanied by the Sociology Professor in UCLA, said that any US matters of the conflict with Iran had, and it has long been a long time.
“This situation – that seems to be the same – is the case in the way – is something that has been in the imagination:” Harris, American American who wrote the book “Politics and the social status of Iran.” “20 years, this is something that has been discussed constantly.”
Many Edigres found in the circle between a deep dislike and angering government’s irritation, and concern for family members who are left behind. Some in Westerwood was willing to chat.
A woman who asked only Mary, for security in her family in Iran, said she had come out of the past five years and visited her and her husband. The Chicago citizen says last week and the part has been very difficult, as many in his family, including his parents, still live in Tehran. They recently came out of town another place in Iran because of continuous attacks on Israel’s armies.
“I’m talking to them every day,” said Mary, 35.
Sticking outside Shater Abboss Bakery & Market – The owner of its owner and hanging on the pre-Iranian flag – Mary said that she was “positive and anxious.”
“The very confusing feeling,” said. “Some people, happy because they do not like the government – hate government.” Some, he said, upset about the destruction of property and deaths of citizens.
Mary was planning to visit her family in Iran in August, but that was broken down. “Now, I don’t know what to do,” he said.
It was not far from Westwood, Beverly Hills’ Iran’s Iranian Jewish community could have been heard. On Sunday morning, Shahram Javidnia, 62, went near a group of Pro-Israel support group that addressed the “Beverly Hill. One of them removed the flag of Israel.
Javidnia, an Iranian Jew who lives in Beverly’s hills and opposed the government in Iran, saying that you looked for social media, TV and a radio.
“Now as they are in poor place,” he meant the authorized leaders of Iran, “the time Iranals can get up and try to do what is right.”
Javidnia came to the US in 1978 in a teenager, a year before the transition could lead to Kishah and the establishment of Islamic Republic. He stayed in the LA point, and he didn’t go back. He said the return was not something he thought of.
“The place I used in my childhood is not there,” he said. “Nothing.”