Tom’s
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(group member since Jun 14, 2009)
Tom’s
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from the Q&A with author Tom Gabbay group.
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You're right - sorry about that. Here's the corrected link"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tom-gab...

I just posted a blog on the subject at The Huffington Post. You can find it at:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tom-gabbay...
Please leave any thoughts you have, pro or con, in the comments section.


In fact, that was exactly where I started with this book. What if one of the most beloved films of all time was based on an incident in Jack Teller's life? And what was the real story, before Hollywood got its hands on it? If you look at the last couple of paragraphs in the book it drops a clue about that. Hint: Julius Epstein was a real screenwriter.

Sure. It's open to pretty much anything.

You make some excellent points. Scary times, indeed, but like all crises, full of opportunity. We may be witnessing the beginning of the end of Islamic fundamentalist rule in Iran, where it all began.

I'm not an expert on Iran by any means, but while researching my novel, The Tehran Conviction, I came to understand the country's recent history, and thus the politics of a place that we in the West sometime see as unreasonable and irrational. The CIA-sponsored overthrow of the democratically elected government in 1953 still haunts the country. They were a fledgling democracy at the time, trying to achieve independence from the outside world. They trusted the United States because America had gone through the same process. They, too, had made a Declaration of Independence from Britain. But that trust was betrayed. The oil was too important and the Soviet Union too close to take chances with democracy in what was seen as an unstable country.
Shah Reza Pahlavi was installed and the absolute power he held for 26 years was very often abused. When, in 1979, the people had had enough, there was turmoil in the streets much like we're seeing today. But the democratic forces in the country had been weakened from years of oppression, so the Fundamentalist clergy prevailed in the power struggle that took place when the Shah fled. The Islamic Revolution was born.
Now, 30 years after that revolution, and 56 years after the coup, it seems to me that Iran has a chance at moving beyond the backward-looking philosophy of its religious leaders. If that's true, it could be a "game changer" in the Middle East and beyond.
This video provides a sense of what is happening:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3er0fl...