A community of 30,000 US Transcriptionist serving Medical Transcription Industry

The Democrats' travel ban no one likes to talk about.


Posted: Feb 2, 2017

Shahram Hadian still remembers what it felt like to be 9 years old, living in an apartment in Atlanta and waiting for his mother to return from Iran. The weeks turned into months, the months into years. He thought he might never see her again. “It’s a part of my story I don’t share a lot,” says Hadian, whose family fled Iran in December 1978 to escape the Ayatollah Khomeini’s uprising against the Shah of Iran. His father was a military man who saw the writing on the wall, as Khomeini was manipulating and agitating against the U.S.-backed Shah, gaining popularity among college students and rural Iranians who saw the country as becoming too secular and too Western. By the spring of 1979, the students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. U.S. President Jimmy Carter acted swiftly and without warning to cut off travel into the U.S. from the Ayatollah’s new Islamic state. Iranian travelers were simply told at airports and at embassies that their visas were revoked. Deal with it. “People don’t know how Carter’s executive order back then affected my family and others,” said Hadian, who converted to Christianity, served in law enforcement and later became pastor of a church near Spokane. He ran unsuccessfully for governor of Washington state in 2012. President Trump’s executive order bars citizens of Iran and six other countries – Iraq, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen – from entering the U.S. for the next 90 days. The decision sparked immediate protests at airports across the U.S. by well-funded groups on the political left. That caused Hadian to revisit his own experience under President Carter, who received zero pushback at the time from the media, the political elites in Washington or the liberal left in Hollywood. Hassan Rohani during prayers, behind the founder of the Islamic Revolution, Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini Hassan Rohani during prayers, behind the founder of the Islamic Revolution, Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini “We came to the states on a visa because we had to leave Iran so quickly. My dad had been in the military under the Shah and sensed things were shifting. My mom was a schoolteacher in Iran,” he recounted. But his mother lacked only about nine months for her retirement pension, so she returned to Iran in summer of 1979 to finish up her work. While she was there, the revolution kicked into high gear, the U.S. embassy was seized that summer and U.S. hostages were taken. Hadian’s mother was able to escape Iran by getting a tourist visa to visit a friend in Spain, figuring she would hop a plane for the U.S. and reunite with her husband and children in Atlanta. But when she got to the U.S. embassy in Spain to get her passport stamped, she received the shock of her life. “She’s is notified her visa has been revoked,” Hadian said. “We’re in Atlanta and we find out it’s been revoked. Now my dad is scrambling saying what do we do?” He said there was no news coverage like today. “It took a lot of digging to figure out what was going on with,” he said. “It was not in the news at all.” After a few weeks his mother left Spain for Germany, hoping the U.S. embassy there might be more accommodating. No luck. “It didn’t matter to these people. My dad explained it to them, pleaded with them at the embassy, but they didn’t care that the rest of our family was already in America. “So all this talk about separating families, we went through all that, and it was not for just 90 days.” Hadian had just turned 9, his mother was stuck in Germany. “My dad was afraid she’d never get out, so she gets an apartment in Germany,” he said. “My sister goes to visit her there, but we’re back in Atlanta.” Hadian’s father at that point started shopping for a country that would accept his entire family. Canada was that country. All that was required was to establish a 90-day residency, “and literally on day 91 we went to the embassy in Ottawa, and they approved her status, and she flew in from Frankfurt, Germany, about a week later in fall of 1981.” “We had to emigrate to another country, because they would not let her in that whole time Carter was in office,” he said. And the family’s problems didn’t stop there. They had to drive back to Atlanta to get their belongings. Even with Canadian green cards in hand, they still were not waived through the border. “We still had a hard time coming across the tunnel from Ontario into Michigan,” he recalls. “I vividly remember we had caught a bus, and they would not let us cross in because they thought we were moving back to the states. And my dad said, ‘No no, no, we’re only getting our stuff.’ They made him leave his luggage in Canada, wait at a hotel in Canada for about a week, then made us buy a round-trip bus ticket back to Canada.” In Atlanta, the family loaded belongings into a U-Haul and drove back to the U.S.-Canadian border. They were detained again for several hours. Then they settled in Vancouver. “We would have never left the states if it were not for this ordeal of my mother not being able to join us,” Hadian says. While he was living in Atlanta, his father left him with an older cousin, who had also fled Iran, while he went out to find work. The cousin sexually abused young Shahram. No hard feelings against U.S. or Carter Despite the traumatic experience of being separated from his mother and abused by his cousin, Hadian is not bitter against the United States or President Carter for revoking his mother’s visa and banning travel from Iran. “I went through trauma. But now I’m listening to all these bleeding-hearts in the media saying these 100 people were detained by Trump’s travel ban for two-and-a-half hours at the airport, and how they were scared and inconvenienced,” he said. “You want to talk about inconvenience? You want to keep the debate on an emotional level? I’ve got a pretty emotional story, being separated from my mother for two-and-a-half years. Let’s talk about the life-altering situations nobody is talking about that resulted from Carter’s decision and what happened in 1979-81.” Unlike in 1980, the media would rather focus on the emotional aspect of families being temporarily separated than on questions of national security posed by unvetted travelers from danger zones. “When we were taken off that bus and detained for hours, I remember watching my dad cry,” he said. “These were things we had to go through. I don’t hate America for it, and I understand this ban and the enhancement of our vetting process is absolutely necessary because we’re in different days, when we have an enemy coming in and no process in place to stop them.” The right decision In retrospect, Hadian’s parents made the right decision to leave Iran in December 1978. By the summer of 1979, Khomeini achieved total power. Military men with loyalty to the Shah were arrested, and many of them were never seen again. The mullahs rewrote the Iranian Constitution turning Iran into a totalitarian theocracy. “We had relatives in Iran selling all our stuff over there. We left Iran in a rush. We had property, cars, we had stuff. We left it all,” he said. “Dad was borrowing money from my mom’s sister’s husband and he was doing everything he could to provide for us and my mom who had no way of working on a tourist visa in Germany.” Once settled in Vancouver, Hadian’s father started a restaurant business. Hadian was six months short of his 12th birthday when he was reunited with him mom. “I remember seeing my mom for first time in two and a half years,” he said. “It was an emotional reunion. I get choked up now thinking about it. My dad wasn’t the most affectionate, he was a hard-nosed military man, and so I missed my mom and that deeply impacted me, so I just cried and cried when I saw my mom because I didn’t realize how much it impacted me to be separated from her all that time.” Returning to America, becoming a Christian Hadian applied for a U.S. green card in 1991. Seven years later in 1998, at the age of 27, he was granted the card and returned to the states after 18 years in Canada. He moved back to the Atlanta area and worked as a tennis coach in Duluth, while living in nearby Lawrenceville, Georgia. It was there that he began learning about Christianity and questioning his Muslim faith. “I moved back to Atlanta to work, which is where I became a Christian. It’s interesting how the Lord took me back there, to the source of the pain, and brought healing, and revealed Himself to me in such a powerful way.” As he looks at the world and all that has happened between 1979 and now, he sees the reawakening of the global Islamic movement. In many ways that reawakening started with the Ayatollah Khomeini overthrowing the Shah of Iran and seizing the U.S. Embassy. Islam had declared war on the West, and the United States was seen as the head of the snake that needed to be crushed – crushed for its support of Israel and for its perceived domination of Muslim lands. And now a refugee crisis has been thrown on top of the already strained relations between Islam and the West. The West refuses to acknowledge it is in a war with radical Islam, but Islam is not so confused. Its imams, mullahs and sheikhs from Mecca to Tehran and increasingly in Minnesota, Michigan and Virginia, are openly identifying Israel and the U.S. as enemies of Islam. U.S. Christians largely asleep about Islam The Christian community is largely asleep and devoid of accurate information about Islam, Hadian says. “To me right now, our biggest struggle is within the Christian community. It’s all in. You’re either all in for the refugees or you’re nothing,” he said. “We need to expose the groups like the evangelical World Relief, the Lutheran Social Services and Catholic Charities. That’s an issue we’re not talking about. “These church-related organizations are getting close to $2 billion a year between them, and the biggest bulk of funding is coming from the federal government,” he said. “And we need to expose the fact that their contract with the U.S. State Department forbids them from proselytizing the refugees. You’re not evangelizing them. You’re more worried about let’s feed them, clothe them and get them a translator and a tutor than about how we reach out to them with the gospel. “If we don’t figure out how to do that, they will not assimilate. And they will end up attacking us like in Europe. We’re not haters. We’re not wanting to have a lifetime ban, but tell the other side of the story.” After the Muslim bombing of the St. Mark’s Coptic church in Egypt, there was no weeping in America for the Christians, notes Hadian. “I think it was Tucker Carlson on Fox News who said, ‘I don’t hear Christian pastors talking about the persecution of the Christians.'” In the 35 years since the Refugee Act of 1980 was signed by President Jimmy Carter, there has never been a year in which more Muslims were accepted as U.S. refugees than last year. More than 46,000 Muslim refugees entered the U.S. as refugees in fiscal 2016, with 12,600 of them coming from Syria. Less than 1 percent of those Syrian refugees were Christian. “It is hypocrisy and selective outrage by the left,” he said. “They’re outraged we’re putting a temporary ban on seven Muslim countries, but not outraged by the effective ban on Christians from Syria. They are running for their lives and can’t even go to the safe zones without being attacked by Muslims.” Hadian is planning to make his first visit to Israel in March as part of a pastors’ group hosted by Christians United for Israel. “They sat me down and kind of sheepishly told me that if your passport says you were born in Iran, expect to be detained for about four-and-a-half hours, and I’m like, ‘OK, no problem. I understand given the security of their country and that they don’t trust the Iranian government. I’m expecting it; I’m not offended. But we’ve lost our collective minds in this country. Why should I get offended that the Israeli government is doing its job? Is it my right to go to Israel, or is it a privilege? “So they were like, ‘Expect to be extremely vetted,’ and I’m like, ‘OK, vet away.'” Yet, liberal Western Christians are in many cases so thin-skinned they can’t even hear the truth, let alone receive it. “Christ said, ‘I’m sending you out to be as gentle as doves but as wise as serpents.’ They are refusing to be as wise as serpents, and that’s why they’re falling victim to the lies and the deceptions of Islam,” Hadian said. “They are sacrificing themselves to Islam, just like in Europe.” Because of the propensity of modern-day Western Christians to fall into the trap of becoming “snowflakes” and actually side with the left and Islam, Hadian believes Trump will have his work cut out on many flash-point issues – including Muslim immigration, moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem and declaring the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization. “I’m telling people the darkest days are still ahead of us. Trump is getting serious about this. He’s got enough of an ego if he decides to do something, I don’t think anything can sway him, and that’s exactly what you need to go against this monster,” Hadian said. “The Muslim Brotherhood groups, like CAIR and ISNA, are going to use the liberal left as useful idiots. That’s why we see women wearing hijabs in solidarity with Muslims when they don’t know what the hijab means for Muslim women living in Muslim countries. You want to know what a hijab means? Go ask a woman in Iran. It’s pure stupidity on their part, but CAIR will cover for them and say the hijab has nothing to do with domination of women. The toughest days are still ahead of us, and it is going to be an all-out war. At some point, as Christians, we need to go about understanding the spirit of Islam and where it comes from.” At its heart, Islam is made up of an anti-Christ spirit, Hadian said. “It denies Him as the Son, and it denies his Father. So what do you have left? What you are seeing is a deception,” he said. He believes the next step in the Islamization of America is a massive growth in conversions. Young, secular women who have rejected Christianity will flock to Islam. “How many liberal Christians are going to get converted to Islam after going down the road of Chrislam for a while?” he said. “So really the only explanation we can come to as believers is a spiritual one. It is a blindness, a deception at its root. But I just sure hope this administration goes full force ahead against the Muslim Brotherhood.” ;

"I think it was Tucker Carlson on Fox News who - said, 'I don't hear Christian

[ In Reply To ..]
pastors talking about the persecution of the Christians.'”

That is the truth. All you hear about is Muslims.

U.S. Christians are largely asleep about Islam.

Similar Messages:


Why Americans Should Never Be Allowed To TravelJan 12, 2010
The following are actual stories provided by travel agents:I had someone ask for an aisle seats so that his or her hair wouldn't get messed up by being near the window.A client called in inquiring about a package to Hawaii. After going over all the cost info, she asked, "Would it be cheaper to fly to California and then take the train to Hawaii?"I got a call from a woman who wanted to go to Capetown. I started to explain the length of the flight and the passport information when she interru ...

Advice? Wanting To Take A Travel JobDec 18, 2010
I have been offered a job as a fashion merchandiser for a group that tours.  This would mean I would have to tour with them.  I would be responsible for negotiating with the suppliers for their items they sell at concerts and online plus set up the displays at shows, etc.  I am being offered 4 to 6 times what I make doing transcription plus my airfare and hotel would be included at all times. I got the job because my boyfriend is in the group and another man in the group's wi ...

Question For Travel-savvy PostersApr 03, 2012
I have not flown in years....scarily, not since the availability of the internet, have I traveled except for driving in my car. I'm in the process of planning my vacation of a lifetime, which is traveling to the east coast (Maine, to be specific) for 10 days of rest and relaxation. Now, here's where my ignorance shows.  Can anyone tell me the best way on the internet to track down flight information?  I have no idea how much to put aside for travel expenses, and I've ...

Rebuplican Stand On Trump's Travel Ban.Feb 01, 2017
See link below. ...

Travel Bans Have Been Issued For Certain Texans,Oct 17, 2014
I've heard it all. ...

State Dept Warns Americans Against Travel To Iran.Jan 29, 2016
I can hardly believe Obama screwed up this badly. ...

Travel Bans Used With Good Success To Control Outbreaks Of Diseases In AnimalsOct 17, 2014
It's called a "stand-still" order, and it's one of the FIRST steps taken by agricultural authorities with the very first or even suspected discovery of a case of certain animal diseases.  No animals are allowed to be transported in or out of the "stand-still" order area.  Now, I'm quite sure that human epidemiologists are perfectly aware both of this practice and of its effectiveness.  So there's something else going on here when it comes to implementing trave ...

Who Likes All Their Inlaws And How? OMGFeb 15, 2010
Oh my DH, the Dad and Brother, in which everyone who is family just pats him on the back so much and  everyone convinced he is as good as sliced bread.  This guy, while I am on unemployment, pays for his son's fishing trip, and "feels soooo good when his daughters come to him for money" that makes me feel good.  He will even "pay for (My daughters) college" if her dad, my ex, will not.  Well we all know where the money comes from he offers is fro ...

GWB Likes Michelle ObamaMar 02, 2017
The last True Republican President seems quite fond of the former first lady. ...

Gay Jewish Immigrant Who Likes Black MenFeb 03, 2017
I didn't know who this was before the riots at Berkeley the other night. Then I saw this young man on Tucker Carlson's show last night. What a bright, well-spoken entertaining young man. I'm going to keep my eye on him. I haven't read his writings, but I bet they're just as fascinating. This youtube link is about 15 minutes long, but it is enjoyable! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vx-_7XfAU9E ...

MODERATOR! Why Are The Likes And Dislikes Disabled????Nov 17, 2015
I've been trying to leave 'likes' and 'dislikes' since Saturday but am unable to do so. Will there no longer be any way to "comment" by those choices? If not, why?It's a way for a lot of MTs to be able to voice their opinion without a reply because they may be working or about to work, or just don't have an answer but may agree or disagree with the original poster. ...

Hope Everyone Likes Their Personal Information Shared With Jun 20, 2013
Not only will the IRS and Dept. of Health and Human Servies have this info, but the FBI, DHS, and any other agency they feel should have it.  ________________________ A new 253-page Obamacare rule issued late Friday requires state, federal and local agencies as well as health insurers to swap the protected personal health information of anybody seeking to join the new health care program that will be enforced by the Internal Revenue Service. Protected health information, or PHI ...

HGTV: Hillary Clinton Likes 'Love It Or List It'Nov 22, 2012
I enjoy decorating and can see how, if I were trying to bring peace to the Middle East, watching others tackle the big problem of how to decorate around a badly placed window might be relaxing. Even reassuring. Lots of problems can be solved. :) Hillary Clinton likes 'Love It or List It' Tweet 13 Comments ( ) By CAITLIN MCDEVITT |  11/12/12 7:59 AM EST AP Close Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is big fan of HGTV, accordi ...

Guess Who Likes The GOP’s 20-week Abortion Ban? Women.Aug 05, 2013
[For conservative antiabortionists, I've always said, including here, that antiabortionists could always have saved many of the unborn lives they said they cared about if they'd joined with others to roll abortion dates back, instead of supporting villification and divisiveness. Maybe never too late to change strategy?] From the Washington Post: The war over the “war on women” rages on these days, as Republicans seek to tar Democrats with the scandals of Anthony ...

The TalkOct 06, 2011
Anybody watch The Talk?  Do you like it now that Holly Robinson Peete and Leah Remini have been fired?  I thought it was great when it first started, the chemistry between the ladies was so fun.  Leah was over the top sometimes but she was funny, interesting and brought a lot to the table, same for Holly.  I can't stand watching it anymore.  Molly Shannon is just plain weird the way she talks with her claw hands.  The woman who sits in Leah's seat has abso ...

Who To Talk With?Mar 13, 2014
I do not attend a church, have no friends close around to talk with and no family left, all deceased. I do not want to come here and discuss my issues, have in the past and that turns into a free for all. I do have things i would like to talk with others about, a sounding board but who can you talk to if you fall into the above categories? Any suggestions? ...

Okay, Let's Talk About The Important Apr 28, 2011
Oprah and fund raisers. Who wants to start? ...

Obama :: They Talk About Me Like A Dog ..Sep 07, 2010
Has President Obama been listening to a lot of Jimi Hendrix lately?  With just under two months to go before Election Day, Obama kicked off the fall campaign season Monday with an aggressive speech targeting Republicans. But it was an off-script moment in the speech that's attracted the most attention, as Obama accused his GOP critics of talking about him "like a dog.""Some powerful interests who had been dominating the agenda in Washington for a very long time -- and they're not ...

Let's Talk Issues....smAug 01, 2012
Since it has been brought up that libs supposedly don't want to talk issues, let's do just that... Issue 1: Foreign policy: What exactly is it that Romney would do different from Obama in the middle east? Issue 2: Besides trying to kill Obamacare and therefore healthcare for tons of people, as well as lowering taxes for the rich, what is it exactly that Romney would do to improve the economy? I'm assuming pubs have the answers to these questions as they are so sure that Romn ...

Doctors Trying To Talk Down To Me, Really?Mar 19, 2013
I am wondering if others run into what I have or is this just me who seems to have a bull's eye on them and others think they can say what they want and I will not respond. Anyway, this morning I went back to the ophthalmologist, had cataract surgery about 3 weeks ago. I noticed the first visit the day after surgery he seemed a little put off like he might have been a little huffy but nothing else happened that time. This morning we were talking and I was telling him about not being able to ...

I Understand Y'all Don't Like The Talk About (sm)Mar 29, 2013
the Obamas excessive, over-the-top vacations; so here is an article on Biden's third vacation of the year.    Link ...

Dtr Trying To Talk Me Into Getting Pedicure.Apr 04, 2013
I DO NOT have pretty feet and am pretty self conscious about doing this.  Not even sure what to expect.  Anyone here have them before?    ...

What With All This Talk About Guns Did Y'all Know (sm)May 02, 2013
that while Newtown parents were appearing with Obama as props in his push for gun control and violating our rights, that when offered a budget that would have them pay for armed security at schools, they rejected it.  Interesting, huh?  They want us to pay for it, but they're the ones with the murdered children and they don't want to pay.  Something definitely wrong here. ...

Let's Talk VacuumsAug 30, 2013
I currently have a Dyson Animal which is about 7 tears old or so.  It's great on carpet and I have no issues there BUT I don't have carpet anymore. The Dyson just doesn't do that well on the bare floor.  I have tile floors and a boat load of cats, hence a boatload of cat hair. I also really miss the ability to clean unde things easily which is tough with the upright.    I'm looking at canister vacuums again. Anyone have one that they absolutely love that ...

Talk About Out Of Touch!Apr 04, 2014
He's right about one thing - most likely it won't pass.  Somehow, though, I doubt he's the only one in Congress that feels this way, the poor, poor things! http://www.wtop.com/120/3596224/Moran-174K-a-year-is-not-enough   ...

Talk About Fun Times...May 30, 2014
Press Laughs at Psaki Saying Obama ‘Doesn’t Give Himself Enough Credit’ on His Foreign Policy... ...

Talk About The ... Hitting The Fan. This Is ReallyAug 01, 2015
I have just heard today that the Navy plans to bring charges against Lt. Cmdr. Timothy White, who fired shots at a Hixson man who on July 16 rammed through a gate at the facility on Amnicola Highway and killed four Marines and a sailor. Where the shots fired by the commander was gun free zone. ...

Let's Talk About QatarJun 07, 2017
Beyond the black and white.   Why would Saudi Arabia choose to banish them?  Oil, money?   Saudis lowered price on oil, which we have enjoyed for several years...but not everyone has.  The Saudis did this to kill the competition, to dominate...and raise prices.  Sort of like new grocery store, seems so cheap, eliminates competition, raises prices.   http://money.cnn.com/2014/10/30/investing/cheap-oil-prices-hurt-iran-venezuela-saudi-arabia/index.html   (BT ...

Now, If Anyone Dares, We Could Talk About Trump!Apr 01, 2011
I think I'm off for the weekend too. I don't think I can take more of this today. I didn't make myself sick, but my jaws hurt from laughing. ...

Straight Talk Smartphones Sep 26, 2016
I need a phone just to connect to the internet on my home wifi. Straight Talk has phones you can get for free that are activated when you purchase a 30-day service plan. I really don't need to be able to talk, text, or use their data. Is anyone familiar with these phones? What happens when you do not purchase another 30-day plan? Would the phone still be able to be connected to my wifi or would it somehow be deactivated? I understand I would not be able to make phone calls, text, ...