As I said, there is a movement. The organization that was set up was mainly to really respond to these necessities. Not only should we bring about awareness within the Iranian nationalities, but also bring awareness within the Persians who are dominant, politically, culturally, and economically. What we have done in that regard is really an answer to the current situation that, yes, we should present an alternative. We should tell the Iranian national minorities it's possible to have some sort of government in Iran that not only respects the rights of people but also is a member of the international community, which respects the rights of others, as well, and becomes a good member of the international community—not like Ahmadinejad, who's representing a great country so badly.
In terms of media in Iran right now, especially satellite has actually helped a lot, even though there's a lot of censorship. Right now there are a lot of satellite stations that are broadcasting to Iran. Not only are there Iranian, or Persian, or Kurdish satellite stations, but also other stations, so people in Iran have a lot of access to information and resources, be it by Internet or by satellite. So there's that.
By the way, government actually moves into houses and confiscates satellite dishes. This is a policy. That's done without warrants. They just get a tip from someone that, yes, this neighbour has this many satellite stations, so they just go on the rooftop and take satellite dishes out and then charge people $100, maybe $200.