User:JanisRosamund2929

Several  gentlemen and ladies view an oil company investment as a plot of land or a piece of equipment. However, oil-drilling companies additionally invest in people. Such investments could be paid for with cash, or any one of them might concern the promise of certain advantages. Some Iranians have enjoyed such benefits. Typically, at the very least some of those same individuals have spent time studying in the usa. In most cases, their research has centered on classes that related to engineering. Upon returning to Iran, those same U.S.-educated engineers usually had good-paying jobs.

Unluckily, certain Iranians have envied the good fortune of others. Occasionally those envious guys have tried to devise some type of scheme, one that could possibly be utilized to end the string of successes enjoyed by a fellow-engineer. In fact, the existence of such schemes served as the foundation for the plot line in one or a greater portion of the programs that have been aired by Persian Satellite TV stations.

These kinds of programs have resulted in one Iranian-American to suspect foul play regarding an automobile accident, one that came about within Iran’s borders. That incident occurred in April of 1977. It brought on the death of an Iranian-born man who had lived, studied and worked in the us for longer than ten years.

Obviously, those oil businesses that choose to put money into one or much more of Iran’s oil-filled fields have good reason for satisfying the engineers who speak and comprehend English, but also have an intimate know-how of the Persian culture. However, this fact does not always look very clear to those male workers who have picked to remain in their Native Land. Plus, there are times once a U.S.-educated engineer doesn't accept the veracity of all the Moslem teachings. In short, a few of them belong to a religion various other than Islam.

Which can put a company’s investment at risk. It could result in somebody to pursue the benefits which have been awarded to a very deserving worker, even though a worker whose religious beliefs differ from those of government leaders. One Iranian-American thinks it might clarify the fact that one engineer’s driver called in sick on a certain day in April of 1977. Then while that driverless gentleman sat behind the wheel of a car, he was hit by another vehicle. As a result of that deadly accident, another man sat behind the desk of an American-affiliated firm, one that had invested in attempts to extract Iran’s black gold.