"I cannot wait for the west to fall"
Look at the state of her
She literally has no idea the hell that awaits her if Islam took over
It's scary how thick these people are
Iranians from inside Iran:
"This is a historic moment. From Iran, thank you, Trump, and King Reza Pahlavi. Thank you, Benjamin Netanyahu and Elon Musk. Long live Iran. Am Yisrael Chai."
President Trump: “If Iran starts killing people like they have in the past, I think they're gonna get hit very hard by the United States.”
Since President Trump said this, the Islamic Republic of Iran has killed over 60 unarmed Iranians.
What a sight. We're holding our breath over the terrible risks these monumentally brave people are running. But my goodness, doesn't it make your heart soar.
We’re only a few days in, but 2026 already feels like a year of potentially momentous shifts and changes.
Of course, much of the global news cycle has focused on developments in Venezuela, following the US intervention to remove dictator Nicolas Maduro from power. Toppling Maduro seemed like the easy part – almost too easy. Managing a just and peaceful transition to democracy and economic renewal is the hard part, and things are not looking great. But leaving all public muscle-flexing aside, Venezuela is still a sovereign nation, and those with a clear popular mandate to lead, notably the widely recognised winners of the rigged 2024 elections, must be given the opportunity to do so. Venezuelans deserve to be free and to prosper – on their own terms.
Similarly, the US campaign to annex Greenland – whether by economic means or by force - has startled America’s allies, foreshadowing greater rifts to emerge in the coming months. It’s a move that threatens to unravel NATO and do irreparable damage to vital strategic relationships the US has spent decades to build. The truth is that President Trump already holds many cards: he can increase his US military presence in Greenland to Cold War levels if he’s inclined to do so, and there is openness by both Greenland and Denmark to deepen commercial ties with the US, including the extraction of natural resources. None of this requires a land grab like the one being bandied about now. Who treats a loyal ally like that?
While the Greenland fracas is creating headlines, I wish the same attention were given to the wave of popular protests that have been spreading rapidly across Iran over the last few days. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians have been taking to the streets in frustration over the dreadful state of their nation’s economy and the crushing impact of soaring inflation resulting in dramatic cost-of-living increases. The discontent is reminiscent of the “Woman. Life. Freedom.” uprising spurred by the brutal police murder of Kurdish-Iranian Mahsa Amini in 2022, but it is also now a struggle for survival and dignity. Angrier than perhaps ever before, ordinary Iranians have had enough – of a government incapable of governing, and of a totalitarian establishment that seems to care more about regional power dynamics than about its own people.
The corrupt and self-serving mullah regime, not known for empathy, nor for its economic prowess, is responding to the protests in the way it always does – with more repression and violence. As far as we know, the crackdown on demonstrators has already cost dozens of lives, likely even more. Yet the more Khamenei and his cabal prioritise self-preservation and the defence of an untenable status quo, the stronger this revolution will grow.
I have no doubt that the masses in the streets, led and buoyed by a fearless generation of young women and men, will ultimately prevail. To paraphrase Rumi, one of Persia’s most beloved poets: Iranians know they were born with wings, and so they are no longer willing to crawl through life. We should use every opportunity to put a spotlight on Iran, amplify the voices of dissent and document the regime’s crimes.
BREAKING — IRAN:
Prominent Iranian athlete and soccer icon of Kurdish descent, Voria Ghafouri, former captain of Iran’s national team, has shown support for the call to action of Iran’s exiled Shah and National Leader, Reza Shah Pahlavi II [@PahlaviReza]. The Kurds are pro-Shah.