Non-Iranians screaming ‘No War with Iran’ while the Islamic Republic slaughters protesters, executes kids, & threatens the world? You’re not anti-war, you’re pro-regime, siding with the tyrants occupying my country. This is offensive & heartbreaking.
#Iran#ThankYouPresidentTrump
We know what the regime in Iran is doing to its own people — and I don’t think we talk about it nearly enough. The Iranian people are suffering under a brutal authoritarian regime that crushes dissent, silences opposition, and rules through fear and violence.
I’ve said repeatedly that the free world needs to pay attention to what’s happening inside Iran and stand with the people fighting for liberty and freedom. Too often, the focus shifts away from the Iranian people themselves. My position is simple: support the people of Iran in their struggle against tyranny.
In this clip, I discuss the ongoing crisis in Iran, the failures of world leadership to confront the regime, and why freedom movements across the Middle East matter to every believer in liberty.
To watch the entire episode:
Rumble: https://t.co/kCVPRLXJwT
YouTube: https://t.co/PxGNZvLeNk
HAPPENING NOW: Iran’s Exiled Crown Prince @PahlaviReza joins our @DashaBurns to discuss the latest develops in the conflict with Iran and his vision for what comes next.
Tune into a live taping of #TheConversation at @POLITICOLive’s Security Summit 👇 https://t.co/Y5V8cLzaJj
Ehsan Afarashteh
36 years old
Master's degree graduate in civil engineering and an elite in networking and IT
Originally from Isfahan and raised in Tehran.
Executed in Iran by the regime on unproven spying charges
The 38th execution during the 75 day Internet blackout
Erfan Shokourzadeh, a 29-year-old master’s student in aerospace engineering, was executed this morning by Islamic regime terrorists under the cover of an internet blackout.
Innocent. Alone.
We need to correct the record.
The Starlink story was a cover.
Hesam Alaeddin was not murdered just for seeking a connection to the free world. He was murdered in an armed cartel robbery.
The actual motive was cryptocurrency. Hesam used Starlink to bypass the regime's digital cage so he could trade freely. He held massive digital assets, and the IRGC knew it. Because their foreign financial networks are being systematically choked off, the terrorist Islamic Regime is completely bankrupt. They have only one revenue stream left to fill their deficits: plundering the Iranian people.
They targeted the Alaeddin family because they were the perfect mark: deeply wealthy (their great-uncle owns the famous Alaeddin Mall), religious, but fearlessly and openly anti-regime.
Here is the exact timeline of how this slaughterhouse operates:
Weeks ago, dozens of security forces raided the Kamranieh apartment of Hesam’s brother, Hamid, using "Starlink" as the excuse. Hamid resisted. They shot him in the leg and dragged him to the hospital in handcuffs.
When Hesam and the family went to the hospital to check on him, the agents set a trap. They demanded everyone's phones and belongings as a condition for the visit. When the visit ended, they returned everything—*except* Hesam’s phone and his belongings. They wanted his digital wallets.
Then they took Hesam.
They dragged him into the dark and broke him under brutal interrogation and torture. Later, they brought him back and dumped him in the lobby of his own building. Right there, in front of his twin little daughters, they beat him with batons.
When the neighbors killed their lights and started chanting against the regime in the dark, the executioners screamed back: *"Everything you have is from the charity of the regime!"* The clash escalated. They dragged Hesam away one last time.
The next phone call his family received was to come and collect his corpse.
They are out of money, and they are openly executing citizens to liquidate their assets. They are not a government.
They are a bankrupt terrorist syndicate robbing the hostages at gunpoint.
My friend and I spoke about the IRGC doing this to the Iranian people, and we were called “paranoid” and “brainwashed”
The fact of the matter is, that for an Iranian, something as simple as using the Internet, or speaking out about the regime, can be a death sentence.