Replies (15)
Usrael rain bombs down on your people, but the grim reaper is the guy who cut off the internet?
You’re missing the reality Iranians live with.
Yes, bombs are terrifying. But you’re speaking from a place where you don’t risk prison for what you say online. In Iran, people are jailed, tortured, or even executed for dissent.
The regime shuts down the internet for weeks to isolate the country and hide what it’s doing. Even writing a reply like this online could put someone in Iran at risk of prosecution.
And the strikes you’re referring to were aimed at IRGC commanders and regime officials, not civilians. Civilian deaths are always tragic, but they are not the stated target.
So when many Iranians say the regime is the real threat, it’s because we’ve lived under it for more than 40 years.
Is it true that a girls school was targeted?
5000 free starlink supplied by cia - signup n grab urs instead of complaining shit FREE FROM ELON
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prison in usa france uk too - just for posting online far worst that persia
trump said they reverse engineer lockhit martini + rayteon tomahawk
there is state called colorado in iran with city name boulders near caspian sea where they missile was made so it was internal massacre by reversing n control of centcom :Sweat:
ICE is building same now for all 2~3million people of persian decent
cancel greencards toss them there soon
u really THINK STRIKE using live camera SAT geo location on missile at AT HOSPITAL - UNIVERSITY - PHARMA - DAIRY - RESEARCH institute is targeting IRGC commanders family n homes? so u need become sacrificing civilian to prove that yankees missiles can do collateral damage
The cost of a Tomahawk missile is approximately $3.6 million per unit as of 2026.
cheapest missile is not below 100K
there is oppressive regimes in africa haiti burma ... many places - why is usa NOT LIBERATING them ? why only iran ? it has what ?
so where is the big gang to protect me from being excluded from the job market like is normalized in australia to protect the corporate cartels, or the education system there that during my time in school was actively destroying my ability to enter higher education and do computer science?
where's the big guns for me?
where do you draw the line between the mischief of one state and the mischief of another? what is the difference between destroying your livelyhood for 50 years versus killing you when life expectency says you have another 50 years? what is the difference between 10% theft of the fruit of your labor versus slavery, the 100% theft of the fruit of your labor? not a slippery slope fallacy. it's a lesser degree, but it's still a crime.
I acknowledge that many democracies have failed their people in different ways — education systems, job markets, economic opportunity, and more.
But in the end it often comes down to the choices people make. Some leave in search of better opportunities and freedom. Some stay and resist and sometimes pay for it with their blood. Others choose to conform and survive within the system.
The report about a girls’ school is tragic and heartbreaking — our hearts bled hearing it. But it still isn’t clearly verified, and the IRGC has a history of lying about major incidents, including the Ukrainian passenger flight they shot down with missiles. Situations like this need proper clarification before conclusions are drawn.
You might also hear about strikes hitting educational or research facilities. Some of that may be true. But it’s important to understand that in Iran much of the country’s infrastructure is controlled or infiltrated by the IRGC. Universities, research centers, and industrial facilities are often militarized or used for military-linked programs by the state apparatus.
That’s part of the reality of living in a country where a military‑political organization like the IRGC has deep control over civilian institutions.
To be honest, the more I try to explain it, the harder it is to convey how many Iranians see this. But let me put it simply: it’s not like we don’t understand geopolitics. The U.S. has never acted purely for the sake of the Iranian people; oil and strategic interests have always played a role. Decades ago Western powers shaped Iran’s politics around oil, and today others like China benefit from it. Maybe tomorrow it will be someone else.
Ordinary people are almost always excluded from these geopolitical games.
But for Iranians the point is simple: what we ultimately want is freedom. The regime has become the number one enemy of our people and culture. and sooner or later it will fall — either through change from within or through the will of the Iranian people.
fyi, keyboards don't have em-dash keys
typical hedging, empty statement from claude prompted by an amateur.
yeah, choices people make - like not cheering for bombings of civillian targets. that would be a good start. iranians are responsible for routing around the nonsense of the IRGC. maybe you should look at history to learn about how they got into that position also, because you might be surprised.
also, the amount of uranium that usa is standing over Iran to take is enough to run 5% of the global shipping transport from a counttry with 1.1% of the global population. claude can give you those figures if you ask.
I don’t mind using AI to help polish wording or organize my thoughts — it’s just another tool. The ideas are still mine. If you disagree with the point, that’s fine, but it’s better to argue the substance rather than throwing insults or acting like using a tool somehow invalidates the argument. Mocking people doesn’t make you right, and acting smart doesn’t automatically make someone smart either.
You also say Iranians should just “route around the IRGC.” That ignores what the power structure in Iran actually looks like. The IRGC isn’t just a military branch — it controls large parts of the economy, intelligence services, media, and major state institutions. Challenging it isn’t an abstract idea; for civilians it can mean prison, torture, or death. Many people have already paid that price during protests over the years.
As for your uranium point: if the goal were simply to take Iran’s uranium resources, the easiest path would be lifting sanctions and trading with Iran, not maintaining decades of confrontation. States usually pursue resources through contracts and markets.
The uranium argument itself is largely speculative geopolitics, not the central driver of most tensions around Iran.
None of that changes the reality that many Iranians live under a system that jails dissent, shuts down the internet, and suppresses protests. Pointing that out isn’t cheering for civilian bombings — it’s describing the political reality inside the country.
you should try routing around the australian government setting up the system so you can't get a job and are stuck between trying to work as a freelancer without transport and not making enough money to get over the bump for the inflated prices for a motorised vehicle that lets you get enough advertising out, and then you think "ok, so i can't get anything adequate to find my customers" ... and so it goes on. let's just say that after 12 years trying to get up from ground level into a position where i had any hope of owning my own house and not basically needing welfare to stay out of it. idk what to say. a cartel just robbed me of 12 years of my life. so i had to find a route around it.
and for full disclosure, paste in the claude app configuration text you use and teh prompt you used to generate that nonsense. i already posted mine, and if you like i can dig up a long conversation about the point about how ridiculous it is that the americans think they can just walk in and blow up civillian infrastructure and have them hand over 2 tons of 60% uranium. ever heard of the word "robbery"? because that's what it is.
consistently, the iranian government has asserted they aren't cooking up nukes
consistently, inspectors have agreed.
consistently, the neocon americans have continued this. and you know what i think? show me the non-classified, non national security protected validation that you can even make plutonium actually make an explosion like the one witnesses described in hiroshima. because it sure as hell sounds like a hydrogen explosion on steroids to me, white flash, 5-7x the flame front velocity as gasoline, starting firestorms just like saturation bombs.
and i got a year in prison for daring to sell drugs over the internet. so don't talk to me about your nonsense. i was nearly killed in the arrest, also. the doctors couldn't believe my skull wasn't fractured. a bread plate sized pool of blood sat under me, and the stain was still there a year ago before someone had the idea maybe to pressure spray it out of the pavement.
you think i don't know what it means to be oppressed at threat of death. well, that's cute.