Yesterday we all watched staged protests against Iran’s legitimate government, not a “regime” as it is often labeled in the media — because the regime is in Tel Aviv or in Washington, which have revealed the full moral misery and hypocrisy of the EU and the USA. The first misconception presented to the public is that Iran has the largest diaspora in the world. The answer is: IT DOES NOT. So who were those people marching in the streets? Mostly Germans, Canadians, and other nations living in those cities. They joined the protests essentially to confirm their hatred toward Muslims — something even the small number of Iranians who participated are aware of.
Another very serious and disturbing detail of this theater were the Israeli and American flags that we could all see. Let us recall for a moment that last year, in the attack on Iran, it was Israel and the USA that killed over a thousand Iranians, mostly civilians. The conclusion is that these Iranian protesters not only hate the Iranian authorities, but also Iranians themselves.
Let us not forget the most important point of this text: the genocide in Gaza. The Iranian people are very sensitive when it comes to Palestine and Gaza and have, for decades, provided every possible form of assistance to that suffering nation so they can survive occupation and the terrible crimes committed against them daily. Israeli flags in the marches stripped the protests against the Iranian authorities of any legitimacy and justification.
Let no one forget this fact: Iranians are a proud and just people. They proved this in 1979 when they overthrew the Western puppet who called himself king and who literally handed over Iran’s oil and gas to Europe and America for free, simply to secure a comfortable life for himself. That is when the real thing happened: Iranians rose up against the tyrant, removed him from power, and returned the oil and gas to whom they belong — the people of Iran.
In closing, I would tell all European politicians, especially those in Canada or the USA, that before they dare to open their mouths and speak complete nonsense, they should for one minute remember the genocide in Gaza — the most horrific event of this century — where over 100,000 Palestinians, mostly children, were brutally killed. Remember that you yourselves participated in that genocide. And none of us will ever forget that.
All of us ordinary people are asking the same question: why have the “democratic countries” that advocate for human rights (only in theory) not imposed any sanctions on Israel so far? Why have they not declared the IDF a terrorist or criminal army (because after committing genocide, the IDF is a criminal army)? Where is the maximum pressure on Israel to change the regime, to prosecute and punish all participants in the genocide — from the president and ministers to military personnel — with long prison sentences? Are your democracy and human rights not universal, and why do you not extend them to Palestinians? Yet you constantly repeat that democracy must prevail among the Palestinian people.
As for the so-called Prince Pahlavi, he condemned his political career to failure long ago by publicly supporting Israel regarding the genocide in Gaza. Iran will never forgive him for that. In some wild scenario where he managed to come to power in Tehran, I am certain he would soon be killed. Because Iran and the Iranian people do not forget. They only wait for the right opportunity. History has shown us that.
There is no substitute for Iran’s current leadership, nor will there be one. The people love their leaders and trust them — and that is what hurts certain political circles in the EU and the USA the most. But let us admit this: if Americans are allowed to favor Trump, who shows all the symptoms of severe schizophrenia and who speaks countless absurdities every day, embarrassing both himself and his nation, why should Iranians be denied such a possibility? Whatever kind of government they have — and if they love it — then let it be. No one can or should interfere in that. If Israelis can take pride in authorities that committed genocide, then who has the right to deny that same possibility and sentiment to others?
