(A.K.A. Non-Original Rants)

–Co-opting good stuff from all over the ‘Net and maybe some original thoughts—ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒE

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True courage in Iran

In this post by Jim Hoft, he points out the bravery of Iranian women. They are showing their hair and are lighting cigarettes off of burning pictures of the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Either act could get them imprisoned, beaten, raped, broken, and executed.

This is the brutal reality of life for women under the Islamic Republic in Iran. A woman in Tehran sent me this photo of her scarred back, flogged for the “crime” of showing her hair. Yet, she refuses to be silenced.

Holding a Woman, Life, Freedom slogan, she took this photo as a powerful act of defiance, declaring:
“The morality police arrested me for resisting their van. My ‘crime’ was unveiling. After months of court hearings, I was sentenced to 74 lashes. The cleric overseeing the punishment stood there to ensure it was carried out. I won’t give up my fight against this brutal regime, but we are fed up with living as prisoners in our own homeland.”

This potential is not be exaggerated.

More than 2,600 people have been reported detained since the wave of protests began, including at least 167 under the age of 18, according to HRANA. Some 116 people have been killed, the group said, including at least seven people under the age of 18 and 37 members of the security services.

The group found that most victims “were killed by live ammunition or pellet gunfire, predominantly from close range.”

Iran’s attorney general on Jan. 10 warned that anyone taking part in the protests would be considered an “enemy of God,” according to The Associated Press, a death-penalty charge.

It’s happened before..

A 16-year-old Iranian girl, who was ‘attacked by morality officers on a train in Tehran for failing to wear a hijab’, has died after she lay in a coma for weeks.

Armita Geravand fell into a coma earlier this month after she sustained ‘severe injuries’ following a ‘physical assault’ by female morality police officers on the Tehran metro, according to a human rights group.

Hengaw, a Norway-based Kurdish human rights NGO, claimed that Mc Geravand was attacked by hijab officers in Shohada Station, a stop on the city’s metro, for not wearing a hijab, which all women in Iran are meant to wear under strict morality laws.

What happened in the few seconds after Mc Geravand entered the train on October 1 is unclear.

Her death comes after the first anniversary of the death of Mahsa Amini and the nationwide protests it sparked.

And here in the West, useful pro-Hamas idiots are protesting anti-theocracy Iranians (ht: Gerry from a comment on a previous post).

Do they not realize that Hamas is Sunni and the Iranian theocracy is Shia? They should be wanting the present Iranian government to fall….



12 responses to “True courage in Iran”

  1. Hamas are the useful idiots of the Iranian military. Iran funds Hamas.

    While there is a small clan of ayatolah at the top, being a theocracy, Iran has 1000s of like minded men ready to step in and continue the reign of terror. A Maduro like operation wouldn’t work in Iran.

    The Iranian revolution was over 45 years ago. Everyone under 55 was indoctrinated into the regime. Given the decapitation of Iraq and Syria, a Libyan style operation might work. Let Iran sink into civil war and anarchy. The press won’t be as forgiving to Trump as they were to Obama, and it would cause a fresh wave of Muslim terrorist refugees flooding into Europe (but Europe is lost anyway).

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    1. Unferth–I disagree with you on this one. If they had been indoctrinated, we wouldn’t have young women lighting cigarettes off of burning pictures and women beaten to death for showing their hair.

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  2. https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/2010441154194526398
    Take the L! DNC Chair Learns the HARD WAY Not to Compare Iranian Freedom Fighters to Paid MN Protesters

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  3. The current quasi “revolution ” in Iran is doomed from the outset.

    Iran does allow its citizens to own firearms, but there are strict regulations and licensing requirements in place. The laws have been tightened recently, and illegal possession or trade of firearms can lead to severe penalties.

    So, all legal Iranian gun owners are on a list. How soon before the mullahs decree that everyone must turn in their firearms and make a few examples of people “resisting” the decree?

    Back in the day before the last Iranian revolution, women there dressed much like their counterparts in other European countries. Styled hair, short skirts, educated. They gave all of that up because a vocal, supposedly religious minority opposed Iran becoming more “westernized”.

    Then there was the Shah, a corrupt ruler who had his own secret police carrying out executions of dissidents. Apparently he either didn’t kill enough of them or he was killing the wrong ones. No doubt the CIA was in that up to their eyeballs.

    Current situation on the ground proves the old adage: You can vote your way in, but you have to shoot your way out.

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  4. Regarding the ‘indoctrinated’ under-55 Iranians. They are the very ‘indoctrinated’ that are turning to Christianity.

    As to how corrupt the Shah was, compared to the mad mullahs he was a lightweight.

    Remember, France wanted the Ayatollah out of their nation as he was causing problems with their ‘migrant workers.’ And Carter, ever the useful idiot, thought that the Ayatollah would be easier to deal with than the Shah, even though there were lots of people in government service who said the mad mullah was going to be hideously worse.

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  5. I stand corrected. I should not have said “everyone under 55 was indoctrinated”. The women are definitely showing true courage. I’m not sure that outsiders can really do much since a lion’s share of the population probably thinks the way the Ayatollahs do.

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  6. I don’t want to cause trouble but your praising Iranian women to act out on social media and in the very next article for today slamming liberal white women for doing almost the same thing?

    You do know that Mossad drop shipped the starlink units that are doing these tick tocks.

    The Mossad is hip deep in this action. As is the out-of-control CIA. Trump, I suspect is “as supportive” of Iran’s revolution as he was for Ukraine.

    Words, feeble or no action. Why? For reasons above my paygrade but I suspect he understands that we need to take care of American issues, instead of policing the world for Israel and EU.

    Lets figure out how to stop open insurrection that is USING 24-07 propaganda on our liberal women to be shock troops for socialism and Islam.

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  7. lnac–Yeah, it’s called stretching for non-existent moral equivalency. What a moron.

    Nemo–They keep trying. And I hope this time, they succeed.

    Beans–Another thing for which Carter is responsible. He did lasting damage not only to our country, but others as well.

    Unferth–I don’t think they do. I think they are trying to live their lives the best way they can.

    Michael–You’re kidding right? The right of a woman to show her hair in public without being beaten or killed is not even remotely the same as bored women getting a jolly out of protecting illegals from deportation and supporting those who would make it so they can’t show their hair in public without being beaten or killed. Trying to equate the two populations is liberal whataboutism thinking and does not pass the smell test.

    Pretty sure that Mossad didn’t drop Starlink into Iran either–your tin foil hat must be pinching.

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  8. Respectfully Mid West Chick from my research Starlink isn’t sold in Iran. That and one of the primary reasons they are protesting is that their money is nearly worthless. Might make buying an expensive western device vs food a bit challenging.

    It’s your blog so I won’t argue with you.

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    1. Michael–Maybe you missed the part about Elon Musk providing Starlink for free. So no, it’s not being sold, but no; they aren’t having to buy expensive western devices either. And I’m not sure how you got from Mossad dropping Starlink into Iran to it being sold. Your comments are not cogent nor are they coherent.

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  9. Thank you for the information about Musk giving Iran free access to Starlink Service. Interesting that smugglers are bring them into this situation.

    A few googled facts, please pardon if I am not coherent here:

    A Doctor working in Iran will typically earn around 1,379,999,600 IRR per year

    Or at current rates: 1,379,999,600 Iranian Rial =
    1,366.20 US Dollar

    A Starlink Mini costs: $599
    The Starlink Mini is currently priced at $599, but it is available for a discounted price of $299 at Costco.

    Assuming the smugglers out of the goodness of their hearts choose not to have a mark up AND somehow manage to get Cosco prices each starlink mini cost about

    21 percent of that Doctors annual salary.

    And that again is assuming the good hearted smugglers didn’t charge anything for their efforts nor the risks to themselves and family smuggling a banned item into a small scale war zone.

    SOMEBODYS Smuggling them in. I agree.

    Cui Bono who benefits from a regime change and potential failed state like Syria that Israel openly admits to doing.

    Not like Israel was under severe missile attacks in the recent past from attacking Iran?

    As far as our liberal women having it easier than those Iranian women I agree for now. If the current insurrection brewing up in Minnesota goes hot then Ms. Good the trained ICE disrupter who died for the cause may have a lot of company.

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    1. Michael–I will ask you, as I’ve asked others, to keep your comments as succinct as possible. If your comments are longer than the original post, you need to rein it in. Also, you need to stay on topic. I don’t know how the hell you got to smuggling, but each iteration is getting further out into the ozone. If you don’t get it together, I’ll either put you on permanent moderation or will ban you completely. Perhaps, with everything you seem to want to say, you should follow ERJ’s advice and start your own blog.

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