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This Is How Iran Lives Under The Ayatollahs

  • Alexander Rodnyansky
  • 2.03.2026, 11:26

Absolutely medieval evil.

I will try to explain in a substantive way what the Ayatollah regime is all about.

I will say right away, my deep sympathy is with the ancient and talented people of Iran, who have had to endure an absolutely medieval evil for 46 years now.

See for yourself:

wearing the hijab incorrectly is punishable by up to 10 years in prison;

music, literature, movies, and television are heavily censored,

countless movies, books, and websites are blocked;

marital intimacy is criminalized;

same-sex relationships are criminalized;

conversion from Islam to another religion is punishable by death;

public criticism of Islam, the Koran, or the supreme leader is prosecuted;

universities have gone through mandatory "Islamization" of programs.

This is just a quick summary, without too much detail.

But the regime is not limited to internal repression.

The slogans "Death to the United States", "Death to Israel" and the officially declared goal of destroying the Jewish state are not empty words.

Iran has been arming and supporting the "axis of resistance" - the armies of terrorists in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Gaza - for decades.

Some numbers:

Spending on Hezbollah - up to $700 million a year;

Hamas and Islamic Jihad - up to $350 million a year;

Iraqi Shiite militias - up to $1 billion a year.

Supporting the Syrian regime during the civil war cost tens of billions of dollars.

Hundreds of thousands of people have fallen victim to pro-Iranian terrorists...

The danger is only growing - Iran is feverishly developing its nuclear program, spending up to $200 billion on it.

At the same time, Iranians themselves suffer from poverty, police brutality, electricity shortages and chronic inflation - the rial has depreciated by more than 2280% in the last year alone.

Tehran lacks water, rivers are drying up and reservoirs are standing empty. Propaganda explains this by saying that "Israel is intercepting Iran's water clouds." It brings to mind the unforgettable, "if there is no water in the tap..."

Hundreds of thousands of Iranians have fled the country.

Tens of thousands of protesters have been shot.

This post is not an excuse for war. I do not accept the inevitable loss of civilian life for any war.

But there is a difference between aggression into a peaceful country and responding to decades of hatred and support for terror.

The famous photo of Ramin Barzegar shows the execution of ten women in Shiraz.

Alexander Rodnyansky Telegram

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