“A #keffiyeh in a broken frame. Some resistances are true, some are staged. The frame can shatter, but the cloth still hangs.”

During my stay in Istanbul for the Bitcoin++ conference, I stayed with a Palestinian friend. He welcomed me with such kindness that I’ll never forget — a reminder that our shared humanity is stronger than borders and politics.

But in many conversations, I noticed something troubling. People from around the world praised the Iranian regime, calling it the “only country resisting the US and Israel.” Their anger at Israel’s brutality in Gaza was raw and justified — the killing of children is unbearable.

Yet as an Iranian, I must tell another truth: this so-called “resistance” is a lie. The Iranian regime is not a hero standing against oppression — it is itself one of the greatest oppressors in our region. Inside Iran, it kills protesters, executes children, jails women for showing hair, silences every free voice, and robs generations of a future.

People outside often romanticize Iran as a symbol of defiance. But they don’t live under it. They don’t feel the fear, the censorship, the prisons, or the graves of our brightest youth. They mistake dictatorship for dignity.

Yes — Israel’s crimes in Gaza are real. But so are Iran’s crimes against its own people. And if we truly care about justice, we cannot choose which lives matter. The children of Gaza deserve life. So do the children of Iran, Ukraine, and Afghanistan.

True solidarity is not selective. It doesn’t excuse one regime’s brutality because it opposes another. Real resistance is about freedom and dignity for all people.

So please — don’t romanticize the regime that has turned Iranians into prisoners in their own land. Stand with the people, not the dictators. Because if our solidarity is selective, then it is not solidarity at all.

#free_iran

#free_palestine

درود بر شما پرهام جان. سپاس که انقدر خوب و شفاف گفتید این رو، که من مدت ها گمان میکردم گفتنش به ریختی که همه بن‌مایه سخن رو در بیابن بسیار دشواره و نشده. 🫡❤️

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

مرسی کیهان عزیز از اظهار لطفت، راستش برای من هم راحت نبود، چند روزی مدام ذهنمو درگیر کرده بود و احساس می‌کردم که روایت درستی ندارم. درنهایت کفتگو و شنیدن نظرات مختلف افراد در این چند روز راه گشا بود. ❤️

Thanks for the perspective, my uncle lived in Tehran for a number of years, since his passing I don’t see many sources on world events that I trust.

Regardless of what happens in any state, it’s mostly just people trying to people while a bunch of psychopaths run things.

I’m really sorry to hear about your uncle — having someone you trust on the ground always makes the picture clearer. You’re absolutely right: at the end of the day, people everywhere just want to “people” — to raise families, share meals, create, love, and live in peace.

What makes it tragic is that psychopaths, as you put it, are the ones steering states and defining borders. In Iran it’s the same: ordinary Iranians aren’t thinking about geopolitics, they’re thinking about how to put food on the table, how to keep their kids safe, how to find joy in spite of fear.

That’s why I always try to remind others — the real story of any nation isn’t the rulers, it’s the people. And across all these divides, we have far more in common than those in power would ever want us to realize.