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Jan 11 2026 11:34am
Perspective? Sure. But your perspective only activates for Gaza bombs, not for 2,000+ innocent Iranians killed protesting their oppressive regime. You ignore that because it doesn’t fit your ‘Israel/US bad, Iran / Palestinians victims’ story. My point stands: if civilian deaths matter, post about them everywhere not just where it scores political points.

Iran was never a democracy,

I dont remember posting about anything that did not involve my own people, since I am not a self righteous hypocrite.


Do you want to re-read what you said and rephrase?

if anyone reading this wants to respond to his post maybe? noting he wont like it if i say it.

This post was edited by ferdia on Jan 11 2026 11:35am
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Jan 11 2026 12:19pm
The so called “educated Western perspective” has not known war, occupation, or existential threat for nearly 80 years.
You speak from theory. I speak from memory.
You cannot comprehend what I have already been forced to forget.
.


Entirely irrelevant to what I wrote but okay. You know nothing about the West, the hand that feeds you, yet you spit on it.

Consider that maybe the whole world hates you guys because you never, ever, engage in good faith on any topic whatsoever. And maybe consider that your people invaded and genocided nearly a million people to establish a state, and continue to bomb and slaughter children and infants in the present day? You refuse to talk about the plague of international jewry because it's your tribe?
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Jan 11 2026 01:15pm
Why do you suddenly care — only when it fits a narrative of Iran as the ultimate evil? The question isn’t whether the deaths are tragic — of course they are. The question is why selective outrage exists. If bombing is violence when Iranians are dying, why isn’t it violence when Palestinians, Syrians, or Sudanese civilians die under foreign or Israeli bombs? Some deaths are visible, others are invisible, depending on who you deem evil.



The context.
Israel is at war with Hamas. Iranian regime is at war with.. its people ?
It’s not surprising that the Iranian regime calls the protestors “anarchists” and claim that it’s Israel and US behind them. That will grant them legitimacy to shoot and kill.
And don’t get me wrong, my side is f*ked up as well, labelling everyone as terrorists and continue to push the limit of “collateral damage”.
Now while you might agree that in a place like Gaza you can’t really operate without hurting the uninvolved, in Iran it’s a complete different story.

Iran and countries like Iran continue to criticize Israel while mass killing their own civilians. That’s what you can call irony.
Oh, and Iran is also a member in the UN.

This post was edited by WhiteSouned on Jan 11 2026 01:19pm
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Jan 11 2026 01:17pm
Entirely irrelevant to what I wrote but okay. You know nothing about the West, the hand that feeds you, yet you spit on it.

Consider that maybe the whole world hates you guys because you never, ever, engage in good faith on any topic whatsoever. And maybe consider that your people invaded and genocided nearly a million people to establish a state, and continue to bomb and slaughter children and infants in the present day? You refuse to talk about the plague of international jewry because it's your tribe?


I know enough about the West to recognize what you clearly do not. Your society has not experienced real war for more than eighty years, and that distance creates moral comfort and false certainty. War is not an abstract debate to us. It is lived reality. When that reality reaches you, and history suggests it eventually will, the tone of certainty and judgment will disappear very quickly, and you will be asking for the kind of experience you now dismiss.


Your reply uses insults and group blame instead of responding to what I actually said, so it does not allow a real discussion. Criticizing a country or its policies is not being ungrateful, and no one owes silence because of alliances or support. Saying that “the whole world hates us” is not a fact, since countries act on interests and public opinion is divided and constantly changing. The claim that nearly a million people were genocided when Israel was founded is not supported by serious historical or demographic research. War in 1948 caused suffering and displacement, but calling it genocide by inventing numbers does not make it true. Civilian deaths in war are tragic and should never be dismissed, but there is a real difference between deliberately targeting civilians and civilians being killed during fighting with armed groups. Finally, talking about “international jewry” is not neutral language. It is a well known antisemitic idea that assigns collective guilt and hidden power, and it undermines any serious argument.

Do you want to re-read what you said and rephrase?

if anyone reading this wants to respond to his post maybe? noting he wont like it if i say it.


I dont like hypocrites

This post was edited by Many_Names on Jan 11 2026 01:19pm
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Jan 11 2026 02:23pm
Perspective? Sure. But your perspective only activates for Gaza bombs, not for 2,000+ innocent Iranians killed protesting their oppressive regime. You ignore that because it doesn’t fit your ‘Israel/US bad, Iran / Palestinians victims’ story. My point stands: if civilian deaths matter, post about them everywhere not just where it scores political points.

Iran was never a democracy,

I dont remember posting about anything that did not involve my own people, since I am not a self righteous hypocrite.


There is a logical inconsistency in your post.

You criticized others for selective outrage, arguing that Iranian civilian deaths should be acknowledged universally. Immediately afterward, you explained that you only comment on events involving your own people. That clarification effectively exempts you from the standard you were just advocating. Do you understand what I just said?

This isn’t about motives or intent — it’s about consistency. If the principle is that all civilian deaths deserve equal attention, then limiting concern to a specific group contradicts that principle (As an example - how you view Palestinians). Hypocrisy, in its neutral definition, refers to applying a rule or expectation unevenly, holding others to a standard that one does not apply to oneself. The fact is not that you are a hypocrite, but that do you not comprehend this fact.

If I post the sun rises in the east, you will refute it, therefore I was hoping someone else would point at the error in your argument, alas it was not to be. I know I am wasting my time posting this as this will go right over your head, however I am acting on the principal that failed logic should be called out.

Finally, Iran was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament (the Majlis), which meant some democratic structures and elections were in place. That is the same as England btw.

can we like agree to not spar for the week. you are hard work.

This post was edited by ferdia on Jan 11 2026 02:25pm
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Jan 11 2026 02:28pm
There is a logical inconsistency in your post.

You criticized others for selective outrage, arguing that Iranian civilian deaths should be acknowledged universally. Immediately afterward, you explained that you only comment on events involving your own people. That clarification effectively exempts you from the standard you were just advocating. Do you understand what I just said?

This isn’t about motives or intent — it’s about consistency. If the principle is that all civilian deaths deserve equal attention, then limiting concern to a specific group contradicts that principle (As an example - how you view Palestinians). Hypocrisy, in its neutral definition, refers to applying a rule or expectation unevenly, holding others to a standard that one does not apply to oneself. The fact is not that you are a hypocrite, but that do you not comprehend this fact.

If I post the sun rises in the east, you will refute it, therefore I was hoping someone else would point at the error in your argument, alas it was not to be. I know I am wasting my time posting this as this will go right over your head, however I am acting on the principal that failed logic should be called out.

Finally, Iran was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament (the Majlis), which meant some democratic structures and elections were in place. That is the same as England btw.

can we like agree to not spar for the week. you are hard work.


That would only be a logical inconsistency if you were Palestinian.
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Jan 11 2026 02:31pm
The context - context always matters.
Israel is at war with Hamas - yes and it took them 3 months to destroy hamas, and then Israel spent 2 further years bombing Gaza. Iranian regime is at war with.. its people ? - Yep the Iranian government is pretty much the bad guys. I have not read enough to understand everything on the ground but I will read more about it, because it interests me.
It’s not surprising that the Iranian regime calls the protestors “anarchists” - true, it is a repressive regime. and claim that it’s Israel and US behind them - true, but it seems implausible that Israel and the US have little green men on the ground. Yes the sanctions destabilized but no i dont know the facts on the ground. That will grant them legitimacy to shoot and kill. - well, they call it legitimacy, everyone else calls it killing the people that dont like their shitty regime.
And don’t get me wrong, my side is f*ked up as well - no comment, labelling everyone as terrorists and continue to push the limit of “collateral damage”. - again, no comment.
Now while you might agree that in a place like Gaza you can’t really operate without hurting the uninvolved, in Iran it’s a complete different story. - not hard to agree with this.

Iran and countries like Iran continue to criticize Israel while mass killing their own civilians. - true. That’s what you can call irony. - yes.
Oh, and Iran is also a member in the UN. - I see the UN as a world forum. I do not see a problem if dictators, communists, capitalists and globalists, etc etc are in the forum. you need to talk to friends and foes alike in the world in order to ensure your own sovereign interests. Israel seems to view the UN as something else.


I think the safest way to answer this is to add comments, which i have in bold. happy new year.

here is a blurb to expand on my view of the UN:

My point is rooted in the role and purpose of the UN. The United Nations exists as a global forum where all recognized sovereign states — democracies, autocracies, monarchies, even states with highly repressive regimes — can engage in diplomacy. The goal is collective dialogue, conflict resolution, and addressing global issues: peacekeeping, humanitarian aid, climate, public health, human rights. In that sense, membership does not imply moral equivalence between states; it simply acknowledges their sovereignty and right to be at the table.

From Israel’s perspective, especially in certain political narratives, the UN can be framed as biased or even hostile — for example, because it criticizes Israeli actions or passes resolutions against Israel more frequently than against other states. Using Iran’s membership as a foil is a rhetorical move: “If the UN admits a country we consider hostile, how can the UN be legitimate?” It’s emotionally powerful for domestic audiences but logically weak, because it ignores the UN’s very purpose: to engage with all countries, even enemies, to prevent escalation and maintain channels of communication.

My framing — that sovereign nations need a forum to speak to everyone, friends and foes alike — highlights this fundamental principle. Even if Israel considers Iran a threat, having diplomatic and multilateral channels through the UN is strategically valuable: it allows for negotiation, intelligence gathering, and influence in international law — things that unilateral isolation would deny Israel.

In short: Israel’s critique of the UN often conflates institutional function (engaging all members) with moral approval, which is not how the UN operates. Membership isn’t endorsement; it’s a recognition that states exist and need a venue for dialogue. This is a classic tension in international relations: pragmatism vs perceived moral alignment.

This post was edited by ferdia on Jan 11 2026 02:35pm
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Jan 12 2026 12:50am
There is a logical inconsistency in your post.

You criticized others for selective outrage, arguing that Iranian civilian deaths should be acknowledged universally. Immediately afterward, you explained that you only comment on events involving your own people. That clarification effectively exempts you from the standard you were just advocating. Do you understand what I just said?

This isn’t about motives or intent — it’s about consistency. If the principle is that all civilian deaths deserve equal attention, then limiting concern to a specific group contradicts that principle (As an example - how you view Palestinians). Hypocrisy, in its neutral definition, refers to applying a rule or expectation unevenly, holding others to a standard that one does not apply to oneself. The fact is not that you are a hypocrite, but that do you not comprehend this fact.

If I post the sun rises in the east, you will refute it, therefore I was hoping someone else would point at the error in your argument, alas it was not to be. I know I am wasting my time posting this as this will go right over your head, however I am acting on the principal that failed logic should be called out.

Finally, Iran was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament (the Majlis), which meant some democratic structures and elections were in place. That is the same as England btw.

can we like agree to not spar for the week. you are hard work.


You are combining two separate ideas and treating them as one. I am not claiming that every person must speak about every civilian death everywhere. What I am criticizing is selective moral outrage, when people claim universal concern but apply it only where it supports their political position. That criticism is about the claim they make, not about my own posting habits.

I focus mainly on my own people because that is where my responsibility, knowledge, and personal stake are. I am not presenting myself as a neutral global voice. Because of that, I am not exempting myself from a rule. I am not imposing that rule on myself in the first place. I am pointing out when others do.

Saying “all civilian deaths matter” while only condemning Israel or the West is a political choice presented as moral consistency. Calling that out does not require me to comment equally on Iran, Sudan, or any other conflict.

Regarding Iran, describing it as a democracy because it had a parliament is misleading. Formal institutions alone do not equal democratic accountability. In practice, it was an authoritarian system with limited political freedom, even before the Islamic regime.

This post was edited by Many_Names on Jan 12 2026 12:50am
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Jan 12 2026 06:30am
English to Israeli translator

English: hamas
Israeli: all arabs


Once this is understood, their comments make more sense.
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Jan 12 2026 06:40am
English to Israeli translator

English: hamas
Israeli: all arabs


Once this is understood, their comments make more sense.


That claim collapses under basic facts. Nearly one fifth of Israelis are Arabs. If Israelis believed ‘Hamas = all Arabs’, Israeli society could not function as it does. Hamas is a terror organization. Arabs are a diverse group of people, including millions who live as Israeli citizens.
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