Wednesday, January 28, 2026

The silence of Barack Obama, Kamala Harris, and Nancy Pelosi on the massacres unfolding in Iran is not accidental. It is deliberate and deeply political. Why? Iran’s revolution is nationalist and secular at its core. This movement is not about reforming the Islamic Republic of Iran, it is about ending it. Protesters are demanding an Iran-first future, free from clerical rule, political Shia, and foreign ideological control. That vision clashes directly with a globalist worldview that is suspicious of nationalism and uncomfortable with strong, culturally rooted nation-states that insist on sovereignty.


 It exposes the catastrophic failure of political Shia.

For decades, Western policymakers engaged with and legitimized this movements under the illusion that they could be moderated or integrated. Iran proves the opposite. Supporting Iranian protesters would mean admitting that these policies empowered one of the most violent theocratic regimes on earth - a moral and strategic disaster that many architects of those policies refuse to confront.
It does not fit the identity-politics framework.
Iranian protesters are not appealing to Western progressive language or causes. They are not asking for symbolic representation or ideological validation. They are demanding sovereignty, cultural revival, women’s freedom, and a secular political order rooted in Iranian identity. That makes their revolution difficult to package, hashtag, or exploit within Western activist narratives.
Silence protects past and present policies.
Speaking clearly about Iran would reopen uncomfortable debates about nuclear deals, sanctions relief, appeasement, and the continued legitimization of a regime that systematically murders its own people. Silence becomes a shield - a way to avoid accountability for years of strategic misjudgment.
The Iranian revolution threatens multiple power structures at once.
It undermines Jihadist ideology by showing that Muslim-majority societies can and do reject theocracy. At the same time, it challenges globalist elites by asserting national identity, cultural continuity, and political independence over transnational ideological control.
That is why the globalist left looks away.
Not because they don’t know what is happening - but because acknowledging it would shatter too many narratives they have spent decades building.

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