It's tragic this guy is still alive.
It's tragic this guy is still alive.
If you dial a random Iranian number, even though there's a 95% chance it won't connect, you are still more likely to get reliable information from Iran than from the Al-Jazeera correspondent in Tehran.
Deconstructing the mythmaking and propaganda generated by the US does not mean you have to accept the mythmaking and propaganda generated by the IRGC
Graph from NetBlocks showing network connectivity in Iran from 24 February 2026 to 10 March 2026. The y-axis represents normalized connectivity, ranging from 0% to 100%, and the x-axis represents the dates. The green line representing Iran's connectivity is high through the initial time period, with a sharp drop on the morning of 28 February. The continued drop in connectivity aligns with a nation-scale internet blackout imposed by authorities after joint military strikes by the US and Israel. The minimum and current connectivity levels are indicated as 1% and 1%, respectively. The chart has a dark background with a red horizontal arrow labeled 'SHUTDOWN' indicating the disruption period, and the NetBlocks logo in the lower left corner with the Mapping Internet Freedom slogan.
⚠️ Update: At 240 hours, #Iran's internet blackout is now among the most severe government-imposed nationwide internet shutdowns on record globally, and the second longest registered in Iran after the January protests, with the country having spent a third of 2026 offline.
Aftermath of Israeli air strikes in southern Lebanon’s Kfar Kila.
Heavy bombing of Karaj, Iran.
An intriguing scene of the sky over Karaj turning blue tonight following a US-Israeli strike.
It has been 70 days since protests began in Iran.
You know you’re *truly* despicable when you can be morally owned like this by, of all people, trump.
Iran's new Ayatollah, Mojtaba Khamenei, owns a property empire in London. If Keir Starmer is unwilling to help topple the Iranian dictatorship by military means, perhaps he could demonstrate his commitment by sanctioning and confiscating all assets of the Islamist terrorist in Kensington?
He’s already covered.
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article...
Sahab Pardaz Co., an OFAC-sanctioned firm responsible for facilitating internet censorship in Iran, has been targeted today.
Well, who could’ve possibly seen that coming?
This gives you a window into the chaos of the Iranian regime right now:
Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei claims that the Iranian armed forces did not target Turkey, Azerbaijan or Cyprus.
He’s only a mystery to those who know nothing about this regime.
www.theguardian.com/world/2009/j...
Ms Fassihi has already begun the process of legitimising and promoting this guy as the one who can bring change, while conveniently ignoring his direct involvement in the brutal crackdown of the 2009 protests.
“Death to Mojtaba” is already being shouted in Tehran. They’re not even using his surname.
“Death to Khamenei” has returned.
A vehicle inspection centre was targeted in the afternoon near Zanjan today. There are unconfirmed reports of civilian casualties.
This is most likely incorrect.
If it’s connected to that piece of paper, it would hardly be called a fatwa encouraging the regime’s supporters to rally in the streets against the protesters, and certainly not a jihad.
There are reports that they’re stashing their weapons in private underground car parks. That, for example, could theoretically help protesters if they seize them, or could be the spark of a civil war.
It could go either way. They’re indeed fragmented, which will make it harder for them to organise and respond, but at the same time, it will make them more vulnerable to bursting out of control and acting even more brutally. Many haven’t slept properly for a week now.
#InternationalWomensDay
#WomanLifeFreedom
You can fiercely oppose Trump and Netanyahu’s war on Iran without becoming a cheerleader for the Iranian regime
They effectively run the whole country at this point. A coup would be pointless.
This is... unusual. I believe some in the IRGC are effectively pressuring the Assembly to choose Mojtaba Khamenei immediately, leaving no room for anyone else.
This could end badly; many influential figures had other ideas.
Larijani prefers his own brother.
A former official, speaking to IranWire, stated that Ali Larijani opposes Mojtaba Khamenei becoming the next Supreme Leader.
The disagreement between Larijani and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who supports Mojtaba, has delayed the announcement.
However problematic at least Pahlavists have some kind of tenuous link with the world as it is, but the Trump administration bringing a deluded political cult like the MEK into this would be a recipe for a far worse disaster than where things are already