Sunday, April 5, 2026

A VITAL HISTORY TO KNOW ABOUT IRAN

This history and the tragic impacts of the profound violence of imperialism is so vital to know and understand, absorb and expose, and act to intervene on and end. It is truly essential to know our history and take into our deepest hearts and souls the wisdom which empowers us to not be complicit with this insane madness generation after generation after generation. — Molly





“Next time someone says that Iran is dangerous and they need to be stopped…here’s some history to share.
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1901: A British businessman secures exclusive rights to Iran’s oil. Iran gets almost nothing from its own resource.
1908: Oil is struck. Anglo-Iranian Oil Company is formed. It later becomes BP. The British Royal Navy converts from coal to oil, making Iranian petroleum a strategic military asset for the British Empire.
For the next 50 years, Iran’s oil is extracted by a foreign corporation. Iran receives a fraction of the profits. Saudi Arabia negotiates a 50-50 profit split with ARAMCO. Iran asks for the same terms. Britain refuses.
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1951: Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister, Mohammad Mossadegh, nationalizes Iran’s oil through a unanimous vote in parliament. Completely legal. Completely constitutional. His argument was simple: this is our oil.
Britain responds with an international blockade. No negotiation. No compromise. They want their oil back.
1953: The CIA (Operation Ajax) and MI6 (Operation Boot) overthrow Mossadegh. They bribe politicians, clerics, journalists, and military officers. They fund fake protests. They run disinformation campaigns through newspapers they secretly own. MI6 operatives kidnap and murder Iran’s chief of police and dump his body in public as a warning.
They reinstall the Shah — a monarch who serves Western oil interests. The CIA officially acknowledged its role in 2013.
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After the coup, BP retains a 40% stake. American oil companies including Exxon and Mobil get significant shares. Iran’s democratic government is gone. Its oil is back under foreign control.
1953-1979: The Shah rules for 26 years as a Western-backed authoritarian. His secret police, SAVAK, is trained by the CIA and Mossad. SAVAK tortures and kills political dissidents systematically. Iran becomes one of the largest purchasers of American weapons. The Shah lives in extraordinary luxury while much of the population remains poor.
During this entire period, Israel and Iran are close allies. SAVAK and Mossad share intelligence. Israel sells weapons to Iran. Nobody in the West calls Iran a “terrorist state” because the dictator is their dictator.
1979: The Iranian people overthrow the Shah in a popular revolution. This is where your list begins — as if the revolution appeared out of nowhere, motivated by nothing but religious fanaticism.
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Now let’s talk about the US embassy that was attacked.
The US news likes to paint the 1979 hostage crisis as an unprovoked attack on America. The revolutionaries seized the embassy because the last time there was a democratic movement in Iran, the CIA ran the coup to crush it from that same embassy. They weren’t being paranoid. They were being historically accurate.
Britannica’s own assessment: “It is generally agreed today that the 1953 coup sowed the seeds for the Islamic Revolution of 1979.”
That’s not a conspiracy theory. That’s the encyclopedia.
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Now let’s ask a couple more questions.
Why are there U.S. military bases in Iraq? Because the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003 on claims of weapons of mass destruction that turned out to be false. Over a million Iraqi civilians died. No American official was ever prosecuted.
Why is there conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon? Because Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982 and occupied southern Lebanon for 18 years.
Why are Houthi rebels attacking ships? Because a U.S.-backed Saudi coalition bombed Yemen for years, creating what the UN called the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. Over 150,000 dead. Famine. Cholera outbreaks.
Why does Iran pursue nuclear capability?
Possibly because Israel has an undeclared nuclear arsenal estimated at 80-400 warheads, has never signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, faces zero international inspections, and has never been sanctioned for it.
Iran signed the NPT. Iran agreed to inspections. Iran signed the nuclear deal in 2015. The U.S. pulled out of that deal in 2018.
Every single item on your list is framed as Iranian aggression against “the West.” But none of them exist without the West’s 70-year campaign of overthrowing Iran’s democracy, installing a dictator, extracting its oil, arming its neighbors, invading the countries on its borders, and maintaining military bases throughout the region.
Now trace who benefits.
The 1953 coup was about oil. BP and American oil companies got the oil.
The Shah’s 26-year reign was about strategic positioning. The U.S. and Israel got a compliant ally on the Soviet border and in the Middle East.
The post-1979 framing of Iran as a “terrorist state” serves a specific function: it justifies permanent U.S. military presence in the Middle East, billions in annual arms sales to Saudi Arabia and Gulf states, and unconditional U.S. support for Israel’s regional dominance.
Every “Iranian attack” on your list occurred in a country where the U.S. had no legal right to be in the first place — Iraq, Syria, Jordan. American troops are stationed across the Middle East not because those countries asked for protection from Iran, but because the U.S. positioned itself there to control the region’s resources and protect its strategic architecture.
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When someone punches you for 70 years — overthrows your government, installs a dictator, trains his secret police to torture your people, extracts your oil, invades the countries on your borders, surrounds you with military bases, and sanctions your economy into the ground — and then you punch back, the question isn’t “why are you violent?”
The question is: who threw the first punch? And who’s been profiting from the fight ever since?
That’s not a defense of the Iranian regime. The theocracy that replaced the Shah has its own record of brutality against its own people, especially women. But that regime exists because the CIA destroyed Iran’s democracy in 1953. The West created the conditions for the very thing it now claims to oppose.
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The history continues.
HAMAS (October 7, 2023)
“Hamas, to my great regret, is Israel’s creation,” said Avner Cohen, a former Israeli religious affairs official who worked in Gaza for more than two decades, to the Wall Street Journal in 2009.
Brigadier General Yitzhak Segev, who served as Israeli military governor in Gaza in the early 1980s, told the New York Times that he had helped finance the Palestinian Islamist movement as a “counterweight” to the PLO. “The Israeli government gave me a budget,” the retired brigadier general confessed, “and the military government gives to the mosques
Initially, Hamas was discreetly supported by Israel, as a counter-balance to the secular Palestine Liberation Organization to prevent the creation of an independent Palestinian state.
And it didn’t stop in the 1980s. According to the New York Times, Israeli intelligence agents traveled into Gaza with a Qatari official carrying suitcases filled with cash to disperse money.
In 2015, Bezalel Smotrich, currently the finance minister in Netanyahu’s government, summed up the strategy: “The Palestinian Authority is a burden. Hamas is an asset.”
Netanyahu told journalist Dan Margalit that it was important to keep Hamas strong, as a counterweight to the Palestinian Authority. Having two strong rivals, including Hamas, would lessen pressure on him to negotiate toward a Palestinian state.
Netanyahu penned a letter to Qatar in 2018 asking the Qatari leadership to continue funding Hamas.
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HEZBOLLAH (1983 Beirut bombings, kidnappings):
Hezbollah was formed in 1982 — the same year Israel invaded Lebanon. It didn’t exist before the invasion. Israel invaded Lebanon to destroy the PLO headquarters there. The invasion killed approximately 20,000 people, mostly civilians. Hezbollah was born as a direct resistance movement to that invasion.
The 1983 Marine barracks bombing on the commenter’s list killed 241 Americans. But why were U.S. Marines in Lebanon? Because the U.S. had intervened in the Lebanese Civil War, positioning itself as a participant in the conflict rather than a neutral peacekeeper. The Marines were shelling Druze and Shia positions from naval vessels before the bombing.
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IRAN’S PROXY NETWORK (Houthis, Kataib Hezbollah, militias in Iraq and Syria):
Every proxy on that list operates in a country where the U.S. or its allies intervened first.
Iraq — the U.S. invaded in 2003 on false WMD claims. Iranian-backed militias formed to resist the occupation.
Syria — the CIA ran Operation Timber Sycamore, spending billions arming Syrian rebels, many of whom were jihadists. Iran backed Assad. Both sides were proxies in someone else’s war.
Yemen — the Houthis fight against a Saudi-led coalition that the U.S. armed and supported. The Saudi bombing campaign created what the UN called the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.
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The United States propaganda machine goes hard. The enemy is not a republican or a democrat.
For all of history people knew their governments were evil. Don’t forget that it’s true today. The enemy is not the one vilified by billionaire owned media dynasties.”
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The tragedy with most people who argue ignorantly, is that most of this information is open source intelligence and not classified information.

Copied from Obinna Aligwekwe

Mo Husseini: Find Your People

 How wise and human and beautiful.
Thank you, Mo Husseini.
🙏💜 Molly

Last night I attended (virtually) a screening of The Path Forward (the short documentary I co-directed with Julie Cohen) and one of the questions I was asked was about hope and how do you maintain it and... well... I've been thinking about that all night (because DORK!)...
I think a lot of us are drowning right now. I know I am. Some days are fine and other days are... FUUUUUUCCCKKKKK.... you wake up to immediate and sheer weight of everything... Gaza, Iran, ICE, the rule of Law, the Orange Turd's latest assault on democracy... you name it... and it feels like someone's dropped a massive weight on your chest as soon as you open your eyes... It's a lot.
One of the things that have kept me sane through it all is this thing that the amazing Mariame Kaba said: "Hope is a discipline. It's not a fuzzy feeling. You have to put in energy and time and you have to be clear-eyed and you have to hold fast to having a vision."
And yeah. She's right. But also... some days that is a really hard thing to live up to... Some days discipline is not at all what I've got. Some days all I've got is anger and exhaustion and rage and a low-grade despair that is just kind of humming away underneath everything.
My friend and mentor Bruce Mau likes to say that pessimists are welcome and optimists are welcome... but cynicism is not allowed. And I'll be honest and say that I thought that was a little glib and a little too neat... but the older I get the more I see the profound wisdom in that. Because pessimists and optimists are still in the room. They're still engaged. They have a perspective on the outcome but they still think it matters.
A cynic is just... done. "We're fucked, why bother." And I get it. There's an appeal to that. Cynicism is 'cooler-than-thou' and oh-so-very appealing to a Gen-Xer for all that... It feels smart. Like you've figured something out that the rest of the world still doesn't see. It's loud-quitting in an all-black outfit and chic Persols. But, man, appealing or cool or not, quitting and sitting it out when the stakes are so immense just feels so fucking wrong. No matter the justification. No matter the effort.
So what do you do? I don't know. I'm figuring it out in real time like everybody else. But the things that help me (and yes, I fail despite them all) is the idea of doing literally anything. ANYTHING. Even tiny stuff. Even stuff that feels pointless. Because doing something. Even something small, breaks the spell of the doom scroll and the catastrophism in a way that wallowing and thinking about doing stuff never does.
And finding other people. That's the big one for me, honestly. I'm an introvert and don't always remember that even an introvert needs people. Because the feeling of being the "only person" who sees how bad things are or the "only person" who hasn't checked out or the "only person" who hasn't lost their ever-loving mind... that feeling will fucking eat you alive. And the only thing I've ever found that helps is just being in community with others who also refuse to quit. Even if it's a stupid zoom or a basement in a church or a cafe or whatever... because that room gives you something that can't you can't get on your own... the sense that you're not fucking crazy and that other people see it too and we'll get through it together.
Maybe that's hope for me. The unglamorous unsexy hope that looks like just showing up and being together... pessimists and optimists alike and working on shit no matter how small.
Find your people. Keep 'em close. It's made all the difference for me... and if you haven't found yours yet... keep looking... cause they're probably looking for you and need you as much as you need them.
Much love to everyone (except the fucking cynics (just kidding... love you too (kinda)))


DO NOT NORMALIZE THE MASSIVE CRIMES BEING COMMITTED IN OUR NAMES

 Copied from a wise activist friend...

Do USers really understand the massive crimes being done in their names right now?
Trump just cavalierly threatened to destroy the desalination plants in Iran, which could cause a massive water crisis in the Middle East and would easily be one of this century's great crimes against humanity.
And it is mentioned as if it is simply a "policy option."
This is after we created a massive humanitarian crisis in Cuba, illegally captured a foreign leader and caused a crisis in Venezuela, have been killing countless civilians in Iran, with Israel by our side, starting another round of massive war crimes in Lebanon.
And of course, the Palestinian genocide underwritten by our money and bombs.
I keep using the word "massive" because I don't know how else to describe the enormity of these quotidian evils.
Have we even started to reckon to the pain, trauma and grief we are causing to people whose only "crime" was not being born here and living here?
I remember a poem that went: "Do you know who bleeds underneath your comfort?"
I keep going back to those words.
Do not normalize this.
Do not normalize this.
Do not normalize this.

Henry Giroux: The Dark Side of the United States

It is my belief that all of us, on a continuum, have been impacted by what bell hooks referred to as imperialist white-supremacist capitalist patriarchy. This pain and separation from within ourselves and with others that we have absorbed is what our delusions, our ancestral and cultural trauma, our addictions and anxiety and depression, and the many faces of  violence are rooted in. And this is why our individual and collective shadow work is so essential, empowering, freeing, and urgently needed. Otherwise the endless wars, dehumanization, and delusions will continue to plague ourselves, our nation, and the world. Peace is possible. — Molly

"War and peace start in the human heart - 
and whether that heart is open or whether that 
heart closes has global implications."
 Pema Chödrön


This is what the dark side of democracy looks like when it is fueled by militarist delusions and expansivist proclivities. Henry Giroux

White House Accidentally Uploads Quite a Damning Trump Speech

 WOW.

The White House mistakenly uploaded Donald Trump’s remarks to YouTube on Wednesday, before realizing its error and making the link private. Business Insider’s Bryan Metzger uploaded to X in full.




The White House mistakenly uploaded Donald Trump’s remarks at an Easter lunch, which was supposed to be closed to the press, to YouTube Wednesday, before realizing its error and making the link private.

In the speech, which Business Insider’s Bryan Metzger uploaded to X in full, Trump fantasizes about being a king, admits there’s no money left for health care or childcare because of the war he started, and daydreams about seizing all of Iran’s oil.

“We’re fighting wars. We can’t take care of daycare. You got to let a state take care of daycare, and they should pay for it too. They should pay. They’ll have to raise their taxes, but they should pay for it. And we could lower our taxes a little bit to them to make up,” Trump said. “It’s not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things. They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing: military protection.

“I can’t get a ballroom approved. It’s pretty amazing, right?” Trump also said in the speech. “If I was a king, we’d be doing a lot more. I’m doing a lot, but I could be doing a lot more if I was a king.”

Trump went on to lament that it’s “unfortunate” that Americans don’t have the “patience” to take Iran’s oil.

“We could just take their oil. But, you know, I’m not sure that the people in our country have the patience to do that, which is unfortunate. You know, they want to see it end. If we stayed there, I, you know, I’d prefer just to take the oil. We could do it so easily. I would prefer that, but people in the country sort of say, ‘Just win, you’re winning so big. Just win, come home,’” Trump said in the speech.

Trump also mentioned his address to the country to take place later that evening, saying to the audience, “Tonight I’m making a little speech at 9 o’clock and basically I’m gonna tell everybody how great I am.”

The whole speech seems to be an insight into what Trump actually thinks but isn’t willing to say to the broader public. But the American people deserve to know what the president thinks about them and their needs, even if it’s not very much.

Message From the Dalai Lama

Photo by Molly
MESSAGE
I wholeheartedly endorse the powerful appeal for peace made by the Holy Father, Pope Leo, during his Palm Sunday Mass. His call for the laying down of arms and the renunciation of violence resonated profoundly with me, as it speaks to the very essence of what all major religions teach.
Indeed, whether we look to Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism or any of the world's great spiritual traditions, the message is fundamentally the same: love, compassion, tolerance, and self-discipline. Violence finds no true home in any of these teachings. History has shown us time and again that violence only begets more violence and is never a lasting foundation for peace.
An enduring resolution to conflict, including the ones we see in the Middle East or between Russia and Ukraine, must be rooted in dialogue, diplomacy and mutual respect — approached with the understanding that, at the deepest level, we are all brothers and sisters.
I urge for and pray that the violence and conflicts may soon come to an end.
DALAI LAMA
31 March 2026

Faisal R. Khan: The Gospel You Left Behind

 So well articulated by my friend, Faisal.
— Molly

The Gospel You Left Behind
To many of you who call yourselves Christians in the West this Easter weekend, before you walk through those church doors, I need you to sit with something uncomfortable.
Jesus was a brown Palestinian. Born under occupation. Born into poverty. He did not look like your stained glass windows. He did not speak your language. He would not recognize the theology you have built in his name.
He spent his life with the poor, the outcast, the widow, the orphan, the foreigner, the despised. He touched lepers. He elevated women when his entire world told him not to. He rebuked empire. He overturned the tables of those who made religion into profit and power.
And yet so much of Western Christianity today turns away refugees at the border while quoting scripture. Supports the bombing of the very lands where Jesus walked. Remain silent while hospitals, schools, churches and masjids are destroyed. Waves the flag of holy war while ignoring the desperate faces of the very people Jesus looked like, the very people he would have sat and broken bread with.
The Crusades were not the Gospel. Manifest destiny was not the Gospel. Christian nationalism is not the Gospel. Empire dressed in a cross is still empire.
You cannot claim the teachings of a man who said love your neighbor, welcome the stranger, blessed are the peacemakers, and then advocate for the destruction of Muslim countries, the deportation of immigrants, the abandonment of the orphan and the refugee. That is not a contradiction. That is a betrayal.
This weekend, as you celebrate resurrection, ask yourself honestly, what has been buried inside your faith? What truth have you rolled a stone in front of?
Jesus did not die so that Western civilization could be defended. He lived so that the most vulnerable among us could be seen.
And do not mistake silence for peace. Jesus was not a quiet man who retreated into prayer while the world burned around him. He walked directly into the narrow streets of power. He named injustice out loud. He rebuked the Romans. He challenged the religious establishment to their face.
He spoke for those who had no voice and he did all of it without raising a sword. Peacemaking is not disappearing. It is not softening your voice until the truth becomes unrecognizable. If you are sitting in your comfort and calling it peace while Muslim and Arab countries are bombed, while brown and black refugees drown at borders, while children are orphaned by wars you support, you are not following Jesus. You are hiding. And your silence is not holy. It is a betrayal of the very man you claim was resurrected this weekend.
And to those sitting in those pews, if your church is silent while atrocities are committed in the name of your faith, while your scriptures are twisted to justify holy war against innocent civilians, it is incumbent upon you to stand up and speak out. And if your pastor, your priest, your preacher stands at that pulpit and teaches hatred, division and bigotry, understand this clearly. They are not preaching Jesus. They are not preaching God. They have wandered far from the most basic tenets of everything Jesus stood for and everything he commanded.
Reflect. Return. Come back to the root. Because the tree you are standing under has grown very far from where it was planted.