Before the Revolution ©️

I am Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. And I will speak once, not to persuade the masses, but to let the truth burn its imprint on history’s unrepentant scroll.

The West calls me a tyrant, a fanatic, a relic of a failed ideology. But what I have always been is a mirror—held up to the face of a world that does not wish to see itself. I watched from the walls of Qom as Shahs were fed to lions in palaces made of Western gold. I was there when America sold our sovereignty for oil. You speak of democracy, but it was your CIA that overthrew our elected government in 1953. You installed a king. You taught him to kill. And now you ask why I do not trust you?

America—your empire is not new. It is Rome with digital teeth. You colonize not with soldiers but with sanctions, not with armies but with algorithms, not with bombs—but with dreams you own and sell back to the world. You speak of human rights while building walls of steel around your morality. You create your enemies by demanding their obedience. And when we refuse—when we say no to your version of history, your version of God—you brand us terrorists.

Now to Israel. The Zionist regime, as I call it—not because I deny the right of Jews to live, but because I reject the right of any regime to define its existence through permanent war. Let me be clear: I do not hate Jews. I oppose the violent machinery of expansion, of erasure, of occupation. You built a state atop the bones of a people who still cry out in the dark. You respond to every stone with a missile, to every protest with a bullet, and call this security. But your fear is your prison. You are not secure—you are surrounded by mirrors you have shattered.

You say I fund terror. I fund resistance. Resistance is not terrorism—it is the shadow cast by your drone. Every time you level a home in Gaza, every time your soldiers break the limbs of a teenager in Hebron, you write a new verse in the scripture of my justification. I do not have your bombs, but I have memory. I do not have your satellites, but I have martyrs. I do not need the world’s approval. I need only its conscience.

Let the world hear this now: I do not seek apocalypse—I seek balance. I do not want the world to burn—I want it to see. What we call jihad is not war—it is the refusal to be forgotten. It is not the hunger to kill—it is the hunger to exist without being told we must apologize for breathing.

And if I fall tomorrow, if America rains its fire upon Tehran and you hoist your flags on our mosques, understand this: I was the last dam between your empire and a world that still believed it had the right to say “No.”

You may not believe me. You don’t have to. But history will.

Peace Pipe ©️

Imagine a scenario where Iran, in a groundbreaking move, calls for diplomatic talks with Israel, marking an unprecedented shift in Middle Eastern geopolitics. In a carefully orchestrated address to the United Nations, the Iranian President steps forward, extending an olive branch to Israel, calling the two nations “brothers in history” and emphasizing their shared heritage. This gesture, echoing the philosophical and historical depth of both nations, underscores the ties between the Persian and Hebrew peoples that go back thousands of years to an era of mutual respect and cooperation.

The Iranian President presents a vision of unity, underscoring the countless points of cultural and religious intersection between the two nations. He speaks of Cyrus the Great, the Persian ruler who liberated the Jewish people from Babylonian captivity, invoking a symbol of protection and solidarity that transcends millennia. With a limitless intellectual insight, he weaves a narrative that Israel and Iran are “two branches of the same ancient tree,” shaped by common values, ethical monotheism, and contributions to human civilization. In the speech, he suggests that modern-day animosities pale compared to their shared histories and collective dreams for a prosperous future.

Israel, in turn, responds with a cautiously optimistic statement, recognizing Iran’s historic gesture and affirming its openness to dialogue. In a display of diplomacy, Israeli leaders publicly acknowledge the Persian Empire’s role in safeguarding the Jewish people, suggesting that the two nations could be “partners in peace” in the contemporary Middle East. Both nations pledge to establish regular diplomatic channels, focusing on areas of mutual interest like technology, agriculture, water resources, and counterterrorism. With the limitless potential of such an alliance, the Middle East could witness a transformation, where the collective intelligence and cultural richness of these two nations serve as the cornerstone of a peaceful and cooperative future.