00:00Oman says Iran was close, very close to a nuclear agreement with the United States.
00:05One diplomat called it the closest the two sides have come in years, but then instead
00:09of ink on paper, missiles arrived to allegedly liberate the women of Iran, protect human
00:14rights of protesters, to avoid nuclear developments, to prevent an attack on United States.
00:19The attack was described as a surprise, including one on a girl's primary school.
00:23148 children reportedly killed, little girls blown to pieces, as adults picked up blood
00:30stained bags and shoes and limbs.
00:32Schools are protected under international law, so many experts are questioning the legality
00:37as well as the morality of such an action.
00:39But who will investigate?
00:40The allies of the attackers, sorry, the liberators, then the unthinkable.
00:45An American-Israeli strike killed Iran's supreme leader, the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
00:50The United States has carried out targeted attacks before, including Iranian General Qasem
00:55Soleimani in 2020, but assassinating a sitting head of a state, that's a different story.
01:01Let's be clear, Khamenei was not a universally loved leader.
01:05He was hated by many in Iran, as was he loved by some in his community.
01:09For 37 years, his rule was marked by crackdowns, censorship, harsh restrictions on women.
01:15Iranian authorities accepted that 5,000 were killed during the 2026 protest, blaming foreign-backed
01:22rioters, of course.
01:23Twice women were killed in hijab rule-related cases.
01:27So yes, there was repression, and human rights were being violated.
01:32But is that a valid reason for a foreign country to kill a sovereign country's president or prime minister?
01:38If we follow the U.S.-Israel rhetoric, protesters and women being harmed, maybe the liberators
01:43should take a look in their own backyard.
01:46As the U.S. was liberating Iranian women, its state of Tennessee proposed death penalty for women
01:52who get abortions, even in rape cases.
01:55Trump's eyes shot at a woman in the street, while the shooter called her dead body a misogynistic abuse.
02:01It is unlikely that he will face any consequences.
02:05As for protests against a state chief, thousands took to the streets of Tel Aviv last year
02:10to demand Benjamin Netanyahu's ouster.
02:12They called his regime extremely corrupt.
02:14Then in U.S.A., at least nine anti-Trump or anti-I.S. protesters were killed
02:19in the streets of the land of the free.
02:21Young people who wanted human rights, killed.
02:25Cannibalism and child rape is alleged in the infamous Epstein files,
02:28but Trump admins said there could be no prosecutions as the system would collapse.
02:33A lot of the atrocities alleged by Trump admin against Iran can find
02:37echoes and faint shadows in the United States and its allies.
02:42That is women and citizens being repressed.
02:44Would that give any other country the right to liberate the people of United States?
02:49The United States once liberated Afghanistan, now its women are outlawed from studying
02:54or even receiving medical help from doctors.
02:57The question remains, who has the moral authority to liberate a nation,
03:01kill a president, prime minister or a supreme leader with impunity?
03:05What gives Trump the final authority on kidnapping one president from Venezuela,
03:10kill a supreme leader elsewhere and sow seeds of disruption in other West Asian countries?
03:16Netanyahu has already announced that Turkey is the next threat.
03:21Will Trump now liberate the women and children of Turkey?
03:27What is Trump now?
03:27What does he do?
03:27Oh, he'll be 25 years old.
03:28But the truth is, I have to be 25 years old.
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