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@LBGamestips
MR | LBFound | UI/UX Designer | Founder LMedia | #Trader |
Everywhere Katılım Eylül 2013
2.8K Takip Edilen280.5K Takipçiler

BRICS reports that 🇮🇷 Iran considers charging taxes and toll fees to cross the Strait of Hormuz.
Lemme get something straight 😳😳
So it's been toll-free all this while? This country might be different from what the world powers are saying about them. Do you know how expensive it is for ships to pass through the Panama Canal?


English

Come to think of it. 🤔
Iran 🇮🇷 has hypersonic missiles, cluster munitions, the most advanced, war ready and cost efficient drone model on the planet and they've effectively been fighting 6 countries 🇦🇪 🇶🇦 🇴🇲 🇺🇸 🇮🇱 🇸🇦 at once for 3 weeks with a yearly budget of $10 billion.
and we're supposed to believe they never figured out how to build nuclear weapons?
Nonsene! If Iran 🇮🇷 wanted a nuclear weapon, they'd have one. They don't and never did.
Joe Kent's telling the truth, they literally voted against developing them in 2004.
"Iran 🇮🇷 must NEVER get a nuclear weapon" is the "Saddam Hussein has weapons of mass destruction" of 2026.
This entire based on a total lie.


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🇮🇷 Female Iranian footballers who returned to Iran 🇮🇷 recall how Australian 🇦🇺 police were pressuring them to not leave for Iran.
She says:
"When they checked our passports, each of us went into a room with a police officer. At first, when they took my hand and led me away, I was a bit scared, but I told myself it’s okay.
Then we sat down; we went through a few doors, entered a room, and I sat. The security agent called someone on a phone, and I realized they wanted to ask us again: 'If you go back, it’s like this [dangerous]... your country is at war, etc.
They were asking a bunch of very strange questions, hoping I might say, 'No, I don't know. I am not sure of returning.’
They kept asking those same kinds of questions. He then asked me ‘Do you want to call your family? You can contact them right now to decide if you want to stay or not.' As soon as he said that, I told the lady (the translator), 'Tell him I don’t want to stay.
Anyone who wanted to stay has already stayed.' I didn’t even let him finish reading the rest of his questions; I just said: ‘I want to return to Iran.'
Right then, I got a bad feeling in my heart; I was a bit scared because I really wanted to go back to Iran—I wanted to go to my family, my homeland.”
English

Female Iranian footballers who returned to Iran recall how Australian police were pressuring them to not leave for Iran.
She says:
"When they checked our passports, each of us went into a room with a police officer. At first, when they took my hand and led me away, I was a bit scared, but I told myself it’s okay.
Then we sat down; we went through a few doors, entered a room, and I sat. The security agent called someone on a phone, and I realized they wanted to ask us again: 'If you go back, it’s like this [dangerous]... your country is at war, etc.
They were asking a bunch of very strange questions, hoping I might say, 'No, I don't know. I am not sure of returning.’
They kept asking those same kinds of questions. He then asked me ‘Do you want to call your family? You can contact them right now to decide if you want to stay or not.' As soon as he said that, I told the lady (the translator), 'Tell him I don’t want to stay.
Anyone who wanted to stay has already stayed.' I didn’t even let him finish reading the rest of his questions; I just said: ‘I want to return to Iran.'
Right then, I got a bad feeling in my heart; I was a bit scared because I really wanted to go back to Iran—I wanted to go to my family, my homeland.”
English
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