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How my family became Not Islamic and very Atheistic then went back to become Zoroastrian again like our ancient Iranian ancestors
All thanks to my Anti-Islamic grandfather Islam was killed-off in our family forever which we all appreciate it now very much in our family The last Shia Muslim in my family was my Great-grandfather who was a strict pious religious man which caused his son (my grandfather) to rebel against him by committing apostasy as a young boy to become the first Atheist of our family and fortunately under the secular nationalist Classic Liberal Imperial Government of Shāhanshāh Reza Pahlavi the Great it was completely safe for Iranians (i.e. Aryans) to commit apostasy by exiting Islam forever if they wanted it and live their lives the way they actually wanted instead and the only section of the society who would have issues with this would be the Islamic Clergy in Iran but considering that they had no political power back then there was no need to worry about committing apostasy My Grandfather became an Absolute Atheist and the new patriarch of the family as it's new secular liberal patriarch unlike his ultra-conservative Muslim father. My grandfather became of his lack of religiosity it attracted him to Communism however because of his Iranian Nationalism it caused his fellow Communists to mock him sometimes because of the fact that the true Communist worldview opposes the concept of Nationalism My grandfather was an Atheist (Kafir) man who married a Muslim woman (my grandmother) which is not allowed according to Islam however my Muslim grandmother was very attracted to my Atheist grandfather which made her want to having a relationship with him despite being forbidden by Islam... Fortunately my grandfather's Atheism rubbed-off on my grandmother influencing her to become a bad Muslim that constantly violates Islamic teachings by joining my grandfather in drinking alcohol during holy Islamic days like Ashura or eating pork during Ramadan by not fasting at all which is considered blasphemy against Islam even though the only Islamic practice she did was praying but that did nothing because their children my aunts, uncles and father became Atheists like my grandfather instead which later made all my cousins and myself to also become Atheists in the future as well
Women on the road
Anyone notice how vehicular accidents have skyrocketed since women were given the right to drive??? Weird….
Women on the road
What's the deal with elephants?
Do you know abut The elephant in the room? The silence surrounding the 'elephant' is what perpetuates the problem. To solve a problem, the first step is acknowledging its existence. 'Naming' the problem, saying what everyone is not saing. Then real work toward a solution begins. This is one of the most important skills in leadership and critical thinking: the ability to identify what everyone is trying to suppress, and to find the right, courageous, and effective way to bring it to the surface. From here, we need to be careful not to fall to the second trap ​The parable of the blind men and the elephant is a timeless story of Indian origin that explores the subjective nature of truth and the limitations of human perception. ​The Narrative. ​A group of blind men are asked to describe an elephant by touch. Because they have never encountered one before, each man explores a different part of the animal and draws his own conclusion based on that limited contact. ​ ​The story illustrates that while each individual's observation is technically "true" based on their specific experience, it is an incomplete representation of the whole. It highlights how easily we mistake our limited, subjective perspectives for objective truth. It encourages intellectual humility, suggesting that to understand a complex reality whether in politics, social issues, or interpersonal relationships, one must synthesize the diverse, often conflicting viewpoints of others rather than insisting on the exclusivity of one's own. Good luck to all of us .
What's the deal with elephants?
This woman lived through Mao's China and has a lot to say about today
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALOVZ9fc84k A survivor of the Cultural Revolution is sounding the alarm and people need to hear this Just finished watching this interview with a woman named Xi Van Fleet, who actually lived through Mao's Cultural Revolution in China as a kid. Here are the things that stuck with me: She makes a really sharp point about the difference between authoritarianism and totalitarianism. Authoritarianism just wants you to obey. Totalitarianism wants to control what you think and believe. And she sees echoes of that same thing happening in the West today. One of the biggest themes she kept coming back to is how deceptive communism is as a system, not just as a government. The CCP deceived the nationalist Chinese TWICE until they finally wiped them out. The communists would say "now is not the time for conflict, we need to unite against the Japanese" and the nationalists, who genuinely wanted to cooperate, agreed. That openness and willingness to work together is literally what destroyed them. Twice. And they deceived America over and over throughout history too. Nixon's visit in 1972 is a perfect example, the CCP was on the verge of collapse and used that moment to get a lifeline out of the US. She's saying this is not accidental, it's THE core tactic. She also describes the CCP not as a legitimate Chinese government but as a foreign occupying force that took over China. When she explained it that way it honestly reframes everything. When she described all of this I started thinking of like 10 modern examples on my own. Highly recommend watching the full thing if you have time 🙏
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