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SvennoJ said:
Hardstuck-Platinum said:

Yes they do, and they also have an extremely positive view of the US and Israeli militaries because they see it as they're only hope for freedom from the very extreme rules of the regime. People have literally been killed over singing and dancing in Iran and the citizens are tired of it. Iranians are out in the streets all across the world celebrating. They want to be free. How can we say something is bad when the people inside the country and literally celebrating that it's happening?

Many people in and outside America will be celebrating if Trump gets bombed to death as well.

That doesn't mean it's the way to fix US' regime descending into a fascist dictatorship controlled by the 'elite'.

There were Iranians celebrating on the streets of Tehran during the 1953 CIA-backed coup (Operation Ajax) as well, and here we are again, history repeating. This time it will go right...

It's different. Iranians have had no quality of life for decades and now, their currency is worth nothing because of government policies. Americans still have quality of life and a functioning economy, regardless of Trumps actions. That might change in the future as trump gains more power, but as of now they are not comparable. You don't realise how bad life is inside Iran, Trumps and Bibi's bombs cannot do anything worse to them than they have already suffered, and they know that, and that why they love the US and Israeli military's. 

SanAndreasX said:
SvennoJ said:

Many people in and outside America will be celebrating if Trump gets bombed to death as well.

That doesn't mean it's the way to fix US' regime descending into a fascist dictatorship controlled by the 'elite'.

There were Iranians celebrating on the streets of Tehran during the 1953 CIA-backed coup (Operation Ajax) as well, and here we are again, history repeating. This time it will go right...

To add to this, the Iranians were also dancing in the streets when Muhammad Reza Shah left Iran for the last time to get treated for cancer, and an estimated crowd of 2 million-plus people were gathered in Tehran to welcome the Ayatollah Khomeini home from his exile in Paris. 

The country is divided. There's 90% of the country who want regime change,  but there's still 10% who are loyal to the ayatollahs. The vast majority want regime change though and there is nothing that America or Israel's bombs can do that's worse than what they've already experienced from the ayatollah regime.