CEO, investor, 1st generation immigrant 🇺🇸

Joined March 2014
309 Photos and videos
Kirill retweeted
Holy shit. Iranian Rapper 021Kid releases Persian remix of Israeli song Harbu Darbu featuring Ness and Stilla who did the original. FREE IRAN Israel and the Iranian people will always stand together 🇮🇱 🇮🇷
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Kirill retweeted
Zionism is to Judaism what Arab nationalism is to Islam. Both rely on cultural heritage (Hebrew and Judaism for Zionism, Arabic and Islam for Arab nationalism) as the basis of their national project. If you are proud of your Arab heritage and believe it deserves sovereignty tied to it, Zionists are also proud of their Hebrew heritage and believe it deserves sovereignty tied to it. Arabs have 21 sovereign states. Zionists have one. Internalize these concepts before claiming Zionism is racism, Judaism is merely a religion, or Israel is a theocracy. Islam and Arab nationalism show a similar entanglement and no one calls them racism. Note that Islamism (designing Arab states along Muslim Brotherhood ideology) is supremacy and racism. Arabism is not racism, even though my preference is to switch Arab states like Lebanon and Syria into multiethnic states by dropping their constitutional description as Arab states. Let each heritage—Arab-Muslim or Hebrew-Jewish—celebrate itself and secure a national home where it can pass that heritage to its children. Diversity is great. Stop using religion as a real estate deed. There is enough land for both Zionism and Arabism. (Arabs have all the land and can easily concede the 10,000 sqm to Zionists).
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Kirill retweeted
A donkey is reunited with the girl who looked after him when he was little

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Kirill retweeted
My best advice is to stop using motivation as your only fuel. I know it feels great when you’re fired up, but it’s a short-term fuel source. That’s why the vast majority of people who start anything - diet, fitness, new projects - don’t finish. They run out of gas. The only lasting fuel is routine. And you only get a routine by dragging yourself on the days when you have no motivation. Over and over. I know that’s not the answer anyone wants. I wish I had a magic pill for you. But the only thing that works long term is showing up for yourself even when you don’t want to. Brute force. I’m slightly crazy and don’t have any investors or consultants to listen to, so I’m giving people 50 dollars of their 100 dollar annual subscription back when they show up for themselves and complete a full program in my app. If that motivates you to start, it’s designed to build your routine to keep you going like it has for thousands of other people, so join us: arnoldspumpclub.com/pages/be…
Replying to @Schwarzenegger
Got any advice for staying motivated? Asking for my exhausted psyche.
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Kirill retweeted
24 Dec 2025
Arguably the best use of AI I’ve seen in a long time 😂 The outgoing IDF Arabic spokesperson posted this as a “final goodbye” to Sinwar and all the other terrorist leaders that Israel eliminated during his career. Brilliant.

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or bitcoin at $450
23 Dec 2025
When you bought silver at $25!!!

ALT King Yes GIF

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Kirill retweeted
14 Dec 2025
We and the @PershingSqFdn are going to set up a reward system for heroes. As a society, we don’t do enough to take care of the heroes in our communities. We would like to address this failure and do so systematically. I will report back once we are up and running.
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Kirill retweeted
Tis’ The Season! 🎅🏻 🎄
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Kirill retweeted
As a Lebanese Maronite Christian, I say it plainly: Peace between Lebanon and Israel is not betrayal. It is salvation for our people and the key to our economic rebirth. For decades, Lebanon has bled for wars that were never ours. We buried our youth, lost our homes, and watched our communities vanish… all because of foreign agendas imposed on us under the names of Arabism, Palestinian causes, and proxy resistance. Lebanon deserves peace, stability, and a future not endless destruction. And the Bible is clear: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.” God stands with those who build life not those who worship death. Peace means: reopening our economy attracting investments rebuilding tourism reviving industry and agriculture creating real jobs ending emigration restoring Lebanon as the gateway between East and West Peace is the path to prosperity. War is the path to extinction. I look forward to the day when Lebanon breaks free from militias, foreign chains, and political parasites. The day we choose life over death, freedom over fear, and growth over destruction. May God bless the peacemakers. May God protect Lebanon. May God destroy every enemy of life, truth, and freedom. The economy, stability, and growth we dream of begin with peace.
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Kirill retweeted
I am not young. I don’t use TikTok (have an account/don't use). I listen to NPR Morning Edition and other podcasts, read the WSJ/NY Post/Newsweek/Telegraph/NYT and others daily. I’m a war scholar, over 35 years of experience. I spent 25 years active duty in the military, 2 x year long deployments in combat in Iraq, have been a scholar in specifically urban and underground warfare for over 10 years to include studying Israel's wars before October 7. I have conducted 7 research trips to Israel since October 7th, 6 times embedded, researching, collecting data with the IDF inside of Gaza. The evidence I’ve seen and collected show Israel has executed it's war against Hamas in Gaza above an beyond requirements of the law of armed conflict, implemented more measures to prevent civilian harm and provided more aid and services to an enemy population in enemy controlled territory than any military in history. There is conclusively no genocide in Gaza.
I’m nearly 50. I don’t use TikTok. I listen to NPR Morning Edition and read the Financial Times daily. I’m a lawyer who has worked on Israel-Palestine issues for the last 20 years. The evidence I’ve seen that Israel committed atrocities including genocide in Gaza is overwhelming.
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Kirill retweeted
In Jean-Luc Godard’s Notre Musique, The Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish offers a better explanation of the Arab-Israeli conflict in just a few short phrases than 99% of the empty, emotional speeches uttered on social media today. In a conversation with a young Israeli woman, Darwish says: "Do you know why we Palestinians are famous? Because you are our enemies. The interest in us stems from interest in the Jewish question. The interest is in you, not in us. We have the misfortune of having Israel as our enemy because she has strong allies, too many to count, in the world. We have the good fortune of having Israel as our enemy because the Jews are the center of the world’s attention. You defeated us but you brought us fame. You are our public relations. I have no illusions about this." He is 100% right. The only reason people in the West pretend to care about Palestinians is because they’re interested in the Jews. Had Israel not been a Jewish state but a Muslim state or a Buddhist state, the conflict wouldn’t have been worth a single line at the bottom of a news website. However, since Jews are involved, it never leaves the headlines of all the papers in the world. This prevents peace because too many people are happy to fight to the last Arab just to hurt the Jews. Peace will not promote this goal in any way. They are not friends to the Arabs, just enemies to the Jews.
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Kirill retweeted
29 Nov 2025
Forty-five years ago, I came to the United States with $20 in my pocket and walking with a cane, still recovering after being shot in Lebanon by Hizbollah and Amal terrorists—more than ten bullets in my knees and legs. I survived because of a remarkable Lebanese Jewish surgeon, Dr. David Hanoush, who operated on me three times and gave me the gift of walking again. When I arrived in America, I had nothing. But I worked hard. I had three jobs, went to school, and built a life step by step. And the people who helped me—who treated me with dignity and kindness—were Christians and Jews. I thank them and pray for them every day. This country gave me safety, opportunity, and a future my parents and grandparents could have never imagined. I’ve been with the same company for 35 years, and I spent 15 years volunteering after completing Firefighter School and Police Reserve training. That was my way of saying thank you, America. Thank you for treating me as one of your own. Thank you for turning my American dream into an American reality. And let’s speak the truth. We came from countries where human life meant nothing.
Countries where children grew up with no hope, no safety, no electricity, no clean water, no medicine.
Places where people killed each other in the streets and no one would defend you or protect you. We left all of that behind to come here—to a land that respects life, freedom, and human dignity. America fed us, sheltered us, lifted us up, and gave us the chance to become more than survivors. That’s why we can never forget where we came from. And we cannot, under any circumstances, disrespect the very country that saved us. Some people still act like they’re visitors here. Some hold foreign loyalties above the nation that gave them everything. Some excuse violence done in the name of causes they claim to reject. Some wave foreign flags louder than the one that gives them the freedom to do so. To those people, I have one message:
If you want to recreate the chaos and hatred that destroyed the countries we fled—don’t bring it here.
Not to the nation that rescued us.
Not to the land that finally gave us dignity and peace. As for the rest of us—the ones who stand for the anthem with tears in our eyes, who thank God every day we are Americans, who see every citizen here as family—we’re not going anywhere. And we won’t stay silent while others make us look ungrateful for the blessings we’ve been given. So here it is, plain and from the bottom of my heart: Honor America. Respect America. Put this country first—because it’s the country that saved us. One last note, when I was naturalized and for 15 years before every meeting at the FD & PD: I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.” And it make me sick to see people in NY and Philadelphia burning our flag. - A proud American 🇺🇸
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The new "country of origin" feature on X is one feature we all needed, it will do a ton to fight misinformation and hate which is most often spread by foreign malign actors
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Kirill retweeted
"My name's Raymond. I'm 73. I work the parking lot at St. Joseph's Hospital. Minimum wage, orange vest, a whistle I barely use. Most people don't even look at me. I'm just the old man waving cars into spaces. But I see everything. Like the black sedan that circled the lot every morning at 6 a.m. for three weeks. Young man driving, grandmother in the passenger seat. Chemotherapy, I figured. He'd drop her at the entrance, then spend 20 minutes hunting for parking, missing her appointments. One morning, I stopped him. "What time tomorrow?" "6:15," he said, confused. "Space A-7 will be empty. I'll save it." He blinked. "You... you can do that?" "I can now," I said. Next morning, I stood in A-7, holding my ground as cars circled angrily. When his sedan pulled up, I moved. He rolled down his window, speechless. "Why?" "Because she needs you in there with her," I said. "Not out here stressing." He cried. Right there in the parking lot. Word spread quietly. A father with a sick baby asked if I could help. A woman visiting her dying husband. I started arriving at 5 a.m., notebook in hand, tracking who needed what. Saved spots became sacred. People stopped honking. They waited. Because they knew someone else was fighting something bigger than traffic. But here's what changed everything, A businessman in a Mercedes screamed at me one morning. "I'm not sick! I need that spot for a meeting!" "Then walk," I said calmly. "That space is for someone whose hands are shaking too hard to grip a steering wheel." He sped off, furious. But a woman behind him got out of her car and hugged me. "My son has leukemia," she sobbed. "Thank you for seeing us." The hospital tried to stop me. "Liability issues," they said. But then families started writing letters. Dozens. "Raymond made the worst days bearable." "He gave us one less thing to break over." Last month, they made it official. "Reserved Parking for Families in Crisis." Ten spots, marked with blue signs. And they asked me to manage it. But the best part? A man I'd helped two years ago, his mother survived, came back. He's a carpenter. Built a small wooden box, mounted it by the reserved spaces. Inside? Prayer cards, tissues, breath mints, and a note, "Take what you need. You're not alone. -Raymond & Friends" People leave things now. Granola bars. Phone chargers. Yesterday, someone left a hand-knitted blanket. I'm 73. I direct traffic in a hospital parking lot. But I've learned this: Healing doesn't just happen in operating rooms. Sometimes it starts in a parking space. When someone says, "I see your crisis. Let me carry this one small piece." So pay attention. At the grocery checkout, the coffee line, wherever you are. Someone's drowning in the little things while fighting the big ones. Hold a door. Save a spot. Carry the weight no one else sees. It's not glamorous. But it's everything." Let this story reach more hearts.... Credit: Mary Nelson
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Kirill retweeted
When I reported to Elon, we would have X product meetings at 5 or 6pm (because he was with the Tesla team for 10 hours before that), then my 1:1 checkin would be at 10pm, but that would regularly get moved to 11pm or midnight or 1am. Usually around 2am, he’d go take a nap for a couple hours in the office and then repeat the same schedule again the next day with a different set of companies, 7 days a week.
Any school teacher has more work ethic in their pinky finger than Elon Musk has in his entire body. Make. Billionaires. Pay. Their. Fair. Share.
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Kirill retweeted
Over nine years ago I moved to SF to work at Citigroup as an analyst. I thought an 80k salary was life changing. Shared a 5 bedroom/1 bathroom apartment with 4 girls I met on Craigslist. Today I watched a sign with my VC firms name on it be put up outside of my new office just blocks away. No way in the world I ever thought I'd make it to this point. Never give up.
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Kirill retweeted
The prepared remarks of my Oxford Union debate held on November 13, 2025, on the proposition that “Israel is a greater threat to regional stability than the Islamic Republic of Iran.” Mr. President, I confess that I hesitated before agreeing to debate this evening. To do so risks dignifying a proposition so disconnected from basic facts that it verges on the satirical: that Israel, of all states, poses a greater threat to regional stability than the Islamic Republic of Iran. But we now live in an age where people will believe almost anything. Nearly one in four people in thie country aged 18 to 34 believe that the 7/7 terrorist attacks were “probably a hoax.” And here in this Oxford Union, we saw just three weeks ago that no less than 501 members believe it is right to vote in support of the incoming president, after he had publicly celebrated the killing of Charlie Kirk. So I decided it was necessary to attend and lay out a few essential facts proving that tonight’s proposition is not merely wrong, but the inversion of reality. Regional stability is measured by who starts wars, not by who stops them. Israel not arm terror proxies in five Arab countries; Iran does. The entire Middle East knows this, which is why Arab states quietly depend on Israel for their own survival. Fact: The moderate Sunni Arab countries are part of a strategic alliance with Israel, going back decades. Egypt signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1979. Jordan did so in 1994. In 2020, under the historic Abraham Accords, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan signed peace and normalization agreements with Israel. The accords recognize that the Arab and Jewish peoples are descendants of a common ancestor, Abraham — indigenous to the region — and they articulate a vision of advancing a culture of peace, security and prosperity. Fact: Saudi Arabia, custodian of the two holy mosques, has also developed a significant rappochement with Israel. Indeed, captured minutes of Hamas leadership meetings show that this was a key factor in their decision to invade Israel and launch the war and massacre on October 7, 2023. Hamas wrote: “There is no doubt that the Saudi-Zionist normalization agreement is progressing significantly.” So they decided on “an extraordinary action” to try and torpedo it. Fact: this regional alliance between Israel and the moderate Arab countries was resilient enough to survive the war of the past two years. Last year, neighboring Egypt and Jordan imported a record amount of natural gas from Israel. Israel provides parched Jordan with 100 million cubic meters a year. How is Israel “a threat to regional stability”? The opposite is true. One of the most powerful illustrations of this regional alliance came last year, on April 13, 2024, when the Islamic regime in Iran launched an unprecedented attack on the people of Israel — with 170 drones, over 30 cruise missiles, and more than 120 ballistic missiles. Those who helped shoot down the incoming weapons included the air forces of the US, the UK, France, and Jordan, while Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates contributed intelligence, including radar tracking information. This wasn’t a one-off. When Iran attacked Israel again in June 2025, Jordan shot down Iranian missiles and drones crossing overhead, and Saudi Arabia reportedly allowed Israel to use its airspace to do so. The fact that Sunni Arab states provided a combination of air force interceptions, radar and intelligence is a a real-world vote on tonight’s motion. They know that for their people, Israel is a partner in survival; and the Islamic Regime in Iran is an existential threat. You don’t intercept missiles heading toward a ‘threat to regional stability’. You intercept missiles from one. The Islamic Republic of Iran Now let us address the true driver of instability: the Islamic Regime in Iran. Revolutionary Jihad is their raison d’etre. Compare and contrast. Israel, at the very moment of its birth on May 14, 1948, in its Declaration of Independence, reached out to its neighbors with a simple message: “We extend our hand to all neighboring states and their peoples in an offer of peace.” With the Islamic Regime in Iran, it was the exact opposite. On the first anniversary of his regime, February 11, 1980, Ayatollah Khomeini declared: “We shall export our revolution to the whole world. Until the cry, ‘There is no God but Allah’ resounds over the whole world, there will be struggle.” And that is what they do — in the region and beyond. Iran, through its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, exports terrorism and war. Look at Yemen. They armed and trained the Houthis, a group whose slogan is “Death to America, Death to Israel, Damn the Jews.” The Houthis destroyed Yemen: collapsing state institutions, crippling hospitals and basic services, diverting aid, and deepening famine and economic freefall. Backed by Iran, they turned the country into a battlefield for regional power struggles. Their own people are starving, yet unprovoked, from a thousand miles away, the Houthis have used Yemen’s resources to attack Israeli cities with more than 400 ballistic missiles and drones. All sponsored by Iran. Is this stability? Look at Lebanon. Iran’s proxy Hezbollah hollowed out every institution that once made the country function, turning in into a failed state. They built an Iranian-funded parallel military stronger than the Lebanese army, seized control of border crossings and ports, and converted entire regions into fortified enclaves beyond the reach of the state. They assassinated critics, toppled governments that tried to assert sovereignty, and dragged Lebanon into wars its people never chose. Hezbollah’s capture of the economy—fuel smuggling, customs evasion, protection rackets—bled the treasury dry and helped trigger Lebanon’s financial collapse. Its veto power over politics turned parliament into paralysis. Its domination of security services allowed corruption and impunity to flourish. And by launching attacks on Israel from civilian neighborhoods, it ensured that Lebanon would live permanently on the brink of war, scaring off investment, tourism, and any hope of recovery. In short: Hezbollah replaced the Lebanese state with an Iranian proxy empire, and the result was national ruin. Look at Syria. When Syrians protested peacefully in 2011, the Assad regime was on the brink of collapse. Iran intervened to save its client. It deployed IRGC commanders, imported thousands of Shia militiamen from Iraq, Afghanistan, and Lebanon, and oversaw sectarian cleansing in key corridors linking Damascus to the coast. Tehran funded and directed a campaign of mass atrocities — from starvation sieges to chemical attacks — that killed hundreds of thousands, and displaced millions, half the country. It entrenched militias across Syrian territory, built missile factories on Syrian soil, and used the country as a forward base to attack Israel and threaten Jordan. Iran did not stabilize Syria; it shattered it. Look at Iraq. Iran filled the post-Saddam vacuum by building militias stronger than the state. Through the IRGC and its Popular Mobilization Forces, Tehran created armed factions that answer to Iran, not Baghdad. They seized border crossings, looted state revenues, and assassinated activists who demanded Iraqi sovereignty. These militias toppled governments, paralyzed parliament, and turned Iraq into a launchpad for Iranian rocket and drone attacks. Iran didn’t stabilize Iraq; it captured it, replacing national institutions with a network of loyalist armed groups. Look at Gaza. Iran transformed Hamas into a mini-army. Tehran funded rockets, tunnels, and drone programs, while Hamas diverted aid from civilians to weapons. Instead of building a future for Palestinians, Hamas — with Iranian training — built an underground fortress beneath homes, hospitals, and schools. The result was October 7th: the deadliest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. Gaza is beautiful beachfront property. It could have been prosperous. But Iran made it a military outpost for its war on Israel, condemning Palestinians to endless conflict. And let’s look worldwide. In Australia, the Iranian regime hired criminals to terrorize the Jewish community, firebombing a synagogue, and burning a kosher café, prompting Australia to break its relations with Iran. In Argentina, Iran and Hezbollah bombed the Jewish community building in Buenos Aires, murdering 85 people and injuring over 300. The regime targets dissidents worldwide. Here in the UK, on March 29th, 2024, assailants hired by Iran stabbed journalist Pouria Zeraati outside his London residence. Earlier this week, I was at the World Liberty Congress with my friend Masih Alinejad, who now lives in New York. The Islamic regime tried to kidnap or kill her three times. They sent a hitman with an AK-47 to her home in New York. In the Netherlands, the regime assassinated Iranian dissidents: Ali Motamed in 2015, and two years later, Ahmad Nissi. Dutch, Swedish, French and UK Intelligence have all confirmed that Iran is hiring criminal gangs to target dissidents in Europe. Assassinating dissidents worldwide is why Iran is a terrorist regime. That is why the IRGC is designated as a terrorist organization by Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Ecuador, Paraguay, Saudi Arabia, Sweden and the United States. My opponent Ataollah Mohajerani was complicit with Iranian regime crimes Mr. President, in this regard, I would be remiss not to mention that a human rights lawyer from this university, from Oxford, has filed a complaint and legal dossier with the police against my opponent in this debate, Mr. Ataollah Mohajerani, for his role in the assassination of disdidents. As described in The Guardian, on January 30, 2023, the founder of the Oxford University Public Interest Law program, Kaveh Moussavi, has alleged complicity by Mr. Mohajerani, who was a senior Iranian regime official between 1989 and 1997, “during a period when hundreds of assassinations of dissidents in Europe were attempted and committed on the orders of the Iranian regime.” Moreover, the complaint points to Mr. Mohajerani’s 1989 book, “A Critique of the Satanic Verses Conspiracy,” in which he endorses and justifies the fatwa issued by Ayatollah Khomeini in 1999 against the famed novelist Salman Rushdie, who was stabbed 15 times in 2022 — as a result, presumably, of this Fatwa. And in the book, Mr. Mohajani writes in his book that Rushdie is, “an absolute apostate, and the punishment of an apostate is execution.” And so, Mr. Mohajarani, tonight you say you stand for regional stability, but you have once blessed the idea that an author, a citizen of this country, should be killed for writing a book. So please tell this house: Do you still believe that writers deserve death, or will you finally retract and renounce your support for that Fatwa? [Though he spoke after, Ataollah Mohajerani never answered the question.] Stability includes women’s rights But stability isn’t just military or geopolitical. In the words of the British Department for International Development: “Open, inclusive societies reduce the risk of the spread of instability.” Indeed, a society is stable where a woman can walk on the street without being attacked for defending her rights. In Israel, women have served as pilots, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, opposition leader, and Prime Minister. They are visible and vocal in public life — leading companies, commanding army units, shaping law and policy, and freely expressing their opinions in the press and on the streets, in the tens and even hundreds of thousands. By contrast, in the Islamic Republic of Iran, women get banned from sports stadiums, imprisoned for singing in public, or beaten to death for wearing improper Hijab, like Jinna Mahsa Amini. In Iran, women are made punished simply for wanting to be seen, heard, or free. And make no mistake. What happens in Iran doesn’t stay in Iran. They export the repression. In Yemen, the Iran-backed Houthis have banned women from traveling without a male guardian. Female aid workers can’t even move freely to deliver desperately-needed humanitarian assistance. In Lebanon, in July 2023, the leader of Iran-backed Hezbollah called to kill gays and lesbians, sparking terror among LGBT people. Rights for minorities Stability for a society means also means basic human rights for minorities. In Israel, Arabs vote in the only free and fair elections in the entire Middle East. In the Islamic Republic of Iran, ethnic minorities are subject to discrimination, including Ahwazi Arabs, Azeris, Baluchis, Kurds and Turks. And the regime targets religious minorities, including Christians — particularly those who converted from Islam — as well as Sufi Muslims, Sunni Muslims, Gonabadi Dervishes, Jews, Yarsanis, Zoroastrians, and, in particular, Baha’is, who face systemic persecution, including mass arrest and lengthy prison sentences. Even the UN, which is often soft on Iran, has recognized these gross and systematic abuses. On December 17th, In Resolution 79/183, the UN condemned the Islamic Republic of Iran for restrictions on freedom of thought and religion, attacks on places of worship and burial, and harassment, intimidation, persecution, arbitrary arrest, detention of persons belonging to these minorities – as well as its incitement to hatred leading to violence — in violation of Iran’s obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Right to protest Stability for a society also means the right to protest. In Israel, it’s a national pastime to lambaste the government. In Tel Aviv, Saturday-evening protests have often drawn tens of thousands, and even hundreds of thousands of demonstrators. In Iran, they beat, blind, rape, torture and kill women who protest. During the Woman Life Freedom protests of 2022, the regime arrested 20,000 people, across 130 cities. At least 551 people—including dozens of children—were killed. For protesting. Conclusion In the final analysis, Mr. President, the greatest threat to regional stability is a regime that murders its own people, hunts its critics across Europe and America, arms terror proxie, and exports terror on four continents. The Islamic Regime in Iran has killed hundreds of thousands in Syria, shattered Yemen through the Houthis, bankrupted Lebanon through Hezbollah, hijacked Iraq through militias, and turned Gaza into a launching pad for the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. At home, they shoots women in the streets, blind teenagers, torture dissidents, and execute protesters. Abroad, they sends terrorists and assassins to murder innocents in New York, London, and Buenos Aires. This is not a government seeking stability; it is a revolutionary engine of hate, terror, and chaos. Israel, by contrast, is the firewall that prevents Iran’s imperial project from engulfing the region. To claim Israel is the greater threat to stability is not merely wrong — it is an inversion of reality itself.
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Kirill retweeted
Another game changing @Israel innovation. It’s milk - genuinely. But it’s non-dairy - although it IS dairy. Confused? @StraussGroup (@Yotvata1) came out with a 3% milk which does not come from a cow. It’s not soy, not almond or oat, it’s milk made in a lab using beta-lactoglobulin (BLG), the whey protein in cows milk. It tastes like milk. It frothes like milk (for lattes). It cooks like milk. It is even healthier than milk (compared Yotvata 3% label to the cow free label, there’s less saturated fat in the cow free). It’s likely to reduce dairy costs as there are no cows involved and it changes the kosher industry forever (although I’m sure the rabbis will find a way to mess that up too). This week I’ll be experimenting. My first task will be to make fresh mozzarella cheese which I’ll be documenting on X. When I was a chef long ago I loved making fresh mozzarella, and I’m hoping this product reacts the same way as cow’s milk did. I typically use a higher fat content but can solve this by reducing the milk over low heat first, then cooling it…stay tuned for the video on how it all went. @BDSmovement vegans - tough luck. Enjoy the estrogen increasing soy milk while the world moves to a more sustainable future thanks to Israeli innovation.
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Kirill retweeted
6 Oct 2025
Most people have never heard his name. Dr. Mohammed Helmi was an Egyptian Muslim who risked everything to save Jews during the Holocaust. He hid a Jewish girl, forged her identity, and defied the Nazis — knowing it could cost him his life. He didn’t do it for fame or recognition. He did it because it was right. The world should never forget him. #ClaimsConference_Partner #BMF_Partner #RighteousAmongTheNations
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