
The Daily Heretic Ex-Muslim Nuriyah Khan - Iran Protests: Ayatollah Khamenei is a MONSTER
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What is life in Iran really like — and why do so many people outside the country misunderstand what Iranians are protesting against?
In this powerful and deeply personal conversation, ex-Muslim writer and activist Nuriyah Khan explains why she believes the Iranian protests are about far more than headlines suggest — and why she describes the current regime as fundamentally oppressive.
This isn’t a geopolitical briefing.
It’s a lived perspective.
Nuriyah reflects on the cultural and political shift that took place after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, how everyday life changed for women, families, and dissenters, and why many Iranians feel trapped between an authoritarian system and a world that doesn’t seem to hear them.
She also questions why parts of Western discourse seem to soften or excuse the regime’s actions, while the voices of those directly affected are often sidelined or dismissed. Her argument isn’t about ideology — it’s about consistency, human rights, and listening to people who actually live with the consequences.
Andrew presses her on what outsiders most often get wrong about Iran, and what she wishes journalists, activists, and policymakers understood better. Nuriyah responds by drawing a clear line between cultural respect and political denial — and explains why confusing the two harms the very people the protests are meant to support.
They explore:
What the protests inside Iran are really about
How daily life changed after the Islamic Revolution
Why women and minorities are often at the centre of dissent
Why Western narratives sometimes miss the point
And what solidarity actually looks like from the perspective of those inside and connected to Iran
You don’t have to share Nuriyah’s conclusions to find this compelling.
Because this conversation isn’t about slogans — it’s about testimony, memory, and the gap between how events are framed and how they are lived.
This clip offers something rare: a voice shaped not by theory or distance, but by experience — challenging viewers to rethink what they think they know about Iran, protest, and power.
🎧 Watch the full podcast here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJdo7GZ5_Jk&t=479s
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