Skip to main content

tv   Documentary Iranian Dream 3  PRESSTV  February 28, 2024 1:02am-1:31am IRST

1:02 am
so an email has recently come to light, an exchange between jeffrey leeds and former secretary of state colon powell in which he acknowledges that israel has quote has he says 200 nuclear. weapons um and the nuclear non-proliferation treaty has not been signed في by israel um uh under us law the united states should cut off support to israel because it's a nuclear power that has not signed the nuclear non-proliferation treaty according to colin pow correct? shouldn't you ask colin pal that? i i'm not going to speak to this particular traffic and i'm certainly does have nuclear weapons? i'm certainly not going to discuss matters of intelligence from the from the podium and i'm not. who is it
1:03 am
who is assaulting and taking food out of the mouths of the children of public workers in this state right now? is it the occupy wall street activists? no, no, the occupy wall street movement is movement about stopping the grinding wheels of repression right now and stopping this attack on all working people in this country. every human being has a dream and every dream has fate. some dreams accompany one till death and some only for moments that just tickle him, but he will soon forget. our dreams sometimes are like others have, but they may hate it or at least be indifferent towards it. sometimes it is like something that we own and we are not aware of, and sometimes it does not exist, and we have just thought that others have.
1:04 am
we're condemned to our mother's nationality, condemned to where we live, to live life that we spent and the footprints behind us, but i know one thing, we're free to have any hope. however far from the minds of others محترم پردازه شماره 2014 the people i saw
1:05 am
during this time had dreams of things that i already have, on the contrary, i wish i had the things that they have, but in fact they didn't have. every person has a dream and i, the iranian of dream. حرکت رهبر معظم انقلاب خیلی.
1:06 am
of it was just something special, something that you can't find anywhere else in the world, and if i try to explain it, if i try to, scientifically analyze it, that might take away from its power in a way, i would just urge, urge people, i guess, to just they'd
1:07 am
have to experience it for themselves to really understand it. i want to introduce myself first of all, my name is caleb and i'm from the united states and i read the letter of the supreme leader to the youth of europe and north america. and i've come to iran to learn more about the supreme leader in the revolution and if i wanted to meet the supreme leader uh kine how how would i do that بگن حتماً ملاقات براشون بچ سلام من hello salam my name is caleb i'm from the united states some iranians thought the negotiations were good other iranians thought they were not good.
1:08 am
today the people of iran even more than in the past, do not trust the united states. even if the sanctions are lifted, the imperialist will find another way. uh, the imperialist, the wall street monopolis, as long as they exist, and as long as iran is on the revolutionary road, they're going to try to suppress iran, like they don't want any independent country. "and that's a mistake that i think that's a confusion that that is kind of widespread. there have been a lot of leaders who lead independent countries who've been convinced that that they can come to an understanding with the united states. right next to anti-american paintings, you could see catholic church on the street. all right,
1:09 am
so we're here at st. sarka's church. this is an armenian christian church here in tehran, and today they're going to say prayers in honor of imam komeini, the founder of the islamic republic." i'm just going to go inside.
1:10 am
and as much as iran is very much an islamic republic and the government really bases itself on the islamic religion. there are zarastrian, iranians, there are christian iranians, there are iranian jews who practice their religion very, very openly. and are very free to practice their religious beliefs, hold ceremonies, worship in the way their faith,
1:11 am
hallelujah. so they tell me this was this is this is the water jug uh that people used to make in in ancient times here and aron now it's more of
1:12 am
kind of decoration are you they really love tea in iran almost every every every moment they're they're pouring me some tea. and i'm drinking some tea, so and we have some traditional iranian clothing here, very, very nice, this is this is a side of iran that we never really get to see in the united states, whenever we see... of iran, we see pictures of people waving guns around or military things, we never get to see this kind of cultural side of the iranian society, this this vast civilization, this vibrant civilization that that is, there's so much history about iran that that is never taught to us in the united states. i'm looking for some traditional.
1:13 am
it's very nice, very nice, i like it, so i should try this one now, i'm going to try this one on, very nice, very nice, yeah, i like it, very nice, very nice, yeah. it looks good, i like it, i think i'll take
1:14 am
it, looks good, this and this, thank you very much, that's a core, hello. so now we're headed to one of the wealthier sections of the city here in tehran where some of the younger people get together during the night and uh and have their cars uh show off their cars kind of and we're going to talk to some of the people here in this wealthier section of the city about what they think about gap between the rich and poor here in tehran. "well, when i was in the north of tehran, i saw lot of very wealthy
1:15 am
iranians driving bmws and mercedes and eating hamburgers, uh, and i, i talked with some of them, i was able to have some conversations. hello, my name's, my name is caleb, i'm from the united states, uh, hey. hey, hey, how are you my friend? uh, my name is caleb. what's what's your name? my name is f. okay, it's a
1:16 am
very nice car. thank you. mercedes, yes, sure. can get in here? yes, yes. okay, great. excellent. thank you. oh, it's so very nice. very nice seats. oh, wow, look at this leather. yeah, so i've heard that there's kind of a growing gap between the the rich and the poor in iran that... did not understand what the united states was really like, they really believe the propaganda that they're seeing on their
1:17 am
satellite tvs, that uh, they really believe that the us is just a disneyland playground where everyone's happy and wealthy all the time, and they are convinced that that's what the us would bring to iran, and i also tried to point out to them that the wealth of us society in involved lot of people being killed, lot of people, millions of people were killed in order to keep the us at the center. the world economy, they seemed uninterested in that, they didn't really want to hear about that, they didn't really, they didn't really care, and they live in a they live in a fantasy land, and they're the most privileged people in iranian society. the are people who, you know, their family has lot of money from the capitalist sector of the iranian economy, and they are deluding themselves and they are convinced that uh, they could be even richer if only iran and the us were to become great friends and the iranian revolution was to be overthrown, and they're wrong. okay, well thank you very much, thank you, yeah, i appreciate it, thank
1:18 am
you for letting me get in your nice car, very nice, thank you, thank you so much, thank you, have a good evening, okay, okay, yeah, be well, thanks, thank you. "i don't think they really hurt me, i think the satellite television and their frustrations and maybe what they've seen in the, you know, maybe they have a friend who's been to the us or whatnot, and this has an impact, they don't know how it really is, they don't really understand, but you know, that's just that's the way they are, uh, i wish i could make them understand it, but i don't think i will." the appointed day came and i could only get permission in the place of the foreign guests. i had hoped at least my location close to aron leader.
1:19 am
'i was successful, i saw the supreme leader, i was able to be just 200 fet away from him, i was able to look up at him right there on the balcony and see see his face, see the face of the iranian revolution and be in his presence. the first time that i i teered up
1:20 am
was when i i saw you know the supreme leader and was able to look at him and just to see him come out and to just see his presence, he has this presence, like you could feel the difference, even if i couldn't seen him, i would have known when he walked into the room and when he left, even if i were completely blind, you can feel his presence. but the second was to look out on the crowd of people and see you know how they responded to him and and see how fired up and i saw that that's who the iranian revolution was for.
1:21 am
"my iranian dream was to to to to look on the face of the supreme leader and see and see um who it was who wrote that letter and come to understand what was behind that beautifully worded letter, find out what was behind it, find out what the society that that has a leader like that is like. i felt like i was not just looking at the face of one man, i was looking at the face of the iranian revolution, i saw with my eyes the the the iranian revolution, i looked at it with my own eyes. "i saw it with my eyes, i saw what this country is about and what it's fighting for. i saw it, all the passion of the people who unfurled those flags and screamed for palestine, scream death to america. this is the this is, this is what iran has, this is the this is, this is the mission that iran is on, struggling for independence, and the only thing i can hope for is that someday in the us we can have a revolution like iran had, that someday the americans were losing their
1:22 am
jobs and are in a desperate economic situation because of the same class of bankers that they can rise up, they can do what the iranians did, and rise up and fight back, that would be so glorious if that could happen. that's a song from a different united states, when people fought in the civil war, they were fighting against slavery, they were fighting against injustice. it was a different time. nowadays, us soldiers are attacking countries, murdering people. that was a different time, and that was a different period when when, fighting, fighting as a soldier for the united states, waving the flag of the united states was a way to to fight for justice, it was a way to oppose oppression, it was a way to stand with the oppressed, very different time. i like the songs from the civil war, from that period, because they they speak about a different united states, a united states that wasn't run by bankers and businessmen, but the united states where people still believed in justice and... freedom: yes, we'll rally round the flag, boys, rally once again, shouting the battle cry of freedom, yes, we'll rally round the hillside, we'll rally
1:23 am
from the plains, shouting the battle cry of freedom, you know, there's that, and then there's like a calmer one they talk about, we shall overcome, you know, we shall overcome, shall overcome, we shall overcome some day, oh deep in my heart, do believe, we shall overcome someday, we shall live in peace, we shall live in peace, we shall live in peace some day, oh deep in my heart, do believe, we
1:24 am
shall live in peace someday, will... walk hand in hand, will walk hand in hand, all the peace shall overcome, we shall over come some day, what if in my... god and all that i do, oh we shall overcome some, we walk hand in
1:25 am
hands, heal our hand in hand, hell and
1:26 am
1:27 am
nations the first out of the exercise as part the 24. named after the longest river in the world, it's now become the largest e-commerce company on the planet. it started as a bookseller at discount prices, but grew so much to sell almost everything through breaching rules of the game. watch and hear more about amazon. in this documentary.
1:28 am
either you're with us or you're with the enemy? there's no in between, and that doctrine still stands. لو وافق صدام على كل قرارات الامم المتحده وعلى كل ما تريده الولايات المتحده لكان قد اطيح به. كان المفروض عندما يسقطون النظام يسلمون الدوله للمعارضه. هم اسقطوا النظام والدوله معا وسلموا المعارضه صراع على السلطه. اول من وجهه. ضربه للامريكان العراق هي الفصائل الشيعيه المدعومه من ابو م یک سوال بزرگ در مقابل آمریکا ایجاد شد که شما اشغال کردید آمریکا را چی عراق آورد الحجد ايضا كان عامل جديد غير المعادله لذلك في فتره ترامب جاءوا وقالوا بصراحه هذا انتهى عليكم ان تتخذوا
1:29 am
موقف. palestine has risen from the ashes, the nation has gone a long way in its struggle against the occupation regime of israel, from throwing stones to flying drones. but who can deny iran's decades long support in this arduous journey.
1:30 am
h says there are still big gaps that need to be bridged for sease fire in gaza as israel presses ahead the deadly air strikes on sie strip. un says israely forces are targeting eight convoys in gaza as they try to systematically block aid access to people in need, and iran prepares for legislative and assembly of experts elections to be held simultaneously on friday.