Engineered Collapse: How the West Hijacks Youth to Destroy Nations
The Islamic Revolution wasn’t just religious. It was a scream from the soul: enough. Enough of your lies, your corruption, your foreign puppets. Iran chose veils over Vogue. Tradition over TikTok. Spirituality over Silicon Valley.

What if the same forces unraveling the West — the ones turning men soft, women bitter, and children confused — were being used as weapons of war in the East?
What if the destruction of tradition, family, and spiritual identity wasn’t just some accidental byproduct of modernity… but a deliberate tactic?
Look around. You feel it. Families barely function. Men are passive, medicated, addicted to pixels and porn. Women are either exhausted or enraged, shamed for wanting to mother and told to compete instead. Children are chemically altered, hormonally confused, spiritually starved — and none of it feels right.
We laugh it off, call it progress, call it equality, call it pride. But what are we proud of, exactly?
Everywhere you look, culture is breaking down. And it's not just ideology doing the work. It's the food. The drugs. The sweeteners and the seed oils. The plastic and the pesticides. It's the estrogen in the lager and the endocrine disruptors in baby formula. It’s not one thing. It’s all of it — a slow poisoning, physical and psychological.
Now… imagine a country that says no to this.
That tries to hold onto its family values, its spiritual backbone, its biological clarity.
That country is labeled a terrorist state.
Let’s talk about Iran.
Not the one you’ve been shown on TV — the caricature of angry mullahs and backwards laws. But the Iran that danced in silk and cinema, that had its sovereignty stolen, then spent 40 years saying: never again.
Iran in the 1800s wasn’t colonized the same way as Africa or India. It was carved up — economically. Britain took the oil. Russia took the north. And the people? They got played.
Then in 1908, oil was struck. Anglo-Iranian Oil Company — later BP — was born. Black gold flowed West, bankrolling the British Empire, while Iranians stayed poor.

In 1951, Mohammad Mossadegh tried to take it back. He nationalized Iran’s oil. A bold move — too bold. Two years later, the CIA and MI6 ran Operation Ajax. Mossadegh was out. The Shah was back in.
But this time, the Shah came with disco balls and CIA-trained secret police.
Tehran in the ‘60s and ‘70s looked like Paris. Miniskirts, jazz clubs, cocktails at sunset. The West called it modernity. But it was cultural colonization dressed in Chanel. Behind the gloss, the CIA and Mossad were building SAVAK — a brutal regime to crush resistance and erase Persia’s spirit.
Then came 1979.
The Islamic Revolution wasn’t just religious. It was a scream from the soul: enough. Enough of your lies, your corruption, your foreign puppets. Iran chose veils over Vogue. Tradition over TikTok. Spirituality over Silicon Valley.
The world recoiled. How dare they reject us?
Since then, the West has tried everything to re-enter — not with tanks, but with TikTok. Not with missiles, but with movements. Feminism. LGBT rights. Identity politics. All valid on the surface — until you realize how they're being used.
Because this isn’t liberation. It’s infiltration.

Let’s zoom out. Iraq. Libya. Afghanistan.
In each case, the pattern was the same. Target the youth. Flood them with ideology. Fund them. Weaponize their hope. Promise them freedom. Then destroy their country and walk away.
Libya is the perfect example.
Muammar Gaddafi. Painted as a tyrant. In reality, he offered free education, healthcare, zero debt. He used oil profits to build infrastructure. And — most damning of all — he proposed a gold-backed Dinar to trade oil outside the dollar system.
Within months, Libya was flooded with youth uprisings — NGO-funded, foreign-trained, backed by NATO airstrikes. Gaddafi was killed. His Green Book, which laid out a system of direct democracy, was buried. The country collapsed into chaos. Open-air slave markets returned.
All because he threatened the petrodollar and refused to install a Western-controlled central bank.
Sound familiar?
Iran has no Rothschild central bank.
Neither did Iraq, Libya, or Afghanistan before the invasions. Once toppled, central banks were installed. Mission complete.
This is how it works:
1. Demonize the leader
2. Fund and train young dissidents
3. Sow unrest under the guise of liberation
4. Collapse the culture
5. Install a financial system
6. Harvest the resources
Iran has watched all of this unfold. And it knows it’s next.
That’s why it resists — not just with guns, but with culture. With boundaries. With values the West abandoned.
The regime is far from perfect. Yes, it’s repressive in many ways. Yes, there are human rights issues. But if you’re going to critique Iran, do it honestly. Don’t ignore the subversion aimed at it. Don’t pretend it’s a one-sided fight.

Western-funded platforms like Tavaana, NED, HRAI, USAID — they spend millions on youth programs, influencer training, scholarship pipelines. This isn’t grassroots. It’s psychological warfare.
The regime cracks down — often brutally — because it sees what’s coming.
So before you parrot “Free Iran” and boost hashtags, ask:
– Who’s funding this? – Who benefits if Iran collapses? – And who replaces the regime?
Because if history tells us anything, it’s that the West never replaces regimes with freedom. Just with central banks.
And behind those banks are the same few hands. Zionist networks, global financiers, unelected elites — using ideology as camouflage for conquest.
So maybe Iran isn’t your enemy. Maybe it’s just the last one standing. Maybe that’s why they want it gone.
Because every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
And the lies of the West are finally meeting their match.
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