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00:00Now, I know from many of the interviews you've done and articles about you that your family
00:04suffered quite a lot at the hands of the current Iranian regime, and your mother was even in
00:09prison for a while. And I know that much of your knowledge of the country comes from the stories
00:14they tell you, particularly your mother. Now, what chance is there that your view of the country
00:19and your angle on it is shaped by that rhetoric, and that perhaps because of that, there's not a
00:25lot of room to see it in any other way. I mean, I think, you know, at the end of the day,
00:31this is a story that has affected millions and millions and millions of Iranians. This is not
00:36an isolated incident. You know, this is a situation that any Iranian that you meet nowadays, you're
00:43going to find that they have either immediate or extended family that have either been executed
00:48or tortured by the Islamic regime. And so I think this idea that, you know, this is sort of an
00:54isolated experience, or, you know, some several traumatized Iranians are just allowing this to
01:00sort of shape their perspective. It's not really gaining a sense of the bigger picture, which is
01:05that Iran in itself is sort of an anomaly where you have masses, you know, the majority of the
01:13population that are against the regime, precisely because they've all had this personal experience.
01:18And so, yeah, in one way, you could say, well, maybe you're just a person whose family have had such a,
01:22you know, such an experience. And that's why you see it this way. Sure. But you're also going to have
01:26to apply that to about 80% of Iranians. And that's why that does actually form the general perspective
01:32of the Iranian people.

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