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BREAKING….She Said Nine Words That Made An Entire Parliament Go Silent. Then It Erupted. Manuela Bergerot walked into Madrid’s regional parliament and delivered nine words that cut through every political justification, every military briefing, and every carefully constructed narrative about why the strikes on Iran were necessary and defensible….THE DETAILS ARE WORSE THAN THE HEADLINE 👇👇
BREAKING….She Said Nine Words That Made An Entire Parliament Go Silent. Then It Erupted.
Manuela Bergerot walked into Madrid’s regional parliament and delivered nine words that cut through every political justification, every military briefing, and every carefully constructed narrative about why the strikes on Iran were necessary and defensible….THE DETAILS ARE WORSE THAN THE HEADLINE 👇👇
You cannot defend women’s rights by celebrating the death of 160 girls. The chamber erupted. And the speech has been traveling across borders ever since.
Bergerot was speaking directly about the bombing of the Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab, Iran, struck on February 28th during U.S.-Israeli operations. Iranian authorities reported approximately 165 people killed, most of them girls between the ages of 7 and 12. The UN has called it a grave violation of humanitarian law. The United States says it is investigating. Israel has denied involvement. Right wing politicians in the chamber had been invoking feminist values to justify their support for the strikes, and Bergerot looked at that argument and dismantled it with a number that cannot be reframed or spun into something more comfortable.
Madrid’s regional president Ayuso responded by telling Bergerot to go to Tehran alone and drunk — a retort that immediately ignited its own fierce debate about how female politicians are treated when they challenge the dominant military narrative. Bergerot’s reply was quiet, precise, and impossible to dismiss — the first condition for a woman to be free is that her country not be bombed. One hundred and sixty five children. Most between seven and twelve years old. At school on an ordinary morning.
Was Bergerot right — can women’s rights ever be defended through strikes that kill girls? Sound off below.
BREAKING….She Said Nine Words That Made An Entire Parliament Go Silent. Then It Erupted.
Manuela Bergerot walked into Madrid’s regional parliament and delivered nine words that cut through every political justification, every military briefing, and every carefully constructed narrative about why the strikes on Iran were necessary and defensible. You cannot defend women’s rights by celebrating the death of 160 girls. The chamber erupted. And the speech has been traveling across borders ever since.
Bergerot was speaking directly about the bombing of the Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab, Iran, struck on February 28th during U.S.-Israeli operations. Iranian authorities reported approximately 165 people killed, most of them girls between the ages of 7 and 12. The UN has called it a grave violation of humanitarian law. The United States says it is investigating. Israel has denied involvement. Right wing politicians in the chamber had been invoking feminist values to justify their support for the strikes, and Bergerot looked at that argument and dismantled it with a number that cannot be reframed or spun into something more comfortable.
Madrid’s regional president Ayuso responded by telling Bergerot to go to Tehran alone and drunk — a retort that immediately ignited its own fierce debate about how female politicians are treated when they challenge the dominant military narrative. Bergerot’s reply was quiet, precise, and impossible to dismiss — the first condition for a woman to be free is that her country not be bombed. One hundred and sixty five children. Most between seven and twelve years old. At school on an ordinary morning.
Was Bergerot right — can women’s rights ever be defended through strikes that kill girls? Sound off below.