The Mullah on the Sidewalk: An Iranian Cleric’s Cold Welcome in Toronto Exposes the Hypocrisy of a Regime’s Western Enablers
TORONTO — To those who have watched the Islamic Republic of Iran rule by the shadow of the gallows for more than four decades, the sight was both jarring and entirely predictable.
Walking down a bustling street in Toronto—a global sanctuary defined by its liberal values and pluralistic tolerance—was a man dressed in the unmistakable regalia of the ruling Iranian clerical establishment. He wore the traditional robes and the turban that, in Tehran or Isfahan, command immediate, enforced deference.
But this wasn’t Tehran. This was Canada, a nation currently grappling with the reality that agents and ideological sympathizers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) are increasingly using Western democracies as safe havens, even as the regime they defend massacres unarmed civilians back home.

When a prominent independent journalist intercepted the mullah on the sidewalk, the confrontation that followed quickly went viral. It was a masterclass in the cognitive dissonance, ideological evasion, and profound hypocrisy that defines the modern defenders of the Islamic Republic.
The Illusion of Religious Authority under Western Skies
The encounter began with a fundamental question of double standards. While millions of ordinary Iranians risk arrest, torture, and execution just to access the global internet through faulty VPNs, the elite of the regime and their emissaries travel the world with unfettered access to the very Western technologies they ban at home.
“The Iranian people don’t have open internet access, but you do. Why?” the reporter asked.
The cleric’s response was a study in regime boilerplate, delivered with the serene confidence of a man accustomed to monologue rather than dialogue. “Well, I’m the voice of Iranians, and I have to defend their right,” he claimed, speaking via Western digital platforms. “This is why I have access to the internet, to just have our voice heard by the international community.”
When pressed on why the citizens he claimed to represent were forced into a digital blackout, the mullah pivoted seamlessly to the state’s favorite shield: national security. “The internet is closed because of security reasons, because we are under attack, we are under aggression.”
It is a narrative the regime has used to justify the slaughter of thousands of its own people, most notably during the “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests sparked by the 2022 custody death of Mahsa Amini. To the mullah on the Toronto street, the brutal suppression of young women demanding the right to show their hair is not state-sponsored terror; it is merely an “urgent measure taken for the sake of war.”
Dictating God’s Law from a Position of Safety
As the interview deepened, the conversation shifted from digital hypocrisy to the core tenets of Sharia law as interpreted by the Khomeinist state. When asked about the brutal enforcement of mandatory hijab laws and the subsequent executions of dissidents, the cleric resorted to a familiar theological defense: humans do not make the laws; they merely execute the divine will.
“God is the one who makes the rule, not us,” the cleric insisted, asserting that under Sharia, all human beings are technically equal, but must submit to divine decrees.
“Do you think that God wants women to be killed for showing their hair in public?” the reporter countered.
“God doesn’t want anybody to be killed,” the mullah replied smoothly.
Yet, when confronted with the reality of tens of thousands of unarmed civilians massacred by the regime’s security apparatus—including iconic figures like Mahsa Amini and Nika Shakarami—the cleric’s theological framework dissolved into conspiracy theories and historical deflections.
“The Shaitani [satanic] people all the time say that the prophets kill the people. Prophets never kill people,” the mullah said, before making a statement that would shock anyone familiar with human rights reports on Iran: “Ali Khamenei never killed anybody. Yes.”
To claim that Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei—the absolute authority who commands the IRGC, the Basij militia, and the judiciary that sentences teenagers to hang from cranes—has “never killed anybody” is an act of historical revisionism that only someone living under the protection of Canadian free speech laws could comfortably utter.
The Palestinian Deflection: A Well-Worn Tactic
Perhaps the most revealing moment of the encounter came when the cleric was pressed on the specific numbers of domestic casualties inside Iran. Trapped by the facts of his own regime’s brutality, the mullah executed a rhetorical maneuver deeply embedded in the DNA of the Islamic Republic’s propaganda machine: he brought up Gaza.
“What about the 90,000 plus Iranians who were massacred?” the reporter asked.
“What about Gaza?” the cleric immediately shot back. “That was a war.”
This pivot is not accidental. For 45 years, the Islamic Republic has used the Palestinian cause as a geopolitical moral shield. By positioning itself as the vanguard of anti-Zionism and anti-imperialism, the regime attempts to buy the silence of Western leftists and international observers, distracting them from the systematic internal colonization of its own population.
Critics and Iranian dissidents have long pointed out the profound cynicism of this strategy. The regime funds Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis—groups that bring ruin to their own regions—not out of a genuine desire for human liberation, but to project power and deflect scrutiny from the kleptocracy and human rights abuses occurring within Iran’s own borders. On the streets of Toronto, the mullah’s immediate regression to the Palestinian issue when asked about dead Iranian women laid this strategy completely bare.
The Unholy Alliance: Why the West Remains Silent
The Toronto confrontation highlights a much larger, more troubling phenomenon currently playing out across Western democracies and elite university campuses. While millions march in London, New York, and Toronto protesting Western foreign policy and Middle Eastern conflicts, there is a deafening silence regarding the atrocities committed by the Islamic Republic.
Interviews conducted with student protesters at institutions like King’s College London reveal a stark generational blindness. When asked why they remain silent on the tens of thousands of Iranians executed by their government while aggressively protesting other conflicts, Western students often appear uneducated on the realities of Khomeinist rule.
“People see the overthrowing of the regime as taking the US, UK, or Israel’s side, which people don’t like because they like to be very anti-western,” noted one astute student observer in London.
This anti-Western bias has created what many analysts call an “unholy marriage” between Western Marxism and Islamic totalitarianism. It is a historical irony of the highest order. In 1979, secular leftists, socialists, and Marxists partnered with Ayatollah Khomeini to overthrow the Shah of Iran. Almost immediately after consolidating power, the Islamist regime turned on its leftist allies, arresting, torturing, and executing them by the thousands.
Today, Western leftists on university campuses are repeating the same mistake. By viewing the world strictly through the lens of Western imperialism and colonialism, they treat the Islamic Republic—and its proxies—as “resistance movements” rather than the fascist, theological dictatorships they actually are.
Regulating the Infiltration
For the Iranian diaspora living in Canada and the United States, the presence of these regime affiliates on Western soil is an open wound. Thousands of Iranians fled their homeland to escape the morality police, the IRGC, and the arbitrary executions of the judiciary. To see the very men who justified their persecution enjoying the cafes of Toronto, the security of Canadian laws, and the benefits of a free society is a bitter pill to swallow.
The video’s conclusion notes that many within the diaspora are growing increasingly furious, noting that some religious figures acting as representatives of the Iranian state may not even be native to the country, but are foreign nationals imported or co-opted by the regime to enforce its global propaganda network.
There is a growing demand among lawmakers in Washington and Ottawa to formally designate the IRGC as a terrorist organization in its entirety and to aggressively deport any individual with ties to the repressive apparatus of the Iranian state.
Until Western nations take a firm stand against the ideological infiltration of their own societies, the spectacle of the Toronto sidewalk will continue to play out: regime mullahs enjoying the fruits of Western freedom, using Western internet to justify digital blackouts at home, and using Western free speech to defend a dictator who hangs those who dare to ask for it.
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