"Starlink got beat and the zionist Jew Musk has been handed his backside."
KernowDamo: Iran jammed Starlink during the shutdown, and in doing so stripped away the last illusion that satellite internet is untouchable.
Right, so Iran has just jammed Starlink during a nationwide internet shutdown. The Elon Musk unstoppable magic workaround everyone’s been banging on about didn’t work. The satellite didn’t sail above it all. The signal didn’t just “get out”. It got hit like everything else. Iran always manages to find a way.
Now some might say that is a sign of Ayatollah nervousness and wanting to shut down dissent, but actually this completely screws the comfortable story such people might have been telling themselves, because it cuts both ways and the Jews weaponising the protests, the Jewish Israel regime AI, the Jewish Mossad agents on the ground – they get silenced too.
Besides, for years now we’ve been assured that blackouts don’t really count anymore. States can try, but it’s fine, Starlink fixes it, it’ll be free internet access letting footage escape, and therefore the pressure builds as desired, end of story. Well no. Turns out if a state decides the access itself is the problem, it treats it like infrastructure, not a TED Talk and Starlink isn’t as infallible as it was once thought.
So all that certainty about what can’t be controlled, what can’t be hidden, what always leaks — that’s just gone. Not debated. Gone. And a lot of loud commentary suddenly has to stand up on its own without pretending technology was doing the hard work for it.
Right, so Iran has managed to deliberately interfere with Starlink satellite internet reception inside the country during a nationwide communications shutdown. We’re not talking “slow service”, not “temporary issues”, not a polite regulatory squeeze or even a case of “how many devices have those kids got plugged in”. Right, so Iran has just jammed Starlink during a nationwide internet shutdown. The Elon Musk unstoppable magic workaround that everyone's been banging on about didn't work, highlighting a significant communication breakdown. This development is part of the latest news from the Middle East, particularly concerning ongoing iran protests and the regime's efforts to control information. Iran's ability to counter satellite internet services like Starlink Iran raises questions about future digital access.
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