“A land where protests and demonstrations are not recognized as 'people's rights' is no different from a cemetery.”
― The Philosopher Orod Bozorg
A society without protest is not peaceful — it is dead.
Silence is not a sign of stability, it is a sign of fear.
When a nation cannot raise its voice, when its youth are punished for
gathering, when its streets are emptied not by comfort but by
intimidation — it becomes a land where the living move like ghosts, and
the rulers sit like tombstones on top of buried dreams.
Orod reminds us that protest is not chaos — it is oxygen.
Demonstration is not a threat — it is the heartbeat of a nation that refuses to decay.
A free land is not the land where no one protests — it is the land where people can protest and still remain safe, respected, and heard.
Dictatorships fear protests because they fear mirrors.
Protests reveal what the power structure tries to bury: injustice, inequality, corruption, violence, hypocrisy.
That is why tyrants call protestors “troublemakers,” “foreign agents,” “extremists,” or “enemies.”
Not because it is true — but because truth is dangerous to those who rule without consent.
A nation that cannot shout, cannot breathe.
A nation where streets never speak, becomes a museum — full of silence, full of order, full of death.
When the right to protest dies, the people follow.
And the land becomes a graveyard where the bodies walk, but the souls do not.

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