There’s a lot of noise right now about why the so-called social justice world has gone quiet on Iran. Why the same activists, influencers, and moral megaphones who never shut up about Israel suddenly have nothing to say.

I’m not bothered by their silence. I’m bothered that we ever treated them as serious in the first place.

Because what’s being exposed here isn’t hypocrisy. It’s something worse. Irrelevance.

For years, these people positioned themselves as the conscience of the world. They shouted, labeled, boycotted, and moralized with absolute confidence. Israel was their favorite target. Simplified slogans. Aggressive certainty. Endless outrage. All delivered with the conviction of people who believed likes were the same thing as truth.

Now Iran is on the table. A regime that jails women for showing hair, executes dissidents, crushes minorities, and exports violence across the region. And suddenly, the feed goes quiet. No urgency. No passion. No hashtags. No rage.

That silence tells you everything.

This was never about justice. It was about aesthetics. About fitting into a digital tribe. About picking causes that were safe, fashionable, and rewarded with applause.

Israel was easy. Complex democracy, open society, free press. You could attack it endlessly without consequence and be praised for it. Iran isn’t easy. Iran doesn’t play along. Iran doesn’t offer the comfort of moral theater without risk.

So they opt out.

That’s not moral failure. That’s exposure.

The truth is, these activists don’t shape reality. They chase it. They don’t lead movements. They ride algorithms. Their outrage rises and falls based on engagement, not ethics.

And once you see that, the illusion collapses fast.

Real struggles don’t need Instagram approval. Real freedom movements don’t wait for Western validation. The people of Iran are fighting something real, with real consequences, and real courage. That kind of fight doesn’t translate well into infographics and 15-second videos.

So it gets ignored.

What’s sickening isn’t that they’re silent now. It’s that for years, people listened to them at all. That institutions treated them as authorities. That journalists echoed their framing. That they were allowed to masquerade as something principled when they were always just performative.

This moment should be clarifying.

The loudest voices were never the most serious ones. The most aggressive critics were never the most informed. And the people who claimed to stand for justice were often just standing where the camera was pointed.

Iran will be free one day inshallah, soon. Israel will still be standing. And the social justice crowd will move on to the next trending outrage, convinced once again that they’re on the right side of history.

Keyboard Warriors – They’re not villains. They’re worse: They don’t matter.

We support Iran. We support the Iranian people. Their fight is legitimate, moral, and overdue.

Sammy Dweck Fragin comes from a loud, loving, mixed-heritage Syrian Jewish family in New York—one of eleven kids whose home was a blend of cultures, stories, and food. He made aliyah in 2014 to serve in the IDF and stayed, becoming a passionate advocate for olim and a real-estate professional who genuinely loves helping people feel at home. Alongside his work in real estate, he specializes in social media, marketing strategy, and ghostwriting, helping individuals and organizations articulate their story with clarity and impact. His writing, published across several newspapers, reflects a point of view that is at once American and Israeli, traditional and modern, personal and political—rooted in the belief that identity is layered, belonging is earned, and home is something we build together.