PROPHECY UPDATE
PROPHECY RELATED NEWS AND COMMENTARY
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Iranian Students Return to Protests Despite the Regime’s Bullets, Hope for Israeli Attack
Iran dismisses Trump’s nuclear claims as ‘big lies’
Iran has rejected accusations that it is seeking nuclear weapons, denouncing US President Donald Trump’s latest remarks as false and misleading.
Trump has repeatedly demanded that Tehran dismantle its nuclear program and curb its ballistic missile capabilities. In his State of the Union address on Tuesday, he claimed Iran was again pursuing “sinister ambitions” and warned that he would “never allow” it to obtain an atomic weapon.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei responded on Wednesday in a post on X, accusing the US administration and the “war profiteers encircling it, particularly the genocidal Israeli regime,” of using propaganda tactics against Iran.
He added that claims made about Iran’s ballistic missiles are “simply the repetition of ‘big lies’.”
In his address, Trump said Iran “has already developed missiles that can threaten Europe and our bases overseas” and is “working” to build missiles that will soon reach the US.
Both sides are preparing for a third round of indirect, Oman-mediated talks in Geneva on Thursday, where Tehran is reportedly expected to present a draft agreement.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has insisted that Tehran’s nuclear program is peaceful and that zero enrichment is unacceptable, stating Iran is ready for military confrontation if diplomacy fails and would target US bases if attacked.
Moscow has warned that the standoff is “potentially explosive” and that strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites could cause a nuclear disaster, urging all sides to seek a peaceful settlement.
Russia Calls on France, UK, EU, UN to Prevent Transfer of Nuclear Weapons to Ukraine - Appeal
Vance says US has seen evidence that Iran is trying to rebuild its nuclear weapons program
The United States sees evidence that Iran is trying to rebuild its nuclear program after US-led strikes against Iranian nuclear sites in June, US Vice President JD Vance says.
“The principle is very simple: Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon,” Vance tells reporters, a day ahead of talks in Geneva between US and Iranian delegations. “If they try to rebuild a nuclear weapon, that causes problems for us. In fact, we’ve seen evidence that they have tried to do exactly that.”
Vance notes that US President Donald Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are due to attend the negotiations with Iran on Thursday, adding that Trump wants to address the Iranian nuclear program “diplomatically, but of course the president has other options as well.”
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
United Nations Moves to Censor the Internet
The United Nations is now openly discussing “coordinated global action” to combat what it defines as disinformation and hate speech online, and this should not be dismissed as some abstract policy debate. This is a structural shift toward the internationalization of speech regulation, and that carries profound political and economic implications.
The UN’s recent digital governance initiatives, including its policy briefs tied to the Global Digital Compact, explicitly call for stronger international cooperation to address online misinformation, platform accountability, and content governance across borders. The stated objective is to create safer digital spaces and reduce harmful content, yet the mechanism being proposed is coordinated oversight at a global level.
An unelected international institution proposing frameworks that influence what information is acceptable raises concerns. The UN has no direct democratic mandate over the citizens of individual nations, yet its policy direction increasingly encourages governments and platforms to align with shared global standards for speech moderation and information control. This is being framed as a necessary response to misinformation, extremism, and social instability in the digital age. The globalists want to control our ability to access and process information.
The core issue is not whether misinformation exists. It always has. Every era has dealt with propaganda, rumors, and competing narratives. What is different now is the scale and the proposed solution of centralized digital oversight coordinated at the international level. Why should a select few determine fact from fiction? The power is unimaginable.
What one administration labels misinformation may later prove accurate, and what is defined as harmful speech can shift with political priorities. History is filled with examples where dissenting views were initially censored only to later become accepted truths in matters of war policy, economic forecasting, and public health.
The future regulatory battleground will not be limited to finance, taxation, or energy, but increasingly to information itself.
In a digital economy, whoever influences the flow of information indirectly influences public confidence, political legitimacy, and even economic behavior. The real question is no longer whether misinformation exists. The structural question is who defines truth, who enforces that definition, and how far institutions are willing to go to maintain narrative authority in an era of declining global trust.