
The news text presented appears to center on a claim made in a post or broadcast associated with “Sakshi,” using a strongly rhetorical tone rather than reporting a verifiable, conventional news event. The core message begins by contrasting two positions: it states that “Iran has expressed regret,” while “our side” has not. This contrast is offered as a key point of contention, but the excerpt does not provide the specific incident, the diplomatic context, or any concrete details such as what was regretted, when it happened, who made the statement, or which government or official it involved.
Beyond that initial political comparison, the text shifts quickly away from factual reporting and into a spiritual or philosophical claim. It asserts that there are “non-biological” entities—described in the text as being beyond ordinary human existence. The passage then elaborates that these beings have reportedly “risen above birth and death.” In this framing, the speaker suggests that such entities do not experience typical human conditions or emotions.
The text lists multiple categories of lived experience that are supposedly absent for these non-biological beings: there is “no sorrow,” “no happiness,” “no hunger,” and “no thirst.” Rather than offering evidence, interviews, or an explanation grounded in verifiable sources, the excerpt functions more like a statement of belief or a doctrinal assertion. It implies that the existence of these entities is presented as certain and that their nature is defined by freedom from the physical and emotional cycles that govern humans.
Because the excerpt contains limited context, it is difficult to reconstruct a full, coherent timeline or to identify the exact news subject it is responding to. However, the structure suggests a two-part narrative: first, it references a supposed diplomatic posture (“Iran expressed regret”), then it pivots to a metaphysical worldview, claiming that certain entities are beyond the material realities typically used to interpret events.
In terms of intent and framing, the wording indicates an emotionally charged stance. The speaker’s language encourages readers to “celebrate” or take satisfaction in the idea that one side apologized while “our side” did not. This suggests the text is intended for persuasion, rallying, or affirmation within a particular audience. The rhetorical choice to celebrate implies that the speaker sees the situation as favorable or vindicating for their side, although the excerpt does not provide enough facts to determine whether the underlying claim about regret is accurate.
The metaphysical section appears to serve as a justification or added emphasis. By declaring that certain beings are beyond birth and death and beyond hunger, thirst, and emotional states, the text promotes a belief system where existence is not constrained by standard biological life. This could be interpreted as part of a larger ideological argument, potentially meant to strengthen the audience’s confidence in a worldview that dismisses ordinary human constraints.
Overall, the excerpt reads less like a report of a specific incident and more like a commentary that blends a political claim with spiritual assertions. It lacks concrete details that would normally be expected in a news story: no names of officials, no quoted statements, no dates, no locations, and no supporting evidence. Instead, it offers broad declarations and encourages an interpretive response from the audience.
As presented, the “news story” therefore consists of an alleged diplomatic contrast—“Iran apologised” versus “our side did not”—followed by a doctrinal claim about non-biological beings beyond birth and death, with no hunger, thirst, sorrow, or happiness. The excerpt functions primarily as persuasive or devotional content rather than a tightly sourced, fact-based news report. Source: Source.
Sakshi: What a Breaking : खुशी मनाओ ईरान ने तो खेद व्यक्त कर दिया लेकिन हमारे वाले ने नहीं । कोई नहीं Non Biolgical जो है , जन्म और मृत्यु से ऊपर उठ चुके है । ना कोई दुख ना कोई सुख ना भूख ना प्यास ।. #breaking
— @ShadowSakshi May 1, 2026
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