Iranians went to the polls Friday to elect a new president after an unusually intense campaign which saw the hard-line incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seemingly thrown onto the defensive. Opposition leaders said they expected a huge turnout, with many reformists who sat out the last vote in 2005 saying they will take part this time.
2 pages so I'm not gonna quote it all here
Anyway, I'm interested in the outcome of this.
_________________ stop light plays its part, so I would say you've got a part
Iranians went to the polls Friday to elect a new president after an unusually intense campaign which saw the hard-line incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seemingly thrown onto the defensive. Opposition leaders said they expected a huge turnout, with many reformists who sat out the last vote in 2005 saying they will take part this time.
2 pages so I'm not gonna quote it all here
Anyway, I'm interested in the outcome of this.
Yeah I'm certainly interested in it (I'm surprised we don't already have Iran thread). But don't forget, it's pretty much a PR/puppet position. The real power lies with Khamenei and the clerics.
Iranians went to the polls Friday to elect a new president after an unusually intense campaign which saw the hard-line incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seemingly thrown onto the defensive. Opposition leaders said they expected a huge turnout, with many reformists who sat out the last vote in 2005 saying they will take part this time.
2 pages so I'm not gonna quote it all here
Anyway, I'm interested in the outcome of this.
You don't REALLY think Ahmedinejad is gonna get voted out do you...
ahmadinijad will win like bush won in 2004 the same hillbillies and backwards ass religious dumbfucks that vote for a midget war monger like bush will vote for a midget war monger like mahmoud people are the same everywhere ...dumb
ahmadinijad will win like bush won in 2004 the same hillbillies and backwards ass religious dumbfucks that vote for a midget war monger like bush will vote for a midget war monger like mahmoud people are the same everywhere ...dumb
Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2004 5:51 am Posts: 17078 Location: TX
Oh yeah, I'm totally interested to see what lunatic a fanatical muslim country will elect next. I'm sure he will be a real winner, just like everyone else in the middle east.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 12:47 am Posts: 46000 Location: Reasonville
Apparently the challenger lost in his own hometown, and now the U.S. suspects something's up with the election process there.
_________________ No matter how dark the storm gets overhead They say someone's watching from the calm at the edge What about us when we're down here in it? We gotta watch our backs
Apparently the challenger lost in his own hometown, and now the U.S. suspects something's up with the election process there.
Well if I was the US government, I'd suspect something is up. I mean, Obama made a speech! It was brilliant! Obama touches and inspires people. This surely must have worked. He's a world changer. He opens eyes. Just look at Lebanon! It was all his doing!!!! Surely Iran would have done the same thing!
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 12:47 am Posts: 46000 Location: Reasonville
Iran has a large moderate youth movement going on, and for their challenger to lose in his hometown is absolutely suspect.
_________________ No matter how dark the storm gets overhead They say someone's watching from the calm at the edge What about us when we're down here in it? We gotta watch our backs
Joined: Wed Dec 13, 2006 4:37 am Posts: 3610 Location: London, UK Gender: Female
yeah. it's not so much the fact Ahmadinijad got re-elected that's suspect in itself but the numbers are.
_________________ 2009 was a great year for PJ gigs looking forward to 2010 and: Columbus, Noblesville, Cleveland, Buffalo, Dublin, Belfast, London, Nijmegen, Berlin, Arras, Werchter, Lisbon, some more US (wherever is the Anniversary show/a birthday show)
Of course it was fixed. I think anyone familiar with Iran knew it would be, unless Ahmadinejad's late-election hikiinks managed to piss off the powers that be enough to support a challenger. Even then, the challenger they picked would certainly not have been Mousavi.
I don't think anyone thought they'd fix it quite this blatantly, though.
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Quote:
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Joined: Sun Oct 24, 2004 3:38 pm Posts: 20059 Gender: Male
To answer LW, I did think Ahmadinejad was going to win, but I thought/think it will be interesting to see the aftermath. On a side note, I do think it's hilarious that you decided to attack Obama in here though.
_________________ stop light plays its part, so I would say you've got a part
Apparently the challenger lost in his own hometown, and now the U.S. suspects something's up with the election process there.
The U.S. should mind it's own business. Iran is a sovereign nation. Let the U.N. deal with it, right? Sanctions sanctions sanctions.
Little effort was made to explain Saddam’s culpability, his misuse of Iraqi resources, or the fact that we were not embargoing medicine or food.- Madeleine Albright
Quote:
Iraq’s food-rationing program
Saddam did not use the sanctions as an excuse to let the Iraqi people starve. The New York Times and Washington Post reported that he maintained an elaborate food-rationing program, presumably to hold the loyalty of the Iraqi people, which the sanctions were intended to dissolve. He did such a “good job” of creating dependence on the government for food that current American administrators in Iraq find the Iraqis reluctant to give up the program even though Saddam is gone and the sanctions are over.
Buffalohed wrote:
That's great, we should probably send a few dozen battalions over there to take over and run the election for them, in that case.
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