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The potato revolution continues
Writing on ForeignPolicy.com late last month, analyst Mehrzad Boroujerdi described Mir-Hossein Mousavi's Iranian election campaign as something of a potato revolution:
[P]otatoes, it seems, have everything to do with the Iranian elections this year. Ramping up the public distribution of potatoes, along with a wide range of other government subsidies and alms, has become Ahmadinejad's preferred strategy for buying votes. While the Western world has focused on the incumbent's inflammatory statements about the Holocaust and his confrontationist nuclear policy, his domestic critics have focused their ire on his flawed economic remedies and populist demagogy, in addition to his erratic diplomatic style. Hence, potatoes, and the surprise return of Mousavi, a man little known outside Iran.
Well, Mousavi looks to agree. Speaking at a rally today, an observer's twitter feed reports him saying:
These masses were not brought by bus or by threat. They were not brought for potatoes. They came themselves."
Potatoes, it seems, just don't buy what they used to in Iran... and I doubt revolution was the purchase that Ahmadinejad had in mind.













Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's Charity Economics and the Apocalypse
The world is outraged by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's apparently rigged election victory. Recent polling indicates that the results may well be valid, however. Key to understanding what has happened are the 'Charity' economics that Ahmadinejad practices. The long term implications mean that military action is more likely, $500 a barrel oil possible and Apocalypse a desired eventuality for powerful extremists in both Iran and Israel.
Ahmadinejad, Iran's Charity Economics and the Apocalypse
Hello ForeignPolicy
Hello ForeignPolicy editors.
Can I use the photo of this article into a University Essay?
I'm doing a essay about Iran, and I really want to use this photo, of Mir-Hossein Mousavi.
Waiting an answer,
Luiz Soares, owner of Jogos Gratis