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Originally posted by jsobecky
One has to look no further than the recent parliamentary elections, in which 2,300 candidates were arbitrarily disqualified by the Council of Guardians, to realize that true, free elections in Iran are stll a distant dream.
Originally posted by ulshadow
Thats great thing for Iran. Hope they don't ragged it... like the US election in 2004 lol
how many years does iran elect a new president again?
And siroos i can see your back on ATS after don't know how long to give more
Iran = Good
US = Bad
stuff
Originally posted by djohnsto77
When did the U.S. call Iranians to boycott the elections???
I must have missed that statement...
You see this group of revolutionaries as positive and noble because they oppose the regime you deem evil and corrupt. However, to the regime in place, and those who support it, the dissidents are nothing but terrorists, trying to unmake civilization, a dangerous, corrupting influence.
Every four years. The thing is this: If indeed we Iranians even suspected that the elections would be rigged, we wouldn't even bother to go anywhere near a ballot box. The fact that there was a near 70% turnout shows that the Iranians trust the system in this regards. The problem many Iranians have is that they think that the Guardian Council has too much power and can veto decisions made by the parliament and the government.
On Iran, President Bush said the voting has been designed to keep power in the hands of a few rulers “through an electoral process that ignores the basic requirements of democracy.”
“The Iranian people deserve a genuinely democratic system in which elections are honest—and in which their leaders answer to them instead of the other way around,” Bush said in a statement released by the White House. “And to the Iranian people, I say: As you stand for your own liberty, the people of America stand with you.”
Originally posted by Kriz_4
Originally posted by jsobecky
One has to look no further than the recent parliamentary elections, in which 2,300 candidates were arbitrarily disqualified by the Council of Guardians, to realize that true, free elections in Iran are stll a distant dream.
You are obviously privvy to information we are not.
Can you tell us why the candidates were disqualified? I would like to know.
Originally posted by Siroos
A little more than 1000 candidates registered, not 2300, and 8 candidates is a whole better than 2-3 candidates in the U.S. - You have to be a billionaire in the U.S. to even stand a chance to be CHOSEN to be a candidate. In Iran ANYONE, whether rich or poor can run for presidency. Our system is not anywhere near perfect, but so is yours!