Politicians, especially those with total authority, rarely fiddle with their image, lest it undermine their cult of personality.
In dictatorships, familiarity breeds consent. So perhaps Qaddafi uses his sunglasses to send out political messages. Maybe his prescription keeps changing. His tastes are too protean for any one style to stick. We went into the town by different routes and we were talking to each other by radio.
Before the war I saw Gaddafi a few times and his sons. I run a construction business and every year Gaddafi would have this celebration on 1 September, always in a different part of the country. I would build the stage. It was very elaborate. They would make a new road for him, and plant palm trees, and he would stay there in his tent, never going out.
So a few times he would pass me and say: "As-Salamu Alaykum [peace be with you]. Everyone who was in his presence was afraid, me too, because you knew that he could just look at you and you would be in big trouble.
The war isn't over, there is Sirte to capture and Beni Walid and maybe Sabha too; it could go on for another month, but in the end all cities will be free. Everyone changed in this war in Misrata, for the better. People you know, sometimes they would say hi to you, sometimes they wouldn't. Now they always say hello. What I hope for now is the same thing I hoped for on the first day of war in Misrata. In the 18 th and the 19 th century in the U. The historian Vanessa Brown explained in her book Cool Shades, which analyzes the history of sunglasses, that the men at that time used this glass to show their calm and seriousness.
The researchers from University of Toronto found out that the pedestrians with sunglasses have less chance to donate to beggars on the street, and the study indicated that the function of sunglasses to hide the identity and expressions encourages immoral behaviors in another way.
Sunglasses help to hide emotions and gaze in front of the public, preventing people from having an insight into their thoughts and keeping dictators as a unreachable status. In addition to Gaddafi and Kim Jong-il, Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe, who stepped down last year because of a coup, was known for having a variety of wire-rimmed glasses and sunglasses. The Russian president Putin, who has been criticized for becoming increasingly dictatorial, has worn sunglasses in public events for many times.
On contrast, in countries with a more complete democratic political system, leaders are generally less likely to wear sunglasses in public. When Darth Vader stands with his storm troopers, he wears sunglasses. Vader attempted to create the Death Star, a planet to kill other planets, and eliminate the Rebel Alliance. He was revealed by his son, Luke Skywalker, to be the deformed Anakin Skywalker.
Luke then killed him. The galaxy is safer now. As a public service, we've rounded up a few classic examples. You're welcome.
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