“When there’s no water and the air becomes unbreathable, the social contract fractures,” Nima Shokri writes in The Conversation. “Citizens no longer debate ideology or reform timelines, they question the state’s right to rule at all.”
“When there’s no water and the air becomes unbreathable, the social contract fractures,” Nima Shokri writes in The Conversation. “Citizens no longer debate ideology or reform timelines, they question the state’s right to rule at all.”