Sunday, May 1, 2011

"Chocolate" Valentine's car

 Where are the best places in the world to spend Valentine's day?

The strangest new location must be your own driveway or garage, providing you love chocolate and providing that your Valentine just bought you a car $28,780 "chocolate".


Just in time for Valentine's day market, Mercedes-Benz unveiled its smart car on the theme of chocolate in Tokyo last month. Lots of features in chocolate brown car of patterns that look like chocolate bars, and even the dashboard appears as if it could melt off the coast on your hands.


It goes without saying that it would be cheaper to say that I love you with a box of chocolates actual $ 28,775. The Japan Mercedes takes orders for their Valentine car, designed by a company of accessories called Q - Pot. It will be available at la sale through early March.


If you want to be sure of getting chocolate on the day of Saint Valentine to 100% and in the middle of a story of failure at the same time, you want to indent off the coast of the nation of C?te d'Ivoire in East Africa. It is largest producer of cocoa the most. It is also the scene of a political stand off which sends international price of cocoa through the roof.


The country recently held presidential elections, but the party is become very tense. The internationally recognised winner, Alassane Ouattara, can not take office because the incumbent who lost, President Laurent Gbagbo refuses to power. If the man with the majority of voices calls for a ban of one month on exports of cocoa as a means of cutting the renegade President funding.


President Obama is supporting the tactics of prohibition proposed cocoa, as a way of supporting democratic elections. During this time, the global cocoa market is unstable. So unless things settle, you will need to purchase a car "chocolate" of $28 next year, just to save money on candy.


Where elsewhere is really interesting Valentine's day this year? Iran. At least if you're the adventurous type who likes to challenge authority. The strict Islamic regime officials have called for a ban on Valentine's, of flower cards and other manifestations of affection. They say that Valentine's day is a Christian feast, with no place in the Islamic world.


It is true that Valentine has historical links with the tradition of Christian and novel, but it has long ceased to be a religious festival. Still, Iranian printers were informed to stop making maps with hearts. This is perhaps the Iran first Valentin Twitter.

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