“Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.”
John 8:44
Who does not know what the outcome in Argentina will be? Who? “True believers,” that's who. The ones who lap up any lie, no matter how absurd. The ones who worship obscure deities and blood sacrifice. The ones who have the nerve to call themselves sane.
"EL Loco,” is the nickname, pillage and plunder is the game. See, the Messianic fanatics have the entire realm fooled. How so? They have the simple minded and naive believing that their “get down” is “religious,” when in reality it is a covetous, murderous, land grabbing, resource stealing, multi-generational grift. Only the very simple minded cannot see this. You know, the ones who still “believe” in sci-fi fables of nothingness. Reality is much more different. Just ask the people of Argentina, see how their leaders are doing “god’s work.” Nothing like “religion” as a sweet cover for evil. “You heard?”
Reality in Argentina, means a group of people, in positions of control, following the same “religious” dogma, will loot and plunder every nation in which they have an influence, after all, AGAIN, “they are doing god's work.” It is the “religion” of materialism, evil, lies and deceit. IT HAS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE CREATOR OF THE UNIVERSE. IT HAS EVERYTHING TO DO WITH ENSLAVEMENT AND EVIL.
“In what has been called an "unprecedented mobilization" never before in modern Argentinian history has a mass strike been called less than seven weeks into a new presidency. But leaders from Argentina’s largest labor union - the guys who are used to a steady drip of handouts from the government - said the nationwide protests reflect the urgency they feel as Milei pursues radical economic and political reforms he likens to “shock therapy.”
“Thousands of (most labor union) protesters swarmed the square in front of Argentina’s Congress on Wednesday, denouncing Milei’s sweeping plans to overhaul the government, privatize public industries and slash spending. Some banged pots and carried signs accusing Milei of being a “traitor”. Other banners featured the portrait of working-class icon Evita Peron.”
“Elizabeth Gutierrez made her way to the gathering after working an overnight shift as a nurse. She explained she was motivated by steep increases in food prices since Milei took office.”
“Before we used to have asados [barbecues] every Sunday. Not now. Even rice is very expensive,” Gutierrez said. “Rents have shot up. You can’t live off your salary any more: It’s not enough" she raged adding that “the people are here to defend their nation."
“Well, here's the problem: the nation has been bled dry by corrupt politicians, and the only thing that can save it is the most aggressive belt tightening in decades. And while Milei is trying it, he is about to find out just how much pushback his plans will cause, and how impossible it will be for his ambitious plan seeking to end the government's parasistism of the economy, to succeed.”
“Another protester, 63-year-old retiree Alicia Pereyra, voiced opposition to Milei’s efforts to deregulate the economy, including plans to “modernise” labour law and ditch rent regulation. “He wants us to be slaves,” Pereyra said. Draped in an Argentinian flag, Pereyra worried about her ability to make ends meet in the face of Milei’s reforms. Her retirement income amounts to only 85,000 pesos per month — about $70. She said basic necessities had become so costly under Milei that she is unsure whether she will be able to access the medicine she needs for a chronic illness.”
“Even small luxuries are now out of reach. Pereyra described how she and her husband opted for orange juice instead of wine to make their New Year’s toast for 2024, breaking a long-running family tradition.
“It’s a horrible feeling of not knowing what’s going to happen tomorrow,” she said. “[Milei] is turning our heads upside down.”
In his inauguration address, he warned the country that Argentina’s situation would get worse before it got better. And he was right.
One of his earliest measures was to devalue the Argentinian peso by 54%, which only accelerated the already sky-high inflation rates.
According to the National Institute for Statistics and Censuses (INDEC), Argentina ended 2023 with annual inflation of 211% the steepest rate in Latin America, surpassing even Venezuela. The year also clocked the fastest inflation hikes since 1990, resulting in higher prices for consumers.”
“Milei coupled his currency devaluation measure with immediate cuts to government spending, including consumer subsidies. One presidential “mega-decree” in December reformed or overturned dozens of laws and paved the way for the privatisation of state-run companies. Another decree axed 5,000 government jobs. But further changes are on the way. Wednesday’s nationwide strike comes as Congress prepares to consider a slimmed-down version of Milei’s “omnibus law” the following day.”
“Originally containing 664 articles, the bill sought to reimagine the country’s elections, restructure the lower chamber of Congress and enact tough new restrictions on protests, including through penalties of up to six years in prison. The streamlined version is still massive, with over 500 articles. If passed, it would hand broad legislative powers to Milei’s executive branch for an “emergency” period of one year.”
“Still, the president dismissed Wednesday’s strike as evidence of backward thinking. “There are two Argentinas,” he told local media. “One wants to stay behind, in the past, in decadence.” Members of his administration likewise blasted the protesters. On Wednesday, Security Minister Patricia Bullrich — Milei’s erstwhile rival on the campaign trail — called the union groups that organised the strike “gangsters” and “guarantors of poverty.”
“There’s no strike that will be able to stop us,” she wrote on X.
Meanwhile, the establishment - realizing their jobs are about to be rugpulled - is lashing out: Federico Finchelstein, a New York-based historian and fascism scholar, said Milei’s first month in office has demonstrated his “authoritarian style of populism”. He drew parallels to Donald Trump, the controversial — but popular — former president of the United States who sought to claim broad executive authority while in office. Finchelstein likened Milei to a “mini-Trump.”
“It’s a type of populism that looks to undermine democratic institutions,” Finchelstein said, clearly forgetting that it was Argentina's "democratic institutions" that brought pushed it beyond the edge of collapse.”
Argentina's Blow Out Sale
It kinda tickles me, in a twisted way when I am right. All roads seem to overlap. As a student of history, I have come to believe that most incidents that appear separate, are in fact related in the most obscure of ways. Six degrees of separation or even less.
Stay tuned, the “religious” people who are running the realm ain't finished. They have a plot. They are gonna loot, pillage, and plunder, and then they are gonna run back home, but not before they make the people who “believe” otherwise.
Lord have Mercy
one mans trash is another's treasure. As my neighbor commented: I'm mexican we are too poor to have trash. true truth.