Javier Milei wins Argentina election
Discussion
Triumph Man said:
That is just rehashing what he said the other day as a scare story. It's more measured than what his opponent said. JuanCarlosFandango said:
Triumph Man said:
That is just rehashing what he said the other day as a scare story. It's more measured than what his opponent said. I rather suspect the ppl of the FI don’t care overly much. The military ability of Argentina is currently slightly less than the Jamaican bobsleigh team.
Given that this bloke appears to be saying he intends slashing govt spending, then I don’t think he is rebuilding the Navy & Airforce anytime soon.
Given that this bloke appears to be saying he intends slashing govt spending, then I don’t think he is rebuilding the Navy & Airforce anytime soon.
JuanCarlosFandango said:
CivicDuties said:
I feel certain that's a great comfort to the people of the Falklands Islands.
Is there anything to suggest that their independence is any more under threat than it was last week?CivicDuties said:
Yes. The election of an unhinged far-right President in Argentina, the sort of bloke who likes to wave chainsaws around in public, and who is a kind of Trump-level idiot who is likely to stop at nothing in order to maintain his own political position, including whipping up nationalism and using the "issue" of the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands as a domestic political weapon.
Here he is rallying the troops by, err, praising Margaret Thatcherhttps://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/nov/13/javi...
CivicDuties said:
Yes. The election of an unhinged far-right President in Argentina, the sort of bloke who likes to wave chainsaws around in public, and who is a kind of Trump-level idiot who is likely to stop at nothing in order to maintain his own political position, including whipping up nationalism and using the "issue" of the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands as a domestic political weapon.
Surely as an anarcho-capitalist libertarian who believes in the Non-Aggression Principle (ha!), Milei will just negotiate to purchase the Falklands as a business transaction in free exchange at what market forces dictate is the correct price? Heck, a large part of Sunak would probably be minded to accept that deal if it came his way!
CivicDuties said:
JuanCarlosFandango said:
CivicDuties said:
I feel certain that's a great comfort to the people of the Falklands Islands.
Is there anything to suggest that their independence is any more under threat than it was last week?"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
(also, he's not far right)
RichTT said:
from the article :
"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
+1"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
Argentina already claim sovereignty of the Falklands so he's changing nothing.
2xChevrons said:
CivicDuties said:
Yes. The election of an unhinged far-right President in Argentina, the sort of bloke who likes to wave chainsaws around in public, and who is a kind of Trump-level idiot who is likely to stop at nothing in order to maintain his own political position, including whipping up nationalism and using the "issue" of the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands as a domestic political weapon.
Surely as an anarcho-capitalist libertarian who believes in the Non-Aggression Principle (ha!), Milei will just negotiate to purchase the Falklands as a business transaction in free exchange at what market forces dictate is the correct price? Heck, a large part of Sunak would probably be minded to accept that deal if it came his way!
RichTT said:
CivicDuties said:
JuanCarlosFandango said:
CivicDuties said:
I feel certain that's a great comfort to the people of the Falklands Islands.
Is there anything to suggest that their independence is any more under threat than it was last week?"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
(also, he's not far right)
RichTT said:
CivicDuties said:
JuanCarlosFandango said:
CivicDuties said:
I feel certain that's a great comfort to the people of the Falklands Islands.
Is there anything to suggest that their independence is any more under threat than it was last week?"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
(also, he's not far right)
https://falklands.gov.fk/our-history
Amazing to see keen British patriots prevaricating over the sovereignty of these islands.
(also, he's far-right)
It's quite an interesting example of how things are spun.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
JuanCarlosFandango said:
It's quite an interesting example of how things are spun.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
That's because you're an idiot though.As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
Vanden Saab said:
RichTT said:
CivicDuties said:
JuanCarlosFandango said:
CivicDuties said:
I feel certain that's a great comfort to the people of the Falklands Islands.
Is there anything to suggest that their independence is any more under threat than it was last week?"Mr Milei, 53, said in the debate: "We had a war – that we lost – and now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels."
I don't see what's controversial about that?
(also, he's not far right)
He's far right. No need to deny it because you might agree with him and don't like the connotations.
Edited by F1GTRUeno on Tuesday 21st November 13:28
JuanCarlosFandango said:
It's quite an interesting example of how things are spun.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
Given he's accompanied by few deputies and even fewer senators he's not going to be doing much of anything other than holding press conferences about how he can't get anything done.As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
JuanCarlosFandango said:
It's quite an interesting example of how things are spun.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
Yes and Putin was never going to go the full fash and invade Ukraine either, so no problem I'm sure. These people just want to Make Their Country Great Again, what's wrong with that? Right?As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
Nobody's saying he's "gearing up" to mount an invasion, he's only just gained office, so stop misrepresenting what's being said.
There's this funny thing called the future, and also the past, look at the track record of similar sorts of leaders utterly failing their countries and trying to bury their failure by wrapping it up in a flag and invading somewhere they they think should belong to them when it doesn't. No, never happens that, no need to even take a cursory glance at history.
Jesus, the willful naivety.
JuanCarlosFandango said:
It's quite an interesting example of how things are spun.
As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
Those things are true, but they're not why he's being called far-right, are they? No one's calling Milei 'far right' because "he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands." (btw I do agree that his statements about the Falklands are pretty moderate and essentially just state both the current political position and the settled national stance of Argentina. Other Argentinian leaders have been far more strident. It's awful clickbait headline-writing by parts of the British media). Plus, practically, Argentina doesn't have the capability to get troops across the Puerto Madero docklands, let alone to the Falklands.As for as I can see he is an academic economist with a bit of an eccentric approach to public image, talking about how he's going to solve Argentina's economic problems and playing down the disagreement over the Falklands, and yet he's being presented as this mad "far right" showman gearing up to mount another invasion.
But I suspect the label of 'far-right' gets slapped on because of his position on the left/right economic axis (a self-described anarcho-capitalist, the hardest of hard right economic positions), his social conservatism, his bombastic (to put it mildly) rhetoric about leftists and so on.
I suspect that if, say, Paul Cockshott (Marxist economist) somehow became PM of the UK you wouldn't accept "he's just an academic economist, talking about how he's going to solve the UK's economic problems" as a defence of him not being "far-left".
Put it another way - if it was correct to label Corbyn and McDonnell as "far left", can we accept that it's equally correct to label Milei as "far right"?
I don't think either label is accurate to those cases, but in both I can see why others would apply them, and why those people are more than just theorists talking about radical solutions to problems.
hidetheelephants said:
Given he's accompanied by few deputies and even fewer senators he's not going to be doing much of anything other than holding press conferences about how he can't get anything done.
Are you sure? He'll be the Fuhrer of Port Stanley by weekend if mega brain F1GTRUENO is not mistaken. Gassing Station | News, Politics & Economics | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff