• PugJesus
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    591 year ago

    I see Argentina decided they weren’t fucked enough.

  • @Lauchs@lemmy.world
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    411 year ago

    Desperate people make poor but desperate choices. 150% inflation? Goddamn, people here are freaking out about 5%…

    There was a thread a couple days ago about how do you see the world ending. It’s stuff like this, situation will het worse and worse so people will turn to crazier and crazier solutions.

    We’re all in for an interesting next few decades.

  • @Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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    331 year ago

    Can someone explain me this? In Argentina, the majority of the workers are employed by government (crazy rate of employment by a government, I don’t think they actually need all those people), but then the majority of the voters elect someone that plans to cut spending a lot, meaning most of those workers that voted him will be laid off.

    • @Unpigged@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      71 year ago

      Can we theorize a situation where an average Argentinian voter consciously chooses a short term crisis with the prospect of normalization over a lifetime stagnation and decay? Argentina’s economy was shit for a long time, and maybe people’s intent is to wreck things for a change?

        • @SheDiceToday@eslemmy.es
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          11 year ago

          I know they’re out there, but there can’t be a significant enough bloc of them to swing things. I’ve never encountered one outside of the internet, and even on the internet they mostly seem to be acting facetiously.

          • @Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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            21 year ago

            I know tons of them IRL. They just said things like this country is already shit? What’s the worse thing that happens, Trump burns everything down? That’s what we need to happen anyway to move forward.

            I have heard that sentiment a lot.

      • @lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        01 year ago

        Do you have any evidence that a significant number of voters have ever voted for short-term harm to enable some hypothetical future benefit?

    • @ABCDE@lemmy.world
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      91 year ago

      I can get the annoyance with how the economy has been… but jeez, what is the real solution here? I can’t see much of anything positive coming out of this.

      • Pxtl
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        161 year ago

        Elect normal-ass people instead of batcrap loonies like milei or the peronists.

        • @ABCDE@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          What options are in Argentina currently? I have almost zero knowledge of the political system there.

          • @Coki91@dormi.zone
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            1 year ago

            Juan Schiaretti was the most normal dude of the runner ups, but besides him being like 70, nobody knew who he even was in the Political Spectrum, just this elections have made him visible enough that he got a good amount of votes and good reputation

            The others? Peronists (All the Blue colored Parties)

            A Lizardman known as “Larreta” who’s an Authoritarian and one of the most incompetent sons of bitches that has ever governed Buenos Aires and the other of his same Party “Patricia Bullrich” A LITERAL TERRORIST on the 70s and previously Security Minister, didnt do a great job, both of them in the Yellow Party

            Lastly there was Milei… so yeah

            • u/unhappy_grapefruit_2
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              1 year ago

              Prehaps something good and unexpected might come out of milei’s election even though he seems like an completely and utterly crackpot in my somewhat biased opinion having only read a few articles before hand then again he might end up “drowning” in his glow-in-the-dark swimming pool. You can’t predict the future. Plus it can always be worse. Milei might have some great plan’s in the work.he could be a good competent leader

    • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      51 year ago

      I assume that, just like with trump, they won’t admit that they were bamboozled and will just double down with the crazy.

  • Pxtl
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    201 year ago

    Ugh. The way that generally centre-right economic policy wonks are celebrating Milei’s election is grotesque.

    I get that dollarization would probably be good for Argentina.

    Even as a leftist, I’m open to the possibility that an anti-Peronist economic policy could save the country - I doubt they could survive another Peronist.

    But Milei is the worst kind of MAGA wingnut. He’s a talk-radio shock jock. It’s like if they elected Tucker Carlson or Don Cherry into the casa rosada.

    His one possibly-good policy idea doesn’t overshadow that.

  • CALIGVLA
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    1 year ago

    It’ll be a miracle if in the next year alone he doesn’t completely obliterate what’s left of Argentina’s economy.

  • @ThatFembyWho@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    Look I understand, I really do.

    When I was a kid, I was told to beware of clothes irons because they are hot.

    But one day, curiosity got the better of me, and I touched the damn thing to see if it was hot. Hurt like hell, still have the scar to this day. But I don’t touch hot surfaces anymore.

    Go on Argentina, touch the iron :)

  • @RizzRustbolt@lemmy.world
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    41 year ago

    Time to bankrupt a country to pay off venture capital debts!

    Worked out great for the last guy to acquiesce to American interests…

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    31 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Official results showed Milei with near 56% versus 44% for his rival, Peronist Economy Minister Sergio Massa, who conceded in a speech.

    His plans include shutting the central bank, ditching the peso, and slashing spending, potentially painful reforms that resonated with voters angry at the economic malaise.

    “Milei is the new thing, he’s a bit of an unknown and it is a little scary, but it’s time to turn over a new page,” said 31-year-old restaurant worker Cristian as he voted on Sunday.

    He will have to deal with the empty coffers of the government and central bank, a creaking $44 billion debt program with the International Monetary Fund, inflation nearing 150% and a dizzying array of capital controls.

    “The election marks a profound rupture in the system of political representation in Argentina,” said Julio Burdman, director of the consultancy Observatorio Electoral, ahead of the vote.

    Supporters of Massa, 51, an experienced political wheeler-dealer, had sought to appeal to voter fears about Milei’s volatile character and “chainsaw” plan to cut back the size of the state.


    The original article contains 629 words, the summary contains 176 words. Saved 72%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!