Javier's Milei's Amputation Regime for Argentina
The countrys new president has imposed a set of brutal austerity measures as part of a so-called chainsaw plan. The carnage is already mounting.
JACOB SUGARMAN
Javier Milei, Argentinas new president, lifts a chainsaw during an election rally on September 25, 2023, in Buenos Aires.
(Photo by Tomas Cuesta / Getty Images)
BUENOS AIRESThe crowd marches languorously down Diagonal Norte toward Argentinas presidential palace bearing a series of cardboard characters painted a metallic grey. Together, they spell out the phrase Son 30,000the estimated number of people who were killed or forcibly disappeared during the US-backed dictatorship that ruled from 1976 to 1983.
Its just after noon on March 24, the countrys Day of Memory for Truth and Justice, and hundreds of thousands have taken to the street to commemorate the victims of the Argentine junta and declare
nunca más (never again). But this years march is uniquely fraught. In November, Argentina elected economist and television personality cum politician Javier Mileia self-styled anarcho-capitalist who openly denies the juntas crimes.
Earlier that morning, while demonstrators flooded Plaza de Mayo outside, the Casa Rosada released a nearly 13-minute video on X, formerly Twitter, providing a complete accounting of the period, with testimonials accusing left-wing guerilla groups of acts of terror. Six days before, the human rights organization HIJOS (Hijos por la Identidad y la Justicia contra el Olvido y el SilencioChildren for Identity and Justice against Forgetting and Silence ) published a statement announcing that one of its members had been bound and sexually assaulted, and that her assailants had spray-painted the letters VLLC on the wall of her home. (Mileis personal slogan is
Viva La Libertad Carajo, or Long Live Freedom Dammit.)
Hes an idiot, said Beatriz Conde, a 73-year-old retiree from nearby Avellaneda. I should apologize to the idiots, poor things. Milei is worse. He has no heart. Hes garbage.
More:
https://www.thenation.com/article/world/javier-milei-argentina-100-days/