A revolution is the usurpation of someone else’s property that prevails without the possibility of return, of returning the stolen. Governments that claim to be “revolutionary” but cannot make a revolution, radical and permanent expropriation, resort to targeted measures of redistribution. They encourage militant takeovers, squats, systematic property invasions or looting of goods, in order to simulate the unattainable utopia of revolution. The revolutionary path is always imposition with violence, therefore, unjustified. This same anti-ethics is used by pseudo-revolutionary governments to justify the violation of property rights, as we saw in Argentina during the ineffective presidency of Fernández II.

Javier Milei won Argentina’s primary and will run for president against Patricia Bullrich and Sergio Massa

Last week there was a concerted wave of looting in the state of La Plata, the promoters of which encouraged regular rioters to take any product without paying, under the pretext of being “hungry”. They say that the robbery is concentrated on food, but that they take all kinds of items, only to exchange them for food later. Faced with the scandal, Peronist government officials appear who blame the events on the winner of the recent primary elections, candidate Javier Milei, whose speech insists on unlimited respect for private property. See? It turns out that preaching against theft begets robbery and theft. Unsurprising stupidity in an administration that legalized violent Mapuche “recoveries” and massive invasions of La Plata, among other usurpations. The conservative “opposition” saw nothing, and neither did Pope Panchito, the same one who cried! when the band of conquerors was driven out and is now silent before the brutal sacrilege of the Nicaraguan dictatorship.

Who is Javier Milei and what are the radical proposals with which he won the primaries in Argentina

There has never been such a widespread backlash against a politician as the conspiracy of Argentina’s political, journalistic, religious, trade union and commercial establishment against Milea. The conservative candidacy of Marxism and populist Kirchnerism go head-to-head against the liberal aspirant. Why are you so afraid? Because they know that the people of the great southern country are tired of the persistent destruction of wealth by union, party and bureaucratic oligarchies, all of what Milei calls “caste”, which have turned what was once one of the most prosperous countries in the world into an underdeveloped wasteland. . Because they see that people have finally realized that change cannot be expected to be the same as always. The libertarian leader refined his speech, during the campaign we saw him develop his ideas in an interesting way, leaving behind the loudness and obscene reaches that were necessary to project an image of radical and decisive. Very impressive was his presentation to the businessmen of the Council of the Americas, in which he clearly and cheerfully presented his government’s plan. Basically, in the interviews, he shows himself at the level of an interrogator who, accustomed to dealing with boring topics of political correctness, cannot deal with Milei. A new era is opening for Argentina and Latin America. (OR)