[RD] News Thread of the Americas

There wasn't even any rejection, Morales won the previous election. It was stolen from him by a military coup encouraged and supported by other countries' governments.

Relevant for other parts of the americas: leftist candidates can win. And phony centrists whom everyone knows are right-wingers can 'surprisingly' lose. Of course in those other places the right won't lose if the 'other candidate' is also for them.
 
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Here's more things that the rightwing conspiracy doesn't want you to know about.

A Venezuelan tanker built c. 2005 is sinking in port due to lack of maintenance.

Argentina's newly-appointed head of the federal anti-corruption office has decided to permanently withdraw his office from suing or investigating former government officials including former presidents Menem and Kirchner, vice-president Boudou and several ministers and secretaries.

For those who are interested, an interview with the president-elect of Bolivia. He says the government is his own and not Morales'. I hope so.

Also the Pantanal region is burning up in yet another case of massive forest fires. President Jair Bolsonaro does not give any fornications.

Sadly it's already ten years since the murder of Mariano Ferreyra and, although one man was sent to jail, the entire corrupt structure of trade unionists for life still controls the country.

Oh, and Our World in Data's refusing to use Argentina's official data, but we're discussing that in the Coronavirus thread.
 
This Sunday there's a plebiscite on whether Chile finally gets rid of Pinochet's constitution from 1980.
 
Another refreshing piece of news which Mr. revealer-of-truths above does not want to publicise is former presidents Sanguinetti and Mujica have agreed to voluntarily step down from their posts in the Senate, in a gesture of goodwill towards renovation that is rather rare in this continent, where officials tend to stay in their posts for as long as possible as if it were a competition.
 
Just for those who are interested, Venezuela's PDVSA is still in freefall.
Yesterday there was an explosion in an oil refinery. Democratically self-elected president-for-life Maduro, without bothering to offer even made-up proof, blames an attack by unknown terrorist saboteurs. But he does admit that Venezuela has only about 20 days' worth of gasoline left.
Last week an oil tanker, the Nabarima, with 1.3 million barrels of oil on board, was reported as having begun sinking. Already since early August there's been leaks and warnings and complaints about it, but the misgovernment has so far claimed ‘fake news’.

:sigh:
I'm officially Argentina's aronnax.
 
On Bolivia:

Reports say that the day after the elections, Gutiérrez was attacked by a group of armed thugs, suffering serious head injuries. He spent the next several days in intensive care in a private clinic, before passing away on October 28, aged thirty-six. According to his personal lawyer, Nadesha Guevara, the union leader had been receiving death threats since August due to his involvement in the protests and strikes, and even requested protective measures from the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights (CIDH) that were never delivered. Some of these threats originated from the Cochabamba-based paramilitary group, Resistencia Juvenil Cochala (RJC).
[...]
Another group that has been featured prominently in the current protests is a US-funded NGO Ríos de Pie (Standing Rivers).

Strangely, despite their “environmentalist” outlook, the group has been almost completely absent in any efforts to contain the mass forest fires that raged across Santa Cruz throughout 2020 (even bigger than the ones in 2019), and has instead focused its efforts on attempting to delegitimize the results of the 2020 elections and protesting against MAS legislative measures. Most recently, a group of Ríos de Pie activists attempted to hold a protest against MAS at Plaza Murillo in front of the Presidential Palace in La Paz, only to be dispersed (ironically enough) by police forces still administered by Añez.

The group itself is led by Jhanisse Vaca Daza, a graduate of the Harvard Kennedy School, whose alumni also include individuals like Venezuelan far-right coup leader Leopoldo Lopez and neoliberal economist Ricardo Hausmann. Daza’s resume, however, is more impressive than her academic history. The organizations that she has worked for include the Human Rights Foundation (founded by the libertarian cousin of Leopoldo Lopez, Thor Halvorssen), the National Endowment for Democracy–funded Center for Applied Non-Violent Action and Strategies (CANVAS), and most prominent of all, the Atlas network.

The latter is comprised of right-wing, libertarian, and far-right political movements from around the world, and has been linked to the creation of hundreds of thousands of fake social media accounts either supporting right-wing regimes, as in Bolivia; destabilizing left-wing governments, such as Venezuela and Nicaragua; or attempting to intervene in electoral processes on the side of the far right, as in the Chilean national plebiscite of October 25, 2020.
 
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Logically Vizcarra's ouster has led to street protests and the like. Vizcarra was thrown out for past corruption by an even more corrupt congress. They could've thrown him out for the country's utter mishandling of the coronavirus crisis instead, but on that front they couldn't outdo him.

Some years ago CFC might have heard about the murder of Marielle Franco, a Braziliain politician who happened to be black, female and homosexual. Now a friend of hers has gone into hiding due to various death threats.
This really highlights how, while people outside Brazil are just focused on hating Bolsonaro™, Brazil's seeing various extremist paramilitary organisations rise, already challenging the power of the traditional drug lords. Together with the rise of Evangelical churches, this feels like a very bad mixture of some parts of the present US and 1980s Colombia.

Also there's this thing about some Indigenous in Canada gaining control of a fishery company but who cares.
 
For those who might be interested, Peru is in utter chaos, as condemned by Nobel prizewinner Mario Vargas Llosa. Two people have been killed in the protests already and the new leader of the Congress has already asked the new interim president to evaluate the possibility of resigning before they throw him out already. I'll try to browse through the Peruvian media tomorrow.

Over the Andes in Bolivia Evo Morales has appointed his personal attorney and former multi-minister to the post of attorney general of Bolivia to ensure transparency.
Also Bolivia's re-established relations with secular Iran and democratic Venezuela.

Here in Argentina a new boost to ecologically friendly energy sources has come in the form of a new 4.5% tax on windfarms.

In Venezuela the misgovernment has dismantled the Venepress news agency, sending in intelligence agents without even bothering to get a pet judge to issue a warrant.
 
For those who might be interested, Peru is in utter chaos, as condemned by Nobel prizewinner Mario Vargas Llosa. Two people have been killed in the protests already and the new leader of the Congress has already asked the new interim president to evaluate the possibility of resigning before they throw him out already. I'll try to browse through the Peruvian media tomorrow.
Merino resigned today. Currently Peru has no president or ministers, not that the pandemic cares.
 
Also Bolivia's re-established relations with secular Iran and democratic Venezuela.
You say this with a tone of disapproval, but every other country in South America (including France and the Netherlands) has diplomatic relations with Venezuela, and most of them have relations with Iran. Are MAS doing anything other than bringing Bolivia into line with regional norms?
 
Congressman Francisco Sagasti is appointed the third president of Peru in a week. The Constitutional Court still hasn't ruled whether Vizcarra's ouster last week was actually constitutional or not. More importantly, tomorrow's football match between Peru and Argentina is confirmed.
You say this with a tone of disapproval, but every other country in South America (including France and the Netherlands) has diplomatic relations with Venezuela, and most of them have relations with Iran. Are MAS doing anything other than bringing Bolivia into line with regional norms?
I feel sorry for Bolivia. It seems destined to pivot between subordination to the US and mass exports of cocaine and subordination to other terrorist states and mass exports of cocaine.

I definitely disapprove of both regimes (and quite a few around the world, incidentally). Not least because of their interference in Argentina: Iran for its terrorist bombings in '92 and '94, and Peronism's quarter-century-long efforts to co-operate in helping the Iranians escape justice, to the point of actually murdering a federal prosecutor in 2015, and Venezuela for unrestricted support to the Kirchner kleptocracy which straight-up illegal campaign funding.

In the case of Bolivia it's not just the diplomatic recognition of the unelected Venezuelan psychopaths (if you scroll up and maybe back a couple of pages you'll find the various links to the regime strongmen who straight-up admit that they started a new corporatist legislative body because the people refused to vote for theirs) which is already aberrant by itself. It's also straight-up resuming more of the awful work and international legitimation of those monstrosities.

Bolivia's further screwed by new human-to-human contagion of a hæmorrhagic fever virus from the Chapare in La Paz.

Also, TF, seriously: you say ‘bringing Bolivia into line with regional norms’. It's not really much of a reasoning to say ‘oh others are doing it’. Otherwise we should have praised the now-gone government they had this past year for sympathising with Bolsonaro. :ack:

Speaking of which, in some of the little good news to come out of Brazil in recent time, Bolsonaro's taken a beating.

Setback for Bolsonaro after poor results in Brazil local elections
President’s candidates suffer heavy defeats amid resurgence of mainstream parties

Jair Bolsonaro – already smarting from Donald Trump’s defeat – has suffered a further setback after candidates he had championed performed dismally in municipal elections.

Spoiler :
Sunday’s vote provided the first electoral opportunity to gauge the health of the Brazilian president’s anti-establishment movement since the populist’s shock election victory in 2018.

The results, which included painful defeats for Bolsonarista candidates in key cities and the resurgence of politicians from mainstream parties, suggest it is an ailing force.

“The far-right wave that carried Bolsonaro to the presidency turned into a ripple in 2020,” claimed the political commentator Josias de Souza in his dissection of the vote.

Bolsonaro, who has yet to publicly recognise Joe Biden’s victory over his top international ally, had endorsed rightwing candidates in six state capitals – four of whom suffered heavy defeats.

In the Amazon city of Manaus, Bolsonaro’s pick, a friend of four-decades called Alfredo Menezes, finished fifth. In Recife, Patrícia Domingos – who Bolsonaro had vowed would rid Brazil’s north-east of “communism” – came fourth.

In Belo Horizonte, Brazil’s third city, Bolsonaro’s candidate, a 23-year-old conservative activist called Bruno Engler, was thrashed by the incumbent Alexandre Kalil, who won more than 63% of the vote.

But Souza claimed that “of all the Waterloos inflicted on Bolsonaro on Sunday, the most devastating was in São Paulo”.

There, in Brazil’s largest and most economically powerful city, Bolsonaro’s choice, Celso Russomanno, was trounced by the centre-right incumbent, Bruno Covas, and a rising leftwing star called Guilherme Boulos. Covas and Boulos will face off in a second round on 29 November.

“We have beaten Bolsonaro – we have beaten his project of hatred, backwardness and lies that tried to take root in the city of São Paulo,” Boulos celebrated.

São Paulo’s governor, João Doria, claimed: “Democracy has won and Bolsonaro has lost”.

Rio’s unpopular evangelical mayor, Marcelo Crivella, reached the second round but is widely tipped to lose. One newspaper branded Sunday’s results “the Bolsonarista breakdown”.

Elsewhere, there were humiliating defeats or hiccups for other candidates linked to Bolsonaro.

The president’s cousin, Marcos Bolsonaro, managed only 1,340 votes – 4% of the total – in his bid to become mayor of the town of Jaboticabal.

The president’s ex-wife, Rogéria Bolsonaro, failed to become a Rio councillor after receiving just 2,033 votes.

Bolsonaro’s son, Carlos, secured a second term in Rio’s city hall but received 36,000 fewer votes than in the last election and lost his title as Rio’s most voted councillor to a socialist.

In the southern town of Brusque one would-be councillor who tried to boost his chances by running under the monicker “Donald Trump Bolsonaro” secured just 107 votes – 0.7% of the total – finishing in 128th place.

Bolsonaro tried to shift the narrative, claiming the results boded well for his re-election chances in 2022 and were “a historic defeat” for the left. But analysts said the opposite was true, with a new generation of leftwing politicians performing well.

As well as Boulos, 38, there were strong showings from Manuela D’Ávila, 39, the Communist party candidate in Porto Alegre, Marília Arraes, 36, the Workers’ party candidate in Recife, and João Campos, 26, the Brazilian Socialist party candidate in the same city.

Monica Benício, 34, the widow of murdered leftwing councillor Marielle Franco, was elected to Rio’s city hall for the Socialism and Liberty party.

“The left rejuvenated on Sunday,” reported the Rio broadsheet O Globo.

The election comes at a testing time for Bolsonaro. Trump’s defeat has robbed his populist project of a key source of legitimacy, corruption investigators are reportedly closing in on two of his politician sons, and polls show support slipping in several major cities.

Meanwhile, more than 165,000 Brazilians have died because of a coronavirus epidemic critics claim Bolsonaro has catastrophically mishandled. Last week, with hints that Brazil’s outbreak was again worsening, Brazil’s president rejected warnings of a “second wave” as “jibber-jagger”.
 
Also, TF, seriously: you say ‘bringing Bolivia into line with regional norms’. It's not really much of a reasoning to say ‘oh others are doing it’. Otherwise we should have praised the now-gone government they had this past year for sympathising with Bolsonaro. :ack:
But you aren't criticising Chile or Uruguay or France for maintaining diplomatic relations with Iran or Venezuela, or insinuating some fellow-cause between those countries and Iran or Venezuela. You are specifically criticising Bolivia, attributing to that government some ill-motive or ill-judgement that you do not attribute to the governments of these other countries. I'm asking why this should be the case, when by appearances, Bolivia is not doing anything which would be considered remarkable if it were not the Bolivians doing it.
 
Bonus track: this comic explains why Argentina's approach to inflation (print money to combat it) is doomed to failure.
 
So how much of South America is basically without functional governments right now? Peru, Venezuela, and Argentina? Brazil is largely inept as well?
 
So how much of South America is basically without functional governments right now? Peru, Venezuela, and Argentina? Brazil is largely inept as well?
Basically, yes. None of the others are doing too well in any case. A lot of it's covered in the Coronavirus thread already, but today we had a little gem, in which a prominent government party member stated outright that the Supreme Court needs to be packed and/or replaced because if they keep declaring evidence in corruption cases against government officials admissible then they're all going to end up in jail. Which would serve them right.

It is of note that the Bolivian people seem to be paying attention to the declaimed ideals of MAS and the battle cry within the party is ‘Renovación’. Evo Morales being hit by a thrown chair is now memetic.

Sunday before last Venezuela's self-admittedly self-elected régime organised ‘elections’ in which unfriendly candidates were barred from running. A bit less than 20% of the electorate showed up. Out of these, 64% are claimed by the government to have voted for their candidates (the rest for the government-picked ‘opposition’) which gives the government a 91% share of the seats in the new ‘Assembly’. The rest of the country didn't show up, even with the Venezuelan government bluntly stating that those who couldn't prove they'd voted would be left without food (since then the régime has simply blocked the entry of UN food aid because the UN refuses to hand food out on a partisan basis).
You can check the Socialist International's website for their own take on the issue.

Juan Guaidó's Assembly held a ‘popular consultation’ which had more than six million people participating last Saturday, forcing them to extend the original deadline by a couple of hours, even with Maduro's militias disrupting the vote and trying to steal ballot boxes.

And this is where we get to Traitorfish's point:
you aren't criticising Chile or Uruguay or France for maintaining diplomatic relations with Iran or Venezuela
None of those three countries claim that Venezuela is a democracy, let alone ‘the way of the future™’. Chile and Uruguay actually voted in favour of the OAS resolution condemning last week's farce (read the text, it's at the end of the article). France did the same as a UN member. Bolivia refused to.

For more tidbits on Venezuela, you have their condecorating a Holocaust denialist who wore a Nazi uniform and Iron Cross just three weeks ago.

The recently deceased Diego Maradona's vocal support for Venezuela's kleptocracy came, of course, from several joint commercial ventures to the tune of a few dozen million dollars
 
Today the rather disastrous former president Menem (1989-99) of Argentina died.

Free.

Which means that justice was never done. You can
  • embezzle the crap out of the country,
  • modify provincial constitutions so that governors can appoint themselves for life,
  • cause a monstruous depression and destroy the entire productive system of a country,
  • co-operate with international terrorism (and even hand them your own son's head) and help commit war crimes,
  • have journalists assassinated for investigating your finances,
and more! and yet have three days of mourning declared for you, condolences for your family, and a slew of hangers-on praising your misdeeds.

The only place where there won't be official mourning is the city of Río Tercero, where there used to be a state-owned military factory and arms depot. Thence weapons were shipped illegally to Croatia during the Yugoslav Wars and to Ecuador during its war with Peru (in the latter of which Argentina was simultaneously a mediator and guarantor of peace!). Since that alone could have seen Menem earn himself a sentence for life he actually had the facility blown up and claimed it was an ‘accident’ even though Trotyl doesn't catch fire on its own.
It's also of note that Río Tercero's mayor is not part of the Peronist crime syndicate. He had already declared Menem persona non grata there last year.

He actually was handed a seven-year sentence after his first trial was voided but, to a man, the Peronist party always accepted his renewed nomination as senator for his home province, which gave him automatic immunity, until the very day he died.



---------------------------

Meanwhile, a couple of useful links:
(in Spanish) Diosdado Cabello admits that Venezuela has been penetrated by the ELN and FARC but people shouldn't worry because the Venezuelan armed force are killing them… as usual, my sensors detect a contradiction:
thesis: Colombia's evil because it's killing off revolutionaries,
antithesis: Venezuela's good because it's killing off revolutionaries
proposed synthesis: revolution's only good as long as you don't do it against me?

(in English) a long read, about ten minutes, on how China is slowly but surely turning Argentina into its vassal.
 
That South American countries ever go to war with each other blows my mind. Like, why ever?
 
Today I am in the habit of replying with tropes, so
 
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