Magazine time In its latest issue, it dedicates a long cover report on the Argentine president, Javier Milei, in which he highlights his lack of political strength to carry out his long-term structural reforms and at the same time minimizing the social unrest that they can generate and that can derail them.
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The journalist who signs the report highlights her binary vision of the world, and gives as an example that the question about the first social protests about her plans makes Milei “explode the fury that made him famous on television”, and that he got in response: ” “Are you in favor of that group that, having lost the elections, is now planning a coup?” the president replied.
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TIME Magazine about Javier Milei.
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The report cites numerous people who deal with Milei and who highlight that “he sees the world through lenses that are right-wing memes”, always through social networks, the place where he feels most comfortable, according to a political analyst. consulted.
Faced with her repeated conflicts with the President of the Spanish Government, Pedro Sánchez, or the Colombian Head of State, Gustavo Petro, or even the Chinese regime, the reporter highlights the fluid contacts she maintains with the United States: “US officials say it is Milei is incredibly easy to work with, easy to reach on WhatsApp, where she freely exchanges messages and emojis with Ambassador Marc Stanley.”
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U.S. officials say Milei is incredibly easy to work with, easy to reach on WhatsApp, where he freely exchanges messages and emojis with Ambassador Marc Stanley.
An American diplomat quoted in the report highlights, however, the differences between Trump and Milei: “Milei is a rigid ideologue, a true believer, while Trump only believes in himself.”
On several occasions, the journalist points out that Milei’s project transcends the merely political, to which the president himself agrees: “There is an economic battle, a political battle and a cultural battle. We believe that post-Marxism can lead the world to ruin,” he insists.
His spokesman, Manuel Adorni, elaborates on this idea: “If they expected that the president was going to change his way of being, that will never happen,” he emphasizes; However, not everyone thinks the same, and the director of the Wilson think tank for Latin America, Benjamin Gedan, warns: “Much of the support for Milei was for his economic program, not for his libertarian vision or his agenda against progressivism.”
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The president of Argentina, Javier Milei (2-d), during the presentation of his book “The path of the libertarian” this Friday at the Auditorium of the newspaper ‘La Razón’, in Madrid. EFE/Borja Sánchez-Trillo
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(Also: Argentine Foreign Minister affirms that the crisis with Spain ‘is an anecdote and will not affect relations’)
“Dear, I wanted to do this because I wanted to sing,” he said before singing a single song with an amateur band: his version of “Panic show” by the Argentine rock trio La Renga.
After his interpretation, the economist president gave an extensive economics class based on his thirteenth book “Capitalism, socialism and the neoclassical trap.” In his speech, he railed against socialism, defended monopolies, denied the existence of market failures and said that abortion responded to a “mechanism to massacre populations.”
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