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And So It Ends For Argentina (Lessons for America)
The Modern Survivalist ^ | Oct. 25, 2011 | Fernando Aguirre

Posted on 10/25/2011 5:44:35 AM PDT by Travis McGee

In spite of having a healthy sized ego I’ve always known my limitations. Even though I’ve been writing about survival and preparedness for many years on daily basis I’ve never considered myself a writer, not even a mediocre one. I know what a writer is and I know I’m not one. I’ve read the work of excellent ones, and I know I just lack that art. I am though a somewhat acceptable story teller, and that’s how I managed to write a book that people can relate to, can learn the lessons I want to transmit and read it without deciding to use it for tinder after ten pages. The most recurrent topic in my blog has been preparedness stories and anecdotes, specifically oriented towards real world survival events and how the people of my country managed to get up, shake off the dust and continue in spite of what this country throws at us.

Some of the events I’ve written about have been hard to digest. Even though I’m firmly against the doom and gloom fascination so common in the survival and preparedness world, there’s times when you just have to tell it as it is. You can’t disguise the death of a person you know, or relate incidents of crime and violence looking through pink-shaded glasses because one extreme is just as bad as the other. The nature of the topics discussed here are serious, sometimes matters of life and death, so that’s why to a certain nouvel readership it might seem dark to read. Even with a pragmatic eye and objective point of view none of this reads like a walk in the park.

As I write this, I can’t avoid feeling two very clear sensations. The first one I can only explain by saying that it’s like stepping out of a boat just as it finishes its slow, decadent sinking and finally goes under the surface. The second one is genuine sadness. Of all the posts I’ve written, this is without a doubt the saddest one I’ve written. I’m not talking about the loss of culture, standards of living or the death of a friend. Its not about the starvation of children of violence towards people close to me. It’s about all that and more. It’s about the death of a country itself.

As the press all over the world talks about the political success of the current administration, and mentions the “flourishing”, prosperous Argentina, a clear minority which I’m part of sees things differently. It makes you wonder and ask yourself a few other things as well. Who writes all these praises? What kind of data do they use to make such positive statements? How can a country be booming economically, yet keeps having shantytowns grow at an accelerating rate, poverty, misery and decadence never backing down one inch, and the 3rd greatest inflation in the planet as the icing on the cake? After reading some of the emails people sent me on the “success” of Argentina, I wonder if its just innocent stupidity, lack of professionalism or if there’s more to it than meets the eye and there are other intentions behind it.

Argentina was fatally wounded almost ten years ago and Argentina as I knew it died yesterday, October 23, 2011, when Ms. Kirchner was re-elected with over 50% of the votes, gaining complete control of the country. She now controls the executive of course, but also the congress, unions and even the media through the Kirchner Media Law. The headlines of the world consider this something of a surprise, a small number of Argentines such as myself consider this the culmination of a decade long process that started with the destruction of opposing parties by any means, legal or not, the indoctrination of the generations to come through several channels including the mandatory “Citizen Formation Studies” in schools and even an officially approved version of history. It seems insane, but the “History” I was taught twenty years ago is different from the one my son is taught, much worse, its different from the recent history I SAW with my own eyes.

One can only wonder how can such an authoritarian leader earn so much public support? Wasn’t it bad enough when they controlled the media through an unconstitutional law, or what about our retirement funds begin stolen (nationalized) right in our faces?

How Did This happen?

The process was long and patient at some times, brutal at others. People from other parties or simply with different views suddenly found themselves facing various charges or harassment. People that didn’t play along simply didn’t end up well, and by that it includes every possible end you can think of. Soon enough politicians that used to be the opposition ended up siding with the ruling K party. Journalists and political analysts that didn’t play ball would be threatened to remind them of their position, or eventually found themselves unemployed and no one willing to hire them. The young adult sector was dealt with by the son of the Kirchner’s, Maximo. He formed “the young Ks”, with their leaders grouped in an organization called “La Campora”.La Campora was formed by friends of the son’s president, at times such a useless and lazy gang, not even Nestor Kirchner himself could place them in the positions they wanted on occasions. During a meeting with the Young K leaders he’s quoted to have said” guys, guys, you come here asking for positions of power and management, but you don’t even have a high school diploma for me”. Almost like a Homer Simpson parody, even the slightest degree of competence would place you in charge of an area of the government or in charge of a recently “nationalized” company, like when they took back “Aerolineas Argentinas” airlines from the Spaniards.

As for the rest of the population, nothing has ever worked as well for the peronist party as keeping those families poor and numerous, and the Ks repeat that same recipe. The handouts for one reason or another make sure those votes keep coming. Handouts per child, for political support, its all there if you show up to the rallies or protest against the companies that aren’t “team players” with the government. If you are a company owner, in the legal or illegal pharmaceutical business, a good amount of donations will go a long way in ensuring the health of your business. Where does the money come from? Stealing the retirement funds helped, so does sucking the blood out of what’s left of the middle class through taxes, but the key is Argentina’s Green Gold: Soy. In a world in crisis commodities such as soy are expensive. What did the K’s do? Take so much from the farmers through taxes with no regard to the future, so that today the land almost grows soy exclusively. In agricultural terms this is madness but they are doing it anyway. Get rid of everything, cattle, other agro, just plant soy. Soy kills the land and ten years from now we’re looking at a food crisis, but who cares? The amount of pesticides used already has consequences with child mortality and significant amount of malformations. No one seems to care.

But the most brilliant part of this evil plan was the children, the generations to come. Political brainwashing thanks to the mandatory citizen formation classes, combined with the iron grip on the media that ensured the famous in the showbiz which the uneducated masses follow play along supporting the Ks, all this “work” had its results eventually. This was complimented with an extreme liberal agenda, from gay marriage and adoption to the official nod to drug abuse. Keep in mind that this has been going on for a decade now. It was first four years of Nestor K, then four more of Cristina K during which Nestor died. Now its four more of Cristina K, and the first generation of indoctrinated kids finally had a chance to vote in these elections.

Don’t repeat Our Mistakes

Ms. K won with over half the country voting for her. This may appear to be a triumph of Democracy. You have to wonder though, if it really is a democracy after everything that has happened, including the sharing of power between husband and wife to extend their period in power. Hugo Chavez was voted at some time into office. So was Hitler.

Many people consider what happened to Argentina after its economic collapse to be a window into the possible future of USA. In many ways and in spite of the differences I do think it is. I do see so many of the similarities that I feel encouraged to make certain warnings which followers of my blog read time and again. One of them is being watchful of the calamity of crime and the suffering it causes. Argentina is already becoming like Venezuela in that area as well.

The one I want to make sure people listen to in this case is to please be careful of authoritarian governments. They sprout and grow within the political system and government structure during hard times like we’ve seen it happen so many times in the past, in different countries at different times. Never forget Hitler got voted into office thanks to the desperation of the Germans just wanting to believe the promises after so much economic struggling. Argentines would hand over a freaking crown to this woman if she asked for one, but they already gave her so much more than that. Please learn from our experience in this as well. Never give more power to a president than the one he should have. Remember that he’s always an employee of the people, and not the other way around. Punish authoritarianism by taking action, talking with your representatives and remembering it when its time to vote once again.

USA has real hope in its Tea Party movement and politicians like Ron Paul. Support them. Support movements like the Appleseed Project, those are great folks that teach a key part of the TRUE history of the United States and not a sanitized politically correct version.

Take care everyone,

FerFAL


TOPICS: Government; Society
KEYWORDS: argentina; cwiiping; obamadream
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Fernando Aguirre is the author of "The Modern Survival Manual: Surviving the Economic Collapse," which I strongly recommend.


1 posted on 10/25/2011 5:44:40 AM PDT by Travis McGee
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To: FerFAL308; Eaker; afnamvet; AK2KX; Ancesthntr; An Old Man; APatientMan; ApesForEvolution; ...
CW2 Ping

Posted to the CW2 list as an example of how a country slides into socialist tyranny.

Many lessons applicable to America's near future may be learned from studying the cases of Venezuela, and now Argentina.

2 posted on 10/25/2011 5:47:43 AM PDT by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Travis McGee

Sounds a lot like what has happened here.

The Wife and I have followed this guy’s tips for survivng economic downturns, Sad to see it’s almost hopeless.


3 posted on 10/25/2011 5:49:08 AM PDT by wolfcreek (Perry to Obama: Adios, MOFO!)
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To: FerFAL308; Eaker; afnamvet; AK2KX; Ancesthntr; An Old Man; APatientMan; ApesForEvolution; ...
CW2 Ping

Posted to the CW2 list as an example of how a country slides into socialist tyranny.

Many lessons applicable to America's near future may be learned from studying the cases of Venezuela, and now Argentina.

4 posted on 10/25/2011 5:49:21 AM PDT by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: OKSooner

Read tonite.


5 posted on 10/25/2011 5:51:41 AM PDT by OKSooner ("Get a brain, morans!!")
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To: Travis McGee

Kirchner?

Leftovers from the run-away Nazis?


6 posted on 10/25/2011 5:54:47 AM PDT by wolfcreek (Perry to Obama: Adios, MOFO!)
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To: Travis McGee

“Personality Cult”


7 posted on 10/25/2011 5:59:56 AM PDT by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Happiness)
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To: wolfcreek

—Sad to see it’s almost hopeless.—

If you read the book of revelation, you will find that “it” IS hopeless. But in the end there is victory.

Life is a mist.


8 posted on 10/25/2011 6:01:30 AM PDT by cuban leaf (Were doomed! Details at eleven.)
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To: Travis McGee

Ping for later, depressing reading.


9 posted on 10/25/2011 6:02:15 AM PDT by Mortrey (Impeach President Soros)
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To: Travis McGee
Chavez, Kirchner, Obama - many similarities.
10 posted on 10/25/2011 6:03:19 AM PDT by Truth29
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To: Travis McGee

And those there are, in large part, unable to stop the slide into oblivion, or unwilling to take the extreme measures required to.


11 posted on 10/25/2011 6:05:07 AM PDT by ctdonath2 ($1 meals: http://abuckaplate.blogspot.com/)
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To: Travis McGee

As you have pointed out elsewhere, the US lacks the cultural cohesion that kept Argentina from descending into total chaos and nightmare a decade ago. As Fernando shows, at some point, even that cultural bond can be eroded and eventually eliminated in just the manner he describes. We can see that happening here.

For America, the consequences are and will be dire. Some of us can see it coming. Most of us don’t. There’s a real possibility for a ‘civilizational collapse.’ Won’t be the first. Nor will it be the last.


12 posted on 10/25/2011 6:05:12 AM PDT by Noumenon (The only 'NO' a liberal understands is the one that arrives at muzzle velocity.)
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To: Travis McGee

Ferfal sure paints a different picure than what the drive-bys are telling us. Thanks for posting!


13 posted on 10/25/2011 6:12:38 AM PDT by caver (Obama: Home of the Whopper)
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To: Noumenon

—There’s a real possibility for a ‘civilizational collapse.’ Won’t be the first. Nor will it be the last.—

I agree with all but the last statement. This really may be “Ezekiel 38,39” and a soon unfolding of events as described in Revelation.

We are not Argentina. If we fall, everybody does. Iceland was the canary in the cave. And since it was the first, it was able to still rely on the mere existence of the rest of western civilization to help them out of their mess (in progress). What’s coming is going to be quite global. And icky.


14 posted on 10/25/2011 6:14:30 AM PDT by cuban leaf (Were doomed! Details at eleven.)
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To: Travis McGee

Thanks for the ping, stay safe, brother.


15 posted on 10/25/2011 6:33:37 AM PDT by Repeal The 17th
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To: Travis McGee
You get the government you deserve. You're correct. The late Great USA had better pay close attention.
16 posted on 10/25/2011 6:36:09 AM PDT by ExSoldier ("Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil: It has no point.")
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To: Travis McGee
I visited Buenos Aires in 2007, intent on perhaps buying a home and retiring there. At the time the dollar was worth three Argentine pesos, and my money would have gone further there.

What I saw discouraged me, and I wouldn't dare, especially since Ms Kirchner has been reelected, buy anything there. I speak Spanish, as does my Austrian wife, so culturally, there was a lot to like. Pre-collapse, Argentina was, just like many latin American countries, rich and poor, no in-between. I imagine it still is.

There were some stupendous buys there as far as real-estate goes, and though the people were extremely friendly to Americans, I decided when Ms. Kirchner began to seize bank funds for various government projects, the writing was on the wall.

It's a shame. Their agriculture exports are booming, the only saving grace, and no one has lent them money, so a default will not be a large one.

The Argentinians have experienced nothing but authoritarian leadership throughout their history. Their culture has survived only because misery unites them. They have never experienced true capitalism, only crony, quasi-free markets and despotism. The fact that we Americans have experienced prosperity through free markets makes us different in important ways. For this reason I find it difficult to equate our situation with theirs, at any point in our history. Even now.

17 posted on 10/25/2011 6:45:30 AM PDT by wayoverontheright
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To: Travis McGee
Take so much from the farmers through taxes with no regard to the future, so that today the land almost grows soy exclusively. In agricultural terms this is madness but they are doing it anyway. Get rid of everything, cattle, other agro, just plant soy. Soy kills the land and ten years from now we’re looking at a food crisis, but who cares?

Huh? Unless the seed and fertilizer companies have come up with new breeds of soy, I had always understood that soybeans revitalized the soil because it is a legume that can take nitrogen from the air. Essentially after planting corn for a couple of years you rotate to soybeans to give the land a year off.

18 posted on 10/25/2011 6:54:03 AM PDT by KarlInOhio (Compare "Delay is preferable to error" - Thomas Jefferson // "Pass this bill now!" - Barack Obama)
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To: Travis McGee
Soy kills the land and ten years from now we’re looking at a food crisis,

If he's talking about high-intensity chemical farming of soybeans, he's right, but it's the method, not the plant, that is the problem. No-till farming with soybeans replaces nitrogen and leaves the root masses and much of the green matter for decomposition. Farmers in Latin America had grown milpas of corn, beans, and squash (together) for over a thousand years with relatively little soil depletion.

19 posted on 10/25/2011 6:55:03 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (At least I have the decency to kill my food before I eat it.)
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To: Travis McGee

Thanks for posting this. I believe many people still think that we would be immune from such as this happening here. In particular if we elect a ‘conservative’ president in 2012. However much is already in place. The wheels are in motion and have been for a long time conservative president or not. It will take great united energy to battle the forces at work. To preserve our culture, heritage and nation. Not the PC crap that we constantly see from the left and also from many on the right. I agree with the poster above that our social cohesion is weakening to the point of there being little if any at all left at least in the national sense. We certainly have a hard time uniting on much even on the so called right side of the aisle. Our whole societal structure is under attack and by and large under control of Marxist/liberal doctrine and I’m not sure we have the backbone anymore to fight it. We must unite on our forefathers, our common culture, heritage and blood. Without it we are just a shell.


20 posted on 10/25/2011 6:55:43 AM PDT by Altura Ct.
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