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Pinochet Has Died
Fox News | 12-10-06

Posted on 12/10/2006 9:46:26 AM PST by My Favorite Headache

Hell has a new employee...Pinochet is dead at 91.


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chile; chileansavior; commiekiller; commiethwacker; dictator; leavehimbe; pinochet; tookoutthetrash
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To: WarrenC

If only Pol Pot got the kind of derision that Pinochet got.


441 posted on 12/10/2006 9:52:13 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: FreedomPoster
Guy with the gal is wearing a Che t-shirt.

I just like to ask them how much they paid for them.
442 posted on 12/10/2006 10:03:42 PM PST by proud_yank (Socialism - An Answer In Search Of A Question For Over 100 Years)
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To: fragrant abuse
This thread proves that Free Republic is teeming with 'conservatives' who don't give a damn about real freedom and democracy. Pinochet was a brutal thug and I'm glad he's dead.

Your observation is correct, but your rationale is backwards. Real freedom is rooted in the rights of life, liberty, and property. Communism is by definition the antithesis of all three to the point that they are mutually exclusive. Any true conservative would recognize that.

A problem emerges when the second principle you mention, democracy, is used to enable and elect a communist regime, as happened with Allende in 1970. Such a regime is, by its very nature, hostile to life, liberty, and property, and thus your first principle, freedom. Furthermore, when freedom falls any remainder of democracy soon follows, as its absence gives rise to an unchallenged totalitarian state. It is therefore possible in some circumstances that freedom and democracy in the long run may only be sustained by overturning democracy in the short run.

This is the infamous nazi paradox of democracy - what are a people to do when the electorate votes for a Hitler?

The only answer that works is to overthrow the Hitler, or the Stalin, or the Ortega, or the Allende, and to do so by force if necessary. Pinochet did just that, and he was right in doing so. Even in the most anti-democratic phases of his rule, Pinochet restored the rights of private property that Allende discarded. He thus set Chile on a path to restoring its freedom, followed by its democracy as he gradually and voluntarily relinquished power.

As for atrocities - yes they happened, and no they were not good things. That said, the brutality of the Pinochet regime has been SEVERELY overstated by the leftist media, and the as well as the character of his "victims" has been intentionally misrepresented. The Chilean commission that investigated his 17 year rule attributed 2,300 deaths to his regime. Closer examination reveals some very interesting information about these deaths, putting them into a very different perspective than the "brutal dictator" spin that is often attributed to Pinochet. Consider:

1. Of the 2,300 deaths, over half ocurred during the September 1973 coup itself and the following three months of political discord. Revolutions are a bloody thing by nature so much of this was unavoidable. Furthermore, almost all of the "victims" of this period were marxist officials of the Allende regime, including Allende himself who committed suicide with a gold plated AK given to him by Fidel Castro.

2. Of the remaining deaths, about 600 happened in the 3 years following the coup when marxist pockets were still resisting and many of Allende's subordinates were running around in the jungles of neighboring countries.

3. Political affiliation is known for about 1,200 of the 2,300 killed. Over 1,100 of these belonged to one of three Allendist-marxist political parties, including 384 in the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria - a marxist terrorist organization that was closely aligned with the Allende regime. 758 were members of other communist political parties, and a couple dozen were members of armed marxist guerilla groups such as the Frente Patriótica Manuel Rodríguez. These people were not your normal opposition political party on the minority side of the legislature. They shared more in common with the Bolsheviks, the Nazi SS, and Hezbollah than they did with any legitimate political organization.

4. After the Allendist threat dissipated, political executions dropped dramatically. Between 1977 and 1990, when Pinochet left office, there were roughly 400 executions - an average of less than 30 a year. These included members of small marxist guerilla uprisings in 1983 and 1984. By Latin America standards, this number is miniscule. For comparison, the "democratically elected" Sandinistas executed over 15,000 in their 11 year rule in Nicaragua during the same period. Hugo Chavez is believed to be responsible for murders described as in the thousands after only 5 years in office.

443 posted on 12/10/2006 10:27:07 PM PST by lqclamar
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To: Reaganez

Yes, Hitler was a socialist, like Stalin, Lenin, Peron, and Mao. America really did not have any involvement as many like to believe.


444 posted on 12/10/2006 11:11:36 PM PST by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: B-Chan

Avante!


445 posted on 12/10/2006 11:12:11 PM PST by YCTHouston
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To: My Favorite Headache

Jane, you ignorant slut.


446 posted on 12/10/2006 11:13:09 PM PST by YCTHouston
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To: supremedoctrine

"Los Desaparecidos" refers to the disappeared in Argentina's Dirty War. The Argentine junta was a lot more brutal and sadistic. Torture and sadism ran rampant. They would mutilate and bury their victims. They stole babies from people and performed forced abortions. At least 30,000 died. It would not surprise me if up to 200,000 died because many just disappeared. The Argentine junta had support from Communists and the Soviet Union. That's one reason why America sided with England during the Falkland Invasion in 1982. The reason for that was they were seen as anti-Peronist and no one liked it. When Jorge Videla came to power, it was welcomed. They came about because Peronists were engaging in terrorism. Their goal was to undo what Juan Peron had done.


447 posted on 12/10/2006 11:21:02 PM PST by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: RightCenter

Agreed.


448 posted on 12/10/2006 11:22:05 PM PST by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: SauronOfMordor

Totalitarianism does not happen overnight. It's a gradual process.


449 posted on 12/10/2006 11:25:55 PM PST by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: FreedomPoster

It is difficult to pinpoint exactly how many Castro and his club of thugs has killed. Noone will really know the number because a huge fraction of the deaths caused by Castro (at least in my opinion) are people who have drowned trying to escape his hellhole to Florida, Mexico, and elsewhere. Some estimate put those deaths alone at 30-40,000. But don't expect anyone in the media to report that! When Castro dies the only thing that the media will report will be the passing of "a great humanitarian."


450 posted on 12/11/2006 12:19:33 AM PST by burzum (Despair not! I shall inspire you by charging blindly on!--Minsc, BG2)
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To: My Favorite Headache
An Anagram For You

General Pinochet is dead =
A Chilean's ego-trip ended.

-- posted by db at Anagrammy.com

451 posted on 12/11/2006 1:36:14 AM PST by Silly ("Dignity is overrated. Go climb a tree." -- The Gospel According to Luke, Chapter 19 - paraphrased)
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To: paulat

Maybe I'm just a masochist.


452 posted on 12/11/2006 2:48:50 AM PST by John Valentine
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To: lqclamar

I find your comparison of Allende to Stalin and Hitler somewhat ridiculous. Can you honestly not see the difference?

The question is, when the Chilean people voted for Allende, were they voting for the end of democracy? I doubt it. Allende served three years of a six-year term and was highly controversial, but I have not read any credible evidence that Chile, in 1973, was on the brink of becoming a Marxist dictatorship. While democracy continues to function any leader, no matter how obnoxious his ideology, can be thrown out of office if the people so choose. Pinochet didn't give the people that option for 16 years.

Even if we accept that Pinochet saved Chile from Marxist dictatorship, how can we, as defenders of democratic freedoms, possibly celebrate Pinochet's right-wing brand of dictatorship? (Ironically Pinochet kept Chile's economic lifeblood, the copper industry, firmly under state control throughout his rule).

Pinochet was an enemy of freedom, just as a Marxist dictator would be, and any true conservative would recognise that fact. I don't buy your Orwellian doublethink that Pinochet was somehow defending democracy.


453 posted on 12/11/2006 5:40:59 AM PST by fragrant abuse
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To: Oklahoma
And if the communists/radicals/islamists were in your own country, were your own citizens?

I'd rather lose the Republic then abandon the rule of law and the code of human decency.
454 posted on 12/11/2006 6:15:47 AM PST by brothers4thID (Being lectured by Ted Kennedy on ethics is not unlike being lectured on dating protocol by Ted Bundy)
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To: Melas

I didn't say he was good. Please read my post. I said he was neither all good nor all bad.


455 posted on 12/11/2006 6:17:48 AM PST by 3AngelaD (ic.)
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To: Diocletian

It is not enough to just survive the war, we have to be worthy of survival.


456 posted on 12/11/2006 6:18:06 AM PST by brothers4thID (Being lectured by Ted Kennedy on ethics is not unlike being lectured on dating protocol by Ted Bundy)
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To: brothers4thID

Wow - that's all we need. Defeatists like yourself around here. Life is not just mall walking and happy times...it's also blood and guts--you know like the struggle to defend one's way of life.



457 posted on 12/11/2006 6:19:24 AM PST by eleni121 ( + En Touto Nika! By this sign conquer! + Constantine the Great))
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To: Professor Kill

Thanks for introducing a much needed dose of sarcastic wit to this thread.


458 posted on 12/11/2006 6:31:00 AM PST by brothers4thID (Being lectured by Ted Kennedy on ethics is not unlike being lectured on dating protocol by Ted Bundy)
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Comment #459 Removed by Moderator

To: Diocletian
"Hitler was against homosexuality too..."

...But only when it suited Hitler's immediate interest. He knew of the homosexuality of the leader of the Brown Shirts (the SA) but only removed him when other factors prompted him. The leader of the SS was about as effeminate in manner as Truman Capote but was allowed ever greater power under Hitler.
460 posted on 12/11/2006 6:33:27 AM PST by Monterrosa-24 (...even more American than a Russian AK-47 and a French bikini.)
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