Posted on 11/12/2024 2:26:00 PM PST by ChicagoConservative27
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele and Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves on Monday agreed to create a “League of Nations,” a bloc of like-minded smaller developing countries with common objectives in security, economy, and other areas.
The prospective and yet-to-be formally named group, President Chaves explained, will start with El Salvador and Costa Rica, and aims to promote joint ideas and propose them to the incoming administration of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and to the rest of the world.
Both presidents made the announcement in remarks given after a private meeting on the occasion of Bukele’s two-day visit to Costa Rica.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
So....much.....winning!
Ping.
They know who the real President is.
Agression invites ... hey, can we get along, my friend?
It’s in our best interest to have prosperous and friendly neighbors. Help them provide opportunities and people will self deport.
I saw Tucker’s interview with Bukele and it was fantastic.
This is a good thing and will drive the leftists and globalists out of their minds.
IIRC Mexico was also being surprisingly cooperative while DJT was in office.Hopefully they’ll do so again.
Very INteresting…
Improve their economies so they don’t need to migrate. But first get rid of the cartels.
Unhinged lib report:
Inside the growing cult of El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele, Latin America’s political star
The Los Angeles Times ^ | July 25, 2023 | Kate Linthicum
Posted on 9/4/2023, 3:03:21 AM by beaversmom
MEXICO CITY — In Peru, there is talk of building a monument in his honor.
In Honduras and Ecuador, leaders have copied his draconian security policies, his tough-on-crime rhetoric — and even his fashion choices.
In Chile, Costa Rica, Colombia and Guatemala, citizens have taken to the streets calling on their own governments to embrace his extreme strategies for combating violence.
The brash young autocrat has won legions of fans throughout the region for a sweeping crackdown on gangs that has dramatically lowered violent crime. That his “mano dura” policies draw scorn from human rights and democracy advocates seems to only feed his cult-like status as a renegade willing to get things done, whatever the cost.
My host, an American expatriate who runs an orphanage and home for teen mothers rescued from trafficking (etc.) said that real estate prices were skyrocketing from all the Salvadorans returning from the US with deep pockets, settling back down in their homeland. Prices in San Salvador were what you'd expect in many US cities (and higher than I'd pay in my rural area).
I would rather have Israel, Argentina, Hungary, Poland, Austria and Italy.
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