12-01-2023, 07:59 AM
An-cap ideas are popular now?
I mean, of all the platforms that would help you get elected, that's not a winner in most countries. Hell, he could have ran on "At least I'm not Peron" and it probably would have worked. He didn't have to dive in with both feet on a still-relatively-obscure campaign message. Most people in the USA think "an-cap" is some sort of headwear. At least in the USA, "I'll give you free ponies" is still the best way to get voters easily. He could have gone with: "I'm better at giving away free ponies."
And, if these ideas *are* becoming popular in Argentina, who is to blame for that? How does a country that has lived, breathed, and worshiped socialism for 2-3 generations even learn what libertarianism is? This guy might be the worst controlled opposition ever because he's maybe too good at spreading a message.
Let's say that Milei fails miserably in his presidency . . . he's still spent the better part of the campaign season actively trying to convince the Argentinian populace that they don't need politicians as much as politicians need them. That would be the worst kind of people to try to control.
I get that there are lousy messengers out there. The message is solid and I fail to see how it helps the elites.
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