lunes, 11 de mayo de 2020

bolsonaro pierde con fernández

Leemos en el diario británico The Guardian.
Cuando Alberto Fernández asumió el cargo de presidente de Argentina en diciembre, su toma de posesión fue boicoteada por el líder de extrema derecha de Brasil , que despidió a Fernández y su vicepresidenta, la dos veces ex presidenta Cristina Fernández de Kirchner , como "bandidos de izquierda".
Para Jair Bolsonaro, el nuevo gobierno peronista de Argentina representó un retroceso a la "marea rosa" de los líderes latinoamericanos que coincidió con el tiempo de Fernández de Kirchner en el cargo de 2007 a 2015. "Argentina está comenzando a dirigirse hacia Venezuela", predijo Bolsonaro.
Cinco meses después, es Brasil el que se dirige hacia una emergencia humanitaria, en medio de un devastador brote de coronavirus impulsado por la actitud despectiva de Bolsonaro hacia la pandemia.
El presidente brasileño ha minimizado la crisis como "histeria" de los medios y rechazó repetidamente las recomendaciones de distanciamiento social de su propio gobierno, incluso cuando la cifra de muertos se ha disparado.
Por el contrario, Argentina impuso rápidamente un bloqueo nacional y parece haber aplanado con éxito la curva de contagio.
"Puede recuperarse de una caída en el PIB", dijo Fernández sobre su decisión de implementar un cierre anticipado. "Pero no puedes recuperarte de la muerte"
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3 comentarios:

Rodolfo dijo...

Es el elogio de los soretes: ¿deberíamos tenerlos en cuenta?

El "viento" de la muerte cambia la dirección por un rato, y parece que la hediondez que los acompaña ha desaparecido.

Es el cacerolo que un día te aplaude y otro...

Norberto dijo...

The Guardiian es un diario muy serio del laborismo inglés, al igual que Tne Independent de los llamados liberal demócratas, en realidad social demócratas, cosa que no se puede decir de los diarios conservadores incluyendo el Times, en su gran mayoría propiedad de los Murdoch, todos muy amarillos y chauvinistas.
Stop Fly pasajeros Bondi Arbus para pasajeros y equipajes de la lowcost
Nunca menos y abrazos

Rodolfo dijo...

- Argentina’s 'Queen Cristina' seeks return to politics with Senate bid
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/25/argentinas-queen-cristina-seeks-return-to-politics-with-senate-bid

- Argentina's former president suspected of role in peso inflation scheme
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/26/argentina-former-president-cristina-fernandez-peso-inflation-scheme

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/may/26/south-america-progressive-dream
- The slow rollback of South America’s “pink tide” is laying bare the endemic corruption that was hidden beneath the economic success once enjoyed by the region’s progressive governments. Voted out in democratic elections in Argentina, expelled by what almost conclusively looks like a palace coup in Brazil or tottering on the brink of social meltdown in Venezuela, a league of like-minded progressive presidents has been broken apart in the space of six months.
The ingrained habit of palm-greasing across the continent has suddenly erupted from below the surface, leading to wide-ranging court investigations, especially in Brazil and Argentina...

- How the former head of Shell Argentina turned to clean energy
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/sep/22/how-the-former-head-of-shell-argentina-turned-to-clean-energy
Marina Aizen for Clarin, part of the Climate Publishers Network

What do you do after spending 37 years running a top oil company in Argentina? You become a green energy advocate, reports Clarín
In June, Juan José Aranguren left Shell after 37 years; he had spent the last two decades running the company’s Argentinian division. The ex-hardman of the oil industry is now firmly pro-decarbonisation, and promotes the use of energy which will not contribute to further global warming.

...We’re not just listening to the Pope or worrying about whether the world will come to some kind of compromise before the end of the year in Paris [where UN climate talks will be held].” Aranguren said that not only has energy been wasted in the past few years, but there is a severe lack of transparency around the sector in the ministry of planning.

- Cristina Fernández de Kirchner: is the fairytale ending for Argentina's new Evita?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/20/cristina-fernandez-de-kirchner-argentina-president-political-turmoil

Nisman’s death may yet prematurely end her time in office, but Fernández’s life story to date reads like a fairytale. She was born in Tolosa, a suburb of the university town of La Plata, in Buenos Aires province, known as Barrio del Tambor (Suburb of Drums) for its Afro-Uruguayan carnivals held to the beat of colourful candombe troupes. Much has been made in recent biographies of a rumour that her father, Eduardo Fernández, a bus driver, moved in with her mother only once Fernández was a schoolgirl, suggesting that he was perhaps not her real father at all.

These rumours have never been confirmed, but those who knew her back then say her parents had a strained relationship, punctuated by political disagreements. He was an anti-Peronist, she was a devotee of Eva Perón...