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Old December 17th, 2014 #1
Joe_Smith
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Alejandro Biondini is a little kooky, but he's done a lot. He was the founder of Metapedia (which his son is the administrator of now) and has a great record on anti-Jewish and Nationalist activism.

He's had a myriad of political parties over the years, which all have been banned thanks to Argentina's powerful Jewish lobby and large Jewish community. He recently started a new party called "Local Flag" which was legalized by courts on the terms that they would discriminate membership by race. Can he stave off Jewish infiltration? The Jews seem to think so. He won a large number of votes in the last municipal election in Buenos Aires that shocked the establishment.




https://news.vice.com/article/argent...olitical-party

The recent legal recognition in Argentina of a party founded by a neo-Nazi has renewed concern that far-right sentiment in the country is on the rise during a difficult economic period.

A judge in Buenos Aires earlier this month approved the registration of the Neighborhood Flag Party (Bandera Vecinal), a group founded by a 58-year-old right-wing nationalist named Alejandro Biondini. The ruling permits Neighborhood Flag to field a candidate for president next year — a chilling development for a country where as many as 5,000 Nazis sought refuge after World War II.

The court’s decision took media outlets, Jewish groups, and many in the Argentine political scene by surprise. Argentina’s Supreme Court banned Biondini’s former party, New Triumph, just five years ago for “advocating hatred” and using “symbols in the same manner as the Nazis” — a reference to New Triumph’s flag, which featured a number 7 that was stylized to look like a swastika.


The ban was the only formal outlawing of a political party in the history of democratic Argentina , and it forced Biondini to adjust his presentation. He abandoned the fascist salute and the use of particularly controversial symbols, and launched the Neighborhood Flag.

Biondini’s new party is essentially a coalition of nationalist groups such as the Social Alternative Party, the People’s Countryside Party, and the so-called Movement for Dignity and Independence, which is led by a former military officer who participated in an uprising against the government of Raul Alfonsín in 1987.

Biondini unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Buenos Aires on the Social Alternative Party ticket in 2011, winning a scant 0.19 percent of the vote.

European immigration to Argentina in the early 20th Century helped foster a sense of “white identity” that underlies racism in Argentine society today. This is especially apparent in the upper and middle classes, where white supremacist sentiment is evident in the mistreatment of immigrants Who rape, kill, and steal and over 30 years have become close to 35% of the population and have turned Argentina from a sophisticated white country to a corrupt banana republic from neighboring countries, such as Bolivia and Paraguay, that provide the country with cheap labor.

This racist outlook has been brilliantly skewered by Argentine comedian Diego Capusotto and his character “Micky Vainilla,” a pop star with an Adolf Hitler mustache.

Amid soaring inflation and deteriorating economic stability, parties like Neighborhood Flag appear to be developing a wider base. Fascist sympathizers in some neighborhoods in Buenos Aires pay homage to Benito Mussolini and advocate for a campaign of “militant fascism” against leftists and liberals.

Argentine nationalism operates through a variety of different groups. The main one is National Alert, a movement that actively participated in major protests against the administration of President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner in 2012 and 2013. National Alert sympathizers gather at a place called the Patriot House (Casa Patria), where they hold economic and political workshops and organize frequent activities concerning the 1982 Falklands War with Britain.

Since 2010, the group has maintained Alerta Nacional 24, an online radio broadcast that “strives to disseminate nationalistic content and patriotic music.” It has become the primary forum for youth groups that are related to Neighborhood Flag, such as “La Passaponti,” which is responsible for posters and graffiti with sayings such as, “Nationalism Moves Forward!” “Argentina Awaken!” and “Argentina for Argentines!”

These groups appear to be catching on with a segment of the country’s youth. Earlier this year, in response to complaints, Facebook shut down an online group called “Argentina without immigrants from the outskirts,” which had more than 2,000 members in favor of a platform that called for closing Argentina’s borders and accelerating the deportation of undocumented immigrants.

VICE News reached out to Neighborhood Flag officials to request an interview with Biondini. After several exchanges, the party’s legal team decided that “the leader” would not grant an interview unless it was for live radio or television.


“No print or online press, nor radio or television that is editable,” a party spokesperson said. “There have been a lot of things taken out of context.”
Lesson for white nationalists: don't talk to Jews or their press. Would Abe Foxman do an interview withe Der Sturmer? So why should we do interviews with Vice?

But Biondini’s son, who is also named Alejandro, has publicly defended the new party.

“It’s typical of the system to label you,” he asserted on Infobae, a local media outlet, speaking in reference to the National Front's recent success in France. “It happened to [Jean-Marie] Le Pen in France. They accused him of being a Nazi, xenophobe, etc., and the National Front was victorious in the elections.” Before his Zionist daughter's incarnation He went on, “When you propose family values, nationalism, immigration issues, they accuse you of being a fascist, or extreme right.”

As in Le Pen’s case in France, where his daughter Marine now leads their party, Biondini’s ultranationalism is also a family affair: he was elected as president of the party’s council, his wife took over the director’s board, and his son is a member of the disciplinary tribunal.

The plan, for now, is to build a presidential platform to contest the 2015 election. Biondini seems to recognize that his chances of winning a presidential race is a long shot. But for fascists in Argentina, the ruling in favor of Neighborhood Flag is another step enabling the spread of their ideology throughout the country.
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Last edited by Joe_Smith; December 17th, 2014 at 01:29 AM.
 
Old December 17th, 2014 #2
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MGM 10 minute documentary on Argentina in the 1930's, when non-white and "non-Christian" immigration quotas kept most Jews out:


Argentina 2014, with a Jewish population in the hundreds of thousands and bolivian and peruvian filth in the millions. 70 years of Jewish vengeance for helping the Nazis in WWII, with this video as the pinnacle:

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"The favorite slogan of the reds is: 'No Pasarán!: Yes we have passed! And we tell them...and we tell them, we will pass again!'"
― Benito Mussolini after the Communist capitulation in Barcelona
 
Old December 17th, 2014 #3
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I'm impressed with the propaganda graphics by FSBA, an Argentinian NS youth group. This is a good example on how to use images to inform and provoke thought:



Don't be fooled by those who claim to be victims.



The only way to deal with Marxist violence is show them you mean business.



Welcome to our country, enjoy the cultural enrichment.



Hey foreigners, help us fight racism by going back to your country.



Finish off the TV, before it finishes you.



Abortion is murder
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"The favorite slogan of the reds is: 'No Pasarán!: Yes we have passed! And we tell them...and we tell them, we will pass again!'"
― Benito Mussolini after the Communist capitulation in Barcelona
 
Old December 17th, 2014 #4
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What is the position of this party on indigenous non-Whites? Segregation, expulsion, extermination?
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pierre-Marc View Post
What is the position of this party on indigenous non-Whites? Segregation, expulsion, extermination?
BV isn't allowed to have one. Instead, what they are doing, is forming alliances with indigenous nationalist groups, and you see these people at some of the rallies in some instances. BV is an alliance of parties led by Biondini, and not all of them are racial (some are civic nationalist). Right now the focus is on non-white immigration, and while they won't (or can't, without getting banned again) outright say it, Jews. These are definitely the main problem. Before the 50's aboriginals in Argentina were as uncommon as in Canada, the striking demographic shift has been absorption of non-white elements from surrounding countries.
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"The favorite slogan of the reds is: 'No Pasarán!: Yes we have passed! And we tell them...and we tell them, we will pass again!'"
― Benito Mussolini after the Communist capitulation in Barcelona
 
Old December 18th, 2014 #6
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Old December 18th, 2014 #7
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Protest in Argentina against illegal immigration and bolivian territorial encroachment during summer (in the Southern hemisphere is from December to February):

http://youtu.be/wcgOx5gVGjM?t=2m47s
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"The favorite slogan of the reds is: 'No Pasarán!: Yes we have passed! And we tell them...and we tell them, we will pass again!'"
― Benito Mussolini after the Communist capitulation in Barcelona

Last edited by Joe_Smith; December 18th, 2014 at 04:59 PM.
 
Old December 22nd, 2014 #8
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[it's crazy how many books Bolton is churning out, what is it, his sixth book in a couple of years? they're not just hundred pages or so, this one is in fact 388 pages. Link to store: http://www.blackhousepublishing.com/peron-and-peronism]

Kerry Bolton’s Perón & Perónism
Eugène Montsalvat

4,570 words

Kerry Bolton
Perón and Perónism
London: Black House Publishing, 2014



Perón and Perónism is an excellent resource on the political thought of Argentina’s three-time president Juan Domingo Perón. It places him firmly among the elite ranks of Third Position thinkers. His doctrine of Justicalism and his geopolitical agenda of resistance to both American and Soviet domination of Latin America have demonstrated enduring relevance. Influenced by Aristotle’s conception of man as a social being and the social teachings of the Catholic Church, Perón proved to be an insightful political philosopher, developing a unique interpretation of National Syndicalism that guided his Justicalist Party. While his career was marked by turmoil, he pursued an agenda of the social justice, seeking the empowerment of the nation’s working classes as a necessary step towards the spiritual transformation of the country. Perón’s example stands as a beacon to those who seek the liberation of man from the bondage of materialism, and the liberation of the nation from foreign domination.

Juan Domingo Perón was born on the 8th of October 1895 and graduated from the Colegio Militar, entering the military as a sublieutenant. He later attended the Escuela Superior de Guerra, and became a professor of military history at the War College. His mission to Europe in 1939 proved to be a formative experience on his political consciousness. He was inspired by Mussolini’s rejection of both American capitalism and Soviet communism, stating that, “When faced with a world divided by two imperialisms, the Italians responded: we are on neither side. We represent a third position between Soviet socialism and Yankee imperialism.” Perón became a member of the Group of United Officers (GOU) that overthrew in the Argentine government in 1943.

The GOU was menaced by American pressure due to Argentina’s neutrality in the Second World War and its pro-Axis government. An attempt to buy arms from Germany resulted in American ships being sent to patrol near the mouth of the River Plate and the refusal of American banks to transfer Argentine funds. In response Argentina severed relations with the Axis, but that did not prevent an American embargo.

Within the GOU government, Perón eventually became Vice President, Minister of War, Secretary of Labor and Social Reform, and head of the Post-War Council. He became known as a champion of labor, supporting unionization, social security, and paid vacations, meeting populist radio actress Eva Duarte, his second wife, in the process. However, Perón’s success attracted suspicion from others in the government and General Eduardo Avales forced him to resign his posts and had him imprisoned on October 10th 1945.

However, the forced resignation and imprisonment of Perón triggered a fateful sequence of events that were eventually commemorated in Justicalist ideology on “Loyalty Day.” In response to Perón’s imprisonment, Eva Duarte rallied his supporters in labor, and the CGT labor union declared a general strike. Workers mobbed the labor department in support of the profit-sharing law Perón sponsored. They ran the police gauntlet to flood the plaza in front of the presidential palace. Perón was released and declared his candidacy for the presidency before throngs of supporters from the blacony of the presidential palace on October 17th, now celebrated as “Loyalty Day” by Perónists.

The 1946 election was essentially a struggle between Perón and the US-backed oligarchy of Argentina. Perónist posters asked “Braden or Perón?,” referencing the American ambassador Spruille Braden. The United States attempted to demonize Perón, accusing him of collaboration with the Axis in the Second World War and claiming that Perón planned to institute a totalitarian state, with tactics reminiscent of latter days attempts to paint any leader who doesn’t toe the American line as a rogue who hates freedom. The document summarizing America’s vendetta against Perón was adopted by the anti-Perón Unión Democrática, which comprised both oligarchs and some communist elements. The willingness of the opposition to act as lapdogs for Yankee imperialism only strengthened Perón’s support and he won the election of February 24th 1946.

Perón’s base of support came from the working classes, nicknamed descamisados, the shirtless. The doctrine that drew their support, Justicialism, is a type of National Syndicalism, devoted to the achievement of social justice within the context of the nation as an organic social unit. Perónist constitutional thinker Arturo Sampay defined social justice as “that which orders the interrelationships of social groups, professional groups, and classes with individual obligations, moving everyone to give to other in participation in the general welfare.”

The achievement of social justice would necessitate the elimination of artificial distinctions in society, such as economic classes and political parties. Instead every sector of society would be organized into its own syndicate, essentially the equivalent of the medieval guilds that were destroyed in the French Revolution. Perón saw in the guilds of the past an alternative to the capitalist system of wage labor, providing a social dimension to labor. The worker was a craftsman, integrated into the wider world, instead of a mere cog for the capitalists. Perón saw capitalism as the exploitation of producers by the owners of the means of production:

Quote:
Capitalism refines and generalizes the system of wages throughout the production area, or the exploitation of the poor by the wealthy. This gives birth to new economic and social classes. For one the holders of the means of production – machinery, art, tools, workshops, that is – the capitalist bourgeoisie; on the other hand, employees or the proletariat to deliver the first fruits of their creative efforts.

Man thus becomes a number, without the union corporation, without professional privileges, without the protection and representation of his Estate. The political party establishes the non-functional structure that serves the bourgeoisie in power.
Justicialism sought to undo this distortion of the natural order caused by capitalism. To achieve this, Perón gave a special position to labor unions as leading actors, seeing them as the basis for the syndicates he envisioned to represent each function in society. He sought to transform enterprises into cooperatives where profits where shared between all the producers. Their governing bodies would be the syndicates, who served the national interest, rather than capitalists who served profit alone. Private property would still exist under Justicalism, but it would be distributed so as to encourage production, the ownership of property yoked to the greater good of the nation. He stated that every Argentine should have his own property, yet he believed that factories and businesses should belong to those who work in them. Industries crucial to the maintenance of national sovereignty and economic independence like banking and mining would belong to the state, in order to prevent foreign capitalists from seizing the vitals of the Argentine nation. Perón’s government nationalized the banks, the railways, the airlines, the port of Buenos Aires, and he established the state run oil and gas industry. Much like the Catholic social doctrine of Distributism, Justicialism did not seek to eliminate private property but to give each man what was necessary to produce for the greater good of society.

For Perón work would become an ideal higher than mere bread-winning. It is a spiritual calling that links the achievements of an individual to the achievements of the past and his people. It is a tool of individual and social growth. Work should be mandatory, with everyone striving to contribute, however at the same time the dignity of the worker must be enshrined by law. As such the government enacted a “Workers’ Bill of Rights.” It affirmed the right to a fair wage, unionization, education, safe working conditions, healthcare, adequate healthcare and housing, and social security. However, unlike modern social democrats who see the welfare state as simply providing for man’s materialistic needs, Perón saw it as step towards the spiritual development of the people.

Citing Aristotle’s belief that man was a social being who actualized himself through participation in society, he saw eliminating material hardships as the first step in developing the virtue of the people. Through communal organization the ideal of a better humanity could be reached. In a further tribute the classical ideals of communal self-improvement, Perón emphasized the importance of physical exercise, stating that:

Quote:
the educated man must have developed to being harmonious and balanced in both his intelligence and his soul and his body. . . . We want intelligence to be in the service of a good soul and a strong man. In this we are not inventing anything, we are going back to the Greeks who were able to establish that perfect balance in their men in the most glorious period of its history.
Through sports the youth would develop civic virtue, training men for a life of service. One of the administrations involved in implementing this task was the Fundación Eva Perón.

The Fundación Eva Perón was a social aid agency named for Juan Domingo’s wife, Eva, who played a leading role in it. Established in 1948, its goals included giving scholarships and training to the poor, constructing housing, schools, hospitals, and other public buildings, and engaging in work for the common good. Eva Perón termed this Social Aid, a form of collective self help, explicitly rejecting the idea of charity, saying:

Quote:
The donations, which I receive every day, sent into the Fund by workmen, prove that the poor are those who are ready to do the most to help the poor. That is why I have always been opposed to charity. Charity satisfies the person who dispenses it. Social Aid satisfies the people themselves, inasmuch as they make it effective. Charity is degrading while Social Aid ennobles. Give us Social Aid, because it implies something fair and just. Out with charity!
Among the successful Social Aid projects of the Fundación Eva Perón were the training of nurses, the establishment of large hospitals termed policlincs, the establishment of mobile health care trains, and the construction of homes for the elderly, students, and children.

Given the active and outspoken role Eva Perón played in the Justicalist movement, one would think she would be embraced as a feminist icon. However, Evita herself disdained such characterizations and affirmed the necessity of differing roles for the sexes. She said:

Quote:
Every day thousands of women forsake the feminine camp and begin to live like men. They work like them. They prefer, like them, the street to the home. They substitute for men everywhere. Is this “feminism”? I think, rather, that is must be the “masculinization” of our sex.

And I wonder if all this change has solved our problem? But no, all the old ills continue rampant, and new ones too, appear. The number of women who look down upon the occupation of homemaking increases every day. And yet that is what we are born for. We feel we are born for the home, and home is too great a burden for our shoulders. Then we give up the home . . . go out to find a solution . . . feel that the answer lies in obtaining economic independence and working somewhere. But does that makes us equal to men? No! We are not like them! We feel the need of giving rather than receiving. Can’t we work for anything else than earning wages like men?
The Justicialist creed of social justice supported the family as the basis of society. Juan Perón stated, “Man is created in the image and likeness of God. But this transcendent unity is by nature a social being: born of a family, man and woman, as the first basic social group and the parents provide essential care, without which man cannot survive. This develops within a broader community that was forming along centuries and, therefore, provides the imprint of a civilization and a historical culture. It develops into productive, cultural, professional and other intermediate communities.” In providing social welfare Perón was not replacing the family with the state, but ensuring that a man could afford to feed his family, to maintain their well-being so as to encourage their social development within the nation. By tending this seed of the nation, Justicialism would ensure the growth of virtue among the citizens.

A further part of Perón’s social agenda was the destruction of usury. Perón held that the creation of money should serve a social purpose, not profit the bankers. His government nationalized the banks. Perónist Arturo Sampay said, “Whoever gives the orders on credit and the expansion or contraction of the money supply, controls the development of the country.” As a basic principle of national sovereignty the nation cannot be indebted to private bankers or foreign investors. If a bank is foreign owned or invested in foreign trade, it serves the interests of the foreigners, not the country. Perón termed the banks sepoys, referring to Indian troops who served British imperialism. Perón’s government used the National Mortgage Bank to provide money for public housing at low interest rates, which allow many people to own homes, leading to a more the equitable distribution of property. Perón believed that the money supply should not be manipulated by bankers for profit, but increased or decreased at a rate tied to the work done by the members of the nation. Money was not tied to vague financial mechanisms, but real labor and production. Perón wrote:

Quote:
But in the domestic, social economy our doctrine states that the currency is a public service that increases or decreases, is valued or devalued in direct proportion to the wealth produced by the work of the Nation.

Money is for us one effective support of real wealth that is created by labor. That is, the value of gold is based on our work as Argentines. It is not valued at weight, as in other currencies based on gold, but by the amount of welfare that can be funded by working men. Neither the dollar or gold are absolute values, and happily we broke in time with all the dogmas of capitalism and we have no reason to repent. It happens, however, as to those who accept willingly or unwillingly the orders or suggestions of capitalism, that the fate of their currencies is tied to what is minted or printed in the Metropolis, encrypting all the wealth of a country circulating with strong currencies, but without producing anything other than currency trade or speculation. We despise, perhaps a bit, the value of hard currencies and choose to create instead the currency of work. Maybe this is a little harder than what you earn speculating, but there are fewer variables in the global money game.

Gentleman, in terms of “social economy,” it is necessary to establish definitely: The only currency that applies to us is the real work and production that are born on the job.
Perón’s rejection of international monetary conventions attracted the enmity of the foreign powers intent on using Argentina’s wealth for their own gain. Argentina explicitly rejected the International Monetary Fund. In foreign trade, instead of pursuing exchanges through currency Argentina sought to swap foreign commodities for their commodities, directly bartering goods instead of money. Perón’s refusal to abide by the demands the United States’ global plutocracy drew America’s ire. In 1948 the US excluded Argentine exports from the Marshall Plan zone. Attempts to resolve their differences where stymied by Congress’ refusal to accept the role of the Argentina Institute for the Promotion of Trade (IAPI), which sold Argentine commodities on the international market and subsidized their national production. This autarchic economic planning mechanism flew in the face of America’s pursuit of globalization. If Argentina refused to give dollars, instead seeking to barter goods, the US demanded that they give concessions to American companies, allowing foreign industry to compete with national ones Perón was devoted to developing. America’s assault on Argentina’s economy was a grievous blow to the Perón government, and he began his second term in 1952 with a $500 million trade deficit. That year saw meat shortages and power failures, and while the economy recovered somewhat from 1953 to 1955, the stage was set for the downfall of the regime. In 1955, after a failed coup attempt on September 3rd, a successful coup attempt was launched by the Navy on the 16th. Perón left for Paraguay on the 20th and eventually settled in Spain. The fall of Perón’s government led to the sale of national assets to US corporations, by 1962 production had dropped, the trade deficit had massively increased, and the price of of food increased by 750%.

While his attempts to resist Yankee domination failed and led to the end of his second term, Perón attempted to develop a geopolitical doctrine that would prevent Latin America from falling prey to the predations of the US. He proposed a formation of a geopolitical bloc to resist the Superpowers intent on controlling Latin America, effectively making him an advocate of the multi-polar world envisioned by Russian geopolitical theorist Alexander Dugin fifty years later. In 1951 he articulated his goal:

Quote:
The sign of the Southern Cross can be the symbol of triumph of the numina of the America of the Southern Hemisphere. Neither Argentina, nor Brazil, nor Chile can, by themselves, dream of the economic unity indispensable to face a destiny of greatness. United, however, they form a most formidable unit, astride the two oceans of modern civilization. Thus Latin-American unity could be attempted from here, with a multifaceted operative base and unstoppable initial drive.

On this basis, the South American Confederation can be built northward, joining in that union all the peoples of Latin roots. How? It can come easily, if we are really set to do it.

We know that these ideas will not please the imperialists who divide and conquer. United we will be unconquerable; separate defenseless. If we are not equal to our mission, men and nations will suffer the fate of the mediocre. Fortune will offer us her hand. May God wish we know to take hold of it. Every man and every nation has its hour of destiny. This is the hour of the Latin people.
Perón made overtures to the governments of Brazil and Chile to pursue regional cooperation. In 1953, Chile’s president Carlos Ibáñez del Campo, a friend of Perón, signed an agreement with Argentina to reduce tariffs, facilitate bilateral trade, and establish a joint council on relations between the two nations. Similarly, he pursued integration with Brazil, led by the corporatist Getulio Vargas. While Vargas had been supported in the presidential election by Argentina, he was constrained by pro-American forces in Brazil’s government and a general reliance on American trade. Any chance of integration faded with the suicide of Vargas in the face of an impending revolt.

Perón’s geopolitical relations also extended to Europeans who sought to break free from the American domination that had descended upon the continent in the wake of the Second World War. Like Latin America, Europe had been subjected to Yankee imperialism. Perón met several times with Oswald Mosley, the former leader of the British Union of Fascists, who advocated the formation of an integrated European bloc to reject American and Soviet domination after the World War II, analogous to the Latin American continental unity that Perón supported. Mosley visited Argentina in 1950 and his views may have shaped the development Perón’s geopolitical vision. From exile Perón wrote to Mosley, “I see now we have friends in common whom I greatly value, something which makes me reciprocate even more your expressions of solidarity . . . I offer my best wishes and a warm embrace.”

Among the mutual friends of Mosley and Perón was Jean Thiriart, whom he met through German commando Otto Skorzeny. Like Mosley, Thiriart advocated the formation of a unified Europe to combat American imperialism, though on a more militant level. He saw Latin America, which had been engaged in struggles against American domination for far longer than Europe as an ally to his cause. Perón responded positively to Thiriart’s ideas writing, “A united Europe would count a population of nearly 500 million, The South American continent already has more than 250 million. Such blocs would be respected and effectively oppose the enslavement to imperialism which is the lot of a weak and divided country.” Thus a fundamental alliance between Third World Third Positionism and European Third Positionism existed.

From exile in 1972, Perón addressed the situation of the Third World, decrying the social and ecological destruction wrought by international capitalism. He made several recommendations in that speech regarding the necessary steps they must take to ensure social justice in their nations:

Quote:
- We protect our natural resources tooth and nail from the voracity of the international monopolies that seek to feed a nonsensical type of industrialization and development in high tech sectors with market-driven economies. You cannot cause a massive increase in food production in the Third World without parallel development of industries. So each gram of raw material taken away today equates in the Third World countries with kilos of food that will not be produced tomorrow.

- Halting the exodus of our natural resources will be to no avail if we cling to methods of development advocated by those same monopolies, that mean the denial of the rational use of our resources.

- In defense of their interests, countries should aim at regional integration and joint action.

- Do not forget that the basic problem of most Third World countries is the absence of genuine social justice and popular participation in the conduct of public affairs. Without social justice the Third World will not be able to face the agonizingly difficult decades ahead.
Among the Third World countries that Perón took an interest in was Qaddafi’s Libya. When Perón returned to power a delegation was sent to Libya and various agreements on cooperation were signed. These included deals on scientific and economic cooperation between the two countries, cultural exchange, and the establishment of a Libyan-Argentine Bank for investment. Geopoliticallly Qaddafi’s belief in Arab unity aligned with Perón’s views on the creation of blocs to resist imperialism. Like Perón’s Justicialism, Qaddafi pursued an autarkic economic policy he termed “Arab socialism” aimed at the spiritual development of the nation. Qaddafi’s government outlasted Perón and he pursued aligned with Latin American resistors to American imperialism. His government was particularly close to Hugo Chávez’s Venezuela.

Hugo Chávez, the late leader of Venezuela explicitly declared, “I am really a Perónist. I identify with this man and his thought, who asked that our countries are no longer factories of imperialism.” Chávez revived Perón’s dream of a geopolitical bloc to challenge American domination with his Bolivarian Revolution, creating the Bolivarian Alliance for the People of our America (ALBA). As of this writing ALBA contains eleven member countries, Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Grenada, Nicaragua, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Venezuela. This bloc represents a collection of nations who reject American neo-liberalism and support social welfare and mutual economic aid. Given Chávez’s depiction as a thorn in the side of the American establishment, we can say that Perónist ideals represent a very real challenge to the American New World Order today.

While exile provided Perón with an opportunity to expand his geopolitical contacts and develop his philosophical vision, the election of Héctor Cámpora, a Perónist, who provided the opportunity for Perón to return and run for president, led to a thrid term as President of Argentina. However, in Perón’s absence, major rifts had developed in the Justicialist movement. The tension between left and right wing factions would eventually develop into open violence. The leftist factions eventually formed a radical guerrilla group, the Montoneros. Perónist guerrilla warfare had an early supporter in John William Cooke, a Perónist who eventually fled to Cuba. His influence eventually opened a way for Marxists to infiltrate the movement. Perón himself was strongly anti-communist, stating that “the victim of both communism and capitalism is the people.” Perón believed that communism and capitalism were part of an “international synarchy” against the people stating “The problem is to free the country and remain free. That is, we must confront the international synarchy of communism, capitalism, Freemasonry, and the Catholic Church, operated from the United Nations. All of these forces act on the world through thousands of agencies.” More right wing factions represented by the CGT claimed that “international synarchy” was attacking their leaders.

On the day of Perón’s return the conflict between left and right turned into open bloodshed at Ezeiza airport. Armed supporters from both tendencies had gathered and a shot rang out. The leftists returned fire, targeting those on the overpass podium. 500 Montoneros stormed the podium but were eventually routed by security forces. Overall 13 people were killed. Perón’s plane was diverted to ensure his safety.

Perón appointed staunch anti-communist José Rega as an intermediary to the left-wing Perónist Youth, signaling his opposition to their cause. Representatives of the Perónist Youth were removed from the Supreme Council of the Justicialist Party, and he instructed CGT leader José Rucci to purge the labor movement of Marxists. Two days after Perón’s election on September 23rd 1973, Rucci, his closest ally and likely political heir, was assassinated by Montoneros. The loss of his likely successor negatively impacted Perón’s already feeble health.

On the 19th of January 1974 the Marxist People’s Revolutionary Army (ERP) attacked the Azul army base. Perón believed they had been aided Governor Oscar Bidegain, who had bused armed Leftists into Ezeiza. At a May Day rally Perón declared that the young left radicals were dishonoring the founders of the party, upon which the leftists walked out of the rally. Perón attempted to rally the people one last time, making a speech on a freezing day in June. His failing health declined steeply and he died on July 1st.

Following his death, his widow and vice-president Isabel took office. However, the Montoneros declared a full insurrection on the 6th of September. Moreover, economic conditions rapidly spun out of control, leading to a CGT general strike, combined with an escalating rebellion by the left. The Argentine Anticommunist Alliance, led by Rega, waged a bloody counter-revolutionary struggle. National production slowed to a crawl and inflation soared. In 1976, Isabel was overthrown by the army.

The ouster of Isabel Perón did not spell the end of Perónism, however. Currently Justicialist Party member Cristina Kirchner is the president of Argentina, succeeding her late husband, Nestor Kirchner. While she has received some criticism from more traditional Perónists, she has attempted to repudiate the polices of neo-liberalism. In 2012 a bill was introduced to ensure that the Central Bank acted in the interest of social equity. Moreover, Perónist movements outside the Kirchner regime enjoy a great deal of support. Outside of Argentina, the late Hugo Chávez lead the Perón-influenced Bolivarian Revolution, as previously mentioned. It appears, that after years of struggle and heartbreak, Perónism is once again leading Latin America’s resistance to US neo-liberal imperialism.

Kerry Bolton’s book should become essential reading for all of those who wish to see how a mass movement can be built from the ground up to challenge superpowers. It places Perón in his rightful place as one of the great Third Position thinkers, rallying the workers against communism and capitalism for the spiritual growth of the nation. It will not be lengthy digressions on IQ and philosophy that challenge the American liberal empire, but showing the common man the way to a higher life, against the forces of greed and materialism. Perónism represents a true creed of social justice, one of service to society. If there is to be any real progress for the New Right, they must embrace the shirtless ones who toil for their nation as Perón did.

http://www.counter-currents.com/2014...-and-peronism/
 
Old December 25th, 2014 #9
Robbie Key
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Argentina Snubs Bankers; Stabilizes Own Currency

DECEMBER 21, 2014 AFP 2 COMMENTS

By Bill White —



Argentina may come out victorious in a battle with international moneylenders, as its central bank has stopped bleeding foreign currency reserves. Moreover, black-market prices for Argentine pesos have moved dramatically toward the official exchange rate. This follows years of uncertainty as a gang of hedge funds and their billionaire masters have tried to bully Argentina into collapse to punish it for putting the welfare of its own citizens before international bankers.

The Argentine peso has risen from a low of 15.95 to the dollar in September to 12.65 to the dollar in November, and the central bank has obtained loans valued in U.S. dollars and other foreign currencies since the action was compelled by the corrupt United States court system to default on its foreign and euro-denominated bonds this summer. This and a dramatic reduction of currency in circulation have stabilized an economic situation that once looked bleak.

Alejandro Vanoli, the new central bank president, is credited with checking the predatory attacks by vulture funds. His first move was to reduce the number of pesos in circulation by offering a 23% interest rate for three-month deposits. This brought 3 billion pesos in new deposits into Argentine banks. While the 23% interest rate puts much money into the economy, the depositing of the money prevents it from circulating, reducing the velocity of money and acting in a deflationary manner.

Vanoli then introduced the dollar-linked bond. These central bank investments brought in $983 million in U.S. dollars, helping boost foreign currency reserves, which had been depleted to $28 million. These bonds pay investments at the official exchange rate, currently 8.5 pesos per dollar, and protect against official devaluation.

Argentina then turned to China, swapping 814 million Argentine pesos for Chinese yuan. This was followed by a deal with food exporters to sell an additional $1.5 billion in soybeans and grain overseas, bringing that much more hard foreign currency into the country.


The turnaround could prove a model for other countries, like Venezuela, Iran and Russia, whose currencies have been attacked by American-linked Zionist speculators.

Argentina was pushed into default in 2001 by currency speculators like George Soros and by austerity measures imposed by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Several years later, it stabilized its economy and settled its defaulted debts for about 30¢ on the dollar. However, some international speculators were not happy and wanted to squeeze every dollar they could from Argentina. They sued in U.S. courts and won a judgment from a corrupt federal judge, requiring Argentina to pay 100¢ on the dollar. While the order is only enforceable by war, the judge then froze Argentine assets in the U.S., preventing payment to any Argentine bondholder.

The asset freeze is similar to sanctions-related asset freezes targeting Iran and Russia, while Venezuela’s currency had been targeted by speculators working with U.S. intelligence agencies.

Vanoli’s real genius is twofold. First, he reduced circulation of the currency without taxes. The typical way of reducing excess currency is to tax it out of existence, but in a usury-based economy, raising interest rates, besides depressing bank deposits, increases debt payment and spurs debt repayments effectively deflating the currency. Second, by increasing trade with China, which generally doesn’t trade in yuan, Vanoli allied himself with a large economy able to provide most of Argentina’s imports. Replacing the dollar with the yuan as the standard for world trade has been a major policy goal of the Chinese.

The moves show that economic isolation from America is not the death knell for countries that it once was. In the multi-polar world, the global economy is quickly re-orienting itself around regional powers with global economies that respect national sovereignty and don’t use their economic power as a subversive weapon.


Bill White is a freelance journalist and publisher based in Virginia. He has also written articles for THE BARNES REVIEW (TBR) magazine. Bill is also the author of a new book entitled National Socialism: Yesterday & Today. Proceeds go to White’s legal defense fund.

http://americanfreepress.net/?p=21582
 
Old February 17th, 2015 #10
Die Herrenrasse88
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Are you argentinean??? I'm argentinean I was born in Buenos Aires and I'm really concerned about the extintion of our european blood, roots and culture due to the extreme brainwashing by this disgusting leftist goverment we've been having for over a decade now. As regards biondini, I'll keep an eye on him, I don't know but there are some things that strike me utter odd from him.
 
Old February 18th, 2015 #11
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jewsign Iran Dismisses Inclusion of AMIA Case in N. Talks

Quote:
TEHRAN (FNA)- Iran on Wednesday rejected Argentinian officials' demand that the 1994 bombing of the AMIA center in Buenos Aires be included in the talks between Tehran and the six world powers, reiterating that the nuclear standoff is the only topic on the agenda of the negotiations.

"The framework of the nuclear negotiations is fully clear and merely limited to Iran's nuclear activities, and no other issue goes under discussion," Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham said in her weekly press conference in Tehran today.
http://english.farsnews.com/newstext...13931129001401

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Old February 20th, 2015 #12
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Default Argentine President Tells US, Israel to butt out of Its Business

Quote:
Published 18 February 2015

The Argentine president responds to a top U.S. official, who expressed “concern” about rule of law in the South American nation.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Wednesday that the U.S. government is “concerned” about the rule of law in Argentina, after the death of prosecutor Alberto Nisman.

Nisman, a state prosecutor appointed by Fernandez’s late husband to investigate the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires, was found dead one day before he was to address Argentina’s Congress regarding his accusation that President Cristina Fernandez had plotted a cover up Iranian involvement in the bombing.
http://davidduke.com/argentine-presi...butt-business/
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Old March 1st, 2015 #13
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Default Argentine president: Jewish prosecutor full of contradictions

Quote:
Argentine President Cristina Fernandez says the prosecutor who had accused her of a criminal cover-up had also praised her.

In a speech Sunday to Congress, Fernandez said that in January, prosecutor Alberto Nisman had written favorably about her speeches to the United Nations aimed at getting justice for the 1994 bombing of the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association, which killed 85 people.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7...632256,00.html
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Old March 5th, 2015 #14
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Default Found an indepth article for the Google translator about Alberto Nisman's mysterious death:

http://www.sueddeutsche.de/politik/a...chen-1.2322760

Quote:
...Aus den Wikileaks-Unterlagen geht hervor, dass ein Vertreter der Gemeinde sich auch bei der US-Botschaft beschwerte, Kirchners Regierung manipuliere den Fall Amia. Nisman unterhielt ebenfalls enge Kontakte zur US-Botschaft, er unterrichtete sie regelmäßig über die Ermittlungen. Das alles wurde der Regierung allmählich lästig. Aus Opportunismus gegenüber Iran, wie Nisman behauptete? Oder liegen ihr andere Erkenntnisse über die Hintermänner vor? Noch immer gibt es mehr Fragen als Antworten...
This photo of the fled back home journalist covering the conspiracy was printed in the physical article. Graphic source:

https://www.google.nl/search?q=damia...ml%3B620%3B387

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Old March 5th, 2015 #15
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jewsign Argentina Warned To Keep Investigating Terror Bombings Aimed at Jews

Quote:
Israel told Argentina’s president that her country is responsible for investigating a 1992 attack on its embassy in Buenos Aires.

The statement from Israel’s embassy in the Argentine capital came in response to an accusation made earlier in the week by Argentina’s President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner, who rebuked Israel for not working to bring the perpetrators of the 1992 bombing of its embassy in Buenos Aires to justice.
http://forward.com/articles/215938/a...g-terror-bomb/
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Old March 10th, 2015 #16
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jewsign Argentina Warned To Keep Investigating Terror Bombings Aimed at Jews

Quote:
Israel told Argentina’s president that her country is responsible for investigating a 1992 attack on its embassy in Buenos Aires.

The statement from Israel’s embassy in the Argentine capital came in response to an accusation made earlier in the week by Argentina’s President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner, who rebuked Israel for not working to bring the perpetrators of the 1992 bombing of its embassy in Buenos Aires to justice.
http://forward.com/articles/215938/a...g-terror-bomb/
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Old March 13th, 2015 #17
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jewsign Jewish center, cemetery attacked in central Argentina town

Quote:
Anti-graffiti was drawn on a Jewish center and a Jewish cemetery was vandalized in the same Argentina city.

The Argentine Zionist Union of Rosario, or USAR, a Jewish community and sports center in a city some 200 miles north of Buenos Aires, was attacked this week with graffiti reading “F*** Jew.” The damages at the Rosario cemetery were discovered earlier this week.
http://www.jta.org/2015/03/12/news-o...argentina-town
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Old March 14th, 2015 #18
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jewsign Argentina opens all files on 1994 Jewish community centre bombing

Quote:
The Argentinian government has declassified all documents relating to the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires.

The demand for transparency has been growing ever since the death of an investigator just days after he accused President Cristina Martinez of helping Iranian officials cover up their alleged involvement.
http://www.euronews.com/2015/03/14/a...entre-bombing/
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Old March 23rd, 2015 #19
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jewsign

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Old April 3rd, 2015 #20
Bobby Bandanza
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jewsign Argentine union leader calls government minister ‘little Jew boy’

Quote:
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - An Argentine union leader who called a government minister “little Jew boy” defended himself by saying “Everybody calls him this.”

In a radio interview Wednesday, Luis Barrionuevo, who heads the Blue and White CGT union, in discussing a national general strike initiated the previous day by his union, said the Minister of the Economy, Axel Kicillof, that “the little Jew boy gives no answer” to workers’ demands.
http://www.jta.org/2015/04/02/news-o...little-jew-boy
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