Santiago F
Registered
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2010
- Messages
- 80
- Likes
- 37
notebook.fix said:I think ARgentina is ready to take a risk this time...today's military is not capable of anything other than to temporarily restore order, I don't see them as the same threat...I think Argentina is ready to take this baby step..it may not be easy but it's absolutely imperative.
I'm sorry, but NO. I don't like the K gov't but the last thing we need right now is a military goverment... First off, the military are not politicians. They have a very specific purpose. Let them be just that. Unfortunately, in this country (and many, if not most, others) the military have been primarily "the military arm" of the high classes.
notebook.fix said:I was born here but left just before the military took over so I can't say I know how it feels to live under military rule...but I can say that I spent years learning from my relatives here...they have lived under the military...I can say that on an intellectual level I have an idea about the conditions they & their friends had to endure.
I was born in 1976, so I started to really have a grasp of governments and the like the very day of the return of democracy, in 1983. Thus, I can't tell for myself, but it doesn't take too much to know what it really was. Would you like to live under martial law? Not being allowed to gather with more than one person in public places? I know, our last dictatorship was the worst of all, and perhaps we could imagine a military gov't who provide constitutional rights, but... I'm sorry, our experience in this country and in many others tell us otherwise.
notebook.fix said:I know that this fear of the military runs very deep in Argentina for very good reasons but there will be a time when we have to take charge & take the risk.
Why the military? It always seemed so curious to me, how come the military sometimes govern countries... aren't they supposed to defend the country against foreign agression and just that? Why do the people let them rule a country, or a city, or whatever?
BTW, you say "restore order". I know there's protests every day and we have many problems, but still I think we are much better off than with the military!
The change must come from within civil society. A government of agreement from the whole political spectrum. But perhaps it's too much to ask.