Do I think this protest is BS? No
Do I think anything solid and permanent is going to come of it? No!
I respect these people for getting up and banging their pots, whether I agree with the way they carry out these protests is another matter. They are fighting for things I too care about since I am a resident in this country and have Argentine family. So I thank them for the effort that they're making.
I'm merely pointing out that this is going to go nowhere.
The example of Berlin wall was given. You can't compare these protesters with those at the Berlin Wall because if I remember what I read correctly, the East and West Germans didn't go to the Kremlin with their pots. They chipped away at the wall with hammers and took bricks away with their hands (once it started, very early on, heavy machinery was brought in). Of course I could be wrong about what I'm saying. My information about the fall of the Berlin Wall comes only through books and old news videos and articles. I was 4 years old when it happened. So correct me if I'm wrong.
So what am I advocating? Armed revolution? Violence? No. If in the mind of the people the only choice they have is either armed revolution or banging pots. Then I say bang away! You have nothing else that you are capable of doing anyway.
What I am suggesting people do (on top of what they're already doing) is to gather behind a leader. Someone who is different. Someone who is not a Peronist. Someone who understands that leaders of countries REPRESENT the people, not dictate what the people should do. Someone who understands that their salary comes from the people, someone who understands that they have been elected by the people. Someone who understands that the people who put them in power are not idiots, that they should be consulted before their lives are turned upside down.
Someone who understands that they will be held responsible and pay the price if they try to play with the lives and property of the people.
Am I expecting too much? Perhaps (and I am aware that my idea of a government may be too perfect and not possible, but I'm sure some of it can be achieved). But seriously, how many elections have these people gone through and how many protests? Is Argentine democracy so broken that people can't elect someone who represents them? If so, then not only is this protest pointless, there is no hope whatsoever.
I watched the video that I mentioned and I agreed with every single thing that the video said. Everything they're frustrated with frustrates me too. However, they ended the video with "we don't want these leaders to change, we just want them to listen to us." Its sad that to the people, it seems, the only choice is to choose between either a dictatorial Peronist/fascist government or a dictatorial, murderous military government. And if that's the case and the reality as the Argentine public perceives it then I feel sorry for the people here and the generations to come.
Anyway, my point was and still is that while these protests are a start, they are not going to go anywhere unless the people are willing to band together behind an opposition leader who can stand up to not just Cristina but Peronism. Again, unless the people are willing to free themselves of the shackles of Peron, they will come out and bang pots every 3-4 years, and then go home because they got a small victory at the time or got tired. Only to come back again in another 3-4 years.
In the end, either what I said above makes sense or I'm just a tired and beaten 26 year old who's looking at Argentina through the lens of the Egyptian movement.