Most of us are in Argentina because we for one or more reasons find it better to live here.
Every country in the world except "The Royal Republic of Utopia" have pros and contras, and in the case of Argentina, it seems to have about as many vices as virtues.
One thing most appreciated - at least by me - is the leaned back, laissez faire, 'alegria de vivir' attitude we (at least I) meet from the Argentinos, including the authorities.
Let us assume we succeed in convincing the Argentinos to get rid of their real and perceived vices.
Then there is a certain risk, that if (read: when) you bend the rules a little, this is no longer acepted.
That e.g. when you return to clean, honest, straight living Buenos Aíres from your 203rd visa-trip to Colónia, you are met with a "Sorry Mam'/Sir but you have already been staying in Argentina for 6 months this year, so you cannot be allowed entry until next year".
In short: That following a clean-up process, the Argentina I like, sometimes love, no longer exists, it has become New Zealand or Singapore or Danmark or Finland, top scorers on the anti-corruption index and in civismo, but - why am I here and not there?
This does by no means imply that every change shouldn't be effectuated, only that it is necessary to distinguish between what will improve life and what will destroy the good part of Argentinian "vices".
Good ideas and actions concerning living conditions, improved efficiency, how to eradicate real corruption, improve education, , etc., etc., etc., including how to remove all the minor annoyances like dog poo are good ideas in their own (BTW: very little of this in e.g. my own home town, Mendoza - here the main problems on a stroll is the many missing tiles and the holes in the sidewalk).
Give it a thought.