Kicillof Pays To 92% Of Bondholders, Griesa's Move Now?

also
http://baexpats.org/...in/page__st__60
Don t be pathetic.This is my hobby.
You don t have voting rights, why would the government spend one dime in you?
Persuade expats? Really? are you sure? let´s see 1) the K rise the requirements for getting a visa for non mercosur between 200 up to 300% 2) They enact the deportation order law 3) the enact the illegality of the permatourist, now called pseudo-turista 4) they enact the visa reciprocity fee. I don t think so. Did you take the pill?
I don´t care what you think.
Some of you are so reactionary that whoever doesn t spit insults against the President is a Kirshnerista.
The point is that I read a lot of false info and a lot of delirios persecutorios. For me is not clear if it is ignorancy, trolls paid by the PRO or people who needs al plax.

We don t have voting rights, why would the opposition spend one dime in us?
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http://www.lanacion.com.ar/m1/1394714-como-se-hizo-la-campana-de-macri-en-internet

http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/elpais/1-195763-2012-06-06.html

By the way, he is procesado (under crimilar prosecuting with enough evidence for trial) for making illegal intellegence.

He also had issues with the criminal justice for the dirty campaign against his k competitor.
 
This government is corrupted, a lot, but I think corruption in this government happens more in lower strates, I mean, like municipios, intendencias, even provincias. Not so much on a national scale. And I know what you re going to tell me, Antonini, Skanska, Boudou and a large etcetera, but you guys should have lived here during the 90s, we had a case like that like every week, we even had the diputrucho case, which is something that just could not happened under the Ks or with this opposition (remember the Ks have had the two more important newspapers as oposition, plus several TV channels, like TN and Canal 13, and America, and a long etcetera, while they were all oficialistas during the 90s -and the dictatorship (!!!).)

As I said, in the 90s, with privatisations, selling every single enterprise the state had, taking debt every year and that money desappearing misteriously every year, holding a model based on private gain, of reducing the state, of getting people into poverty, making it a structural problem of Argentine society, something totally new.... corruption, with this panorama, was totally higher than now. A lot higher. Inmensely higher. They were like laughing in our faces. We had a public case of public corruption practically every day, and I repeat, with the media on their side!!! can not imagine what that could have been if they had the opposition they have now. In fact, if I think a little, this make me understand that the time when Argentina produced more poverty in its history, the time when Argentina had its lower hours, both, not by accident, had the same ideology, one under an inconstitutional government that kidnapped and tortured the ones who think differently, and the other supported by an other reason of major force -hyperinflation. Both governments were the times when poverty grew more in our history, both plenty of corruption, both with their media supporting them.
I suggest you guys one day take the time and go to the Biblioteca Nacional, to the subsuelo, to the Hemeroteca, and check the papers from 24 de marzo de 1976 till, lets say, 1978, when they exterminated the militants, when the human right violations were as it best.

Both Clarin & La Nacion openly supported the dictatorship and the reasons that provocated the 2001 crash.
 
U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa In Argentina, where for more than seven years a return to international capital markets has rested on his rulings, the 79-year-old, semi-retired judge is a star. Buenos Aires newspapers kept his face on front pages as judgments for defaulted bonds in his court piled up to about $6.4 billion. When he agreed not to impede an $18.3 billion bond swap, they portrayed him as a hero. ... Alongside a digitally-altered picture of the judge wearing a national soccer team jersey, newspaper Ambito Financiero ran a front-page headline the next day: “Griesa Is Argentine.”

http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/corp_gov/MediaMentions/5-24-10-BusinessWeek.pdf
 
U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa In Argentina, where for more than seven years a return to international capital markets has rested on his rulings, the 79-year-old, semi-retired judge is a star. Buenos Aires newspapers kept his face on front pages as judgments for defaulted bonds in his court piled up to about $6.4 billion. When he agreed not to impede an $18.3 billion bond swap, they portrayed him as a hero. ... Alongside a digitally-altered picture of the judge wearing a national soccer team jersey, newspaper Ambito Financiero ran a front-page headline the next day: “Griesa Is Argentine.”

http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/corp_gov/MediaMentions/5-24-10-BusinessWeek.pdf

Interesting, they confirmed what i wrote before:

"Frustration... it is impossible to collect from a foreign Nation"

Do you read what you post?
 
http://www.lanacion....cri-en-internet

http://www.pagina12....2012-06-06.html

By the way, he is procesado (under crimilar prosecuting with enough evidence for trial) for making illegal intellegence.

He also had issues with the criminal justiciero for the dirty campaign against his k competitor.

First link is a campaign manager talking about their online campaign? I couldn't visit a single site without getting filmus's puppy dog eyes in an advert begging for a vote. Seems they went a more social route getting real people to put their faces saying they would vote for macri.

Second link is pagina 12 quoting a camporista blogger network (who pays them?) saying the church, the campo and macri are all trying to get people out protesting.

As i said before if he is found guilty of stuff he should be put in jail.

Again... We don t have voting rights, why would the opposition spend one dime in us?
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It doesn't make sense
 
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