I don't support the violence, but I get why it's happening, and I have no sympathy for Berni because he has been telling the people of Zona Sur to basically stop complaining for as long as he's been Minister of Insecurity. I hear it from my in laws, they don't waste time calling the police in Zona Sur because they won't come nor do anything about it when they're robbed.
I remember living here in ~2014 and the lynchings that were common because the police just didn't care, and didn't show up, even in CABA. Two stick out in my memory: I remember one in the conrubano where this guy tried to rob this woman because she was taking her baby for a walk in the stroller and she was distracted. The neighbors found out and IIRC they had basically beaten him to death by the time the police came, and he died on the way to the hospital. The other was random people beating the shit out of a guy who tried to steal a tourist's purse in Palermo, it took the cops 30 minutes to come. THIRTY minutes.
The bus driver killed was 65, 1 month away from retirement, and was respected by his peers, having put in his time since 1991. I accidentally saw the video of how passengers found him, I have a pretty strong stomach but it was enough to make me feel unwell. You can't look at the state of things in Argentina, even in the sheltered lives many expats/immigrants/retirees live here and think things are okay for Argentines. And with bus drivers in particular, there has been tons of cases where people are throwing rocks/small boulders/bricks from overpasses on them, or just insecurity in general where the companies that run the buses have straight up told municipalities they'll no longer serve route X after sunset because it's too dangerous.
I have felt like I could cut the tension in the atmosphere with a knife increasingly these last few months, and wondered if it was just me, but after today I'm fairly certain other people are feeling it too.