That means that there will barely be any FARC plants in the Colombian senate.
Dilma Rouseff was even impeached and incarcerated as a result of corruption cases linked with Petrobras some time ago, leaving the Presidency to Michel Temer, a Center politician.
Sebastián Piñera also inaugurated today as President of Chile, succeeding Michelle Bachelet.
Mauricio Macri (Argentina), Pedro Pablo Kuszynski (Peru), Horacio Cartes (Paraguay) are all seeking and forming alliances.
Meanwhile current leftist Presidents in Latin American countries are suffering heavy backlash. Evo Morales (Bolivia) is trying to accomodate the Bolivian Constitution to facilitate him a reelection for a fourth Presidential period. Bolivian opposition is organizing many protests in response.
About Venezuela, we all know it's a dictatorship and they won't leave unless forced in a coup-d'etat. Venezuelans are fleeing massively from that country as people are starving because of 'Bolivarian Diet'.
I don't know very much about the situation in Ecuador, sorry.
Dominican Republic is also facing turmoil as their government is highly corrupt and Haitians are saturating all welfare services.
>>127439This is only the natural progression of events.
>>127439Thanks chilanon, maybe this will spur prosperity in south america. I just wish america would mind its own business when it comes to the governments of south america.
>>127448We cannot hail victory until Cuba, Venezuela and the FARC (Colombian paramilitary drug lords) are out. They are injecting fresh resources to left wing parties in all of SA.
Also, this year are Mexican and Colombian Presidential elections. Let's see how it goes. I haven't done my homework on reading about Mexican politics.
The sad part is that Venezuela had to act as the canary in the coalmine for all this to happen.
>>127454>canary in the coalmineUnfortunately this will all be either ignored or quickly forgotten by leftists worldwide as they continue to try to push socialism.
>>127457It's only expected. True Communism/Socialism has never been tried...
>>127454Why are druglords supporting leftists?
>>127615Because where Rule of Law fails, crime succeeds.
>>127615In the history of Latin America, and in the context of the Cold War and the success of Cuban Revolution, there were Marxist Guerrilla forces in pretty much all South American countries, for example you had:
- Sendero Luminoso and Tupac Amaru (MRTA) in Peru. Alberto Fujimori swept those terrorist groups in Peru, so Sendero Luminoso is no more, but there are several independent terrorist groups with that spirit, trying to gather funds by taking hostages and such. Peruvian police has shown very efficient in combating that group.
- Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez (FPMR) and Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionario (MIR) in Chile. The prior is still active, but long time ago they don't use armed force, so they just act as propaganda arm for the local Communist Party.
- Montoneros in Argentina. The group was destroyed in the Dirty War and there are no signs of armed Peronist groups currently.
And among these are the Fuerza Armada Revolucionaria de Colombia (FARC) in said country.
Colombia has had plenty of guerrilla group such as the M-19, and with the boom of cocaine with Medellin (in which it was Pablo Escobar) and Cali cartels, many of these guerrilla groups found a nice source of revenue, and challenging even the local politics of Colombia using their influence and weapons. As such, it had helped in training local guerrilla and secessionist movements through Latin America it is an important financer of Foro de Sao Paulo, an organism made to unify all left and hard left parties in the region.
Recently FARC agreed to disarm in exchange of a slice of the political pie, having representation in the Congress. I don't know how is that effective, I have not read too much on the topic.
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.periodismosinfronteras.org%2Fforo-sao-paulo-peligro-para-democracia.html&edit-text=&act=url >>127636You should pay atention at mapuches in both sides of the Andes. Here they behave more like a mob but they have shown to be more violent than the average leftie organizations.
>>127646They are indeed acting as an armed force of Chilean Communist Party, and partly that's why I read a bit about FARC. Much of the financement and training comes from there.
Coordinadora Arauco-Malleco's (CAM) endgame is being a secessionist movement and reivindication of traditional mapuche rights, so they are engaged in pyroterrorism, burning lands, machinery and buildings. A notable case was the burning of the Luchsinger-McKay couple along with their house in 2013. All the involved were found innocent because 'lack of proof', however trials are going to be held again this month.
A cousin of mine that is a Carabineros (military police) official told me these groups are very organized, as they use very methodical tactics, calculating and reacting very quickly to outspeed police reaction.
We had our late government and judicial power being very complicit about them. There was a full movement to undermine the reputation of Carabineros, as they detained some people linked to CAM. So they used Civil Police in order to exert force on them, which is known as "Operación Huracán". The proof used for those detentions even was declared as "forged". Meanwhile Bruno Villalobos, chief commander of Carabineros was on vacation.
At least Argentinian government has done something to stop ethnoterrorists. Here, while Bachelet was President until yesterday, they were operating with complete impunity.
Pic related: Héctor Llaitul, leader of CAM.
The national evening news had a report on Venezuelans fleeing the country because of starvation.
They made effort to avoid drawing attention to the government or policy. All that was said was "the economy is not doing well", followed by five minutes of interviewing Venezuelans at the border. It was made clear we should be feeling very empathic towards these poor refugees.
>>127685No man. Here things are quite the opposite. Gendarmeria Nacional, Carabineros´s homologues, are constantly persecuted by the media portraiting them as savages represors agredings inocent people that protest for their "tierra ancestral". We had the so famous "caso Maldonado". It took like 3 months to find the body, who were inside a territory that (((mapuches))) de facto control (they even checked the police when they went there to investigate). Nowadays it´s preety calm the thing in comparison with 5 months ago. And common people KINDA knows that these fuckers are just wannabe indian LARPers who want to take land for fucking reasons. But still (((human rights))) and (((media))) trend to be on their side and even do damage control when they took off their masks.
We´ve decided to send Huanes Huala there. Please gift him a one-time heli ride!
>>129516>No man. Here things are quite the opposite. Gendarmeria Nacional, Carabineros´s homologues, are constantly persecuted by the media portraiting them as savages represors agredings inocent people that protest for their "tierra ancestral".Your media is lefty anon.
>>127636> Sendero Luminoso and Tupac Amaru (MRTA) in Peru. Alberto Fujimori swept those terrorist groups in Peru, so Sendero Luminoso is no more, but there are several independent terrorist groups with that spirit, trying to gather funds by taking hostages and such. Armed guerrilla is Kill, but the long march through the institutions has wrecked havoc here.Peruvians are brainlets regarding their own laws, education system is (((liberal))) as fuck. Gender Ideology is already being teached here in private schools, those are White majority schools. Ivy League wih International Bacheuloreatte programs, in bed with the (((UN))). If not for the Christian traditional core we would be a commie country. Shinning path has ditched the guns for the books, all the NGO's here are run by lefty scum.
>http://larepublica.pe/sociedad/1211513-curriculo-escolar-onu-peru-expresa-su-preocupacion-ante-suspension-parcial-del-enfoque-de-genero>https://elcomercio.pe/peru/presidente-judicial-favor-igualdad-genero-noticia-504649 >>127448The US installed Pinochet after Chile voted in a socialist. We stopped Chile from going the way of Venezuela; Pinochet liberalized the Chilean economy resulting what has been called the "Miracle of Chile". I don't want to put words in Chilean anon's mouth but he probably supports what we did.
>>129516>And common people KINDA knows that these fuckers are just wannabe indian LARPers who want to take land for fucking reasons.So your media IS taken over by leftists as well as Peru anon said.
Here things are very similar as you are telling, but people still don't think these guys are just LARPing. Time Warner media (Chilevisión and CNN Chile) even had privileged access and interviews in CAM land takeovers. Very suspicious.
https://www.hooktube.com/watch?v=ZfvYFzy99skEven "El Mercurio", traditionally right-wing newspaper, is following Washington Post lead and become more of a liberal one, calling "fake news" the accusations of illegal migration from Haiti. See pic related.
At least the new government has given pretty good signals in this regard, switching the head of Carabineros and signaling the intention to reform the entire institution (that seemed to be infiltrated by communists, judging from reactions from some Communist Party politicians), and starting to sue these groups by Anti-terrorist laws.
https://archive.fo/qPMsK>>129573Unsurprisingly, here they are doing exactly the same thing with some personnel tied to communist terrorist groups working in the open.
-Rodolfo Noriega Cardo, former Sendero Luminoso operative, is head of the NGO "Coordinadora Nacional de Migrantes" (National Migrant Coordinator) - trying to extert pressure on the government to regularize the status of thousands of hundreds of Haitian and Dominican "tourists".
-Rolando Jiménez, a former FPMR operative, is head of MOVILH, main group pushing for LGBT rights. They even developed some material and speeches in schools. Pic related is some of this material.
>>129984Don't worry, I mostly support what Pinochet did here. My father always tells me how between 1970-1973 an armed group could raid a "fundo" (ranch), rape the women there, kill the cattle and make big parties once the raid was complete. Obviously you can't make your population not starve that way.
>>129979Word
>>129573And PPK renounced. What's your perspective on things?
>>130826Jesus I had no idea it was this bad in Chile. Breaks my heart to see the country of Pinochet turning into a nation of shitlibs.
>>131688And we already had our own version of Berkeley yesterday.
A former right-wing, conservative deputee and presidential candidate called José Antonio Kast was going to give a speech in Arturo Prat University (UNAP) in Iquique. There he was ambushed by some Antifa groups which pursued, punched and kicked him so he and some followers ran to a gas station until police arrived and everyone fled.
Given the massive amount of videos and photos, government is now going after the aggressors.
We're quickly reaching USA status in that regard but delayed 1 year.
Last pic related, Frente Amplio's (a liberal left wing coalition) reaction:
>You cannot expect that making politics using provocation can't bring consequences for a political activist that enjoys media exposure based precisely on their polemic speech.>Whoever raises the flags of discrimination and hate cannot expect people's response to be always of passive tolerance.>We lament deeply that one of today's politic news is the way Mr. Kast was thrown away from an University from the country's north, as we lament that Mr. Kast has made their way to make politics into a permanent hateful taunt to everyone that isn't like him. >>131711At least please tell me Ampilo is not in power
>>131711I hope things turns to the better. And I also hope there is helicopter waiting to give one way rides out into the ocean for the leftist.
>>131714They have a couple of deputees and a senator. They dropped the facade very quickly in more than one ocassion so they only have followers on the hardest part of University left as for now.
Unsurprisingly they are financed by George Soros and Venezuela.
They have shown they hate the country more than once:
First, in the Congress oath where one of the deputees even went with his 'artistic' attire, video related. Guy's name is Raúl Alarcón/Florcita Motuda.
Next, we have some territorial dispute with Bolivia, as Bolivia are accusing Chile in The Hague court for a sea corridor through
Antofagasta. Well some of Frente Amplio's deputees (including that clown guy) supported Bolivian accusations. Second pic related.
>>131716I'm observing that incident is serving as some sort of wake up call for the non-cuck right and nationalists. These are going to be violent years if you add migrants to the mix.
Thanks for the good wishes. Circunstances like this brought the Helicopter Man into action.
SOME DAY
SOME GOOD GOD BLESSED DAY WE WILL BE FREE OF LEFTIST GIBSMEDAT PEOPLE AND LEFT GOVERNMENTS
>>134335I know Mexican elections are this year. Can you tell me about that, please?
>>127439Now with Timochenko out because of health issues (hopefully he dies) All we have to worry about is the retard Petro and his equally mentally braindead supporters. Then maybe it will be possible to give the FARC the justice and "peace" they deserve.
I only want my country to be free of this cancer.
>>134354As I see it there's no real right wing party in Mexico, just different shades of left or some twisted corrupted version of it (pic related).
MORENA (Movimiento Restauración Nacional) It's looking strong this election period.
There's only dark days ahead brother, we're fucked either way
>>134428On the bright side, there's a single term limit so that Nieto cuck will be out
>>134396>Then maybe it will be possible to give the FARC the justice and "peace" they deserve.Heard your government was discussing peace with them in Cuba even though the referendum failed. Is that still on going?
Honestly when I think about it I think you were blessed by having FARC to a degree, look at what happens when you don't war against Marxists, you end up like Venezuela.
>>134428I just hope that AMLO doesn't win. PRI looks dead now but PAN still also looks shit. I have a feeling that AMLO will win even if I'm very unhappy about the potential outcome of it.
>>134442>Heard your government was discussing peace with them in Cuba even though the referendum failed. Is that still on going? ...It ended in November of 2016. FARC got their own political party, and the ELN are still out there. It is funny because even ignoring them, we got the populist demagogue Petro who also used to be part of the M19.
God help this country if he wins.
Countries which already elected a right wing president (right wing for latin america, at least...) should now focus on getting right wingers in congress. Around here, even if Bolsonaro wins (which I honestly don't think will happen), both Congress and Senate are still heavily controlled, so whoever is the president has his hands tied anyway. And of course there is still the issue of criminals and big business controlling a lot of it (of course that's more or less the reality worldwide, but I guess it's safe to say our kind of criminal is low tier, not in the sense their deeds are less grave, but that they're quite ridiculous, almost like a joke)
>>134686God help your country in general. I have a feeling it may end up becoming Venezuela 2.0 if they win government.
>>134927You just need to bring your monarchy back. That or get you military to intervene again.
>>134962>Military intervention>On Brazil>One of the most corrupt countries in the worldGood luck keeping it all on track and not letting them go power hungry, cause it will happen
>>134962The monarchy never had to deal with favelas and stuff like that, there's no telling how much they would be able to do these days. Demographics can't be ignored, Brazil was completely different when they were around. Having a king won't solve the ((international groups)) that rule Brazil, this is a fight much larger than one country alone. Sure, it might get a bit better, but it's not a solution. Most have a hard time understanding that our situation is very peculiar, no country has solved favelas before. Copy pasting policies used in Europe is dumb. If you ever visit Rio, that reality is made explicit there. That's the filth that's slowly spreading to the rest of the country, and their means are obvious. They are already sending a shitload of Africans and Haitians to the south, for example, and they have organizations representing them overnight. Probably the next step is ramping up the mixing propaganda. 10 years ago favelas were unheard of in my city. Now there are stinky niggers being treated as a divine gift with our tax money
>>135292No civilization has solved apartheid because apartheid is kind of a biologically imprinted defense mechanism. The only way these conflicts have ever been solved is by genocide.
See 1804 Haiti and most African nations.
However our politicians and bureaucrats are so enchanted with the fact of having cheap labor that they will keep privatizing the profits and socializing the costs of that until it touches their pockets or their families, so they will flee to another nation and the lower and middle classes will be left with a shattered society and their hopes destroyed.
>>127636I wish I had beards like them.
Update from Colombia. Yesterday was Colombia presidential election and any of the five candidates (plus "voto en blanco" or NOTA vote) won by a majority of votes, this means there is going to be a second round between the top two candidates of the first round. This two are: Iván Duque Márquez a center-right leaning candidate that won the first round with 39.14% votes and Gustavo Petro how basically wants to transform Colombia into another socialist shithole like Venezuela and won the first round with 25.08 % of the votes.
>>150131>the most nigger and indo regions of Colombia vote for everyone else becoming as shitty as they areReally makes you think. Still hope your socialist candidate loses for everyone's sake.
>>150131As far as I've read, Petro will seek an alliance with the candidate in the third place to beat Duque. Am I right?
>>150167Another problem apart of the niggers and indos, are the bogotanos/rolos. Bogota is like the California of Colombia they are very left wing, they even had Petro as their mayor.
>>150288Yes, however Fajardo (the third place candidate) in a latest interview said he is not interested in any alliance with Petro or Duque
>>150468>Fajardo I think I get what other two's platforms are but what's his and where do you think his voters will mostly vote for?
>>150480Fajardo could be considered a centrist or a moderate liberal, though his political compass is all over the place and some people even say that he is also a light-right wing politician. As for his voters i think they are going to split between Petro and Duque depending on the region and department.
>>150538And Duque won.
What did he promise? Will he comply or will he let himself be cucked as Macri and Piñera did?
>>154638I don't know if we can trust him that much but, I think it's the option we have now.
>>154018>What did he promise? Duque two mayor promises are: improving Colombia economy and fixing the FARC peace deal just like this anon mentions here
>>134396.
>Will he comply or will he let himself be cucked as Macri and Piñera did?I don’t think he will cucked on really fixing the peace deal, considering that Duque mentor is Uribe, Colombia ex-president responsible for FARC downfall (using some very morally questionable methods to do this) during his 8 years presidency and the mayor opposition of the peace deals. Also, to take into account less than a year ago Duque was unknown politically to the Colombians but because of his relation with Uribe he quickly became popular.
And just as I predicted the majority of rolos (Bogota) voted for Petro, fortunately he only won in Bogota with a close margin and 40.98% of the votes were for Duque.