Millions of people took to the streets in Argentina to protest that the motherland cannot be sold .

Mondo Sports Updated on 2024-02-01

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Less than two months after taking office, Milley faced a huge crisis, with millions of people on strike and taking to the streets, saying that "the motherland cannot be sold", and shock ** really shocked Argentina?

On December 10 last year, Argentina's new ** Milley officially announced his inauguration, starting a four-year ** term. Unexpectedly, less than two months after Milai took office, he made a mess in the country.

No, large-scale ** marches broke out across the country. According to Guangming.com, citing the Spanish newspaper El PaĆ­s, a large-scale parade broke out in Argentina on Wednesday.

Millions of people went on strike, took to the streets, and Milley "dismantled the country". The general strike, which lasted 12 hours and did not stop until midnight, was the first time that the current ** faced such a large-scale strike, and it was also the first national general strike in Argentina since 2019. And "the motherland cannot be sold" is the slogan that is shouted the most in front of the Congress.

* On that day, the demonstrations had spread from within Argentina to other countries, including Chile, Mexico and Italy, where Argentines stood in solidarity with the nationwide strike against Milley** in front of the Argentine embassy. The people had only one demand, and that was to stop Milley from implementing radical reforms.

As we all know, Milley advocated drastic reforms to Argentina during his election campaign, including the abolition of the central bank, the abolition of the national currency, and the use of the US dollar as the country's legal tender. Advocating the so-called "shock**" of the Argentine economy was followed by a "radical experiment" targeting Argentina's population of about 46 million.

As soon as he took office, Milley sharply lowered the official exchange rate of the peso, which led to the depreciation of the national currency. The most direct effect of the loss of money is inflation, which is rising. Milk, bread and other daily necessities have increased by 50%, gasoline has risen by as much as 80%, and even some commodities have risen by more than 100%.

At the same time, Milley also canceled some subsidy policies, greatly reduced unemployment benefits, shortened maternity and pregnancy leave, and even directly abolished the lease law, resulting in the loss of the rights and interests of countless tenants and directly harming the interests of the masses.

On top of that, Milley is ready to privatize all state-owned enterprises, affecting a large vested interest group, and that's not the worst of all, Milley has signed the Necessity and Urgency Decree and the Omnibus Act.

The Decree of Necessity and Urgency is seen as a "brutal attack on Argentine workers and vulnerable groups", while the Omnibus Act is a gigantic bill containing more than 500 articles covering all aspects of Argentina.

The public believes that Milley's reform policy is too "freewheeling", without a clear plan and no concrete plan, and pursues a "big move" without considering the consequences. As a result, before the series of proposals were submitted to Congress, a massive demonstration broke out among the people to try to prevent the implementation of the huge bill of Milley.

As things stand, Milley's assault and demonstrations are to be expected, with the population suffering a huge price and discontent erupting sooner or later.

Some analysts believe that in the current situation, Milley, who has only been in power for less than 2 months, is likely to be *** After all, he did not even get 10% of the seats in Congress, and many provinces have also made it clear that they oppose Milley's new deal, and even one province decided to launch its own currency.

It is not yet possible to draw conclusions about the effect of "shock**", and perhaps only time will tell. It's hard to say whether Milley will pass his first "big test", but let's wait and see.

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