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And so we turn back to morality...
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[I think this may be what you're talking about, but you'll see that it doesn't quite hold Chile up as the model you suggest. --t.s.] |
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But that's from some source at UC Berkeley, which is inherently suspect. So by installing Pinochet, we got to help spread repression to Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay, too, helping to ensure the eventual triumph of democract there, too! Sweet! Spanky, how are we supposed to decide which state-sponsored terrorists are bad for democracy, and which state-sponsored terrorists we should support to help the spread of democracy? |
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The article said everything you said, except the debt crisis thing. |
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And so we turn back to morality...
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And so we turn back to morality...
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To quote you, you can't judge these things by hindsight. Are you really attributing Chile's affluence to Pinochet's murderous policies? Which is more affluent -- China or India? If you could replace the governing system of one with the other, which would you pick? |
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Oddly, Sachs doesn't buy this whole "dictatorship plus markets equals democracy" thing. Maybe he's hung up on Russia. |
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And so we turn back to morality...
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And so we turn back to morality...
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ET change country, because it would have been irrelevant if she'd gone to Bolivia |
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And so we turn back to morality...
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Everyone thought that Pinochet was just a stooge of American corporations that was sent in just to enforce evil US capitalistic interests. When Pinochet starting paying Friedman as an advisor and brougth in his minions there were riots throughout central american and everywghere Friedman went. Everyone thought that Chile was simply going to be exploited by US corporation and the economy would be ruined. Pinochet followed the Chicago Boys suggestions to the letter. He turned off the printing presses, cut of all subsidies to farmers and chilean companys, and completely opened up the entire market to free trade. He cut taxes and he created a privatized social security system. Over time the economy grew and the liberals kept coming up with other reasons the economy grew. Natural resources (which Chile has very little of)etc. They also tried to claim that the wealth was only going to the wealthy and that the poor were worse off. Of course eventually all these claims were not supportible The movie Missing came out, with Jack Lemon, making all sorts of claims about the coup. It turned out that almost the whole movie was a fiction. I could go into it but this is getting too long. I have heard many debates about the amount of deaths in Chile. However, I do know that the liberals around the world have to make it the worst most repressive country anywhere to cover up the fact that there has been an economic miracle. Evil Milton Friedman,s plan worked, the US did not squeeze the peasants dry and socialists and liberals around the world hate the fact that their predictions were wrong. Every economic policy Pinochet produced, they are against, and is evidence against their positions throughout the world. So the liberals and the socialists focus all their energy on establishing the case that Pinochet was the most evil dictator of all time. But no matter what they do they can't argue that the Chicago Boys produced a miracle that benefitted every strata of Chilean society. |
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You apparently would rather see your neighbor tortured than your wallet lightened. It's a values thing, I guess. But go ahead and trash liberals some more -- it obviously gives you a big ole hard-on, and allows you to dismiss what Chile itself has said about Pinochet's dictatorship. To answer your earlier question to me, "Bolivia." Mad props to Ty. My first thought was "Brazil" but then I realized this was the wrong board. To answer my earlier questions to you, "China" and "China". Got it. |
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Chiles' per capital income is $4,590 and Bolivia's is $990. In the 1960s their economies were very similar. In Bolivia economic liberalization and democracy may be working together, but Chile's dictatorship and free economics worked a hell of a lot better. |
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