Thursday, December 14, 2006

Hey Argentina, leave Uruguay alone!

Kirchner who is displaying an ever increasing mania as his most poignant personality trait has taken to sponsor protests shutting down the borders between Uruguay and Argentina. This row is over a paper mill being built in Uruguay, marking the largest chunk of foreign investment in that nation’s history. This will be an investment that will generate hundreds if not thousands of jobs and millions of pesos in revenue. The complaint by the Argentines is that the paper mill will pollute the river marking the border of the two nations of which both countries have joint custody and stewardship. 


Blocking borders however, violate the Mercosul’s treaties concerning the free movement of goods. The company, Botnia, is from Finland, responsible for building a paper mill in Helsinki that is ten years older than the one being currently built in Uruguay As a matter of fact that mill lies next to the river that provides Helsinki with all of its drinking water and in ten years there have been no problems of pollution or contamination. 


The technology being used in the Uruguayan paper mill is actually 10 years more advanced and safer than the one currently being used in Helsinki. Finland is also a EU member, which means its companies have to abide by extremely strict rules of environmental conduct. This is just another populist move to rile up support by Kirchner, whose egomania knows no boundaries and who is deadset to getting his wife elected in the next Argentine general elections. It’s bad enough when big government encroaches on the rights of individuals and businesses but it’s worst when it’s another country’s big government doing the encroaching. If this mill was being built on the Argentine side of the river, I guarantee Kirchner would have done absolutely nothing about it except welcomed the investment with open arms (and pockets).
Posted by at 17:37:23 | Permalink | No Comments »

Lula loves genocide, hates Mercosul

The Darfur question was up for a vote in the UN and for the first time the Brazilian ambassador was forced by the president to break with the Mercosul and abstain from condemning the Sudan for its atrocious genocide. Lula’s connections to money-laundering in Angola and other African nations and the terrorist movements of the Arab world are costing the lives of not only Brazilians but now, also of the Sudanese. The genocide in Darfur is probably the greatest humanitarian crisis of our newly inaugurated century and by far the worst genocidal massacre the world has seen since Rwanda and Lula refuses to condemn it. This also further removes any legitimacy that Mercosul has as a voting block and as a true and unified South American voice in the UN. Chavez has recently called for the Mercosul to be burried during a meeting of CASA, the South American Community of Nations, and now Lula has taken one step further in doing just so. 


Brazilian NGO’s normally excited by a president that continues to grow government and curb individual liberty have also joined the chorus of critics condemning the president’s latest move. The Mercosul parliament was inaugurated today, with zero legislative powers and on the brink of its own extinction on account of Argentina’s war on the Uruguayan economy, the parliament should prove another white elephant costing taxpayers of member nations a ludicrous amount of money and being absolutely pointless.
Posted by at 17:12:28 | Permalink | No Comments »