Diana Mondino’s conspiracy theories: between infiltrators and self-employed workers | Without proof, he spoke of the alleged entry of “Cubans and Venezuelans” to destabilize Milei – 2024-03-01 13:16:40

by times news cr

2024-03-01 13:16:40

Without presenting evidence and appealing to hypotheses based on conspiracy theories, the chancellor Diana Mondino publicly stated that there are “people from other countries” who are being “paid” to “remove Javier” Miliei from the government. The official revealed that these “self-employed workers” would be Venezuelans and Cubans, thus His statements could generate a diplomatic clash with the governments of those countries.

The accusation was made last night during a television interview in which the owner of the San Martín Palace took the opportunity to sow suspicions of possible attacks or attacks in the hours before the speech that President Javier Milei will give in Congressat the opening of ordinary sessions.

When asked if there are in the country “infiltrators from Cuba and Venezuela”Mondino responded: “Unfortunately this is the case and it has been proven in several ways.”

He did not provide any evidence or give any clarification in this regard.only mentioned the existence of videos in which some of those suspects “looked like journalists.”

According to the chancellor, these people “They are self-employed people who come to make trouble” to Argentina and “They have a significant degree of preparation” regarding the destabilization of governments.

Chile, Ecuador, Argentina

To aggravate the content of his complaint, he gratuitously slipped that those alleged destabilizers also They would have participated in previous marches that took place in Argentina, Chile and Ecuador.

“Also in the riots that occurred two years ago in Chile there were people from other countries” those that began the massive population that led to the constitutional reform of that country and the subsequent fall of the government of the deceased right-wing Sebastián Piñera, Mondino suggested.

Then, without considering the consequences that his statements could have, he risked: “If I’m not mistaken, now in Ecuador” there were foreigners with the same objective. “I’m not very sure” that it was like that, “it’s not a statement but it seems to me that there were also people from other countries,” she said.

“self-employed”

The truth is that Mondino believes that these “self-employed workers” came to the country because “someone pays them” to achieve a goal: overturn the government of Javier Milei.

“Someone pays them to make a mess or someone pays them to stop making a mess”he said and linked that plot “to the previous government”during which – always according to the chancellor – those foreigners “were free to enter and leave.”

“First, in the previous government they had the freedom to enter and leave (the country); second, they had no consequences for their actions; and third, The prize for taking him away from Javier must be very big because every job you cut must be money that some man was taking and wants to get it back.“the official hypothesized in line with the old logic of the internal enemy.

Then linked these alleged attempts at destabilization with the visit that Argentine union leaders made to the president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro. “There are some beautiful videos of Maduro greeting Argentines, which began to circulate now,” he said to try to close the circle of his conspiracy hypothesis.

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