Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Chile in flames
Chile in flames
Sep 21, 2024 4:21 PM

It’s been a good week for the left throughout Latin America. In Columbia, center-left and left-wing parties did well in regional election. Argentina also took a left-turn with a left-wing Peronist easily winning the presidency, and bringing the former president Cristina Kirchner back to office as Vice-President. In Bolivia, long-serving left-populist president Evo Morales looks as if he is going to get away with stealing an election.

Events in Chile are also a cause for concern. What started as a student strike tipped over into rioting, looting, and mass vandalism in the capital city, Santiago, which spilled out into the provinces. The center-right president Sebastian Pinero put the military onto the streets—something that immediately brought back memories for older Chileans of the Pinochet dictatorship—but somehow also managed to look weak and indecisive as he sought to placate angry protesters.

I have had the good fortune to visit Chile several times to lecture. That, however, doesn’t make me an expert on what is happening there right now. In any case, I always think it’s wise to listen to mentators on the ground who have insights into the particularities shaping a given situation. And, in my view, one of the most mentaries on what is transpiring in Chile appeared in the American Mind this week. In his article “Red October in Chile,” Pablo Maillet gets beyond the superficial instant-analyses, and shows how what is occurring is far plicated than we might suppose.

It’s not just that the Latin American left have always resented that the very painful economic liberalization undertaken by Chile from the 1970s onwards has done something they have never achieved: i.e., taken an entire nation into the ranks of developed economies. Nor is there any doubt that professional leftist agitators are at work. Yet there are also more specific cultural and even spiritual problems driving events in Chile to which, Maillet suggests, Chilean conservatives and free marketers are struggling to provide coherent responses.

In Maillet’s words:

Chile’s situation echoes the American political moment: social disunity, political parties in flux, an elite disconnected from material and spiritual needs, and a seemingly stable democracy which is in fact constantly threatened by certain ideas. The vast majority of the population are ing enamored with socialist progressivism, which is very dangerous because it threatens to destroy the underpinnings of democracy.

Read the whole article. It’s worth your time if you want to understand some of the deeper currents shaping events in Chile and Latin America more broadly. Kudos to Maillet for his excellent analysis and the American Mind for running his piece.

Featured image: Carlos Figueroa [CC BY-SA 4.0]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Video: Jeffrey Tucker Explains Why Capitalism Is About Love
The 2015 Acton Lecture Series got off to a rousing start last week with the arrival of Jeffrey Tucker, Chief Liberty Officer of Liberty.me, to deliver the first lecture of this year’s series, entitled “Capitalism Is About Love.” If you go by the conventional wisdom, that seems to be a counterintuitive statement.Jeffrey Tucker explains how the two are actually bound up together. You can watch the lecture via the video player below, and if you haven’t had a chance to...
The Only Solution to World Poverty
One of the primary assumptions of the modern age is that all choices are multiple choice. Whether we are choosing the color of the car we drive, the occupation that we will work, or the lifestyle we will live, choice is the dominate paradigm. While the expansion of choices has, in many ways, expanded human flourishing, it has also led, in some areas, to a false belief that merely wanting something to be multiple choice will make it so. But...
Thomas Merton on Marxism and Monasticism
A friend of mine recently shared this short clip of Thomas Merton’s last lecture. He has some interesting things to say munism and monasticism, as well as what is clearly a sly promo for Coca-Cola at the end. “From now on, brothers, everybody stands on his own feet.” This would be a great summary statement of what the monastic vow of poverty actually meant to most monks, historically. With regards to monasteries being the only places that have ever fulfilled...
When is a Ban not a Ban? When it’s a Target
When is a ban not a ban? One answer might be when it is based on moral suasion rather than legal coercion. (I would also accept: When it’s a Target.) In this piece over at the Federalist, Georgi Boorman takes up the prudence of a petition to get Target to remove smutty material and paraphernalia related to Fifty Shades from its shelves. Boorman rightly points to the limitations of this kind of cultural posturing. Perhaps this petition illustrates more of...
The 7 Best Super Bowl Commercials About Vocation and Stewardship
Contrary to the trite assertion made every year by people who don’t know how to appreciate football, it is not really true that mercials the best thing about the Super Bowl (at least not always). Sure, it seems that way because the television viewer is mercials than actual game play (in an average game, theratio mercials to playing time is seven to one). The reality, however, is that most of mercials aren’t all that memorable. Only a few stand out...
Is Putin’s Russia Funding the Religious Left’s War on Fossil Fuels?
For all of their wailing and gnashing of teeth about transparency, some in the American progressive movement certainly turn a blind eye toward the funding of their own pet causes. Last week, The Washington Free Beacon’s Lachlan Markay reported that millions of dollars from unknown sources have been passed through pany in Bermuda and transferred to American nonprofits who oppose hydraulic fracturing and, it seems, any industry involved with fossil fuels. Among these nonprofits are several established groups of religious...
Does Slave Redemption Increase Slavery?
Thousands of girls and women in Iraq and Syria have been captured by the Islamic State and sold into sex slavery. But one Iraqi man is trying to save them by buying sex slaves in order to free and reunite them with their families. As the Christian Post reports, “an Iraqi man, who remains nameless, disguises himself as a human trafficking dealer in order to ‘infiltrate’ the Islamic State and get the militants to sell him sex slaves. But in...
Fertility Industry: Money, Not Science
Wanting a baby and not being able to have one is one of the worst feelings is the world; I know firsthand. It puts a person in a vulnerable and sometimes desperate state of mind, not to mention the bundle of emotions one must deal with. The fertility industry knows this, and preys on it. Jennifer Lahl also knows this; she is the founder and president of theCenter for Bioethics and Culture. She wants to call out the fertility industry...
Spirit Empowerment in the Economic Order
In the latest Journal of Markets and Morality, Joseph Gorra reviews Dr. Charlie Self’s new book,Flourishing Churches and Communities, calling it a “joyous, practical, and insightful primer to the integration of ‘faith, work, and economics” that will inspire “a pathway for leaders of Pentecostal thought to reflect on public life in a renewed way.” The book is one of four tradition-specific primers from the Acton Institute, and although it focuses specifically on a Pentecostal perspective, Gorra rightly observes that Self...
Why a Christian Anthropology Matters for Liberty and Love
Dorothy Sayers, playwright, novelist and Christian scholar, wrote an important work in the 1930s entitled,Are Women Human?In her essay,shepresents the biblical case for gender equality in a humorous and insightful way, grounding mutuality in theological anthropology. From the Genesis narratives to the new earth of Revelation, she affirms this thesis: We are all human beings, made in the image of God with a job to do. And we do our jobs as a man or a woman. This theological vision...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved