Argentina
Bad manners are not an isolated gesture, but a style of government. The clown Milei and his troupe have turned outbursts into State policy: insulting journalists, belittling opponents, treating Congress like a puppet show and the people as an ignorant mass that should be grateful for every lash.
The problem is not the shouting on national broadcasts or the insults on social media. The problem is that behind those bad manners lies a void: the inability to argue seriously, to build agreements, to respect institutions. Milei believes authority is established by yelling, like a child who breaks toys when he can’t finish the puzzle.
But education —the real kind— is not a matter of etiquette, but of respect. Respect for different ideas, for opponents, for the people one governs. And when a president behaves like a buffoon, the entire nation risks turning into a fairground spectacle: lights, noise, laughter… and a bitter silence at the end, when everyone realizes that nothing remains of the show.
Bad manners are contagious. It is no longer just Milei: it is his cabinet applauding, the “anti-caste caste” imitating his ways, the country beginning to believe that shouting louder means being right.
In Argentina, the pedagogy of insult has replaced the pedagogy of example. And that, more than clownery, is tragedy.
©️ 2025 ElCanillita.info / BlogDiario.info – All Rights Reserved – SalaStampa.eu, world press service – Guzzo Photos & Graphic Publications – Registro Editori e Stampatori n. 1441 Turin, Italy