Kennedy on Nostr: Hoss “Cyber Jester” Delgado sapphire to understand modern Peronists it is ...
Hoss “Cyber Jester” Delgado (nprofile…gu4k) sapphire (nprofile…s0yr) to understand modern Peronists it is important to understand the break-up between left-wing peronists and right-wing peronists, and how most modern peronists are closer to the left-wing peronists Peron himself kicked out of Plaza de Mayo
>The growing confrontation that had been taking place between Montoneros and Perón reached its point of maximum tension on May 1, 1974, in the mobilization to Plaza de Mayo for Labor Day.
>As explained in a request published after the event, Montoneros attended the event with the purpose of expressing his "disagreement" with the political direction that Perón's government had taken and the presence of "gorillas" (anti-Peronists) in his cabinet. The columns shouted slogans to that effect and did not stop when the speech began. Perón's speech was relatively brief (17 minutes) and was aimed at recognizing the importance of the labor movement and the unions, as the "backbone" of the Peronist Movement, but was constantly interrupted by the opposition slogans of Montoneros: "What's up, What is happening, what is happening, general, the popular government is full of gorillas!", "Agree, agree, agree, general, agree the gorillas, the people are going to fight!", 'Rucci traitor, greetings to Vandor!" In the midst of these chants, Perón responded several times, disqualifying Montoneros's position, impacting above all with the use of two qualifying adjectives that he addressed to them, "stupid" and "beardless."
>The break between Perón and the Montoneros that day in the Plaza de Mayo, described as "expulsion" or "retirement", is widely considered a crucial event in Argentine history. Exactly two months later, Perón died and political violence would escalate geometrically, stressed by State terrorism implemented through Triple A, the return to the armed struggle of Montoneros, adding to that maintained by the ERP and the coup operations that would lead to in the coup d'état of March 24, 1976
>The growing confrontation that had been taking place between Montoneros and Perón reached its point of maximum tension on May 1, 1974, in the mobilization to Plaza de Mayo for Labor Day.
>As explained in a request published after the event, Montoneros attended the event with the purpose of expressing his "disagreement" with the political direction that Perón's government had taken and the presence of "gorillas" (anti-Peronists) in his cabinet. The columns shouted slogans to that effect and did not stop when the speech began. Perón's speech was relatively brief (17 minutes) and was aimed at recognizing the importance of the labor movement and the unions, as the "backbone" of the Peronist Movement, but was constantly interrupted by the opposition slogans of Montoneros: "What's up, What is happening, what is happening, general, the popular government is full of gorillas!", "Agree, agree, agree, general, agree the gorillas, the people are going to fight!", 'Rucci traitor, greetings to Vandor!" In the midst of these chants, Perón responded several times, disqualifying Montoneros's position, impacting above all with the use of two qualifying adjectives that he addressed to them, "stupid" and "beardless."
>The break between Perón and the Montoneros that day in the Plaza de Mayo, described as "expulsion" or "retirement", is widely considered a crucial event in Argentine history. Exactly two months later, Perón died and political violence would escalate geometrically, stressed by State terrorism implemented through Triple A, the return to the armed struggle of Montoneros, adding to that maintained by the ERP and the coup operations that would lead to in the coup d'état of March 24, 1976