I'm joking of course there is no Institute that has had highjacked elections since 2002 in Argentina, that would be enough to convict all of their political class in one big punch and that would never happen, right? Unless you had all the proof since day one right?
Bum Bum Bum says the Death,
Release again,
Then Setback
Elected leaders beholden to organized crime produce a much greater danger because criminal enterprise, by its very definition, does not follow the law. These politicians face coercion of a more forceful kind.
Capture of public office by crime strives not so much to shape the law, but to hollow it out, or prevent it from being enforced at all, which can result in collapse of a local, regional, or national government.
“In February 2001, La Nacion reported that Interpol had found documents in Mexico that proved that the Juarez cartel had contributed to the Duhalde-Ortega presidential campaign in 1999.” The money was laundered by the cartel via New York’s Citibank, and from there went to Mercado Abierto, an Argentinean financial firm owned by Aldo Ducler, chief adviser to vice presidential candidate Palito Ortega. Through Ducler, a $1 million contribution to the presidential campaign was made, followed by a $400,000 contribution for the purchase of a campaign vehicle. See: Delia M. Ferreira Rubio, “Argentina: Two Cases” Casas-Zamora, Kevin (ed.): Dangerous Liaisons: Organized Crime and Political Finance in Latin America and Beyond. Washington D.C.: Brookings Institution Press 2013 ISBN 978-0-8157-2529-9 ↩
I'm joking of course there is no Institute that has had highjacked elections since 2002 in Argentina, that would be enough to convict all of their political class in one big punch and that would never happen, right? Unless you had all the proof since day one right?
Bum Bum Bum says the Death, Release again, Then Setback
Restore order.
Read out the lies.
Elected leaders beholden to organized crime produce a much greater danger because criminal enterprise, by its very definition, does not follow the law. These politicians face coercion of a more forceful kind.
Capture of public office by crime strives not so much to shape the law, but to hollow it out, or prevent it from being enforced at all, which can result in collapse of a local, regional, or national government.
Tell all the lies out loud. Pajarito
“In February 2001, La Nacion reported that Interpol had found documents in Mexico that proved that the Juarez cartel had contributed to the Duhalde-Ortega presidential campaign in 1999.” The money was laundered by the cartel via New York’s Citibank, and from there went to Mercado Abierto, an Argentinean financial firm owned by Aldo Ducler, chief adviser to vice presidential candidate Palito Ortega. Through Ducler, a $1 million contribution to the presidential campaign was made, followed by a $400,000 contribution for the purchase of a campaign vehicle. See: Delia M. Ferreira Rubio, “Argentina: Two Cases” Casas-Zamora, Kevin (ed.): Dangerous Liaisons: Organized Crime and Political Finance in Latin America and Beyond. Washington D.C.: Brookings Institution Press 2013 ISBN 978-0-8157-2529-9 ↩
https://blackboxvoting.org/corruption/