They did it in Lomas de Zamora. They repeated it in Moreno. They did it again in Tierra del Fuego. Kirchnerism is always and everywhere a fascist, thuggish, violent, and destructive phenomenon. There is no difference between the methodology of the Buenos Aires PJ and the Chavista hordes: violence, lies, and sabotage are their only strategy.
The opposition says it openly: they want to destroy everything Milei has built in just two years. They do not care about the social cost or the suffering of millions. Their logic is perverse: the worse, the better. The more the collective effort collapses, the more power they accumulate. That has always been the doctrine of the savage populism that plunged Argentina into misery.
Meanwhile, reality disproves the doomsayers. According to C&T, inflation in September was 2% and the year-on-year rate stands at 30.4% (67.0 pounds), the lowest levels in six years. What is the opposition's reaction? Desperation. They invent media operations such as the claim that the United States "demanded" the annulment of the swap with China or a change in electoral strategy. They lie shamelessly, 24x7, because they know that with real data they can't sustain their narrative.
The Kirchnerist lie clashes with the facts. The Central Bank dismantled another of their campaigns when it clarified that there are no regulatory changes for the purchase of dollars. It doesn't matter: they will invent another one. They are professionals of deception, alchemists of despair.
While they operate, the government moves forward. Seven million retirees and pensioners already have access to discounts of between 10% and 20% in supermarkets, with reimbursements that can reach up to $120,000 per month. A concrete measure, voluntarily financed by business chambers and banks, without a single extra peso from the State. That is the new paradigm: private cooperation for the benefit of the people.
In the agricultural sector, the evidence is even more compelling. After the removal of export duties, the number of trucks entering grain ports tripled. In Rosario, soybeans are sold at $480,000, corn at $247,000, and wheat at $266,000: parity with Chicago for the first time in decades. September closed with export settlements of USD 7.107 billion, 187% more than in 2023. Agribusiness exports grew 9% in volume and 22.5% in value. Milei was right: when taxes are lowered, the economy expands.








