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Latin America’s Far-Right Populists Are Rewriting The History Of Military Dictatorships

Natalia Viana

It's the most insipid kind of historical revisionism. Both in Argentina and Brazil, far-right leaders are denying the countries’ history of human rights abuses during the brutal dictatorships of the 1960s and 70s, and using it to rally support around their causes.

-OpEd-

SAO PAULO — I bring you news from the digital front. Those who weren't paying attention may not have noticed, but in the last couple of weeks the legacy of Latin American dictatorships has been planted once and for all as the banner of the populist far right. The issue has become transnational.

On March 24, National Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice, Argentine President Javier Milei decided to make an unprecedented provocation, publishing an official video with a defense of the military and heavy accusations against those who fought against the dictatorship. The video renames the date the National Day for Truth and "Complete" Justice.

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First, some context: Milei has no connection to the dictatorship. He is an ultra-liberal libertarian, and governs in the style of the new digital populists: on the basis of A/B tests. Like former U.S. President Donald Trump, in a calculated way, and former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, out of personal foolishness, Milei knows that causing debate, attacking and being attacked is the No. 1 strategy for times mediated by the algorithms of the few platforms that actually mediate public affairs.

He named Victoria Villarruel as his vice-president — the daughter of a military man involved in the harsh repression of the dictatorship — a clear affront to common sense in a country where the military who tortured and killed were punished. In Argentina, more than 1,100 people have been convicted of crimes against humanity.

Now he's betting on rewriting the history of the dictatorship because it gets clicks.

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​Inauguration of Javier Milei.