Nayib Bukele, El Salvador

benkostka

Jedi Council Member
Here’s an interesting leader who’s cleaning up the gang problem in El Salvador. He’s recently moved many members of MS-13 to a very high security prison and then used other prisoners to get rid of tombstones with gang symbols on them. His approval rating now in El Salvador is around 85%. Recently Bukele has been attacked by human rights organizations for his crackdown, though it looks like the prisoners aren’t being abused. Here’s his interview with Tucker Carlson, definitely seems like a bright guy who understands world geopolitics.


He’s also recently called out the US on Twitter for our false prosecution of the J6 insurrectionists.
 
At least Bukele has saved them from themselves. Most of the youth in the Marasalvatrucha or MS-13 gang don't make it to old age.

I was watching an interview with one of the officials at the new prison and he mentioned that the diet for the rest of their sentence consists of beans, water and tortillas. The beds have no mattresses and they are not allowed blankets...no visits. The sentences are up to 1000 years in prison.

So what the government intends is not rehabilitation but to keep them separated from society for the rest of their lives.

How good Bukele's strategy is, we may not know, but overcrowding and idleness will take their toll. Possibly that is what the government wants, a self-destruction.

2000 gang members to El Salvador's new prison.

El Salvador moved 2,000 gang members from the Maras, which dominated and terrorized the country for decades, to a new mega-prison. The new detention center is located 74 kilometers from El Salvador.
#NayibBukele made his country the safest in Latin America.

Do not come with the story that the Salvatrucha and #Maras are "human" beings. I have not killed, kidnapped, raped, tortured anyone! , I have not eaten the flesh of another human being, justly , they are inhuman Beasts! Well @nayibbukele 👏🏻

The images of the gang members entering the mega jail d #bukele in El #Salvador have served to enjoy watching the groupies and widows of the maras; mourners crying for the rights of criminals and yawning for those of their victims 😭

If the progressives don't like the way Nayib Bukele treats the gangs and criminals in El Salvador, take him up on his offer and take them home at 2 for 1, then let me know how it goes!
 
At least Bukele has saved them from themselves. Most of the youth in the Marasalvatrucha or MS-13 gang don't make it to old age.

I was watching an interview with one of the officials at the new prison and he mentioned that the diet for the rest of their sentence consists of beans, water and tortillas. The beds have no mattresses and they are not allowed blankets...no visits. The sentences are up to 1000 years in prison.

So what the government intends is not rehabilitation but to keep them separated from society for the rest of their lives.

How good Bukele's strategy is, we may not know, but overcrowding and idleness will take their toll. Possibly that is what the government wants, a self-destruction.

At first glance, when you read this you think it might be cruel. However when you dig into these gangs not because of their horrendous crimes but when you analyze it with all that is known about psychopathy, you really don't know what degree of damage they have both psychologically and neurologically. Of course there will be organic portals, but that deserves another analysis.

What is quite likely is that they have become unrecoverable psychopaths.
 
To put things into perspective of what type of person Nayib Bukele is, what he’s accomplished against all odds, and what he continues to do, this article presents an outstanding overview of the achievements for El Salvador and her people.

From my current level of understanding, I can confidently say he’s helping to level the playing field. Major respect for this man.

Bukele’s War for Peace

How El Salvador Fought the Gangs and Won
2019. El Salvador’s new president Nayib Bukele faces a staggering challenge. In office barely a month, his country is in international headlines again. For decades, El Salvador had never made international headlines because of good news. This time was no different. A Salvadoran father and daughter had drowned in the Rio Grande attempting to cross into the United States. Immigration activists in the US were using the tragedy to accuse the Trump administration of endangering migrants by pacing the number of asylum seekers being processed at the border. Instead of going along with blaming the US, or suggesting that perhaps the US government should send them more aid, as a typical developing-world politician would do, the young president had taken the responsibility squarely on his own shoulders:

“We can speak blame to any other country, but what about our blame? I mean, what country did they flee? Did they flee the United States? They fled El Salvador. They fled our country. It is our fault. We haven’t been able to provide anything, not a decent job, not a decent school.”

What was interesting about Bukele’s statement was that he could have credibly blamed the US government for his own country’s dysfunction. The Carter administration, the Reagan administration, and the Bush Sr. administration all bore enormous responsibility for the bloody civil war that had dragged on from 1979 to 1992. Many tens of thousands were killed. Others were tortured or “disappeared”. Over 1 million fled the country. Even today, over 20% of El Salvador’s population lives abroad, mostly in the United States. It was in this diaspora that the gangs were born.

The typical kid who wound up in a street gang was not irredeemably evil or sociopathic from an early age. More often they were shy and awkward. Many were deeply traumatized, first by witnessing the atrocities of war at a young age, then by being uprooted from El Salvador and transplanted to the strange multi-ethnic concrete jungles of the United States. Many had also spent years separated from their parents, and with their parents typically working long hours just to get by, there was very little time that could be spent with them once they were back together. This was in the generation of Americans that came to be known as latchkey children, dubbed that because as the first generation to have a significant percentage of working mothers, they often came home from school to an empty house. This phenomenon was sharply intensified for the Salvadoran refugees who came here in utter poverty and only had marginal, low-paying jobs available to them. The public schools in LA were essentially ghetto daycares, but without having the good sense to segregate by ethnicity. The Salvadoran kids were picked on and beaten up in the schools relentlessly by the Mexicans and the blacks, both of which already had their own ethnic gangs. There was little recourse but to seek safety in numbers; joining a gang was a way to manage conflict. They still had to fight, and often they ended up fighting even more than they had prior to joining, but they no longer had to fight alone.

Before they were the MS-13 street gang, they were the Mara Salvatrucha Stoners. A group of Salvadoran youth in 1970s Los Angeles who would hang out to smoke marijuana and listen to heavy metal. What made them distinct from other stoner groups, and then later other street gangs, was that some of the hardcore inner circle members of the clique were also heavy into Satanism, replete with ritualistic animal sacrifice, and later, human sacrifice. It was onto these roots that the street gang iteration of MS was grafted onto in the 1980s. At the same time that MSS was transforming into MS, Salvadoran youths were also joining other street gangs like 18th Street, the Rebels, the Harpies, the Crazies, and numerous others.

It was likely the competitive presence of those other street gangs that helped drive the transformation of MS from a stoner gang to a street gang. There were other trends at play as well. The Cocaine Boom was reaching ever greater heights thanks to the work of the Medellin and Cali cartels. Supply had increased so dramatically that wholesale prices collapsed by some 80%. Dealers started making and marketing crack cocaine, which first hit the streets of Los Angeles in 1981. Throughout the decade, black gangs like the Bloods and the Crips and Mexican gangs like Venice 13 and El Hoyo MaraVilla turned vast swaths of Los Angeles into a war zone as they battled for turf. In other words, Los Angeles in the 1980s was the perfect petri dish to grow a metastasizing social cancer like MS-13. And unlike the cartels or some of the more organized street gangs, the leadership structure of MS-13 was decentralized and the activities were disorganized.

The same international interests who had funded the war and told the Salvadorans that it was in their best interests to fight it, then turned around and said that both sides needed to come to a peace agreement. The result of the peace process was that both sides came together and agreed to hold themselves completely unaccountable for the mass murder, terrorism, disappearances, torture, rape, and mass population displacement that occurred as a result of their activities in the war. With the war over, the Clinton administration stepped up deportations of undocumented Salvadorans, but failed to inform the Salvadoran government of the criminal offenses which had led to their capture. Thousands of those deported were members of MS-13 and the 18th Street Gang. In short order, members from these gangs connected and the cliques began spreading across El Salvador, recruiting locals, many of them only 11, 12, or 13 years old and orphaned or abandoned by the war. Many of the members snuck back into the United States where they stayed or were captured and deported once again. This created a steady exchange between the cliques in the States and the cliques back in El Salvador. To make matters worse, the US government and international human rights groups exerted influence to pressure El Salvador into weakening the criminal justice system, by for instance, making it illegal to apply criminal sanctions to anyone under 18 years old. Which were precisely who the gangs were recruiting and using to carry out their criminal activities.

The violence that occurred after the so-called peace as a result of the newly established gangs in the country exceeded that of the brutal civil war. More died from gang violence during the “peace” than had died in the civil war at the hands of the guerrillas, death squads, and soldiers. And more were displaced. While the war had displaced 1 million, the ranks of those displaced to the United States (and some to other countries) swelled to over 3 million — one-third of the Salvadoran population — after the war as a result of the gang violence. And gang members mixed in with those displaced, following them and becoming established in new places in the United States, like the affluent suburbs of Northern Virginia.

In the earliest days of MS-13, when it was still a stoner gang, the Satanic ritualism was mostly confined to a small handful of members who practiced it much in the same way as other bored delinquent teens in the 1970s. By the mid-2000s, the nature of the gang crimes as well as the frequency began to grow worse. The Satanism of early MS-13 started to return, and also be practiced by the 18th St Gang, the main rivals to MS-13. I am told that this was likely not passed down through the group but picked up again independently from the Mexican Mafia, of which many members are involved in the cult of Santa Muerte and in other occult practices and witchcraft. “The brutality of the gangs’ crimes is increasingly horrific,” the Los Angeles Timesreported in 2004. “Homicide victims, including many women and teenage girls, often are found so mutilated that Spanish priest Jose Maria Morataya, who runs a San Salvador rehabilitation and job training center for former gang members… suspects that some gang members practice satanic rituals.” During a sweeping 2016 case against MS-13 tried in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, Jose Del Cid, an MS-13 member who started his career as a killer at the tender age of 9 years old testified, “When you [are involved in MS-13], you feel that the devil is helping you, and sometimes the devil asked you to do things for him.” Scores of interviews with former and imprisoned gang members have turned up talk of pacts with the devil and hearing the voice of the devil or “the beast” as the entity is frequently referred to — “The beast… wanted a soul,” an MS-13 member nicknamed Diabolical testified in a Houston courtroom about the 15 year old girl he murdered — and also to actual possession by the devil in the commission of murder.

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MS-13 Gang members​

Under the Presidency of Mauricio Funes from 2009-2014, the first Salvadoran president to represent the leftist FMLN party, the government and the gangs negotiated a deal (endorsed by the Catholic church and the Organization of American States) which would allow the leaders of the gangs to be transferred to lower security prisons, which the gangsters would effectively control, in exchange for lowering the homicide rate. During this period the rival gangs largely stopped killing each other, but continued to prey on the civilian population through extortion and other crimes. The “peace” agreement merely allowed the gangs space to consolidate and strengthen. The lower security prisons were worse than a joke, they were an offense to normal people. Strippers and Pollo Campero were brought in for the bosses.
The next President, Salvador Sánchez Cerén, also of FMLN and a former guerrilla himself, allegedly paid MS-13 $250,000 for votes in the 2014 presidential election which he won by just 6,634 votes. By the end of Funes’ term and before Sánchez was even sworn in, the truce had broken down. By 2015, El Salvador had the highest homicide rate in the world.

2015 was the year that El Salvador attained the status of the most dangerous country in the world and it was also the year that Nayib Bukele was narrowly elected as the Mayor of San Salvador as the candidate of the leftist FMLN party. His tenure as mayor foreshadowed how he would eventually come to govern as President. He made the city cleaner and safer and successfully implemented a number of popular public works and initiatives. In 2017, he was expelled from the FMLN for criticizing party leaders. Rejecting both the traditional left-wing and right-wing parties, FMLN and ARENA respectively, and looking forward to the 2019 presidential election, he formed his own party, Nuevas Ideas (New Ideas).

Leading up to the 2019 presidential election, Bukele was already polling higher than any of the other potential presidential candidates. The old parties, FMLN and ARENA, teamed up to block his participation in the election. The Supreme Electoral Tribunal — the nation’s highest election authority — ruled that, despite meeting the conditions to register in time for the next election, Nuevas Ideas would not be allowed to compete in elections until after the presidential election was concluded. In order to run for President, Bukele had to run as the candidate of another party. The centre-left Cambio Democratico (Democratic Change) party was the most logical choice, as Bukele had ran for mayor as the FMLN candidate but in alliance with Cambio Democratico. But on the evening of July 25th, 2018, just hours before the deadline for candidates to register themselves for the election, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal secretly met and decided to cancel Cambio Democratico’s eligibility to participate in the election. They also decided to wait until the next day to announce it, when it would be too late for Bukele to change his party affiliation. Bukele got wind of the secret meeting and what was being plotted around 9 or 10 pm. He immediately and secretly withdrew his affiliation with Cambio Democratico, and with less than an hour to go before the midnight deadline, he officially affiliated himself with GANA, a small centre-right party.

The following day, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal announced that Cambio Democratico’s participation in the presidential election was cancelled, and with it, Nayib Bukele’s bid for the presidency. After the court’s press announcement, Bukele made his own announcement. He had switched parties and was in fact very much an active and eligible candidate for the presidency. He had outmaneuvered the anti-democratic forces which had conspired to prevent the citizens of El Salvador from being able to vote for him. Democracy was saved. He stood in the election, and won outright in the first round, taking 53% of the total vote, more than all of his opponents combined.

President Bukele was sworn into office on June 1st, 2019. At midnight on June 20th, in front a crowd of police officers and soldiers standing in Gerardo Barrios Plaza, he announced the Territorial Control Plan.

Phase I of the plan was called “Preparation”. It involved concentrating on disrupting the finances of the gangs and taking back control of historic city and town centers in twelve key municipalities. 2,000 police officers from the National Civil Police and 3,000 soldiers of the armed forces. Another 1,000 soldiers were added one month later. Prisons were put on lockdowns, with cell phone signals around the prisons blocked, all visitors suspended, and higher ranking prisoners transferred to higher security prison.

Phase II was called “Opportunity”. It was an effort conducted in parallel with other operational phases and focused on offering youth a different path than the gangs; the creation of a Social Fabric Revitalization Unit: construction of schools and sports centers, expansion of educational opportunities and vocational training, and so on.

Phase III, “Modernization”, involved equipping the military and police force with modern weapons, vehicles, body armor, helicopters, night vision, etc. It was announced in August and by October, an agreement with the Central American Development Bank was negotiated to secure a $109 million loan. When approval of the loan came up before the Legislative Assembly, it was initially opposed by the leftist FMLN but was expected to pass with support from ARENA, the traditional right-wing party. But then, ARENA pulled its support for the loan. The Bukele-aligned parties, Nuevas Ideas, Cambio Democratico, and GANA, together only held 20 of the 82 seats in the Legislative Assembly. A large segment of ARENA’s 37 member caucus was needed to get over the 43 vote threshold for approval. This set the stage for the most dramatic moment yet of Bukele’s presidency.

On Thursday, February 6th, President Bukele invoked Article 167 of El Salvador’s constitution to convene an extraordinary session of the Legislative Assembly. The next day, he then called on the citizens to join him at the Legislative Assembly. Thousands responded and surrounded the legislature that Sunday afternoon, along with the police and military. But fewer than half of the deputies of the Legislative Assembly appeared for the session. Addressing the crowd from a hastily-erected stage, he railed against the members of the legislature for failing to approve the financing of the war against the gangs, calling them criminals and charging them with collusion with the gangs and indifference to the safety of the public. He then asked the crowd: “I want to ask you to let me enter the Blue Hall of the Legislative Assembly to say a prayer and that God give us wisdom for the steps we are going to take and then the decision will be up to you. Do you authorize me?” “Yes!”, the crowd responded. “God bless you, Salvadoran people. I ask you to wait for me here. I’ll be back in a moment.”

Then, flanked by rows of military school cadets in dress uniform and as the Granadera march sounded, the President entered the Legislative Assembly and walked into the legislative chamber. A detachment of riot police and armed soldiers were already standing inside. Bukele walked up to the dais and sat in the chair of the Assembly President, Mario Ponce. He spoke briefly to the 31 deputies who had gathered, thanking them for their attendance and decrying their absent colleagues, concluding by saying, “It is clear who is in control of the situation. We are going to put the decision in the hands of God,” and then began to pray for several minutes. After he finished praying, he got up without a word and went back outside to address the crowd for a second time. He gestured for calm and said “the entire Salvadoran people know, our adversaries know, the international community knows it, our Armed Forces knows it, our Police know it, all the factual powers of the country know it: if we wanted to press the button, we just press the button. But I asked God and God told me ‘patience.’ Patience, patience.”

The crowd responded in disagreement, they were ready for action. “Patience!”, responded Bukele. “On February 28, all those scoundrels are going to come out the outside door and we are going to take them out democratically. Why are we going to question the true power of the people in democracy? Why, if we are going to have this Assembly in a few months? Why are we going to take it by force, even if the Constitution gives them the right and I’m not going to prevent them? I ask for your patience. If these scoundrels do not approve the Territorial Control plan this week, we will convene here again on Sunday, we ask God for wisdom again and we say: God, you asked me for patience, but these scoundrels do not want to work for the people.”

The crowd continued to murmur in dissatisfaction: “God is wiser than we are. God is wiser than we are. One week, gentlemen. One week. One week. No people that goes against God has triumphed.” As President Bukele left the stage and shook hands with a few supporters, the crowd began happily chanting “Insurrection! Insurrection! Insurrection!”

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Bukele approaches the balcony of the National Palace of El Salvador to give his re-election speech, February 4, 2024 (Photography: courtesy of Jessica Solce)​

The El Salvador opposition’s leaders called this an attempted coup. The Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court requested that President Bukele refrain from using the police and military in such a manner. The American ambassador condemned the action. So did the European Union and the Vatican. The crisis appeared to be at an impasse. Bukele ordered the mobilization of another 1,400 soldiers to fight the gangs, saying “we have to go out and work with or without resources”. And then suddenly another crisis emerged that washed the present one away. COVID-19 cases were starting to pop up around Latin America; for the next year it would occupy an inordinate amount of time and energy. One year after the President’s brief incursion into the legislative branch, his Nuevas Ideas party succeeded in its permanent takeover via the ballot box, winning an astounding 56 seats. Now, Bukele was free to govern with the full support of the legislature.

On July 19, 2021, President Bukele announced phase IV of the Territorial Control Plan: “Incursion”. This phase focused on the government reestablishing security control of the no-go zones that police had previously found it difficult or impossible to operate in. I’ve spoken to several Salvadorans who lived in such barrios. Taxi drivers who had to pay extortion fees when they entered and left the barrio. Little ladies with pupusa stands who had to pay the gangs a percentage of receipts or face the disappearance of their sons. Men who could not cross certain geographic boundaries to buy food or they would be killed — they had to send their wives to do it. This phase of the plan was to take away the gang’s ownership of space and allow the citizens to freely work and come and go as they pleased without fear. As part of this phase, a new goal was also announced to double the size of the armed forces from 20,000 to 40,000 troops.

The operations to reclaim the barrios had put the gang members in a defensive posture. For months, the homicide rate had been extraordinarily low as gang members were forced into hiding. But on March 26th 2022, the gangs went on a killing spree, targeting street vendors, bus passengers, and grocery shoppers. It was El Salvador’s bloodiest day since the civil war. The gangs intended to send a message to the government.

I was told by a high-level source that there was great anxiety all throughout the war on the gangs that this would happen. It’s why one of the first steps that had been taken was to secure and move the high ranking gang leaders in prison, out of concern that after the crackdowns began, one of them would be able to get a message to the outside that would give the order for the gangs to begin carrying out mass casualty attacks on soft targets in an effort to intimidate the public and the government into submission. Pablo Escobar pioneered this tactic in Colombia but he certainly wasn’t the last gangster to use it. In the parts of Latin America riddled with organized crime, nearly everyone in society is a hostage and a human shield.

The reaction by the government was swift and resolute. In the early hours the next day, the National Assembly passed a state of emergency and a state of exception. The gangs had treated the public as hostages, now the president began treating their imprisoned homeboys similarly. Meal rations were cut, mattresses and clothes were taken away, the inmates now wore only underwear and slept on concrete. The President vowed that if there were any more waves of gang violence that the imprisoned gang members would not be fed “a single grain of rice.” This was met with howls of disapproval by International NGOs like Human Rights Watch, The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Amnesty International, and the United Nations, to which the president responded, “They can take their gang members if they want; we’ll give them all of them.”

Over the next few months the war against the gangs intensified. Tens of thousands of gang members were arrested, more than the prisons could reasonably hold. In July 2022, Bukele announced the construction of the largest prison in Latin America, CECOT (Center for the Confinement of Terrorism), with a capacity for 40,000 inmates.

In November 2022, Phase V of the Territorial Control Plan was announced: “Extraction”. Police and soldiers began encircling communities where gang members were suspected of hiding and conducting house by house searches until every single person was checked. In February 2023, the opening of CECOT was accompanied with the publication of videos showing prisoner transfers there.
From the United States and over the internet, it seemed as if the atmosphere in El Salvador was authoritarian and tense. I had to experience it for myself. I flew down for a week in March 2023, but instead of the neofascist police state I had been told by the media to expect, there was instead an air of peace and freedom. I could wander around the poor neighborhoods of San Salvador on foot and drive along remote rural roads at night with no threat of danger. It was not just how I was received (I am fully aware that gringoes in Latin America are often treated differently than the locals) — I observed and talked to many of the locals. They were able to go out in the plazas and to the soccer fields and enjoy themselves for the first time in decades. For some, it was the first time in their life that they had experienced such peace. There was a noticeable police presence in the poorer areas of San Salvador, but they were not rough with the locals as I had witnessed previously in Colombia and Brazil. They were well professionalized. I returned home impressed.

In August I was taken on a helicopter tour of the countryside, and as CECOT came into view my first impression was not of a prison, but of a monastery. A place where the chaos and noise of the outside world is shut out and the voice of God can be heard. The harsh crackdown was necessary to provide a firebreak, an absolute halt to the violence which was feeding a downward spiral that sucked many into a life of crime. Now that there is finally peace, the work of healing and building can proceed. The gang members themselves are freer than ever before. Free from being trapped in lives of crime, free from drugs and alcohol, free from the threat of violence at the hands of rivals or their own gangs. I am told by several missionaries that there is a surge in former gang members becoming born-again Christians and the prison societies becoming gradually transformed from within into genuine spiritual fraternities.

For the kids who would otherwise be growing up into an environment that pressured them into joining the gangs, that pressure is gone and tremendous energy is going into empowering the youth of the nation to live good decent lives. The national homicide rate is now on par with Luxembourg. El Salvador is the safest country in the western hemisphere. Safer than the United States, safer than my own county, which has a homicide rate that is four times worse. Businesses no longer have the tax of extortion by the gangs, they are free to expand. Workers no longer have to pay extortion fees either, so that’s more money for them to invest in their families and enterprises. The psychic relief is incalculable. The security dividend is rapidly transforming the country. I traveled to El Salvador again in August, and then again in November. Though mere months had passed between trips, there were clear improvements upon each visit. New public works and parks. New shops and restaurants. And a renewed sense of pride and joyfulness among the people.

In November, I visited the new national library in the historic section of San Salvador, a gift of the People’s Republic of China. It is a magnificent building that is open 24/7, 365 days a year. Volunteers are there to work with children and there are special sections for those with special needs and disabilities. The books themselves are well-curated. The great books of the western tradition are all there. It is a palace of learning and culture, open and accessible to all. Catty-corner from the library there is a new public plaza under construction which will feature a carousel and street cafes. On the plywood walls encasing the construction site is the motto of the Ministry of Public Works, “There is enough money when no one steals,” which references the new target of President Bukele’s war on crime: corruption. A new prison is being built on the model of CECOT, but named CECOC — Center for the Confinement of Corruption. It is a place to send those who offer or take bribes. Several former presidents are either in jail for corruption or have fled from Salvadoran authorities.

One would think that such a rapid transformation would be met with relief and praise in all corners of western society. But the media, the political class, and many NGOs have all responded to the Salvadoran miracle with varying degrees of hostility, claiming that El Salvadoran democracy is “in danger” (they had little to say however when the TSE tried to block Bukele from running the first time). The reason the Western powers hate Bukele is that he shows that an alternative model of governance, one where the common good is the main priority, is far superior than the post-liberal plutocratic systems we find ourselves in today. But there is little they can do about it. Millions of Salvadorans are still in the United States (though many are starting to repatriate themselves home) and they universally adore Bukele. Any overt actions taken by the US Government against Bukele would assuredly lead to paralyzing mass protests. Bukele is also supported strongly by key Republican officials in Congress who oversee the US State Department. Bukele’s position is entirely different from that of a Lukashenko or Yanukovych.

Many of Bukele’s international admirers have claimed that he has shown that it is easy to fix the key problems of our societies. I disagree. What President Bukele did was simple, yes — put the bad guys in jail — but it was not ‘easy’. It took enormous will, courage, and dogged perseverance to accomplish what he did. It also took no small amount of charisma, and some trickery as well — as in the case where he had to outmaneuver his enemies to appear on the ballot. And he did it at the reins of a country whose population had experienced over four decades of turmoil. At every turn, the population was there to back him up. It is the most religious population on earth, dominated by evangelicals, mostly pentecostals, and they responded strongly to his message of carrying out a holy war against the satanic gangs. Even if we had a Bukele, it is questionable whether our weak, watered-down, secular first-world societies would stick with him and back him the way Salvadorans have consistently done with Bukele, returning him to office with nearly 90% of the vote. But there are other countries in the region who have gone through similar turmoil and insecurity as El Salvador these last few decades. The new President of Ecuador is patterning his war against the cartels there after Bukele’s security operations. El Salvador is sending advisors to other countries like Honduras to help them adopt similar models. It may be that Latin America emerges from its dysfunction well before the so-called first world. And if it does, it will all be because of an audacious man born on the same day as the first liberator of Latin America, Simón Bolívar: Nayib Bukele.
 
Thanks for the post. @Obi

First of all, great speech! It’s timely and hopefully will grow legs and take a walk.

The man, the woman, the AI, who ever it is making the statements or speaking of a successful work they have completed should be met with at least some skepticism. When their message is sound, helpful, and can lead to a creative way through tough terrain. Applaud! When the same person comes up with a sour note…thumbs down! We are after following the message and its potential, and not the person or organization. All people and institution can be corrupted, so the path, the message is issue. We don’t want to play follow the leader. Presently the US alt-media are praising Bukele, and fair enough, but let me add just a bit more.

I have been following the El Salvador issue as much as I can, and it worries me. And what I am presenting is my best understanding at this time. The president of ES has been well received by the US, and given a full airing by Tucker and others. Always it seems to great praises. Especially how his country took care of the MS-13 gangs which were absolutely horrible and disabling to the country. They handle it with super-prisons, and military round-ups. And if the same program was introduced to, let’s say, here in the US, I believe it would be disastrous. And, IMO, is presently unjustly administered in ES at the present time.

ES was assisted in the building of these great mega prisons to “get the bad guys” and I believe there is another one being planned for Colombia. In reading through the documentation, it appears that how one finds themselves in one of the mega super tough prisons is that someone suspicions you. That’s it. Who is suspicious of who and the why’s are not clear. So, if an otherwise good boy of 14 y/o thinks his uncle’s tattoos are cool, and gets a tattoo, that can be all it takes to “suspicion” him and he is gone. For life. Life in prison for suspicion. Its not hard to see that anyone can go away for any reason especially if the accuser is never named. Once arrested, there is to be no lawyer, no trial, no communication. Period. Gone for a life sentence. Not only is that an egregious wrong to the one who has been arrested, but think how compliant that would make the rest of the population.

What if the new US president implemented those reforms here in the US to get things under control? And if this becomes seen as “the model” then spreads throughout all of the Americas.

On the one hand you can say. Hey, desperate times call for desperate measures. One the other hand I don’t think I need to explain where these measures go wrong, and how it could be a set-up for a totalitarian state.

That’s my understanding at the moment, if anyone has more or better info, feel free to post.

Thanks again for the post, and I hope President Bukele’s words find a constructive application😊
 
Good points @Adobe

There is a very thin line between a benevelent dictator and a tyrant. I think jury is still out on him if he misuses the power he has and if it corrupts him. Then the citizens of ES will be in a very grave danger.

What caught my attention is that these kind of truths (re: elites), which are obvious for us, are now openly spoken in front of the press and other people to hear. Therein lies my hope... but time will tell if I was too optimistic.
 
The full story, if you listen to Bukele tell it, is that the gang members began as such when they grew up in the US as the kids of migrants who fled El Salvador's civil war in the 1980s, which was funded and fueled, at least in part, by the CIA. They became 'MS13' and 'Barrio 18' in LA, California, then were deported 'home' in the 90s, when the civil war ended, by the Clinton government. So, what you're seeing is El Salvador cleaning up Uncle Sam's (double) mess.

Is it fair, locking up so many people under emergency powers? I trust the people of El Salvador to be the judge of that, and they recently re-elected Bukele with 84% of the vote! Notice that global media is uniformly denigrating his crime policy, reporting breathlessly about 'concern for human rights' and 'due process'. I saw one infuriating BBC News report about Bukele's war on gangs that had the news anchor conclude his introduction to their report with the line: "...since then [since Bukele began rounding up gang members by the thousands - NB], there's been no information about who exactly has been jailed..."

The very first footage immediately shown in the report depicts hundreds of men lined up in a prison, covered from head to toe with the kinds of tattoos which graphically detail exactly which gang they belong to, when they joined, and how many kills and rapes they've 'scored'.

Who exactly has been jailed?! Media, as usual, at once obfuscates the glaringly obvious, while omitting vital context to provide true glimpses of reality.

If Bukele's a dictator, then he's a benevolent one, and the question his success begs for the citizens of every other democracy is: if they can transform their country from "the murder capital of the world" to one of the safest countries, overnight, then why can't we? Is it really because 'human rights', or is it because our criminally-inclined leadership wants criminals on the streets?

Here's the point in one recent speech (at the CPAC in the US) where Bukele describes the origins of these notorious gangs:

 
Here’s an interesting leader who’s cleaning up the gang problem in El Salvador. He’s recently moved many members of MS-13 to a very high security prison and then used other prisoners to get rid of tombstones with gang symbols on them. His approval rating now in El Salvador is around 85%. Recently Bukele has been attacked by human rights organizations for his crackdown, though it looks like the prisoners aren’t being abused. Here’s his interview with Tucker Carlson, definitely seems like a bright guy who understands world geopolitics.


He’s also recently called out the US on Twitter for our false prosecution of the J6 insurrectionists.
That is definitely a guy who deserves attention! I usually reckon Bukele is well-meaning, but let's remember he is a Bitcoin enthusiast (he made it an official currency on El Salvador). This very act makes me doubt his intentions, or at least, question whether he is a "bright guy who understands world geopolitics."

(Other interesting mavericks are Javier Milei and Ecuador's president.)
 
If Bukele's a dictator, then he's a benevolent one, and the question his success begs for the citizens of every other democracy is: if they can transform their country from "the murder capital of the world" to one of the safest countries, overnight, then why can't we? Is it really because 'human rights', or is it because our criminally-inclined leadership wants criminals on the streets?
And everyone's noticing, I caught this tweet last year about El Salvador being the leading country in the region for tourism growth.

He responded with the correct force and initiative to a country that was owned by gangs, people could not get a job outside their town because gangs would not allow them to leave or enter without paying a toll, or leave or enter too late.. they effectively lived under a dictatorship controlled by gangs.

Sometimes, when you get an infection, you can try to treat the symptoms, or you can take antibiotics and hurt your gut biome. Were there Human Right's violation? it is truly difficult to tell, but I do not discount the possibility, but there were no human rights observance before he took over, so maybe he's not being super PC when going about fixing his country, but he's being effective and everyone at home thinks so, and people abroad think so too.

He is using power effectively to improve his nation, dictatorially perhaps, but that's because of the connotation that the word has in the West, dictator only means to lead and take charge of the dictates of the country, yes it can mean tyrannical control for evil purposes, but not in this case I don't think.

Plus think about the West, where you get to vote on who's going to lie to you for the next four years, while there is a tyrannical, unelected dictatorial power structure behind every decision that matters, so this whole living under a dictatorship, well.. we actually know what that looks like.


(Other interesting mavericks are Javier Milei and Ecuador's president.)
I don't know about that at all, Milei is a nut job and Noboa is probably just pretending to be Bukele while selling his country to the US. Look at the result of their rule, Milei is extremely unpopular and the country is all the worse after him, and Noboa, he's just lost more sovereignty. Bukele has achieved the exact opposite.
 
How El Salvador Fought the Gangs and Won
[...] On Thursday, February 6th, President Bukele invoked Article 167 of El Salvador’s constitution to convene an extraordinary session of the Legislative Assembly. The next day, he then called on the citizens to join him at the Legislative Assembly. Thousands responded and surrounded the legislature that Sunday afternoon, along with the police and military. [...] He then asked the crowd: “I want to ask you to let me enter the Blue Hall of the Legislative Assembly to say a prayer and that God give us wisdom for the steps we are going to take and then the decision will be up to you. Do you authorize me?” “Yes!”, the crowd responded

[...] “We are going to put the decision in the hands of God,” and then began to pray for several minutes. After he finished praying, he got up without a word and went back outside to address the crowd for a second time. He gestured for calm and said “the entire Salvadoran people know, our adversaries know, the international community knows it, our Armed Forces knows it, our Police know it, all the factual powers of the country know it: if we wanted to press the button, we just press the button. But I asked God and God told me ‘patience.’ Patience, patience.”

The crowd responded in disagreement, they were ready for action. “Patience!”, responded Bukele.
I am only little familiar with El Salvador´s politics and history, but IMO, I find this quite a rare example of a live political interaction of a President towards his people gathered in an agitated crowd of thousands. First Bukele asks them for authorization to enter the Assembly, to only pray for Gods wisdom for several minutes. Then he does exactly this, returning with the message of patience. And while the crowd disagrees, he can calm them in the name of the Devine.

[...] If Bukele's a dictator, then he's a benevolent one, and the question his success begs for the citizens of every other democracy is: if they can transform their country from "the murder capital of the world" to one of the safest countries, overnight, then why can't we? Is it really because 'human rights', or is it because our criminally-inclined leadership wants criminals on the streets?

In this video, Bukele addresses these questions, I find, quite courageously. First he reminds his US audience to remember the fundamental purposes of the judicative - to execute justice without fear. Then he calls on leading PTB´s and their clandestine organizations that fund criminal activities. Again he reminds the US audience to stand up "against institutional nihilism" and to start "with heart and soul" defending these principles that created all these institutions in the first place, like freedom of speech, free will and determining your own faith.

After watching Bukele´s video, I am somehow reminded of Lobaczewski´s Logocracy from Harrison´s Ponerology Substack. Its fresh on my mind, as we just finished reading it here. I hope its not to far fetched to make a connection to Logocracy.

The main topics in this great book, that impressed me strongly, were the emphasis on principles like professional competence is a prerequisite for leadership - and Bukele succeeded making El Salvador one of the safest countries in the world.
In a logocratic society there has to be a popularisation of ponerology - and he publicly names and calls PTB´s out for their clandestine criminal activities.
Lobaczeweski also emphasizes on spiritual rehabilitation for a society to become healthy and creative again and the moderating role of the Catholic Church - and Bukele prays in front of the Legislative Assembly for Gods wisdom.
Another of Lobaczeweski´s topics is educating a nation towards moderation and forebearance - and Bukele sucessfully calls for patience towards an agitated crowd of thousands.
 
And everyone's noticing, I caught this tweet last year about El Salvador being the leading country in the region for tourism growth.

He responded with the correct force and initiative to a country that was owned by gangs, people could not get a job outside their town because gangs would not allow them to leave or enter without paying a toll, or leave or enter too late.. they effectively lived under a dictatorship controlled by gangs.

Sometimes, when you get an infection, you can try to treat the symptoms, or you can take antibiotics and hurt your gut biome. Were there Human Right's violation? it is truly difficult to tell, but I do not discount the possibility, but there were no human rights observance before he took over, so maybe he's not being super PC when going about fixing his country, but he's being effective and everyone at home thinks so, and people abroad think so too.

He is using power effectively to improve his nation, dictatorially perhaps, but that's because of the connotation that the word has in the West, dictator only means to lead and take charge of the dictates of the country, yes it can mean tyrannical control for evil purposes, but not in this case I don't think.

Plus think about the West, where you get to vote on who's going to lie to you for the next four years, while there is a tyrannical, unelected dictatorial power structure behind every decision that matters, so this whole living under a dictatorship, well.. we actually know what that looks like.



I don't know about that at all, Milei is a nut job and Noboa is probably just pretending to be Bukele while selling his country to the US. Look at the result of their rule, Milei is extremely unpopular and the country is all the worse after him, and Noboa, he's just lost more sovereignty. Bukele has achieved the exact opposite.
Argentina is drowned on decades of left-wing policies. Getting things straight is always painful and traumatizing. Milei is doing one thing Argentineans are not used to: get the government to do not spend more than it has.
 
Argentina is drowned on decades of left-wing policies. Getting things straight is always painful and traumatizing. Milei is doing one thing Argentineans are not used to: get the government to do not spend more than it has.

I don't think so. Good governance isn't just a matter of left-bad vs. right-good. There have been great left wing leaders, and great right wing leaders. The real matter at hand is whether or not the government is a puppet of the PTB or not. If it is, left or right, the population will suffer from being looted by foreign corporate interests, draconian laws, social strife, etc. Milei is definitelly just a stooge of the globalist bankers. He's popular because he used anti-woke rhetoric to get into power. His economic policies won't do anything to help Argentinians.

'Restricting gov't spending' to save a hard economy is a spell cast by mainstream economics. As far as I know, the main way to jump start an economy is by going into debt that is explicitly tied to increasing industrial production and infrastructure. Apparently this school of thought got its start in America, as written about by Matthew Ehret:

The Origins of the American System

During the crisis of 1783-1791, The newly established American republic was an agrarian economy in financial ruins with no means to pay off its debts or even the soldiers who fought for years in the revolutionary war. It was only a matter of time before the fragile new nation would come undone and be reabsorbed back into the fold of the British Empire.

The solution to this unsolvable crisis was unveiled by Washington’s former Aide de Camp and now Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton who studied the works of the great dirigiste economists like France’s Finance Minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert, and introduced a four-fold solution:

  1. – Consolidate all unpayable state debts into a singular federal debt secured by the issuance of new bonds. This was done via his 1790 Report on Public Credit.

  2. – Tie these new bonds to internal improvements like roads, canals, academies and industrial growth which would create a qualitatively new form of debt that would permit the nation to produce its way out of poverty which would lead to “the augmentation of the active or productive capital of a country”. In this sense Hamilton distinguished bad debt from good debt using the important guiding principle that the “creation of debt should always be accompanied with the means of extinguishment.” [to illustrate this more clearly: think of a farmer taking on a debt in order to feed a gambling addiction vs investing his loan into new farm supplies and a tractor.] The thrust of this conception was found in his Report on the Subject of Manufactures of 1791.

  3. – Guide that new national power over finance by a system of national banks subservient to the Constitution and the General Welfare (instead of a system of central banks under the British model that ensured nation states would forever be subservient to the laws of usurious finance). This was illustrated in Hamilton’s 1790 Report on a National Bank and his 1791 On the Constitutionality of a National Bank.

  4. Use protective measures where necessary to block foreign dumping of cheap goods into the nation from abroad which essentially makes it more profitable to purchase industrial goods and farm products locally rather than from abroad. Hamilton also promoted federal incentives/bounties to encourage private enterprises to build things that would be in alignment with the national interests.

AFAIK, this is a basic description of what many BRICS+ countries have done - and this is explicitly the opportunity Milei destroyed.
 
Argentina is drowned on decades of left-wing policies. Getting things straight is always painful and traumatizing. Milei is doing one thing Argentineans are not used to: get the government to do not spend more than it has.
No, I think Milei is trying to impose his delusion of how the world works on the entire country, and reality is smacking him back. Take a look at this whole thread we have on that subject. Does that mean that not going his way endorses the extreme left policies? not really, did Argentina need some correction towards the right? sure, is Mieli's approach correct? heck no! the proof is in the consequences of his actions.

The idea of a broken clock is right twice a day applies to him, he says somethings, sometimes, that make sense.. and the rest is pure nonsense. His whole rhetoric is, Communism is evil, so the answer must be extreme overcorrection towards the right, that doesn't even make sense in small everyday situations, but that's what he's presenting.

If he were so smart, why would he take the country out of the BRICS? and attack their most important trading partners? even from his own rhetoric about free markets, it makes no sense whatsoever. So, Milei, is a child that has a very cool pep theory about the workings of the world, who is loud and obnoxious and thus people mistake that for authenticity and sincerity, which they have not received from any other political leader, to be fair. But once you get past the showboating, he's a loonie, not a thinking adult in my opinion.
 
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