Fortean Times

BARKING MAD?

Prior to Argentina’s presidential election last November, the vote’s ultimate winner, Javier Milei, put out a list rebutting 26 items of gossip being spread about him online. Many were pretty standard accusations, like “Milei will remove pensions” or “With Milei, workers will earn less”. Others were more unusual, such as “[Milei will legalise] selling of children”, “Milei is a NAZI”, “Milei talks with dead dogs” and “Milei fucked his sister” (this is, verbatim, how it was actually phrased). Alarmingly, it would appear only some of these rumours were untrue. When a critic once described him as “a dishevelled [talk-show] panellist who screams on a stage and sleeps with eight dogs and his sister”, Milei’s only reply was: “I don’t have eight dogs.” 1 As for another ‘debunked’ slur – “Milei has psychological problems” – the jury is still very much out …

The standard response to Milei’s election in Western media was that Milei was, indeed, a total nutter. He had to be: he offered various non-liberal policies, like abortion-scepticism, and embraced Thatcherite free-market economics. He appeared at rallies brandishing a chainsaw, promising to chop up the bloated Argentine State by closing 11 of 18 government ministries, “dynamiting” the National Bank, and ‘dollarising’ the economy (effectively replacing the highly devalued peso, a currency now “worth less than excrement”, with the US dollar). Why such media panic? Was this just a new version of ‘Trump Derangement Syndrome’ among the piously progressive commentariat class, or does Mr Milei indeed suffer from genuine mental problems?

In favour of the latter option is the fact that ever since he was a shunned and bullied schoolboy, prone to sudden outbursts of violent temper against his teachers, Milei has gone by the nickname of – ‘The Loony’. Indeed, is the title of the new unauthorised biography of Milei by Argentinian journalist Juan Luis González, from which many of the weirdest rumours about the new President first emerged. By González’s account, it isNorberto to thrash him so savagely his younger sister Karina was hospitalised with shock. From her sickbed, his mother then phoned Javier to tell him that, if the girl died, it would be his fault. As an adult, Javier later broke off all contact with his parents, saying they were “dead” to him.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fortean Times

Fortean Times15 min read
Letters
CONTACT US BY POST: PO BOX 1200, WHITSTABLE CT1 9RH, OR E-MAIL SIEVEKING@FORTEANTIMES.COM PLEASE PROVIDE US WITH YOUR POSTAL ADDRESS Let me add my congratulations to Fortean Times for hitting (now surpassing) its half-century milestone. After I addre
Fortean Times1 min read
ForteanTimes PRESENTS THE UFO FILES
The perfect starting point for anyone wanting to get up to speed on the ever-changing landscape of UFO research, this special edition from Fortean Times presents classic cases covering nearly 80 years of ufology – from the first modern UFO sighting i
Fortean Times4 min read
Future Shock
Dir Mitch Jenkins, UK 2023 On digital platforms A Million Days is a British sci-fi drama that belies its limitations to produce an engrossing and complex chamber piece. The Earth is experiencing a catastrophic environmental disaster and a ‘Space Seed

Related Books & Audiobooks