Post by account_disabled on Feb 14, 2024 8:20:29 GMT
What Are the Reasons That Have Enabled This “new Right Crusader” to Become a Massive Phenomenon? To What Extent Do Your Anti-progressive, Anti-left and Anti-feminist Ideas Fit Into the So-called Right-wing Fusionism That Groups Liberal-conservative Sectors With Reactionary Nationalist Groups? How is Laje's Cultural Battle Connected With the World of Books and How Has This Space Contributed to the Amplification of Javier Milei's Political Positions? How Did Laje Manage to Transform What Until Recently Were Marginal Positions Into Part of the Mainstream of Latin American Public Conversation? The Answers Are Not Simple.
But His Own Story Can . The Young Laje Born in 1989 Into a Middle-class Family in the Province of Córdoba, Laje Became Interested in Political Issues From an Early Age. The Oldest of Four Siblings and the Son of a Judiciary Laos Email List Worker and a Municipal Employee Whom He Used to Accompany to Mass – as Documented by Journalist Juan Elman –, Laje Completed His Secondary Studies at the Instituto Italia, a Private Secular School. And Oriented to the Middle Sectors. It Was There That He, for the First Time, Began to Take Positions on Thorny Issues in National History.
The Topic That First Brought Him Together Was the Argentine Military Dictatorship and the Conflict of the 1970s, the Same One That, a Few Years Later, Would Catapult Him Into the Public Sphere. After Finishing High School, He Began Studying Systems Engineering, but Things Changed When, in 2011, He Obtained a Scholarship to Study Counterterrorism Strategies at the William Perry Center of the National Defense University in Washington, Dc. Upon His Return to Argentina, He Abandoned His Engineering Career to Study Political Science at the Catholic University of Córdoba.
But His Own Story Can . The Young Laje Born in 1989 Into a Middle-class Family in the Province of Córdoba, Laje Became Interested in Political Issues From an Early Age. The Oldest of Four Siblings and the Son of a Judiciary Laos Email List Worker and a Municipal Employee Whom He Used to Accompany to Mass – as Documented by Journalist Juan Elman –, Laje Completed His Secondary Studies at the Instituto Italia, a Private Secular School. And Oriented to the Middle Sectors. It Was There That He, for the First Time, Began to Take Positions on Thorny Issues in National History.
The Topic That First Brought Him Together Was the Argentine Military Dictatorship and the Conflict of the 1970s, the Same One That, a Few Years Later, Would Catapult Him Into the Public Sphere. After Finishing High School, He Began Studying Systems Engineering, but Things Changed When, in 2011, He Obtained a Scholarship to Study Counterterrorism Strategies at the William Perry Center of the National Defense University in Washington, Dc. Upon His Return to Argentina, He Abandoned His Engineering Career to Study Political Science at the Catholic University of Córdoba.