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What factors in Argentina made the seemingly impossible possible, someone being elected that would actually reduce the size of government. It being done is unheard of the world over despite a lot of talk. The question is do we want this to be a one time fluke where we actually got our way or a repeated pattern?
If we want it to be a repeated pattern we need to look at what went right, why it is an outlier, what countries offer similar opportunities, and how we can adapt the situations in those countries.
Here is one thing that went right. They have a runoff voting system. This allows people to vote for who they want instead of against the party they fear by voting for the party besides them that has the greatest odds. It also helps more agreeable options win by having stinky statists of various flavors that 50% of the population hate to be voted last.
This may mean that countries with a first past the post system may not be great candidates, or at least not our first for getting an Argentina 2. Countries with coalition.
There are a lot of other things that went right. Talking about inflation, demonstrating that the beurocratic class are parasites, bringing central banking into the discussion, and sadly their economic situation.
Looking at the neighboring countries as possible targets who do you think would be best target? Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, or Brazil?
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