zexen_lowe said:
While the involvement of the US is arguable, what's not is the fact that the operation is totally withouth a single merit and it was, simply put, an operation of extermination. There's a reason why the three biggest heads of the operation in Argentina (the three leaders of the Junta) and many more of the officers are in prison with a lifetime sentence for genocide and crimes against humanity. No, it was without a doubt the worst thing that ever happened in my country, and if the US were involved (as the evidence suggests) those who were, like Kissinger, really should be ashamed |
Ignore him. Research groups like the Council on Foreign Relations are just as prone to US interests and bias as any other source.
The truth is the majority of "expert opinion", that we here from in the mainstream media, is inherintly biased towards Western interests and therefore always biased because of it.
Ask your self how easy is it to guage alternative views when Al Jazeera and various other Central Asian news organisations are silent, or just simply not shown on Western Tv/Media.
“When we make some new announcement and if there is no positive initial reaction from the market, I try to think of it as a good sign because that can be interpreted as people reacting to something groundbreaking. ...if the employees were always minding themselves to do whatever the market is requiring at any moment, and if they were always focusing on something we can sell right now for the short term, it would be very limiting. We are trying to think outside the box.” - Satoru Iwata - This is why corporate multinationals will never truly understand, or risk doing, what Nintendo does.







