Latam is showing signs of a proactive leadership that might have the possibility of changing the international globalist agenda. Last week, Argentine President Javier Milei and Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele expressed their views about the bleak global panorama.
Before the United Nations General Assembly, these leaders criticized the United Nations’ (UN) direction regarding the Pact for the Future, a series of actions also directed to implement the so-called 2030 agenda to adopt global governance elements. While the pact is non-binding, it will be adopted by most countries in the UN.
In his speech before the UN, Milei criticized the current state of the organization, calling it a “Leviathan” that wants to control the way of life of each nation’s citizens. MIlei stated that the pact was socialist, and called for establishing an agenda of freedom instead.
In the same way, Bukele explained that the world was facing the coming of a dark age and that his experience as the president of a troubled nation like El Salvador gave him the vision needed to observe the signs before the upcoming fall. Bukele declared that while El Salvador cannot change what’s coming, it can become a shelter and a beacon of hope for the coming times.
Both politicians have positions opposite to the international status quo, and perhaps if they succeed with their projects in their respective countries, they might gather critical mass, growing their influence to cancel the UN’s globalist policies also rejected by many other countries in the region and the world.