pmatusov
AK6PM
Thanks for the good words.
I am still puzzled by what broke in Chile.
Chile "had it" much better than all of its neighbors, by all accounts.
The riots started by "students" protesting subway fare increase by 4 cents on a dollar. It seems like not a reason to blow up half the country, especially considering that students were almost entirely unaffected by this increase.
The TV footage from October 21 (day 3 of riots) was very touching - the working people went to clean up the burnt down subway stations, so they could return to work. Whatever they had to say on TV about riots was far from sympathetic.
The riots had a devastating effect on the local economy away from Santiago - from day 1.
No planes taking off from Santiago => no tourists landing in Punta Arenas => nobody on tours/trips/whatever.
In contrast to that - Buenos Aires seemed its relaxed and cheerful self despite economy being really bad and getting worse.
And Bolivia blew up two weeks later.
I am still puzzled by what broke in Chile.
Chile "had it" much better than all of its neighbors, by all accounts.
The riots started by "students" protesting subway fare increase by 4 cents on a dollar. It seems like not a reason to blow up half the country, especially considering that students were almost entirely unaffected by this increase.
The TV footage from October 21 (day 3 of riots) was very touching - the working people went to clean up the burnt down subway stations, so they could return to work. Whatever they had to say on TV about riots was far from sympathetic.
The riots had a devastating effect on the local economy away from Santiago - from day 1.
No planes taking off from Santiago => no tourists landing in Punta Arenas => nobody on tours/trips/whatever.
In contrast to that - Buenos Aires seemed its relaxed and cheerful self despite economy being really bad and getting worse.
And Bolivia blew up two weeks later.