| THE IDISH TIMES
(20/04/2007)
Fantastical theories keep real world at bay
Argentina Letter Tom Hennigan
Given that the locals are among the world’s most avid consumers
of conspiracy theories, it should not be surprising that Argentina’s
literary sleeper hit of the past year is a book on the subject
titled Delirios Argentinos ( Argentine Deliriums).
Authored by Irish-Argentine writer and journalist Sergio Kiernan,
it is an analysis of the country’s main conspiracy theories
from cranks on both the left and right. Many of the people who
feature in the book are the easily identifiable conspiracy theory
nuts familiar to all who have heard how the moon landings were
shot on a Hollywood sound stage and that Elvis still pumps gas
somewhere in Arizona.
If such a book can have one, Kiernan’s mad hero is Homero
Rómulo Cristalli Frasnelli. Son of Italian immigrants, he
was a successful footballer, then shoemaker and union organiser.
A committed Trotskyist operating under the nom de guerre of J Posadas,
he was a polymath who devoted much of his considerable intellectual
energy to the theory of extraterrestrials and socialism. He published
numerous papers and books with titles such as Why extraterrestrials
do not make contact publicly, arguing that ET and chums would strike
fear into capitalists, as only societies organised along socialist
principles would be capable of inter-stellar travel and that those
who did arrive did not hang around earth for long because capitalist
societies bored them.
Possibly true, but then again Posadas also believed that along
with cockroaches, socialism would survive a nuclear war and, therefore,
urged the Soviets and China into a pre-emptive attack, believing
that the inevitable flowering of a new socialist world order would
be worth the apocalyptic carnage.
Kiernan says Argentina’s appetite for conspiracy theories
is linked to the relative decline of the country in the world pecking
order. One of the richest countries at the start of the 20th century,
it began its near continuous descent following one last party in
the late 1940s and early 1950s as the gold accumulated during the
second World War from sales of beef and grain to the Allies was
spent as if it would last forever.
But it did not and, rather than look for hard answers close to
home to explain this painful reality, many have found comfort in
conspiracy theories, most of which have sought to show how the
outside world has it in for Argentina – whether international
capital, international Jewry, the US, the USSR or the UK.
Says Kiernan, this retreat into fantasy is made all the more attractive
because believing in it conveys a certain power on the believer,
however powerless or hapless they actually are – they know
something we do not.
The undisputed “masterpiece” of Argentinian theories
is El Plan Andinia, a homegrown version of The Protocol of the
Elders of Zion. Andinia is the planned name for a new state to
be carved out of Patagonia by international Jewry, which has secretly
sent Jewish pioneers to start the colonisation of the region.
For Kiernan, Plan Andinia holds all the key elements of an Argentine
conspiracy theory – exaggerated, narcissistic, gullible and
lacking in rigour. In its various versions, this theory recounts
how Jews have been planning the dismemberment of the patria for
decades, having selected Patagonia because Argentina is the most
strategically located country in the world. Mad maybe, but in the
1970s military officers tortured a prominent Jewish detainee in
their search for details about Plan Andinia. This violent intersecting
of fantasy and reality is for Kiernan the reason why Argentinian
conspiracy theorists need keeping an eye on.
Most people do not take them literally but their craziness finds
it easier to infect the national discourse than it should.
For the author, the endemic political violence of the 1970s was
the result of the struggle between various competing deliriums
that convulsed the country’s biggest political movement,
Peronism, as well as Marxist guerrillas and fascists in the military. “The
most direct consequence of the delirious and paranoid mentality
is to raise the level of violence.”
While that 1970s fever has broken, some of the symptoms remain.
When President Néstor Kirchner turns foreign private companies
that invested in the country into the latest agents of imperialism,
he is drawing on a rich past that needs little further explanation
for voters.
Today Jews might not want to turn Patagonia into a homeland, but
deputies in congress denounce foreigners they say are buying it
up to grab hold of its ample fresh water supplies.
“Nobody is coming for the water,” writes Kiernan. “But
none of that matters, because the delirium is impervious to experience,
the passage of time and proof.”
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