Posted On: Wednesday - December 17th 2025 7:36PM MST
In Topics:   Immigration Stupidity  Liberty/Libertarianism  Geography  Race/Genetics  World Political Stupidity
Besides obvious weather jokes here, this title has another point, one that may be a little confusing. A couple of days ago ZeroHedge reported Chile Turns Hard To The Right: Tough-On-Crime, Anti-Immigration Candidate Easily Wins Presidency. One expects ZH commenters to make appropriate corrections, and at least once commenter below the article noted that being against crime and invasions is not necessarily "right" ideologically. It's just right logically and patriotic.
This is not the old "the Right" of Latin America. Peak Stupidity has written before - see Mormons, Commies, Shitholes, and Crown Jewels for one example, that the Latin American countries seem to jump back and forth from Communism to (somewhat) too-far right Caudillo*-led semi-dictatorship regularly. The word "Junta" comes from that neck of the woods. From our post:
Let me tell you about South America, though very generally, and about Venezuela. Back in the 1980's that country was the "crown jewel" of the continent. For various reasons, probably good stuff for another post, all the countries in Latin America has have been run badly for most of their histories. Simon Bolivar was the guy who liberated more than 1/2 the countries in South America from the Spaniards, who were no Magna Carta-drafters or Constitutional scholars themselves. Subsequent to these liberations, the mixed native-Spanish people have been running these semi-shitholes into the ground, pulling them out of the ground and back, in 10 - 50 year cycles. Some have been in the shithole phase for their entire histories so far - bad timing, that, huh? In general, down there, military juntas come and go, Commies take over for long periods, death squads try to get rid of the Commies, along with other people they never did like and so forth.Things have changed somewhat lately. Argentinian President Javier Milei is a Libertarian. You don't see that much down in Latin America, and we continue to wish him good luck with all that...

Now, per ZH, one Jose Kast was just elected President of Chile, and he's another Trump/MAGA acolyte. Love him or
In an election where the decisive themes echoed mounting concerns in the Americas and Europe, a conservative who's vowed to crack down on illegal immigration and crime trounced his Communist opponent in Sunday's presidential election in Chile. The result confirms a major political current that now has many Latin American countries embracing right-wing politics.He won the election 58% to 42% over Communista Jeannette Jara. (Miss Jara declined Peak Stupidity's phone calls.)
Crime weighed heavily in the contest, with 63% of Chileans saying it was their biggest worry. That's about double the global average. Illegal immigration (40%) is the second-biggest concern. The two worries go hand-in-hand, as a 50% surge in murders from 2018 to 2024 is largely the work of international criminal gangs. Chile has more than 300,000 illegal immigrants, many of them Venezuelan.We were there, only in Santiago, unfortunately, back in '18. It's difficult for a Gringo rube to distinguish among Chicanos, but I do have some pictures somewhere of people in a park in that city that looked like they didn't fit in.
At Kast's victory rally, supporters wore red "Make Chile Great Again" hats,...Ah, geeeze!
... Guiding off the inauguration date, he has repeatedly warned illegals of how many days they [have] to self-deport, before his administration kicks them out. Self-deporation, [sic - WTH, ZH?] Kast has said, will give them the opportunity to bring their possessions with them, while avoiding detention. "If you don't leave voluntarily, we will detain you, retain you, expel you, and you'll leave with what you have on," said Kast. Kast's looming victory had already had a striking effect, with wary illegal immigrants surging into Peru ...
... so much so that Peruvian President Jose Jeri declared a state of emergency in late November. Meanwhile, authorities along Chile's border say illegal entries have plummeted.We've commented on this game of illegal alien hot potato before. This is an international version of the game being played down there - that and futeball. I don't blame most of the people for trying to get out of increasingly shitholic places, but I guess you've just got to fix your own places. This ain't the 1800s. Most countries are full enough...
All that written, my real impetus to write this post was the one map below. Peak Stupidity loves our Geography.

Note a quirk here, something the lack of a legend doesn't help with. It looks to me like the left-leaning countries, none dare call them Communist(?) - are depicted in red. The new allegedly right-leaning countries are depicted in blue. Now there's a bit of common sense that you just don't see on maps in this country. For the life of me, most times I STILL have to think "Oh, right, it's backwards... need to flip it around."
This map is based on the leaders of the countries, so it only means so much. The colors may not have much permanence. It is interesting to see Brazil in red, a country that is said to have had its own cheatfest election back in '22. The incumbent Jair Bolsonaro was allegedly beaten by Communist Lula da Silva 50.9 - 49.1%. Mr. Bolsonaro has been given the '21-'24 Trump treatment, this in a country with even less rule-of-law.
Then there's Venezuela (kinda wish we'd just stay away), a basket case, from Crown Jewel only 40 years back. My feeling from talking to people from Columbia is that it's a much better place than during the worst of the drug production years of the 1990s. The Guiana's? Besides the rocket launching site in French Guiana, these places are demographically "unsound"**. I mean, the Jonestown Massacre was probably the best thing that's ever happened in the Guianas!
Bolivia is a mystery, known about or visited by only Los Banditos Yanquis, as far as I know. Paraguay, sure, I can see it being blue, what with the grandsons of Nazis and all residing there. A poor Commie doesn't stand a chance.
Uruguay, well, our report about the place is still coming - sorry about the delay. I just read that in the '24 election, in a run-off just before we visited, one Yamandú Orsi of the Broad Front defeated Álvaro Delgado of the Republican Coalition. The former is also big in the Movement of Popular Participation. OK, if you're in a country with parties named "fronts", expect Communism to arrive any day. The Broad Front and the Movement of Popular Participation. That's extremely Monty Pythonesque. "What ever happened to the Broad People's Popular Front, Reg?" "That's them over there on the side of the building. "Splitters!"

That mural with the whole set of (Steve Sailer-coined) Conquistador-Americans must have been there from before the election. I saw this in Colonia del Sacramento. In Montevideo, I "snapped" the following picture:

Except for the first guy to chime in, I found this pretty refreshing, I mean if you're gonna have graffiti everywhere... which Montevideo most certainly does.
Finally, regarding the map, one could probably extend the red right on up the road, through the Darien Gap ... and on up, bypassing only El Salvador (based on leadership only, remember), right up through
No, that wasn't finally actually. If we're gonna mention the country Chile, we will have to include the weather report. It's a big country north-south-wise, with various micro-climates and large features. I am primarily interested in the weather on January 6th of '14:
* Thanks go to commenter E.H. Hail for his bringing this term to light here. (That's in regard to a certain orange dude.)
** I had an idea that these countries that hardly any Americans know about, and the less the FedGov does the better, would be good bug-out places. The demographics nixed that one.
Comments:
The Alarmist
Thursday - December 18th 2025 3:21PM MST
PS
I will start to believe these “far right wing extremists” are a problem when they start murdering nuns.
I will start to believe these “far right wing extremists” are a problem when they start murdering nuns.
Moderator
Thursday - December 18th 2025 8:33AM MST
PS: "I'm not American, so I don't know if the switching part is true." I didn't realize that, M.
Yes, I've written about this deal before, with some help from info in a Steve Sailer post or 2 from way back. My friend and I had wondered since 2000, the last time we were sure it was always R-red and D-blue from then on. I think the switching part was true, as Steve Sailer almost always has his fact right. Plus, he's got a pretty good memory.
The Canadian colors might go back to before your average Canadian (or people anywhere) had color TV sets. In the B&W era they'd have found a way. I realize the colors are for more than the TV election returns anyway.
Have a good morning, M.
Yes, I've written about this deal before, with some help from info in a Steve Sailer post or 2 from way back. My friend and I had wondered since 2000, the last time we were sure it was always R-red and D-blue from then on. I think the switching part was true, as Steve Sailer almost always has his fact right. Plus, he's got a pretty good memory.
The Canadian colors might go back to before your average Canadian (or people anywhere) had color TV sets. In the B&W era they'd have found a way. I realize the colors are for more than the TV election returns anyway.
Have a good morning, M.
M
Thursday - December 18th 2025 5:50AM MST
PS
From what I've read the US red/blue thing got crystallized in the 2000 election.
Before that the TV news (the only thing most people remember) switched who was red and who was blue each election, but the dispute over that one lasted so long it ended up being part of the brand.
I'm not American, so I don't know if the switching part is true.
The Canadian parties have the colors (Conservative blue, Liberal red, NDP orange) as part of their brand for a long time (at least 50 years which is as long as I can remember being politically interested), so that makes this story even stranger to me.
From what I've read the US red/blue thing got crystallized in the 2000 election.
Before that the TV news (the only thing most people remember) switched who was red and who was blue each election, but the dispute over that one lasted so long it ended up being part of the brand.
I'm not American, so I don't know if the switching part is true.
The Canadian parties have the colors (Conservative blue, Liberal red, NDP orange) as part of their brand for a long time (at least 50 years which is as long as I can remember being politically interested), so that makes this story even stranger to me.
I wonder if anyone reading has seen "The Penguin Lessons". I've been meaning to write a review - it takes place in Argentina during some of these troubles.