tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8132273.post1709993473497487312..comments2023-05-01T11:44:04.490-03:00Comments on D for Disorientation: Shadows of the dictatorshipPablohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08296074005654785159noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8132273.post-32708921203969932482008-08-12T12:28:00.000-03:002008-08-12T12:28:00.000-03:00Thanks for this post. New to your blog and glad to...Thanks for this post. New to your blog and glad to see someone tackling the subject. I've often questioned the veracity of claims from the right that the government is made up of "montoneros," who - as it is often alleged - should be on trial just as the militares are. Obviously, there is a significant difference between being a supporter of a left-wing political organization and being convicted of murdering people in a "terrorist" attack. That being said, I wonder if any of these claims are actually based on anything more than just hyperbole.<BR/><BR/>Reading some of the commentaries in publications like La Nacion, you might suspect that functionaries such as Carlos Kunkel and Rafael Bielsa had verifiably taken part in "terrorist" acts in the 70s. Is there any truth to these accusations or is the only aspect of this that is based in reality the fact that they may have been part of student organizations etc. that in theory supported left-wing causes and/or violence...?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com