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#Post#: 110--------------------------------------------------
Eye tracking to find out how tablets are used
By: anno rani Date: September 10, 2023, 6:03 am
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In January 2020, several Argentine media briefly focused on a
railway union activist. Mónica Schlotthauer had gone from her
seat in Congress to her usual job on the railroad: cleaning the
Once station, located in the center of the city of Buenos Aires.
In times of criticism of the "political caste", the case of this
parliamentarian was an exception. A "revolving door" not towards
companies, as often happens, but towards her usual work, from
where she carries out her activism for a "class" unionism. A
year later, Alejandro Vilca, until then a garbage collector,
assumed another seat. He obtained 25% of the votes in the
northern province of Jujuy, on the border with Bolivia, and on
May 8 of this year he revalidated his popularity with 13%. of
the votes as a candidate for governor.
Born in 2011, the FIT was an unprecedented event in an Phone
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space prone to fragmentation like few
others: that of the followers of the Russian Bolshevik leader
Leon Trotsky, murdered by Stalin's hitman in 1940 (a story
popularized by the novel The Man Who I loved dogs , by the Cuban
Leonardo Padura). And more recently it incorporated other groups
and became the FIT-Unidad (FIT-U). Argentina, along with France,
is one of the few countries in which Trotskyism has significant
political-cultural weight in the left field.
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But while in France the Trotskyists are going through a severe
crisis, in Argentina today they are "the left" and have a
parliamentary bench. The reason is not difficult to understand:
after the formation of the Frente de Todos (name of the
pan-Peronist coalition that governs the country), the Troskos
constitute the only significant left outside the expanded
Peronist space, which since the 2000s has presented a profile of
center-left, now in the process of mutation.
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