Share

Who Are You, Javier Milei — and What Are You Doing in Our Zionist Feed?

חאבייר מיליי

Argentina: the land of steak, tango, and a president who yells at the economy.

If two years ago someone had told us that Argentina — the country of gauchos, Malbec, and endless inflation — would elect a libertarian rock star with a chainsaw and a Twitter account, we’d have laughed.
But ever since Javier Gerardo Milei stormed into power in December 2023, the world has learned what happens when libertarian economics meets political showmanship.

And somehow, this wild-haired, fast-talking Argentine economist has ended up right in the middle of the Zionist Twitter feed.
Because, honestly — who could resist a South American president waving an Israeli flag while quoting the Torah and talking about free markets during a discussion on European antisemitism?

Milei in a Nutshell: The Anarchist with a Chainsaw

Javier Milei, 54, was a celebrity long before he became Argentina’s president.
A self-described “anarcho-capitalist,” he rose to fame as an economist railing against the Argentine Central Bank — which he called “a factory of poverty” — and promising to slash government spending. Literally. With an actual chainsaw he brought to campaign rallies.

Yes, the man wielded a chainsaw on live television to demonstrate how he’d “cut through bureaucracy.”
The media dubbed him “The Joker of Economics.”
The Argentine public — exhausted after decades of triple-digit inflation — decided to hand him the keys and see what happens.

-- פרסומת --

Since taking office, Milei has eliminated dozens of regulations, sold off state-owned companies, and cut taxes for businesses.
The results? Inflation dropped from a staggering 210% to 86% by October 2025 — still absurd, but at least less apocalyptic — and the Buenos Aires stock market rebounded like a leftover asado reheated to perfection.

Love at First Scroll: Milei and the Zionist Feed

So why is Milei suddenly a star of Israeli social media?
First, because he doesn’t just support Israel — he celebrates it.

In his victory speech, he pledged to move Argentina’s embassy to Jerusalem — a promise he kept in July 2025, to the horror of anti-Israel activists in Buenos Aires.
He frequently appears draped in Israeli flags, quotes Scripture in public events, and speaks with open admiration for the Jewish people — even as he remains a practicing Catholic.

Latin America’s left-wing media quickly branded him a “Zionist neo-colonialist,” which, naturally, only boosted his popularity among Israeli right-wing circles.

To Israelis, Milei is exactly the kind of leader we love watching from afar: charismatic, unapologetic, a disruptor who forces the old elites to swallow their tongues — while throwing verbal darts at the UN, Brussels, and local socialists for dessert.

חאבייר מיליי

When Antisemitism Rises, Milei Breaks the Pattern

While antisemitism in Europe hit new records in 2025 — with anti-Israel marches in Berlin, vandalized Jewish memorials in France, and anti-Israel resolutions in the UN Human Rights Council — a loud, eccentric president from South America stood up and said:
“I stand with Israel. Period.”

That sentence alone short-circuited European diplomats.
They’re used to Latin American leaders joining the “anti-occupation” chorus, not breaking ranks with it.

But here was Argentina — a country with one of the largest Jewish populations in the region, yet a long, uneasy history with antisemitism and dictatorship — suddenly aligning with Jerusalem instead of Brussels.

The Enemies List: Tehran, Caracas, and Everyone in Between

Unsurprisingly, Milei’s stance triggered rage across the usual corners.
Iran labeled Argentina “a Zionist puppet,” while Venezuela’s socialist regime called his government “a betrayal of Latin solidarity.”

Milei’s response on X (formerly Twitter)?

“Better to be a puppet of freedom than a servant of tyrants.”

And that, in a nutshell, is Milei’s foreign policy: bold, sarcastic, and utterly immune to diplomatic politeness.

Cynical Humor as a Foreign Policy Tool

When the UN condemned Israel for its Gaza operation in September 2025, Milei fired off another viral tweet:

“Once again, the United Nations proves it’s united only in hating Jews.
Good thing Israel doesn’t need their blessing to defend itself.”

The tweet went viral in Israel — faster than a hummus meme — and made European ambassadors in Buenos Aires break into nervous sweat during press conferences.
The same European officials who usually lecture Israel on morality discovered that the Argentine president simply doesn’t care what they think.

Milei vs. the World: Brussels, Beijing, and the Kremlin

By late 2025, Milei found himself in a global tangle:

  • Brussels: The EU imposed trade restrictions on Argentina over Milei’s rollback of environmental regulations.
  • Beijing: China fumed as Argentina withdrew from several Belt and Road projects and halted Chinese subsidies.
  • Moscow: Putin wasn’t amused by Argentina’s growing friendship with Israel and Washington.

Milei’s motivation is clear: he wants Argentina free from dependency on autocratic powers — and aligned with democracies that value freedom and innovation.
It’s a risky bet, but one that wins him respect from Zionist audiences and mockery from European cartoonists.

The Jewish-Zionist View: Admired, But Not Naïve

From an Israeli perspective, it’s hard not to feel warmth toward a leader who waves the Israeli flag and calls out antisemitism in the global arena.
After years of hypocrisy and double standards, Milei feels like a fresh breeze from the pampas.

But Israelis are also realists.
Argentina’s history isn’t easily erased — from harboring Nazi fugitives after World War II to the terrorist bombings of Jewish centers in Buenos Aires during the 1990s.
Milei might be sincerely pro-Israel, but he’s fighting against entrenched bureaucrats, unions, and military circles that don’t necessarily share his enthusiasm.

ארגנטינה

The President Who Understands the Feed

Javier Milei is a new political species: part economist, part stand-up philosopher, part internet meme.
He believes in radical freedom — and isn’t afraid to choose sides in the global culture war.

In a world where leaders prefer to sit quietly on the fence, Milei climbed up there waving an Israeli flag in one hand — and a chainsaw in the other.

He may not fix Argentina overnight, but in the eyes of Israel’s online right-wing, he’s already become a kind of digital folk hero:
a chaotic, unapologetic, and delightfully unpredictable reminder that even one photo with a blue-and-white flag can ignite an international debate.

Milei 2025: The Most Zionist President Twitter Has Ever Seen

Just another ordinary video of Argentina’s president, Javier Milei, singing Hava Nagila at a mass rally.

Because in 2025 — that’s what “normal” looks like in Buenos Aires.

👀 לגלות עוד מהאתר אינטליגנטי is סקסי
הירשמו כדי לקבל את הפוסטים האחרונים אל המייל שלכם
Loading
-- פרסומת --

You may also like

Accessability Menu
×