Showing posts with label South America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South America. Show all posts

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Thanks to Starlink Argentina has now more than 2 million additional Internet users

Good news!

"In Argentina, where such a [government Internet] ban was recently lifted, two million people have connected to Starlink, many of whom live in remote areas of the country."

"“When Javier Milei became president of Argentina in December 2023, one his first measures as part of a package of wide-ranging deregulations was to open up the economy to satellite internet. ..."

Doomslayer: Progress Roundup

Starlink Connects Millions of People in Argentina

Argentina Graph of the Day: Starlink Connects Millions of People




Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Venezuelan first lady’s other job: tending a family crime dynasty and crime business

Another Me Too!

"The Venezuelan first lady’s other job: tending a family crime dynasty.
When DEA agents flew Nicolás Maduro to New York to face narcoterrorism charges, beside him was his wife, Cilia Flores. Pursued for years by the Drug Enforcement Administration, Flores was an alleged crime lord in her own right.
A federal indictment unsealed the day U.S. commandos pulled Flores and Maduro from Caracas accused her of conspiring with Venezuelan officials to smuggle cocaine into the U.S., accepting bribes to allow drug-trafficking flights and ordering murders.
According to court records and former associates, she rewarded a web of relatives with drug routes, state contracts and impunity. In a January appearance in federal court, Flores pleaded not guilty and said she was “completely innocent.”"

Wall Street Journal What's news


Cilia Flores


The economy of Paraguay

Good news!

"Paraguay’s economy has grown by an average of 4 percent annually for two decades—a record of stability that helped earn it investment-grade credit ratings and is now drawing in foreign investors." (Source)

Monday, March 23, 2026

New archaeological dating of ancient Chilean site reopens controversy of first human colonization of South America

Amazing stuff! How exact a science is stratigraphy?

"It is among the most hotly contested topics in archaeology: When did people first arrive in the Americas? A few decades ago, there was consensus that people began populating North America no earlier than about 13,000 years ago, as evidenced by well-dated spearheads with characteristic fluted bases known as Clovis points, named for the city in New Mexico near the archaeological site where they were first identified in 1929.
Then, in the 1970s, an archaeologist named Tom Dillehay claimed to have dated stone tools and other artifacts found at a site in southern Chile to 14,500 years ago—a time when much of North America would have still be covered in impassable glaciers.

Few gave the claims from that site, known as Monte Verde, much credence until an independent cadre of researchers visited it in 1997 and confirmed the dates . The result sent shockwaves through the archaeological community and overturned the so-called “Clovis first” paradigm in favor of a new “pre-Clovis” one. This interpretation spurred scientists to retool their hypotheses for how and when people entered the continent; a coastal migration hypothesis has since gained popularity in its wake. Several other sites throughout the Americas have since been dated to before 13,000 years, and the matter appeared settled. ...

A study published last week in Science saw one such “pre-Clovis” skeptic revisiting Monte Verde—or sites close to it, as the original dig site has since been destroyed—and redating the sediment layers from which the supposedly human made artifacts were said to have come.  ...

In the authors’ analysis, the key layers aren’t 14,500 years old, but instead only 8200 to 4200 years old. The confusion, they argued in the paper, was caused by younger sedimentary material being deposited below older layers by a river’s flow, which scrambled the region’s stratigraphy.

Why did it take so long to uncover this? “The simple answer is that the archaeological site is quite remote and was not visited by many archeologists, geomorphologists, or Quaternary geologists (studying the past 2.6 million years) who could have identified the prominent volcanic ash, the exposed wood bed that is the source for the 14,000-year-old radiocarbon ages, and identified that the site is situated on an abandoned floodplain that had to be younger than the landscape surface,” ...

Critically, these dates from Monte Verde have no impact on the other pre-Clovis sites that have been independently dated, but the brouhaha could lead to enhanced scrutiny and calls for their dates to be replicated. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
There is much debate surrounding the dates of human occupation in the Americas. One site that places South American timing in the pre-Clovis period is Monte Verde II in Chile. This site, however, was mostly only studied by a single group, meaning that replication of the dating has been lacking. Surovell et al. independently examined the site using current approaches and a broader scope and concluded that the site could not be older than 8200 years, significantly younger than the previously determined 14,500 years ...

Abstract
Our understanding of the timing of the human colonization of South America has been anchored by the Monte Verde II site in Chile, reported to date to ~14,500 years before the present (B.P.) and regarded as one of the most secure pre-Clovis archeological sites.
We report the first independent investigation of Monte Verde in the nearly 50 years since initial excavations. We argue that radiocarbon and luminescence dates from alluvial exposures, in combination with the identification of a tephra dated to 11,000 years B.P. stratigraphically underlying the archaeological component, suggest that Monte Verde cannot be older than the Middle Holocene (8200 to 4200 years B.P.). With colonization no longer anchored by Monte Verde, our revised chronology supports a more recent date of human arrival to South America."

ScienceAdviser

A later debut for humans (Perspective, open access) "Stratigraphic analysis resets the time of human arrival in Monte Verde, Chile"



Fig. 1. Map of the study area.


Fig. 2. Ages of geologic deposits and the Monte Verde site.


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Argentina formalizes withdrawal from World Health Organization

Good news! What is the WHO good for? Maybe time for a new international health organization!

"Argentina has officially left the World Health Organization (WHO), the agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health. A year after requesting its withdrawal, the process has been completed, Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno announced.

President Javier Milei’s administration had informed its decision to leave the organization in February 2025, and sent a notification requesting withdrawal on March 17 of last year. 

The move was in line with United States President Donald Trump’s decision to abandon the WHO last year, a process that was completed in January.

“Our country will continue to promote international cooperation in healthcare through our bilateral agreements and regional frameworks, while fully safeguarding its sovereignty and its decision-making authority regarding health policies,” Quirno said in an X post. ..."

Argentina formalizes withdrawal from World Health Organization - Buenos Aires Herald "The moves follows the steps of President Donald Trump and is part of Javier Milei’s alignment with the US"

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Ancient DNA Reveals Twisted Roots of Syphilis Go Back 5,500 Years

Amazing stuff!

"A 5,500-year-old skeleton discovered at an archaeological site in Colombia has now offered up DNA from the spiral-shaped bacterium Treponema pallidum.

This strain, called TE1-3, is not in circulation today, but based on its genome, it belongs to a very old branch, or an "early-diverging sister lineage" of T. pallidum.

It seems to have split off before other subspecies responsible for diseases like syphilis, yaws, bejel, and pinta emerged and spread around the world. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Treponemes are infectious bacteria that cause the human diseases yaws, bejel, syphilis, and pinta. Despite skeletal pathology consistent with treponematosis being present in human remains for millennia, the origin and evolution of these bacteria remain opaque.
Bozzi et al. identified a 5500-year-old Treponema genome during sequencing of human remains from Colombia without skeletal signs of treponematosis (see the Perspective by Zuckerman and Bailey). This genome falls outside of known T. pallidum lineages today, but it has many genetic hallmarks associated with virulence in modern pathogens of these subspecies. This work provides genetic evidence of treponematosis in the Americas thousands of years before the arrival of Europeans and shows the value of screening metagenomic sequences for ancient pathogens. ...

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
The origins and early diversification of Treponema pallidum subspecies, which cause syphilis, yaws, and bejel, remain poorly resolved despite paleopathological evidence for treponemal disease in pre-Columbian populations. Sparse genomic data from ancient, precolonial contexts create a multimillennial disconnect between osteological evidence of treponematosis and its molecular record.

RATIONALE
To better resolve the evolutionary history of T. pallidum, we performed genomic reconstruction and analysis of pathogen DNA detected in shotgun-sequenced DNA data for a human population genomics project.
Although the skeleton showed no macroscopic signs of treponematosis, our metagenomic screening identified T. pallidum in an individual who died ~5500 years ago [5464 to 5309 calendar years before the present (cal yr B.P.), 2σ] and was excavated from Middle Holocene contexts of the Tequendama I rock shelter in Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia.
We applied multiple methods (competitive mapping, phylogenetics reconstructions, genome-wide average nucleotide identity statistics, and patristic distance) to confidently identify this pathogen as T. pallidum, reconstruct the genome (TE1-3), and evaluate its relationship to other genomically characterized Treponema. With this genome, we inferred divergence estimates of TE1-3 from other T. pallidum to reconstruct the early diversification of T. pallidum subspecies.

RESULTS
Our analyses place TE1-3 as an early-diverging sister lineage to all modern T. pallidum subspecies, unveiling a previously unknown subspecies.
Bayesian molecular clock analyses estimate the divergence between TE1-3 and other T. pallidum lineages to ~13,700 years ago [95% highest posterior density (HPD): 6768 to 20,592 cal yr B.P.]. This suggests that the divergence between TE1-3 and the modern, genomically characterized T. pallidum subspecies occurred during the Late Pleistocene to Early Holocene, closely following the peopling of the Americas, whereas the diversification of the known subspecies themselves took place more recently, within the Holocene ~6000 cal yr B.P. (3622 to 9452 cal yr B.P. 95% HPD). After assessing the breadth of coverage, we determined that TE1-3 likely possessed virulence-associated genes found in modern T. pallidum strains, suggesting similar genetic potential for virulence.

CONCLUSION
Our results show the presence and previously unknown diversity of T. pallidum from a Middle Holocene hunter-gatherer context in Sabana de Bogotá, Colombia, extending the genomic record of treponematoses by more than three millennia. TE1-3’s early divergence supports models in which treponemal pathogens had already diversified in the Americas during the Holocene.
The availability of this ancient South American genome provides a rare calibration point for reconstructing the early diversification of T. pallidum subspecies.
This study also underscores the value of metagenomic screening of ancient remains to uncover previously undetectable infectious disease histories in deep time.
These findings open new questions about the timing, routes, and drivers of treponemal spread, and on the longstanding interplay among Treponema pallidum, human hosts, and the broader socioecological landscapes in which these diseases have evolved, persisted, and spread to affect human populations."

Ancient DNA Reveals Twisted Roots of Syphilis Go Back 5,500 Years : ScienceAlert



Deeply divergent Treponema pallidum lineage in the Americas and implications for pathogen evolution.


Friday, January 16, 2026

CIA Director Ratcliffe meets new Venezuelan leader Rodriguez in Caracas, warns country to stop consorting with cartels and US enemies

I presume this is the first high level official visit by a representative of the US government to Venezuela after the abduction of dictator Maduro.

Why the Director of the CIA? What is the message?

CIA chief meets new Venezuelan leader, warns country to stop consorting with cartels and US enemies | Just The News "Just the News obtained three CIA photos of Ratcliffe's visit with Rodriguez, including one of the U.S. spy chief shaking hands with the Venezuelan leader dressed in a bright lime-colored pant suit and sneakers."

Ratcliffe shakes hands with Rodriguez


Brasiliens Präsident Lula zum Mercosur-Abkommen: Eine gerechtere Weltordnung ist möglich

Warum dieser Gastbeitrag des brasilianischen Präsidenten hinter eine paywall ist, scheint eine ziemlich bescheuerte Maßnahme der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung zu sein.

Was meint der linke Präsident von Brasilien (80 Jahre alt) mit einer "gerechteren Weltordnung"? Mehr Sozialismus?

Brasiliens Präsident Lula zum Mercosur-Abkommen: Eine gerechtere Weltordnung ist möglich. | FAZ Ein Gastbeitrag von Von Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Hinter paywall! "Entgegen der Logik von Handelskriegen unterzeichnen wir eines der umfassendsten Abkommen des 21. Jahrhunderts, schreibt Brasiliens Präsident Lula da Silva. Zusammenarbeit ist besser."


Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Präsident von Brasilien


Monday, January 12, 2026

What was the relationship between Venezuela and Cuba since Chavez became dictator according to President Trump

Food for thought! As far as Cuba is concerned it sounds very familiar!

"Cuba lived, for many years, on large amounts of OIL and MONEY from Venezuela. In return, Cuba provided “Security Services” for the last two Venezuelan dictators, BUT NOT ANYMORE! Most of those Cubans are DEAD from last weeks U.S.A. attack, and Venezuela doesn’t need protection anymore from the thugs and extortionists who held them hostage for so many years. Venezuela now has the United States of America, the most powerful military in the World (by far!), to protect them, and protect them we will. THERE WILL BE NO MORE OIL OR MONEY GOING TO CUBA - ZERO! I strongly suggest they make a deal, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DJT"

Source



Wednesday, January 07, 2026

Venezuela crisis: UN aid effort continues amid political upheaval | UN News. Really!

What a joke! Maybe it is time if not long overdue for Western countries to leave the UN and form their own organisation (including humanitarian aid).

Venezuela used to be and ought to be one of the richest countries in South America if not Latin America were it not for two incompetent and kleptocratic dictators like Chavez/Maduro!

"Venezuela’s political shock has sharpened global attention on a country already facing one of the world’s largest humanitarian and displacement crises. For the United Nations, the priority remains unchanged: protecting lives, sustaining basic services and supporting Venezuelans at home and across the region.

The backdrop
  • Venezuela has endured years of economic collapse, political instability, hyperinflation and economic sanctions from Washington, compounded by floods, landslides and other climate shocks.
  • The recent seizure of President Nicolás Maduro by US special forces has added a new layer of uncertainty to an already volatile situation.
  • According to the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, 7.9 million people — more than a quarter of the population — need urgent humanitarian assistance.
..."

Venezuela crisis: UN aid effort continues amid political upheaval | UN News

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

Cuba says 32 Cuban officers were killed in US operation in Venezuela. Really!

In how many countries around the world has the Cuban regime been active?

When dictators of two countries collaborate!

"An American military operation in Venezuela killed 32 Cuban officers over the weekend, the Cuban government said Sunday in the first official death count provided of the American strikes in the South American nation.

The Cuban military and police officers were on a mission the Caribbean country’s military was carrying out at the request of Venezuela’s government, according to a statement read on Cuban state TV on Sunday night. ...

Cuba is a close ally of Venezuela’s government and has sent military and police forces to assist in operations for years. ..."

Cuba says 32 Cuban officers were killed in US operation in Venezuela