Tenemos un ministro de economía muy OP.
Estos nos representan. Que desastre.
despues de cagarla de esa manera, minimo, hace perfil bajo.... no trate de pilotearla y menos que menos dandotela de groso capo.
es una ALTA cagada la que hizo. no sabia numeros ni tenia respuestas. el tipo que es ministro de econocmia NO SABE HABLAR INGLES...
en cualquier pais serio, se le pide la renuncia inmediatamente.
"When your inner instincts take control, your mind goes blank, your senses turn sharp, your body moves easy like a feather and the only thing you see is victory..."
despues de cagarla de esa manera, minimo, hace perfil bajo.... no trate de pilotearla y menos que menos dandotela de groso capo.
es una ALTA cagada la que hizo. no sabia numeros ni tenia respuestas. el tipo que es ministro de econocmia NO SABE HABLAR INGLES... en cualquier pais serio, se le pide la renuncia inmediatamente.
Coincido plenamente en que es un imbécil a radiocontrol, pero me causó mucha gracia eso xD
Even before she was elected president of Argentina, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner carried the haze of corruption. In the most famous case, an emissary from Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela, was discovered at the Buenos Aires airport carrying a briefcase stuffed with $800,000 in cash, destined, he later told the FBI, to support Kirchner’s presidential bid. Kirchner denied the allegation. Within Argentina, many question the huge fortune Kirchner and her late husband Nestor amassed since taking public office. Her declared personal wealth stands at $13.8 million, up from $500,000 when the couple first entered national politics. Kirchner cites income from real estate and hotels the couple had purchased to explain the 2,600 percent return on the couple’s investment purse. Corruption watchers complain that her government has neutered government oversight, giving auditing posts to cronies compromised by conflicts of interest. The result: corruption cases take an average of 14 years to work through the system, according to the non-profit Center for the Study and Prevention of Economic Crimes, and only 15 in 750 cases have led to convictions.
"When your inner instincts take control, your mind goes blank, your senses turn sharp, your body moves easy like a feather and the only thing you see is victory..."
Even before she was elected president of Argentina, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner carried the haze of corruption. In the most famous case, an emissary from Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela, was discovered at the Buenos Aires airport carrying a briefcase stuffed with $800,000 in cash, destined, he later told the FBI, to support Kirchner’s presidential bid. Kirchner denied the allegation. Within Argentina, many question the huge fortune Kirchner and her late husband Nestor amassed since taking public office. Her declared personal wealth stands at $13.8 million, up from $500,000 when the couple first entered national politics. Kirchner cites income from real estate and hotels the couple had purchased to explain the 2,600 percent return on the couple’s investment purse. Corruption watchers complain that her government has neutered government oversight, giving auditing posts to cronies compromised by conflicts of interest. The result: corruption cases take an average of 14 years to work through the system, according to the non-profit Center for the Study and Prevention of Economic Crimes, and only 15 in 750 cases have led to convictions.
Lo que es la codicia chabon, ya tenes una fortuna para tener lo que se te canta, y encima queres mas.
La gente me da asco.