Analyzes in terms of cycles sometimes lead to perceptions that exaggerate trends Last Database and lose the ability to look at the tensions that run through Latin American politics. Both on the left and on the right, in these years the successions in several countries short-circuited the linear Last Database continuities of both the policies and the “natural” leaderships of each sector. Eggs that break When Álvaro Uribe handed over command to Juan Manuel Santos in 2010, he also passed on his legacy Last Database represented in his famous “three little eggs”: democratic security.
Investor confidence and social cohesion. In addition to Last Database representing his heritage, this delivery meant a mandate to his successor and former Minister of Last Database Defense: the boundaries of what Santos could do were marked by these little eggs, which had the axes of Uribe hegemony written in invisible ink, which then led many years showing signs of strength and that the electoral victory of Santos seemed to corroborate. However, the script and the guardianship that Uribe imagined did not remain in force much longer after that symbolic act. One of the toughest Last Database challenges posed to Uribe came precisely from Santos wh.
Despite being part of the hard wing, It didn't take long for him to Last Database confront him politically and publicly, only to end up noisily breaking off their relationship and becoming a declared political enemy. At the beginning of 2014, in fact, Uribe exhibited a basket with three damaged Last Database eggs at a public event, and in an act that did not spare theatrics, he asked the people around him if the Last Database Santos government had known how to take care of those eggs. Obviously, the public shouted “No” and Uribe confirmed: “They broke them. There wasn't even enough left to [make an] omelette." Santos had his own ideas and objectives –far removed from those of.