Ecuador’s Indigenous Protests Expose the Pitfalls of Globalist Policies and Authoritarian Tactics
As Ecuador’s largest indigenous movement intensifies protests against diesel subsidy cuts, the government’s authoritarian response threatens national stability—an unfolding crisis with direct lessons for America’s fight to protect its own sovereignty.
In Ecuador, eleven days of sustained protests led by the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities (CONAIE) reveal a stark clash between grassroots sovereignty and heavy-handed government policies aligned with globalist economic prescriptions. The decision by President Daniel Noboa to eliminate the diesel subsidy—causing prices to surge from $1.80 to over $2.80 per gallon—has ignited a firestorm of resistance that challenges not only his administration but exposes deeper structural flaws imposed on resource-rich nations. Why Are Indigenous Voices Fighting So Fiercely? The indigenous movement represents a backbone of Ecuador's identity and social fabric, defending their rights against what they label "neoliberal measures"...
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