Technopower and populism: Who threatens Latin America the most?

American politics is experiencing one of its most dramatic internal fractures since the Civil War. At the epicenter of this struggle are not the traditional parties, but two figures who […]
Technological sovereignty in the digital age

There is a key question that haunts the topic raised, as Yuval Noah Harari already did in his book ‘Nexus’: Should we first better understand what information is, how it […]
The Geopolitics of Economic Relationships in Ibero-America: Beyond Atlanticist Dependency

The unipolar world order, shaped by Atlanticist institutions and driven by the geopolitical and economic dominance of the Collective West (led by the United States and NATO), is showing signs […]
Denationalization of Latin America’s Energy Resources and the Eternal Condemnation of Underdevelopment

Introduction We could point to numerous examples across the continent that reveal the existence of an economic model which, even in the 21st century, could be described as semi-colonial. This […]
Latin America’s Energy Future in a Multipolar World

Latin America is endowed with vast energy resources that offer significant potential for economic growth and geopolitical influence. The region boasts some of the world’s largest oil reserves, with Venezuela […]
Resurgent Hispanicity: Multipolarity is the way to end the depredation of Anglo-Saxon civilization

Behind the “evils of Hispanic Civilization” we can almost always find the shadow of England, and due to their historical continuity, the United Kingdom and the United States. But now […]
The influence of the European Union in Latin America

Over the past few decades, Latin America’s ties with the European Union have fluctuated largely due to the needs of globalist European centrism. From Brussels, the nations of Latin America […]
Mercosur at the Crossroads

The “Southern Common Market”, better known as Mercosur, is the leading Ibero-American trade bloc. Focused specifically on the so-called “Southern Cone” of South America, it brings together Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, […]
Constant geoeconomic storm over the Strait of Magellan and the Panama Canal

External interference in the maritime routes of Spanish-speaking territories has consistently hampered the economic development of Ibero-America. Before the Treaty of Utrecht in 1714, pirate expeditions against the coasts of […]
The South also sails: Magallanes and Panama between neutrality and conflict

As the Panama Canal faces external and climatic pressures, the Strait of Magellan is gaining prominence in the struggle for control of global shipping routes. In the competition for global […]