Talk:Juan Perón

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Former good article nomineeJuan Perón was a History good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
February 6, 2009Good article nomineeNot listed
On this day...Facts from this article were featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "On this day..." column on February 24, 2005, February 24, 2006, February 24, 2007, February 24, 2008, February 24, 2009, February 24, 2010, February 24, 2015, February 24, 2016, and February 24, 2017.

Placed the POV tag[edit]

The previous talk page was rather lengthy, so I took the liberty of archiving it. I don't know if I did a very good job with the archiving. If someone else can do a better job, please do.

That aside, I placed a POV tag at the top of this page. I placed it there because while it is true that Juan Peron allowed Nazi criminals into Argentina, it is also true that he himself was not anti-Semitic, he did not harass the Jewish community but allowed it to flourish, and that one of his allies in Peronism was José Ber Gelbard, a Jewish man. And Peronism itself contained no anti-Semitism. There were no concentration camps in Argentina.

When told without nuance, the recounting of Juan Peron's allowance of Nazi criminals into the country can paint an unfair portrait of him. As previous editors have mentioned, Germany has deep roots in Argentina that predate Juan Peron and also post-date Juan Peron. Also, it was not only Juan Peron who granted political asylum to Nazi refugees. As is mentioned in the article for ratlines, Nazi criminals made their way into many countries, perhaps the United States and Canada. (It should also be noted that there was an American Nazi Party in the United States and that in the beginning the United States government had also supported Hitler and Mussolini. And apparently there is evidence that Prescott Bush, grandfather of the current president of the United States, collaborated with the Nazis as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prescott_Bush#Nazi_collaboration .) Also, while it is true that Juan Peron had sided with the Axis powers, it is also true that when Argentina did enter the war, they declared war against Germany.

When presented without nuance and historical context, the fact that Juan Peron allowed Nazi criminals into the country can make it appear that he himself agreed with what happened in the Holocaust and he himself was an anti-Semite. And then this is used as leverage in the anti-Peronist argument that Peron himself was a monster. But the nuanced truth is that while Juan Peron did allow Nazis into the country and had sided with the Axis, he himself was not anti-Semitic and did not slaughter Jewish people. Juan Peron's Argentina established diplomatic relations with Israel in 1948.

If this is to truly be a neutral article, then it must contains both sides of the story. Until then, this is a POV article giving an inaccurate and unfair portrait of Juan Peron. My suggestion is that a section called "Juan Peron and the Jewish population of Argentina" be created to balance out the section about the ratlines.

Thank you.

Argentine lad (talk) 21:30, 18 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Peron was a fascist mass murderer who sheltered war criminals. If anything, this article is bending over backwards to pretend that he was a legitimate politician. Shame on you for promoting this pretense. 2601:647:4F00:1AC8:C95A:E899:BDE9:A6D5 (talk) 08:34, 17 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]
I have written the following section for this article. If this article or any of its editors have hopes of retaining Wikipedia's policy of neutrality, then it is only right that this side of the story be shared and this section remain. These are verifiable third-party, reputable and notable sources:
==Juan Perón and the Jewish community of Argentina==
Prior to his assent to power in Argentina, the Jewish population in Argentina was the largest Jewish population in Latin America. After becoming president of Argentina, Juan Perón sought out the Jewish community for participation in his government, and one of his advisors was a Jewish man from Poland named José Ber Gelbard. Because Peronism contains no anti-Semitic or other racial bias, there were no concentration camps in Juan Perón's Argentina. [1] The Jewish Virtual Library writes that while Juan Perón had sympathized with the Axis powers, "Perón also expressed sympathy for Jewish rights and established diplomatic relations with Israel in 1949. Since then, more than 45,000 Jews have immigrated to Israel from Argentina." [2] In the book Inside Argentina from Peron to Menem author Laurence Levine, former president of the US-Argentine Chamber of Commerce, writes: "although anti-Semitism existed in Argentina, Perón's own views and his political associations were not anti-Semitic.... [3] And while Juan Perón's Argentina allowed many Nazi criminals to take refuge in Argentina, Juan Perón's Argentina also accepted more Jewish immigrants than any other country in Latin America, which in part accounts for the fact that Argentina to this day has a population of over 200,000 Jewish citizens, the largest in Latin America and one of the largest in the world. [4]
Argentine lad (talk) 22:11, 18 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding this section of the article I have a couple of comments and few edits. First,Argentine lad did quite a job in finding quotes and sourcing this section. Now for the comments:
In General. Unless I missed it, the article before the edit didn't accuse Peron of being an antisemite and from the historians I've read I don't recall such accusation, so I don't get the point of writing a section trying to refute something that it doesn't seem to be an issue. Actually brings the reader to the question that he might have been accused of being an antisemite if such a section exists. I would like to know other editors opinion on this. In light of all the work the editor went through to add it, I will not start a whole edit war on the whole section. But IMHO the whole section is unnecessary. It will be like adding another section on Peron and the Italians, Peron and the Irish, etc.
In particular. 1. Highlighting opinions of Page, describing Peron as a "pacifist", is highly POV. It is Page opinion on Peron and not a fact. We can start quoting authors left and right on the subject without bring any light on the issue. I propose deleting that quote. 2. "Perón sought out the Jewish community for participation in his government", the point that Gelbard was a close confidant doesn't mean that he sought out the whole community. More evidence on this is needed to include that sentence. 3. "Because Peronism, the political philosophy Juan Perón developed, contains no anti-Semitic or other racial bias, there were no concentration camps in Perón's Argentina" Of course there were no concentration camps in Argentina. I don't understand why to include that. 4. Time Magazine writes "in practice the Perón regime resembled hardly at all the defeated European fascist dictatorships." The sourced article actually argues Peron's closer associations with the fascist. Wronk link? 5. "Juan Perón allowed Nazi criminals into the country in hopes of acquiring advanced German technology developed during the war" Which technology was Eichman an expert in?. That theory doesn't hold. 6. Eva's photo belongs in Eva's wiki not here.
In summary my opinion is that the whole section should be deleted. But for now, I will just make these changes. Bakersville (talk) 22:18, 23 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I have replaced the paragraphs in their entirety save for the picture of Eva Peron (despite the fact that it is perhaps not that outrageous to think that the man's wife and closest political partner would be shown on his article). You had no right to remove what you removed. And you have no right to say that the works of Joseph Page and Tomas Eloy Martinez [1] do not deserve to be on this page. Martinez is director of Latin American studies at Rutger's University. Page's biography of Juan Peron [2] is a major work and a former best seller.

The reason it is necessary to have a section like this on Juan Peron's page is because in the English speaking world people have a misperception of him as being a Nazi, and this is enhanced by there being an entire section about him allowing Nazis into Argentina. The argument could very easily be made that this is a minor aspect of his career and legacy and deserves perhaps a sentence or two in his biography, not an entire section. And I notice that the Spanish language section has absolutely NO reference to him allowing Nazis into the country. http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Domingo_Per%C3%B3n So, it becomes apparent that this is an aspect of his story with a cultural focus. In the English speaking world it seems to be a big deal that he allowed Nazis into the country. In Latin America, in the Spanish speaking world, it is such a non-issue that it isn't even mentioned in his biography.

So, I ask, why is this section necessary about allowing Nazis into Argentina? If you believe that section is necessary, then why is it not necessary to have another section that puts the whole situation into a larger context, explaining that German culture is deep in Argentina and pre-dates Juan Peron?

But forgive me for thinking that it was the goal of a Wikipedia article on Juan Peron to be an article about Juan Peron. Argentine lad (talk) 09:37, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The entire quote from Laurence Levine is:
"The American government demonstrated no knowledge of Perón's deep admiration for Italy (and his distaste for Germany, whose culture he found too rigid). Nor did they appreciate that although anti-Semitism existed in Argentina, Perón's own views and his political associations were not anti-Semitic. They paid no attention to the fact that Perón sought out the Jewish community in Argentina to assist in developing his policies and that one of his most important allies in organizing the industrial sector was José Ber Gelbard, a Jewish immigrant from Poland."
Levine, Laurence. "Inside Argentina from Peron to Menem." Edwin House Publishing. New York: 2001. ISBN 0964924773 [3]

-- Argentine lad (talk) 09:46, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Please note that even though I think the section is unnecessary I did not deleted it. I made edits and I explained why. Please refer to my explanations in particular. Bakersville (talk) 11:53, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Going through the archived comments of the talk page (archived by Argentine Lad). I've noticed that all the edits by Argentine Lad are copied from a previous discussion in talk from another editor (If you are the same editor under different name please confirm). This may explain the out of context quoting. Please comply with WP:CITE#SAYWHEREYOUGOTIT talk 13:44, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

That's not true. I have added some new material, and I have personally verified that those quotes are indeed where they say they are. I have violate no rule on Wikipedia.

I have already mentioned that the points I raise were brought up by other editors on this talk page. One editor mentioned that when talking about Nazism in Argentina we are talking about Argentina and not Juan Peron. Other editors mentioned that Peron was not fascist. Another editor supplied a list of quotes backing this up. And I added some information I found on my own, such as the information from the Jewish Virtual Library. I am doing what other editors have not done: combine the comments of these editors into contributions on the article discussion page, DARING to go against the subtext of this article which seems to be hell bent on the idea that Peron was a fascist and a nazi.

The comments are not out of context, and they are entirely cited. I have indeed complied with WP:CITE#SAYWHEREYOUGOTIT. Most of the books quoted here are available on Amazon.com and you can go and search within the book contents to see that the quotes are there. Others I have checked at the library. Still others are articles available online, such as the references from Jewish Virtual Library. These references are not out of context and they are cited.

I understand that many of you do not like Juan Peron. But you are letting your anti-Peron bias masquerade as neutral research, which isn't fair. Most serious biographers of Juan Peron would argue that his participation in the ratlines was a minor aspect of his career and doesn't even deserve a great mention in his biography. It deserves mention on the article about the ratlines. But if it is going to be here, then it is only fair that a counter balance be present to show both sides. Please comply with Wikipedia's rules about neutrality.

If you remove the information I have supplied in this article you are doing so simply because it disputes your own personal view of Juan Peron, as it has become apparent that many of you want him portrayed as an evil nazi who helped murder millions of Jews in the holocaust. That's your personal interpretation. It is not historical fact. You have no right to remove the information I've supplied. Your personal bias does not give you mandate. Argentine lad (talk) 21:44, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Peron was indeed an evil Nazi. This is a matter of historical fact. Whatever emotional motives you have for denying this will not change this fact. 2601:647:4F00:1AC8:C95A:E899:BDE9:A6D5 (talk) 08:41, 17 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The material I deleted, I did because is either false (like the Time article quote) or plainly ilogical (he assisted the Nazi criminals for technological advances). Obviously he did not help the nazis murder millions of Jews, and whoever states that doesn't read any history (or geography). But if you want to praise Peron, maybe you should try better that writing that he had a jewish minister and he did not build concentration camps. Please address my comments on your edits: In particular. 1. Highlighting opinions of Page, describing Peron as a "pacifist", is highly POV. It is Page opinion on Peron and not a fact. We can start quoting authors left and right on the subject without bring any light on the issue. I propose deleting that quote. 2. "Perón sought out the Jewish community for participation in his government", the point that Gelbard was a close confidant doesn't mean that he sought out the whole community. More evidence on this is needed to include that sentence. 3. "Because Peronism, the political philosophy Juan Perón developed, contains no anti-Semitic or other racial bias, there were no concentration camps in Perón's Argentina" Of course there were no concentration camps in Argentina. I don't understand why to include that. 4. Time Magazine writes "in practice the Perón regime resembled hardly at all the defeated European fascist dictatorships." The sourced article actually argues Peron's closer associations with the fascist. Wronk link? 5. "Juan Perón allowed Nazi criminals into the country in hopes of acquiring advanced German technology developed during the war" Which technology was Eichman an expert in?. That theory doesn't hold. Bakersville (talk) 23:11, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

You have no right to delete that information. The theory that he allowed Nazis into the country in an attempt to gain access to advanced technology developed during the war is advanced by Tomas Eloy Martinez, an internationally recognized literary figure, and the director of Latin American studies at Rutgers University. His statement was published in Time Magazine. This is a reputable authority published in perhaps THE most notable political magazine in the United States. It is not your judgment to make whether his assertion is illogical. As a Wikipedia editor it is your place to decide whether it is a correctly cited reference made by a notable source in a third-party context. It is.

In 1964 Jorge Luis Borges stated that "the mother of that woman [Evita]" was "the madam of a whorehouse in Junin." He repeated the calumny so often that some still believe it or, more commonly, think Evita herself, whose lack of sex appeal is mentioned by all who knew her, apprenticed in that imaginary brothel. Around 1955 the pamphleteer Silvano Satander employed the same strategy to concoct letters in which Evita figures as an accomplice of the Nazis. It is true that Peron facilitated the entrance of Nazi criminals to Argentina in 1947 and 1948, thereby hoping to acquire advanced technology developed by the Germans during the war. But Evita played no part. She was far from being a saint, despite the veneration of millions of Argentines, but she was not a villain either. Human beings are full of contradictions and labyrinthine complexities. Rarely do they resemble their portrayal in the musicals of Hollywood and Broadway. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/1997/int/970120/cinema.the_woman.html

About Page's reference to Peron as a pacifist, yes, that's his opinion. But it is the opinion of a man who is considered a scholar on the topic and who wrote a book about the topic. It is not the opinion of a gas station employee. It is the opinion of a notable authority and it is correctly cited. You simply do not agree with what he has written. In other words, your POV clashes with his POV. However, Page is the notable and verifiable authority in this context. Not you. Sorry. (Wikipedia does not disallow point-of-view statements so long as they are clarified and cited as the statements of notable authorities. Points of view are everywhere.)

"He was at heart a pacifist. He steadfastly rejected violence as an open instrument of policy.... His record, while far from perfect, stands in sharp contrast to the torture and killing that traumatized Argentina in the late 1970s. Moreover, it is undeniable that the man once reviled as a South American Hitler would have never plunged or plundered his country into war."
Page, Joseph. "Peron: A Biography." Random House. New York: 1983. ISBN 0394522974 http://www.amazon.com/Peron-BIOGRAPHY-Joseph-Page/dp/0394522974/ page 502

I am going to revert your most recent revision because you continue to remove things from the article based solely on your own personal dislike of the material. This is what is called vandalism. Argentine lad (talk) 00:33, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I have not much to add to what I've already noted in my comments. 1) On Page's comment on Peron as a pacifist, if it stays it doesn't belong in the section you created, which is suppose to be about the jewish community. Then other conflicting views should be added to provide balance. 2. The Eloy Martínez quote is from a very skimpy article about a broadway play. If there is a theory on Peron's intentions when he decided to welcome Nazi's criminals of war, we need more than that. Apart from the Huemul Project cited in the article (a fiasco actualy) I don't see any evidence of technology advances from his policy. 3. Still the time quote doesn't provide substantiation. 4. Your sentence "Because Peronism, the political philosophy Juan Perón developed, contains no anti-Semitic or other racial bias, there were no concentration camps in Perón's Argentina", is ridiculous, you cannot substantiate lack of anti-semitism or racial basis (when there is no acussation to start with) on the absence of concentration camps. I still held to my other objections expressed previously. The talk page that you archive has other instances of this discussion. I requested third opinion. I will not revert at this time, but IMHO if this section is staying in the article it needs a rewrite. Bakersville (talk) 13:19, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If you want to make changes to the section 1) it needs better sources, 2) if you want to defend Peron against charges of antisemitism you should first provide evidence that someone has made this kind of accusation. 3) writing this; "Because Peronism, the political philosophy Juan Perón developed, contains no anti-Semitic or other racial bias, there were no concentration camps in Perón's Argentina" and staating the existence of a jewish cabinet minister is an absurd way to defend Peron against (unsourced) charges of antisemitism. EP 22:20, 25 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I didn't claim in the article itself that people have accused him of anti-Semitism. I said on this talk page that people have accused him of Nazism from the start. These are excellent sources, by the way, because they come straight out of works by biographers and from scholars. Argentine lad (talk) 05:24, 26 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Crassweller, David. Peron and the Enigmas of Argentina. W.W. Norton and Company. 1987: 221. ISBN 0-393-30543-0
  2. ^ Jewish Virtual Library. http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Argentina.html#WW2
  3. ^ Inside Argentina from Peron to Menem: 1950–2000 From an American Point of View by Laurence Levine, page 23
  4. ^ "Continuing Efforts to Conceal Anti-Semitic Past." Valente, Marcela. Valente, Marcela. IPS-Inter Press Service. April 27, 2005.

Introduction[edit]

IMO, this entire introduction section to this article should be scrapped. It does not read like an encyclopedia article at all. It is written in the style of a biography, which is quite different. It is filled to the gills with original research & synthesis & unsourced opinions. For example

"Each of the works used to evaluate Juan Perón's failures in stabilizing the Argentine economy with the five-year plans is vital to understanding the truth behind the common historical judgments." -- synthesis by the writer

"Mark Falcoff's, "Prologue to Perón: Argentina in Depression and War" is a secondary source...Because of the many writers contributing to the work but still presenting a similar viewpoint, the validity of the events discussed in the work is without question." -- here the writer is just boldly making an absolute statement about a book that isn't even the subject of the article.

I have no particular beefs about the correctness of what the writer put in, but it reads like he simply copied large sections of a Peron biography (or a book on Argentine history), and not a very good one at that. Pmw2cc (talk) 18:51, 2 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Stojadinovich[edit]

Stojadinovich was not the prime minister of occupied yugoslavia. He was dismissed in 1939 before the WW2 begun. 1941, before the occupation of yugoslavia, he was deported to England. He later died in Argentina. See Milan Stoyadinovich page. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.240.6.134 (talk) 01:50, 2 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review[edit]

This review is transcluded from Talk:Juan Perón/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Hello. I am going to have to fail this article GA nomination. Here is a list of the major issues I found with this article:

  • My biggest concern is the lack of references. There are large swaths of the article, for example most of the Exile section, that are unreferenced, as well as many other paragraphs and partial paragraphs. References are especially important when talking about such a controversial and powerful figure.
  • There should not be external links in the text of the article itself, for example in the 9th paragraph of the Domestic policy and first term section
  • In line links to other language wikis, such as the link to the Spanish wiki in the second and fourth paragraphs of the Domestic policy and first term section, are also frowned upon. If there is no article for this group in the English wiki, either create one or leave it as a red link.
  • Web references need to be formatted with titles, publishers and access dates. They should never be left as bare links. Refs not in English should be marked with their language.
  • Journal references (i.e, the National Geo refs that are #8 and 9) need to have full information - article name, author, etc.
  • References should be consistently formatted. Currently, most use no template, one uses a template from the "cite xxx" (i.e. cite web, cite journal, cite book) family and one uses a "citation" template. They need to be consistently formatted using one of the three types.
  • What makes Ref #18 (Perón y la educación) reliable? It appears to be a blog.
  • Ref #27 (Eduardo Galeano) deadlinks.
  • The External links section has a cleanup tag that has been in place since August 2008. The first and last external links deadlink.

This is just a quick list of the issues I found with the article. I did not check the article for prose, NPOV, completeness or images. I would suggest that the nominator complete some significant work on the article (at the moment, I believe they have made a total of one edit to the article) before renominating it. Please let me know if you have any questions. Dana boomer (talk) 21:01, 6 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Peron was certainly Pro axis? Was his regime considerd Facist by US Allies?[edit]

Know,Col.Peron was Pro Axis but was his regeime considerd during World War 2 as Facist?Thanks!Andreisme (talk) 21:28, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

First of all, Perón was only in power from 1946 onwards. He wasn't the President when Argentina hadn't broken diplomatic ties w/ Germany yet. A great part of the army (including the GOU), did hold sympathies for the axis, and in fact the coup in 1943 was about ousting a pro-ally exterior minister. There are many books about the protection that Perón gave to Nazis looking for shelter. [4]
The UK did not consider the regime to be fascist, in fact they insisted, in spite of the US, that Argentina remained neutral, so that Great Britain could benefit from commodities trade between them and Argentina. The US wanted Argentina to break ties with the Axis.--camr nag 22:47, 27 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Braden did accuse him of being pro-nazism, but that was in the context of an electoral campaign. It was meant as a political way to discredit Perón, just like the rutinary straw man arguments that appear during most electoral campaigns anywhere. Nazism was just the typical epithet to discredit people by that time, if those elections would have taken place a few years later, surely Braden would have accused Peron of communist. MBelgrano (talk) 01:48, 28 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe, but I think that Braden's actions should be considered as being motivated not only by his role as an ambassador, but also, and very importantly for this matter, by his "private" interests on diverse companies (which was basically, what he did in several other cases). I don't think the Secretary of State had Argentina labeled as "fascist".--camr nag 02:23, 28 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

We saw American accusation against Peron, first as Pro-Nazi and later as Pro-Communist, as a prove that He was neither. Both accusation was made at the insistence of many US business interest who lost the monopoly on the Argentinian market with Peron Social and Economic reform. As the article said, US didn't want an economically sovereign Argentina. He welcome both the former Nazis and the jewish refugees because he's neutral, and he treated both equally. Of course for US peoples who were conditioned since birth to only thinking in one direction, this seems strange and unthinkable. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 161.142.139.54 (talk) 08:21, 25 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"We saw American accusation against Peron, first as Pro-Nazi and later as Pro-Communist, as a prove that He was neither"
No, Peron wasn't neither, he was both. Peron navigated between both ideas depending on the circumstance and what he/Argentina could gain from them. He was an opportunist. He sided with the left and right. Many of his policies correlate to those found in fascist and socialist governments. Thus while he may have not been full on pro-fascist or pro-communist, it's understandable how he can be interpreted as being so. He accepted many of their core tenets.
"Of course for US peoples who were conditioned since birth to only thinking in one direction, this seems strange and unthinkable.'
Way to generalize. You must have been conditioned from birth to be a bigot. — Preceding unsigned comment added by TheyCallMeTheEditor (talkcontribs) 08:08, 17 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Article about Peron[edit]

This site: [Argentina] has an article about Peron's policies.Agre22 (talk) 14:41, 13 August 2009 (UTC)agre22[reply]

Perón and Mussolini[edit]

It is usually stated by some authors that Perón admired Mussolini, but I have an idea of something useful to clarify that topic: what did Perón himself said about it? This is the original quote, in spanish (english translation follows)


This was part of the analysis that Perón made of Europe during his trip by 1940. It can be found at the book "Los mitos de la historia argentina" by Felipe Pigna, Buenos Aires, 2008, ISBN 978-950-49-1980-3. This book cites as source "Yo, Juan Domingo Perón, relato autobiográfico", Madrid, Ed. Planeta, 1976. This is a translation with google (with possible mistakes fixed)


According to Pigna, no historian that has deeply studied Perón would label him as fascist. He says that those quotes, product of circunstantial admiration, do not imply a clear fascist orientation. Instead, Perón would have been a pragmatic, taking useful elements from all modern ideologies of the time: this included fascism, but also the "New deal" policies of Roosevelt, "national defense" principles, social views from religion, and even some socialism principles. MBelgrano (talk) 02:10, 10 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

As there was no objections in all those months, this information has been added to the "Perón and Fascism" section, with the quote and opinions by many historians. Those opinions have recently been replaced by user Parallaxvision, who replaced them with quotes from the "blue book" by Braden.
I think this is not a good change. Secondary sources take precedence over primary ones: historians analyse such sources, and not only their content but also their context of creation. As such, historians would not ignore a key detail regarding the blue book: it was written in the context of the electoral campaign of the Argentine general election, 1946, and Braden wasn't an impartial observer, he had been working a lot inside the Argentine domestic politics. This report has all the characteristics of a classic Negative campaigning, a fact historians can not ignore.
Besides, we can expand a little more about this book, which in my edit is just a mention, but not quote very long parts of it in order to give more prominence to their point of view. The quote from Peron, on the other hand, should stay because it is the main point of debate: all the sources that accuse him of fascist include it as an argument
By the way, the section as I wrote it could be improved by bringing other historians that consider Perón a fascist. However, I would prefer if they weren't of the type "Perón said X, therefore he was fascist" (wich is refuted by the historians I cited), but instead if they acknowledge those perspectives and refute them with some other reasoning MBelgrano (talk) 03:30, 15 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Possibly unfree file[edit]

File:Coronel J. D. Peron 1945-09-18 (1-3).ogg, which is used in this article, has been listed as a possible copyright violation. See Wikipedia:Possibly unfree files/2010 April 30#File:Coronel J. D. Peron 1945-09-18 (1-3).ogg and join the discussion on whenever the image is free or not. MBelgrano (talk) 21:01, 30 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Perón and fascism section: deleted unreadable paragraphs[edit]

Hello: I've deleted a couple of paragraph at the intro to the "Perón and Fascism" section for two reasons. First, they are written with such poor English grammar that they are unreadable and irreparable. Second, despite the prolific citations, they are clearly non-neutral defenses of Perón by a partisan. I am not a partisan and I have no interest in this topic except to keep it neutral.

If someone wishes to retain these paragraphs, please clean them up. Kgustaf (talk) 08:48, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Tulio Halperin Donghi is no "partisan". It is a reputed historian, and his works are included in the mandatory bibliography that all university students of history in Argentina must learn. His recognition is not limited to Argentina. He has been a teacher at the Oxford University since 1966, and in the University of California, Berkeley since 1972, and he gave conferences at universities all around the world. His opinion about Perón is certainly authoritative and welcomed. MBelgrano (talk) 12:30, 19 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I have read the whole article. And i Have to say that there´s no way I´m gonna let pass that thing i quote:

-"Arrested four days later, he was released due to mass demonstrations organized by the CGT; October 17 was later commemorated as Loyalty Day. His paramour, Eva Duarte, became hugely popular after helping the CGT organize the demonstration; known as "Evita", she helped Perón gain support with labor and women's groups. She and Perón were married on October 22.[5]"-

October 17th March WAS NOT organized by C.G.T. That is outrageous. Never sustained. And I need not to quote Cipriano Reyes and his book "I made October 17th". Simply to mention that CGT raised a strike for October 18th, WITHOUT EVEN MENTION Perón´s name....

And Evita´s involvement was spread out by Peron himself as a treasonery "pay-back" to Cipriano Reyes and his lack of "loyalty" (he did not surrender to the master).

Regards, despite the way... LumpenProletariat

Sources: "History of Peronism" by Hugo Gambini and "Military Power and Political Society in Argentine" by Alain Rouquié. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.2.15.207 (talk) 05:39, 26 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Inaccuracy of the section regarding asylum for Nazi's[edit]

There are a number of inaccuracies in this section (Nazi war criminals). Heinrich Himmler is listed as having been an envoy to Switzerland in 1948, that would be difficult since he committed suicide in 1945. The whole section should be reviewed, much of it is incorrect or conspiracy theory puffery. ```` — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.191.65.92 (talk) 14:58, 16 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Perón's Ancestry[edit]

According to a recent investigation, Perón had no Tehuelche blood, and was in fact descended from Spanish Conquistadors: [5]. I believe the article should reflect this. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.19.93.182 (talk) 08:03, 21 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Grand Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany - no citation[edit]

I have no idea if Peron actually received the Grand Crosses of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. But I do believe that it should not be included as a category to which Peron belongs unless it can be properly cited. I also believe that the Peron article on the German wikipedia is not a reputable source since it provides no citation for the award; moreover the entire German language page for Person has been tagged as not including adequate references. Userfriendly (talk) 00:39, 15 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Here is a reference for you: on page 22 of the November 1, 1953, edition of the Reading Eagle of Reading, Pa., it was reported by Reuters News Service that West German President Theodore Heuss awarded the Special Grand Cross of the Distinguished Service Order of the German Federal Republic to Argentinian President Juan Péron, who in turn awarded the Argentinian Grand Cross of the Order Al Merito to German President Theodore Heuss. http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1955&dat=19531101&id=sB4rAAAAIBAJ&sjid=up0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=4442,218946 173.77.14.196 (talk) 01:56, 30 July 2013 (UTC) Edit (added page number) 173.77.14.196 (talk) 02:17, 30 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The crosses were awarded on Oct. 31, 1953. This would have been during the period that Péron had first begun to make official visits outside his own country in order to drum up international trade, according to the history books. 173.77.14.196 (talk) 13:27, 30 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]

There is no proof that Eva Peron had anything to do with Libertad Lamarque Leaving Argentina[edit]

The article says concretely that Libertad Lamarque was Exiled over a conflict with Eva Peron, yet this seems like more of a speculation and it should be expressed that way. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2.136.76.138 (talk) 07:27, 4 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Photo of Peron birth[edit]

The photo in the section "Childhood and youth" look awful there, i suggest take it away — Preceding unsigned comment added by Il giovane bello 73 (talkcontribs) 02:47, 12 August 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Death?[edit]

Nothing in this whole article about his death? Really? Just goes from meetings with Pinochet to talking about where he was buried. This seems like an important detail. Kronos o (talk) 00:47, 15 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Nothing has changed in 4 years! Peron made his last public appearance on 12 June, after which he fell ill, though the illness was downplayed until late June, when a medical bulletin reported that he had a severe bronchial infection with cardiac complications. He did not recover, and died of a heart attack on 1 July, aged 78, as reported to the nation the same day by his wife, Vice President Isabel Perón, 43. Prisoner of Zenda (talk) 00:07, 13 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Orphaned references in Juan Perón[edit]

I check pages listed in Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of Juan Perón's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.

Reference named "economist":

Reference named "britannica":

I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not. AnomieBOT 05:52, 20 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]

@Davide King, just a comment to this. I think there is a significant classification of Peron as fascist, but several of the scholars are careful to add clarification that there are unique aspects as well. The main problem people have seem to be how to treat this difference, since its a mixture of fascism, populism and socialism, so I've been careful to state its a branch (derivative) of fascism. It appears to be a case of false balance in this article, the majority of sources are stating Peron and Peronism as a type of fascism, but unique.

Federico Finchelstein states he considers the difference that after 1945, “populism is fascism adapted to democracy”, but that seems like an oversimplification, as populists vary greatly. https://s-usih.org/2020/05/frederico-finchelstein-fascism-and-populism/

Felipe Pigna should probably not be put too much emphasis on, as he is more of a comedian than a scholar.

James Brennan and Paul Hayes are the only non-Argentinian references used in the article, and they are both unison that Peron adopted a form of fascism. Paul Lewis wrote about this, and mentions a range of additional scholars with this classification, naming 8 scholars in the first page; https://www.jstor.org/stable/2130025 You also have Eldon Kenworthy; https://www.jstor.org/stable/421344

You could also include Emilio Ocampo: https://ucema.edu.ar/publicaciones/download/documentos/732.pdf "it is clearly populism (the archetype according to some), it is not exactly fascism but exhibits many of its key characteristics, it is not socialism but relies on a class warfare rhetoric and advocates income and wealth redistribution"

So yes, its not a stereotypical fascist ideology, its unique, but there are more than enough sources including fascism one way or another, either to discuss if it is, or in what ways its different from stereotypical fascism. The categories are for essential—defining—characteristics of a topic, and Peron/Peronism is a significant topic within fascist social studies, so it makes more sense to include the category, rather than exclude it. The content of the article will make these clarifications. Pedantic Aristotle (talk) 02:27, 14 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Personally, I find that quote by Ocampo interesting, and I see it as the archetype of populism, yet I have to go by our policies and guidelines, and I do not think that warrants a "Fascist politicians" category; "Populist politicians" would be perfect, as no one seems to dispute that he was a populist (this is the difference from "Fascist politicians", where there is some debate and disagreement, so it cannot be stated as fact and the article does not state it as fact), yet there is no such category, which I find surprising. From Ocampo, "Outside Argentina, Peronism is an enigma to social scientists. The categories applicable in most countries seem inadequate to define it", this seems to confirm that we cannot state fascism as a fact, since even Ocampo concedes there is disagreement about it.

The categories are for essential—defining—characteristics of a topic but also key, uncontroversial ones; they are not to be used to add another topic that may certainly be relevant, as is fascism in relation to Peronism, but it is not appropriate to do so without a general consensus among scholars, and now we have the evidence of this, as both you and Ocampo acknowledged this. Ultimately, since this article is about Perón and we have the chapter "Peronist Populism and Fascism", an academic book by Federico Finchelstein that includes this chapter discussing the debate and can serve as a tertiary source, concluding that, while fascism certainly had an influence on Peronism, Perón was not a fascist—I find it inappropriate to add the "Fascist politicians" category as you did.
Davide King (talk) 07:36, 14 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
But isn't it supposed to be about verifiability, not truth? It is verifiable that a large amount of scholars use the fascist label, many of them without nuance. He is correct, outside of Argentina there is no other label for it, its just fascist, even if its not perfectly identical to other fascists. Pedantic Aristotle (talk) 08:11, 16 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Introduction and demagogic[edit]

The frase "praised their efforts to eliminate poverty and to dignify labour" adds nothing, as all politicians try to eliminate poverty. 2800:810:46C:2185:2C0E:172E:E33D:6DC8 (talk) 16:28, 25 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Cipriano Reyes[edit]

"The meat-packers' union leader, Cipriano Reyes, turned against Perón when he replaced the Labour Party with the Peronist Party in 1947. Organizing a strike in protest, Reyes was arrested on the charge of plotting against the lives of the president and first lady, though the allegations were never substantiated."

Some kind of citation is needed. I found this article which seems to indicate that he'd been strung along by the police to participate in some kind of coup. Not sure if this counts as entrapment or not, but it should probably be mentioned regardless. Diojer (talk) 01:26, 28 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hello there!
My sources, such as Argentina: From Anarchism to Peronism: Workers, Unions and Politics, 1855-1985 by Ronaldo Munck leave it ambigous whether Reyes was wrongfully accused or not, so it seems that the article you found is pretty important to add in what seems to be an otherwise unclear case - I just did that. Thank you! Brat Forelli🦊 03:53, 28 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]