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God bless that culture. But if the case arrives, that's the proper way to counter it. Here in Argentina "nationalizations", for boomers, are religiously sacred, and privatizations are the purest form of evil sacrilege. That's solely out of indoctrination, for national companies where always terrible and private companies excellent, but indoctrination on the symbol was religious. I'm not exaggerating, it's so strong, so embedded in our parents culture, that up to this day, even for ME (ME!!), the subconscious reaction to the sound of the word "nationalization" is embracing and warm, and the reaction of the word "privatization" is of rejection. So that much that I have to consciously correct it. The youth is thank god devoid from that influence, and will start fresh with a new culture that haves that compass corrected.
Interestingly, "privatization" is also a dirty word here. People vehemently insist that all current government programs remain government programs, but they don't want anything else to be run by the government (except healthcare).
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Interesting grey situation! It's "easier" here for it's a black-or-white situation. From it, if the argument arises, I can advise to use the mentioned take to tackle it.
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