Bangladesh, Oct. 9 -- Argentina is once again standing at the edge of financial ruin. The peso is in free fall, the stock market is plunging, and investor confidence has evaporated. The Financial Times and The Economist have already called it what it is – a country teetering on bankruptcy, surviving only on the hope of a bailout that may never fully arrive. For a nation that has endured more than a century of debt crises, inflationary spirals, and IMF “rescues,” this latest descent into chaos is depressingly familiar. But what makes it different this time is the man at the center of it all: President Javier Milei, the self-proclaimed “anarcho-capitalist” who promised to chainsaw Argentinas bloated state into ...