argentina from 1930 onwards, and i'd lived in argentina since 1959, and i saw 32 attempted coups against frondizi, who was finally thrown out, i think on the 33rd. many, many coups. and the military were looked upon... there was... you know, i hesitate to say that to you who were born in mexico, but they would say, you know, an argentine revolution is less violent than a mexican wedding. that's what argentines said to each other. now, at the same time, things were happening all that time. there was a really terrible threat of terrorism. i mean, there were bombs every day, there were kidnappings, there were assassinations. >> hinojosa: and there was violence from... when you read about this, it's like, oh my god, you didn't know if it was because you were despised and you were labeled. >> i was the voice of imperialism at that time. >> hinojosa: you were seen from the left and from the right as somebody who was really an enemy. >> yeah, then i became a communist, you know, a dangerous communist. but, you know, what i take out of this is the importance of journalism. you can't imagine what it's lik