Those who spoke with “Tute” Di Tella in the days before Javier Milei’s trip to the United States say he was exultant. In fact, some of all that translated into their social networks. There he uploaded three or four images of a chainsaw, one of his inventions, and in the doubt of a user who told him who was that present, the artist replied without a doubt: “For D. Trump.”

Di Tella, a neighbor of Villa Urquiza, is a fan of chainsaws. Those who know him say that is an old hobby that has since childhood. And with Milei’s surprise appearance in Argentine politics that passion could only grow. It is that the man is in fact the author of the chainsier that Javier Milei showed in hundreds of interviews, and that now rests on the long desk he has in the presidential office of the Casa Rosada.

Di Tella’s trust with the president must be enough: he was selected to make the chainsaw that Milei gave Elon Musk in February, on one of his trips to the United States. Musk, at that time, was delighted with the gift and even showed it, but then regretted. “It was a lack of sensitivity.”

Anyway, the truth is that Di Tella’s chainsaw did not reach its recipient this time. Trump did not show the gift. What will have happened is a mystery that only the delegation knows.

Image gallery


In this note

ttn-25