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Lack of Education Brought Brazil a Communist President PDF Print E-mail
2005 - March 2005
Written by Janer Cristaldo   
Tuesday, 22 March 2005 16:36

Brazilian schoolBack to the English language issue. I feel deep sorrow for the monoglot. When I say monoglot I'm not referring, of course, to the millions of people who never had access to an elementary education.

I am talking, yes, about those who had the chance of attending college but never showed a bit of curiosity to know at least one other language really well.

I feel privileged in this respect. I went to high school in Dom Pedrito, a small frontier town in the western part of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, with a population of probably 15 thousand at the time. In that high school, however, I learned Latin, English and French and by the time I left I was writing an impeccable Portuguese.

I even got Spanish as a bonus, given the fact that it was a border town. At age fifteen I spoke four live languages fluently and one dead language with relative ease. 

The quality of teaching in Brazil has been slowly deteriorating since then. First, they removed Latin from all curricula. Next was French. English did remain, but very precariously.

Parents pay a lot of money to a school where their children are supposed to learn English but they still have to pay a private tutor if they want them to speak it fluently. The teaching of Portuguese lost all its strictness.

While fluency in the vernacular should be a sine qua non condition to enter any university, what we see today is Portuguese being taught in college courses. Even worse, these classes are not enough. Just like in the case of English, students still need to pay an outside teacher to be able to master the language into which they were born.

In other words, college today is unable to provide the basic skill expected from anyone with any hope of becoming an educated person, which is fluency in his or her own language.

Each language a person speaks besides her own is a new window open to the world. This is particularly important for Brazilians.

In a country dominated by Marxist thought for the whole past century, the ability to speak French, English or Spanish meant access to bibliographies, which were otherwise permanently unavailable due to censorship.

If I am able to understand Brazil today it is because I was able to read works which were never translated into Portuguese. The fact that the PT is in power today can only be explained by something amiss in our nation's knowledge.

If Brazilians knew what the communist regimes really were like, its late heirs would have been thrown a long time ago into the famous dumpster of history, not in Brasília.

This is the question in the cover story of a recent Veja magazine: "Has the PT Been a Dumbing Agent for Brazil?

Pertinent question? Yes and no. No, because the dumbing of Brazil started way before the creation of the PT. It started when Latin was removed from the curricula and the teaching of Portuguese became a secondary subject in schools.

It started when universities, in order to build clientele, loosened the requirements for the vestibular to the point of allowing unlearned students to enroll in college and not only to attend class. but also to graduate and still remain unlearned.

When I was a college professor I had students in their last semester who didn't even know if a word was spelled with an s or a ç. And I didn't have the power to fail these students; they are now teaching and contributing to the unlearnedness of new generations.

The peak of this big march towards illiteracy occurred in 1998, in São Paulo, when the system of progressão continuada (continuing progression) was adopted in high schools.

What the system meant was that students should be automatically passed from one grade to the other and not flunk. The absurdity was so noticeable that some parents resolved to go to court so their child would fail a school year.

I doubt that such an attitude would ever be necessary in any other country in the world; only in Brazil. 

The question, though, is also pertinent in the sense that the PT is itself accelerating this process towards barbarism. If the dumbing of the country started before the PT arrived in power, its climax occurs at the moment when the whole country chooses an unlearned citizen as its President.

Since the learned proved unable to set this country straight, let us try the unlearned, seems to be the thinking of most electors. An extremely cheap sophism, by the way.

It is like saying: if an honest man could not take us to prosperity, let's elect a scoundrel. In a sense, however, I must say that the President was bright.

He had hardly taken the oath of office when he let go of all the crack-brained utopias of the PT and started to follow, to the letter, the policies of the learned man who preceded him.

If any merit exists in the Lula administration, it is the merit of having betrayed the party who created him.

Once the illiterate president is elected, a sickly feeling permeates the whole country. There is no place for education on the road to a successful life.

Fernando Henrique - regardless of the many different opinions about him - was at least an attractive calling card. A Citizen of the Third World, he spoke more languages than his European or American peers. And he speaks them not to feed his vanity, but to meet his own needs.

For Europeans or Americans, their own language is more than enough; not so for Brazilians, whose language does not enjoy free course outside of Brazil, Portugal and former African colonies.

Bush himself, who speaks the lingua franca of our days, at least cared enough to learn some Spanish.

Our Supreme Ignoramus can hardly stammer the dominant language of the continent where he lives. And I'm talking about Spanish, a sister language, one that every Brazilian willing to look two feet ahead of his own nose has the obligation to know.     

From painfully impoverished Africa to prosperous Europe, including Arab or socialist nations, all countries in the world today resort to English to be able to understand each other.

It was not only diplomacy, but also commerce and tourism that had to surrender to the supremacy of the new esperanto. If you think that visiting Scandinavia is a complicated affair because they speak Swedish, Finnish, Danish or Norwegian over there, not to worry.

If you speak English, you will feel at home in any of these countries. Not only in Scandinavia, a bilingual part of the world, but also in the rest of Europe, the trend is to become bilingual. A German needs to talk to his French neighbor? His aid is the  English language.

Here in Latin America, Chile has just committed to the intelligent goal of making its citizens bilingual in the next twenty years. It is not Portuguese that they intend to learn, mind you. They are preparing the new generations for the dominance of English.

In this globalized world, any prostitute knows that she won't go very far without English. There is no street vendor in the Arab world, not even the illiterate, who does not speak a basic form of English.

In my travels I have met my share of illiterates. They may be illiterate, but they are polyglots. They can't read even in their own language, but they are very aware that they can't sell their wares without at least being verbally fluent in other languages.

But let's not go that far. Let's talk about São Paulo, for example. It's not easy to climb up in any profession in this part of the world without fluency in English. 

In a world where even whores feel the need for a lingua franca, the Brazilian minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim - in consonance with the marxistoid dumbitsia in power today - hands down a directive stating that English will no longer be an eliminatory section of the examination to enter Instituto Rio Branco (Diplomats School).

The question asked by Veja, therefore, is merely a  rethorical one. The interrogation point is a mere euphemism. It is clear that the PT, in its obtuse antiamericanism, is dumbing our country.

Janer Cristaldo - he holds a PhD from University of Paris, Sorbonne - is an author, translator, lawyer, philosopher and journalist and lives in São Paulo. His e-mail address is janercr@terra.com.br.

Translated by Tereza Braga. Braga is a freelance Portuguese translator and interpreter based in Dallas. She is an accredited member of the American Translators Association. Contact: terezab@sbcglobal.net.



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Comments (31)Add Comment
janer cristaldo is a right wing racist s
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
why does brazzil.com allow this racist writer and supporter of the right wing oligarchy to write in brazzil.com?

what a right wing racist nut!!!!!
The template again
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
When the above poster has no intelligent counterpoint to Cristaldo, (s)he just picks an insult from a deck of cards, this time the racist card was drawn. I thought the left was supposedly "tolerant". So much for leftist being for freedom of expression.
...
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
left wing or right he/she speeks english, but mabey freedom speech is a new concept.
Very Good!
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
I'm a Brazilian, Carioca, Mr. Cristaldo is right on one spot in Brazil..education is going down!
just another view
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
We're the one that make english the lingua franca, which doesn't say much about human intelect since it's such a hard language to attain fluency in.I agree with the critique on the dephasing of latin in Brazilian schools, and the general decline of education, probably to a world wide scale. Such decline can attributed to the lack of capable teachers, when the children's exposure need to start at early age, not after their brains are fully formed.I believe english should be dephased from Brazilian schools in favor of latin and esperanto, since lingua francas are transitory.
How far is your view?
written by Guest, March 23, 2005
well the great of all in you living in a early democracy! That you can give your opinion in what you think what is better for yourself and/or a group. but like you want to study Latin and esperanto..and have a place to speak with others, that right to is the same rights to all no matter the importance or size of the group or right! But in the author article, is not the lanquage each is more importante than other, ven the point that right now english is the most importante ina global view, but the importance and right of one in a democratic nation to have a lanquage or education of choice and the right to have the best in to excell, to be the best in it..for personal reasons in use only for yourself or profissional and want to go outside in see the world, does not matter the reason..what's the matter is the dead of education in all aspects..the authoe point the lanquage, because is the older way to a person get more knowlodge, to a country survival economical, cultural etc...to know the past from all cultures is to be prapera to a better future!
It\'s not just Brazil\'s problem
written by Guest, March 23, 2005


I am a 45 year old American and a product of the US public school system in the late 60s and early 70s. Looking back from 35 plus years of perspective, it is now evident that the collectivist infection of "dumbing down" the range and scope of classes, as well as the expectations of the students was starting to creep into the system back then.

I agree that the decay of early education in democratic countries appears to be accelerating under the rules of the collectivist, anti-conceptual mentalities that are in charge of the education system. Ayn Rand wrote of this extensively back in the 60s and 70s as a harbinger of things to come, and boy was she correct.

Two hundred years ago, for those fortunate enough to be educated, it is amazing to hear about the amount of learing that took place by the time someone was 10-12 years old.

And today's problem does not appear to be solely a money issue on education spending in the publci school system in the USA. In the State of Florida, where I live, the public schools outspend the private Catholic schools on a per pupil basis more than 2 to 1, and the private school students kick ass, where the public schools suck wind.

Of course, the private schools do not have to accept "little Johnny" who has a bad attitude, behavior problems, no discipline, etc., unlike the public schools who are not allowed to whip some ass like the Catholic nuns used to do 35 years ago.

I had a nun tell me years ago, paraphrasing her, that the problems of education do not require more money, just more prayer and ass whippin. LOL

In Brazil's case, I do not know how much of the purported problem in the educational system is an access to education vs a spending issue, or if it is a curriculum and stuedent expectation issue.

In any case, Brazilians are a resourceful and optomisitc people, and I think that they will solve this and any other problem that is thrown at them.
Looney Tunes
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
Mr. Cristaldo is a madman.

His premise that learning several languages (in particular Latin) equals a "better education" and will result in a rejection of Liberal politics is ludicrous. There are plenty of well-educated multi-lingual Liberals to refute this nutty theory.

He then give a backhanded compliment to the "ignorant" Lula for doing what? Rejecting Liberal politics.

He also describes what has been referred to in the US school system as "social promotion" and states, despite is multi-lingual education that should inform him otherwise, that, "I doubt that such an attitude would ever be necessary in any other country in the world; only in Brazil."

And by his "logic" the lousy education system of social promotion in the US gave the US, a country that is woefully monolingual, his right wing hero, George Bush [He, of course praises Bush because he "at least cared enough to learn some Spanish." Never mind that he should be fluent in Spanish in light of the fact that he grew up in Texas, has Spanish-speaking relatives (who his father calls "the little brown ones), and was Governor of Texas.] Of course, Bush is considered to be one of the dumbest US Presidents ever and, like Cristaldo, rejects Liberal politics.

Again, Christaldo proves that education does not impart wisdom or class. His tortured logic is astonishing. His disrespectful pet name for Mr. de Silva, which he repeats over and over in his ravings, is scandalous and demonstrates that he is not a man of honor or grace. He is a buffoon. A blow-hard. A jackass.

Proof again that Christaldo is nothing but an educated fool.
No kidding
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
You can practically see Janer Cristaldo foaming at the mouth like a mad dog! His hatred for Lula and anything that is just in the world has him biting at his own tail. What a riot!
i was born
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
No Looney Tunes
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
While educated sponges of public money are often leftists, Cristaldo is talking about how hungry illiterates will support socialists that promise them food!
i was born
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
i was born in campo novo rio grande do sul brazil the same state at janer cristaldo and i have to remember the writer small par of our state song,povo que nao tem virtude acaba por ser escravo,despite their enormously knowledge ,he forgett the most important thing .the people only learn if go to school to learn to realy learn about history,latin,english,spanish,yes i am a gaucho i speak spanish too i born at border from argentina like the writer and i know dom pedrito .is a very preeti small citie at the pampa in our state we have a proud to be a first state on brazil in education but isnt because the state give us schools but because the gauchos have a proud to born on this lands and at our childhood we learn about our past heroes,fights,revolutions,territori conquers,borders fights we teach our childs to be a citizens with large horizons like the writer,but only if the father ,mother,grandfa,grandma,give their own contribution to increase the education of ouyr childs,take a look .I can buy one not four dictionarys english,francaise,latin ,SPANISH, imagine i in a prision,and i learn,learn, i eat the words. at four months i can speak some words in this languages,without anybodi ,iMAGINE this.the problem isnt in the schools, governments ,is about shame,familie values, proud,the fathers escaping to their responsabilities with teir childs,taths the problem if my people can do the simple can do the difficult,even if they try,if i go to school i go to realy learn ,imagine the author sleeping at the school on te latin hour,or english,i is like a condom you only fall on the trap if you be fool,i see too many peoples in my country even in my state claim,i need job,i need food,i need house,but they dont have qualification to job,how if the school is free ?they not go to school?i need food but i not work for this,i need a house but in sao paulo ,porto alegre,etc they not realistic,if one people not have job in one place go to other,if i cant pay one house in there came look for other citie,the author live in dom pedrito?i should probably not have work to them in the citie and lets go folow the work.i think the onli solution to problem of education on my countrie is not a governmental problem only is about the author will now
Ayn Rand all over again
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
Quess it all comes down to Ayn Rand and slave mentality described by Nietzsche. Pride is sinful, pride is bad, pride corrupts, pride leads to insanity. Insanity, is there collective trauma that relates knowledge to insanity and unhappines, or I'm seeing things? I posted early about teching latin and esperanto in schools, it's not a matter of loving or hating Americans, it's just that the public school system can NOT teach fluent English, or Spanish(at all?), so why continue hitting our heads against the wall? Those who actually speak fluently enough to teach would never enter a classroom as a teacher, and if they did, it will never happen on a nation wide scale. I remember seeing an article on JN I believe, about some project teaching poor kids esperanto, with decent results after only 4 months. Thing is, such projects need to start early in life, 1st graders, pre school, not 5th graders. Well, the question really is, what are we doing to change it, are or will we even teach our own kids properly? Why does Marx comes up so often in this forum, are Brazilians the new sons of Marx, does our elite wallow in self hatred in regards to the poor? Does the Brazilian poor have a different glow, not a glow of failure, but a glow of magnificent self righteousness and unshakable optimistic happiness? And, do I notice Americans falling in the same pitfall?

Well,
Sorry for my musings, just another self indulgence.
is it?
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
Quote
?At age fifteen I spoke four live languages fluently and one dead language with relative ease. ?

Here Dr. Janer Cristaldo, shows that he doesn't know the meaning of the word ?fluently?.

?Each language a person speaks besides her own is a new window open to the world. This is particularly important for Brazilians. ?

Totally wrong, here he doesn't consider the importance of each language. I know people who speak over 10 languages, and they are not what Dr. Janer Cristaldo predicted. Countries like Kenya have over 20 different languages. One can easily find people there, who speaks at least 3 of them.

?In a country dominated by Marxist thought for the whole past century, the ability to speak French, English or Spanish meant access to bibliographies, which were otherwise permanently unavailable due to censorship.?

I advise you to move to Zimbabwe, so that you can use your language skills to understand the situation there.

?If I am able to understand Brazil today it is because I was able to read works which were never translated into Portuguese.?

Does that mean, you can't figure out what is going on in your country but someone in Spain can?
It is not the president's fault if you can not analyse the facts on your own, without the misleading information coming from the media.

?When I was a college professor I had students in their last semester who didn't even know if a word was spelled with an s or a ç. And I didn't have the power to fail these students; they are now teaching and contributing to the unlearnedness of new generations?

That makes you as guilty as the institute you worked for.

?unlearned citizen as its President.?

Here Dr. Janer Cristaldo shows that he doesn't know the meaning of the word unlearned.

Dr. Janer Cristaldo doesn't know that one may learn more with experience than books.

?In this globalized world, any prostitute knows that she won't go very far without English.?

Now he changed his point, from learning foreign languages to the importance of English

L.S.Silva
Good article
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
I decline to get involved in some of the more negative comments above except to say that the author is right on the money about the Brazilian education system...its going down down. Whethere we want it or not, right now, we need to speak other languages. Communist de-emphasizing of english is wishful think...look at all of the english schools around Brazil!!! Once again, we have feable minded politics trying to stop or slow the reality.

Many US citizens that have met visiting Brazil are facinated with the countryl and want to try and learn some Portuguese. MOreover, most Americans near the Mexican border DO know Spanish...as everyone must learn the language that will make them understood and help their chances in business or pleasure, or other...

Trying to DUMB BRazil is not smart, everyone is ignoring this outside of the PT communist goverment and thats a shame...its the givt. that sound be leading by example, and not wassting tax payers money with illogical dogmas....

...
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
Schools need to be unified, and use new technologies like electronic ink. It's absurd that post-graduate student write most of the education material without ever stepping into a classroom as a teacher. I believe China is dying to get their greasy hands on electronic ink for this purpose. Those who don't know, electronic ink is like that Sony Libree, one battery charge is enough to change the display 10000 times, each change lasting days I believe... It also looks exatcly like paper, white with black ink.
The Great Cristaldo speaks
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
Lula’s did not say that Brazilian diplomats in training should not learn English, but rather that it is not a requirement for the field. Reasonable minds may differ on that topic. Many believe that makes sense for diplomats to learn the language that has become a common language in international trade, commerce, and diplomacy. Sensible, yes. Necessary, no.

In general, people should learn more than one language to broaden their lives. Doing so may lead one to greater interest in the world, but not necessarily. Learning languages other than one’s native language, while desirable, is clearly not a necessity.

Mastering the rules of one’s own language is also desirable, but clearly not a necessity. Being able to spell words flawlessly on demand is desirable, but clearly not a necessity. Such ability might win you a spelling bee or net you a job as a secretary, but it isn’t proof of a good education. Such abilities do not connote exceptional intelligence or thoughtfulness. Einstein was reportedly a lousy speller, for crying out loud. Is it spelled with a ç or an s? That’s what dictionaries are for.

If Cristaldo stated a lucid argument in relation to the above topic, I would probably reserve my commentary on his column or perhaps more strongly support an argument in favor of multilingualism and a mastery of grammar. But mostly, it’s a big So What? Of course a nation should have an educated population. The greater question is how to accomplish that goal -- a question left untouched by the column.

No, Cristaldo uses this topic for only two purposes: 1) to sing his own praises and 2) to criticize a man he hates. These themes of his however have become threadbare.

Bully for The Great Cristaldo! He has a Ph.D. and speaks several languages. Now if only he did something with that education. When I read his column, all I can think is: All that book learning wasted on a small mind.

His shameful name-calling of the honorable Mr. de Silva, red baiting, twisted arguments, frequent disdainful reference to “young people” (oh, the babes) who criticize him, and elitist holier than thou rhetoric resemble more the ravings of a frustrated right wing has been than any kind of rational discourse.

If only The Great Cristaldo could be as accomplished as that poor, ignorant Mr. de Silva, who went from lowly, uneducated commoner to President of Brazil. But, alas, The Great Cristaldo’s time has passed. The Great Cristaldo pines for the days where all that mattered was position in society and all the good things came to those who had it.

Face it Cristaldo, your road is rapidly fading. Get out of the new one if you can’t lend a hand, for the times they are a-changing.
Above poster
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
Typical leftist arrogance. They think socialism is all that "is". It is the atheist doctrine that human and hu-woman kind will build their own paradise. The above poster wants to play god by forcing all to be subject to his social engineering, but not be responsible for the result.
Above poster
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
Huh? Do you see "socialist" conspiracies everywere? "They" are everywhere, aren't they? Go get help…you are obviously a paranoid.
Above poster
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
Typical right wing frothing at the mouth, pea-brained raving about "socialism" and a lot of rubbish. Yawn.
...
written by Guest, March 26, 2005
We're back to Marx once more?
Funny thing..
written by Guest, March 27, 2005
All the posters saying English is optional/uneccessary/whatever, are ( unless going thru translators ) at least able to write English relatively coherently. Why is that? Wouldn't you have been happier and a truer "Brazilian" to have slept thru English class? What a waste of your time to have paid attention! Your time would have been better spend reading up on Marx and how to keep the masses in ignorance.Karl would not be proud of you, comrade!
Funny thing…
written by Guest, March 27, 2005
You’re a condescending little git, aren’t you? You flatter yourself. You haven’t the slightest idea about which you write.
...
written by Guest, March 27, 2005
Indeed, I'm seriously tired of Americans who slam communism just because they grew watching disney or warner cartoons that told them to do so. Doing that is normal inside the land of the brave, but it doesn't fly here sonny, stop blaming Marx for all the little problems you can't argument. Your blind love for capitalism is touching, but only leads to decadence. No, I'm not a communist, the masses are too dumb for the existence of communism, and I seriously believe if communism were implemented in Germany like Marx predicted, I doubt it would have fallen so easily if at all. Orwell explained it well, do you seriously believe capitalism would survive in world where people received proper education? Surely Brazilians learning english would be good for both peoples, but doesn't that adds momentum to your own decay? I know you never thought of that, but you should, and why aren't Americans learning Mandarin or at least Spanish? Are Americans allowed pride, but Brazilian pride is communist insurrection?
Opa
written by Guest, March 29, 2005
Who gives a s**t about public education. Those poor bastards are here to serve us. When you start educting people, things change.....I don't want change, I am happy with my class status. Valeu!
Refresing honesty
written by Guest, March 30, 2005
"I don't want change, I am happy with my class status."

Finally nice to hear someone say what he really thinks, like the guy above. The above statement is exactly the viewpoint of Cristaldo and his fans. Just admit what you really are and stop trying to make strained arguments to justify your backward thinking, okay?
Everything was my fault
written by Guest, March 31, 2005
Sorry guys, it was mea culpa. I wrote a letter to all Senators in English complaining about the Brazilian embassy. I am mand with the Brazilian Diplomacy. Bando filho das p**as. Any way, then the Brazilian minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim decided to not teach English to his personal.

Dear Sir or Madam:

In 1999, I had the opportunity to travel to Indonesia. I knew a lady with which I got married following the law and traditions from Indonesia.
Since that, I have tried to legalize this marriage in Brazil. However, I just find a hard time. My wife tried to register this marriage in the Brazilian Consular Service in Indonesia when she was living there but they did not accept because I was not in Indonesia.
In these last years, I went many times at Brazilian General Consulate in Toronto, Canada and always heard half explanations about the procedure for legalization of such documents. We went in a notary office in Toronto and we did a document with recognize signature stating that our marriage is in partial goods share to satisfy the Brazilian law. All these documents were brought to the Brazilian General Consulate in Toronto and we paid a fee of $ 72.00 dollars for such documents being recognized to be original.
We sent such papers to Brazilian Embassy in Jakarta. Although, so far we met a bad willing from the Brazilian Diplomacy Service in recognize the documents. I changed various e-mails with Ms. Ingrid about such documents. Ms. Ingrid through of her e-mails told me that the staff Ms. Jenny was responsible for such documentation.
In February 11, 2005 my sister in law went from Surabaya to Jakarta and visits the Brazilian Embassy with purpose to pay the fees and make the burocratic service in Indonesia Institutions.
To make things more easy, in this day, I called Ms Jenny, and she did not knew where was the file and told me that such procedure was only with Ms. Ingrid that was absent from the work.
Then, I called twice the embassy in Jakarta to speak with Mr. Jose Auri in the same morning and I asked him politely if he could give these documents to my sister in law.
So, he decided to give the papers to her and ask her to go to Surabaya to recognize the signature of the Justice Official that did the marriage.

It is very hard to believe in what is happening. I went to Indonesia; I was treated as a King. I respected the laws from that Country. I married conform the laws and traditions of Indonesia and now the Consular Service of my Country is making so difficult to recognize and register my marriage. Why? Discrimination? Envy?

My wife has an accounting degree from Airlangga University in Surabaya, she worked for more than 8 years at Ernest & Young and she was a senior audit when I met her. She came to Canada and recently ends a program in accounting at Seneca College with honours. She works from Monday to Sunday in two part time jobs and goes to College at night. I believe that any Country wants to recognize our marriage. The Canadian government never did a question about our marriage. Why Brazil makes so hard to recognize such documents?
Brazil should have good diplomatic body in any country. If the person is not fit for such service should be sent away and not sent to work in poor countries.

By Brazilian law, even being married, if I have sexual intercourse with a prostitute, and if she can prove it, she has the same civil rights than my wife. Now, why my wife in which a married inside a mosque does not have the same rights? Is it because she is Muslim? Or because she has another ethnic background?

I demand an explanation; I am fed up with this story. My sister in law wants to wait a new diplomatic body start to work in Jakarta to proceed with such documentation.

I feel ashamed from such service as Brazilian citizen.

• Pharmaceutical R&D Technology Post Diploma 2003 - 2004
Toronto Institute of Pharmaceutical Technology – Canada
• Industrial Pharmaceutical Technology Post Diploma 2001 - 2002
Faculty of Technology, Seneca College, Toronto
• Chemical Technology Diploma 1998 - 2001
Faculty of Technology, Seneca College, Toronto
• PhD in Science, Biochemistry Program 1988 - 1993
Centre Polytechnique, Parana University, Brazil
• B.S. in Pharmacy 1983 - 1986
University of Santa Catarina, Brazil.

In this life I am a winner, since, I have the opportunity to born in Uruguaiana and I lived in both side of the Uruguay river. Since, I learn Spanish and Portuguese at same time was more easy to learn English and other language. If tomorrow, you meet me in a public place do not think that I know Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean,Tagalo, Javanes or Indonesia. I only know some survival expressions because general knowledge is very important in this life.
Any way, I am very glad to read the comments in this forum. It took me from a big depression. I am going to take care of my books for now on.
Thanks everybody, I forgot that I was a gaucho and it is not dead who still fight - nao ta morto quem peleia.
Poor Brazil
written by Guest, September 30, 2005
I am very worried about Brazil's future. Yesterday the House of Representatives elected a declared communist as it President. Poor Brazil.
...
written by Guest, February 01, 2006
null :eek hello
brazil people hofully u can read this u
ugly mo fos
please help me
written by shahram, June 08, 2007
hello
i search foe a free course about turism and tour guid becouse i am a tour manager of a travel agancy in iran.
if you know please send me mail or fax for me:
shahram_sedigh@yahoo.com
0098=21=88278015
Lack of Education Brought Brazil a Communist President
written by maria32, December 19, 2008
I am worried about the future of Brazil.
------------------
maria

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