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Who Will Save Democracy in Brazil? The Left Has Shown It Won't. PDF Print E-mail
Written by Augusto Zimmermann   
Wednesday, 11 January 2006 16:28

Political rally in BrazilMany people in developed countries still believe that politics in Brazil might be resumed as a conflict between a right-wing landholding oligarchy, which is then always backed by the military, and the democratic forces of the left, which then would be always fighting for more freedom and justice to the popular masses.

This outlook is too simplistic and does not reflect the far more complex reality of Brazil. It is far better to say of the country that on both sides of the political spectrum there are plenty of 'bad' politicians who are often re-elected merely because their clientelistic voters really do not care about (or don't understand) all their illegal machinations.

Since the end of the military regime (1964-85), however, public opinion in Brazil has come to associate 'the right' with the authoritarianism and human-rights violations committed by the right-wing army rulers.

The country's major right-wing party, the Liberal Front Party (PFL), is notably recognized for its voracious predisposition for all sorts of clientelistic bargaining. This party has abstained from running its own presidential candidates and joined with the Social Democratic Party (PSDB).

Its most prominent leader, Antonio Carlos Magalhães, is a notorious caudillo from the state of Bahia whose followers often side with the governing party.

But it is ironic to see that now the major threat to the rule of law comes not from the right but from a highly anachronistic left. For ever since President Lula da Silva took office in January 2003, his government has been pushing for the creation of illegal bodies of external (political) control over the press, television, and film.

But the numerous corruption scandals that have shaken the current administration, including a vote-buying scheme in the Congress, may at least offer the beneficial effect of demoralizing a government which seemed quite bent on establishing a long-lasting regime based on a disguised form of elected and populist dictatorship.

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the charismatic leader of the Workers' Party (PT), was popularly elected in November 2002 and took office in January 2003. He has since been employing thousands of members of his own political party in the state machinery, including Marco Aurélio Garcia, one of the founders, along with Lula and others, of the PT. Garcia, who is Lula's foreign affairs advisor, is a hardline communist who describes the ruling PT as "radical of the left."

Whether or not the ruling PT is as radical as Garcia, the fact is that this advisor to the president has openly expressed his personal desire to re-establish Soviet-style communism. In an academic paper written to celebrate the anniversary of Karl Marx's "The Communist Manifesto," Garcia, an influential member of the PT's directorate, concluded: "The agenda is clear. If the horizon that we search for is still called communism, it is time to re-constitute it."

As a way of re-constituting old-fashion communism, Garcia and other PT members, including Lula himself, created in 1990 an umbrella organization called Forum de São Paulo (FSP). The FSP was established to fight the "negative effects" visited on communism by the dismantling of the Soviet empire. In 2004, its organizers declared that the major goal of the organization was "to compensate for our losses in Eastern Europe with our victories in Latin America."

In the July 2005 conference of the FSP, Garcia delivered a speech supporting the "great destabilizations" promoted by "social movements" throughout Latin America. He suggested that   extra-legal actions would serve to bring about more "popular democracy" in the region, and as a result eulogised "armed struggles" that would contribute to reaching such an objective. He also stated that that the rule of law ought not to become a "straitjacket" inhibiting the radical goals of these social movements.

In 1990, the ruling PT organized its seventh national congress. The event was held in order to discuss long-term strategies for the political party. One of the discussions was on whether or not "revolutionary rupture" is a necessary step to bring about social transformation. The PT's official magazine reported the results of such a debate in July 1990. It said:

"Over these last 10 years, the PT has... confirmed on many occasions its option for a coherent tactic of combativeness... which characterizes every revolutionary party.

"A rapid look at the eight points made at our seventh national meeting confirms [our option for] Gramsci's notions of hegemonic dispute... the necessity of a powerful state and of engaging ourselves in the ongoing "war of position"... towards a revolutionary rupture.

"The question is to observe whether violence is still a valid weapon and, if so, whether or not it is our best strategy to advance the evolution of humankind towards its superior levels of coexistence and material production.

"Above all, we need to observe if the passage from armed struggle to non-armed struggle represents the clear desire of the popular masses in their struggle against the bourgeoisie...."         

It is clear that the article considers the use of violence a viable strategy for this party. It argues that laws must be obeyed as long as they contribute to radical social changes. The idea is obviously inspired by the writings of Engels, who argued in a March 1884 letter to Bernstein: "The proletariat needs democratic forms for the seizure of political power but they are for it, like all political forms, mere means." 

This sort of mentality is opposed to the rule of law but helps a lot to explain why, on 16 March, 2005, Veja, Brazil's leading current-affairs magazine, published a cover story about the illegal offering of five million dollars by the Revolutionary Army Forces of Colombia (FARC) to the campaign of PT candidates in 2003.

The article quoted official documents from the Brazilian Intelligence Agency, ABIN (Agência Brasileira de Inteligência), attesting to the existence of "close liaisons" between PT members and the FARC drug guerrillas.

ABIN's document number 0095/3100 from April 25, 2003, reveals that Father Olivério Medina, a Catholic priest who acts in Brazil as FARC's "ambassador", announced at an April 13, 2002, meeting at a farm near Brasília that the Colombian guerrillas were donating illegal money to the electoral campaign of PT candidates.

An undercover ABIN agent who attended this meeting reported that the money would arrive via Trinidad and Tobago. It would be sent firstly to businessmen who supported the party and afterwards be distributed as if their personal contribution to the PT's regional committees.

The accusation is very serious because the Brazilian Constitution, in its Article 17, Section II, explicitly states that no political party is allowed to receive any financial assistance from any foreign organization or foreign state.

Enacted in 1995, Federal Law No. 9096 regulates this constitutional provision by stating that the penalty for the party found accepting this kind of financial contribution is having its registration cancellation.

The Colombian government has already confirmed that Father Medina is indeed the intermediary between members of Brazilian political parties and the FARC guerrillas.

In an interview to daily Folha de S. Paulo, on 24 August 2003, the FARC leader, Commander Raul Reyes, said that his terrorist organization has close ties with the PT leadership, including high authorities in the current government.

What is more, the Workers' Party (PT), in an official note entitled "The Truth about Colombia," the FARC and PT', has openly admitted that the FARC and the PT are both members of the subversive FSP, although it falsely maintains that there is no evidence of the FARC's involvement with kidnapping and drug-trafficking.

On March 20, 2002, a committee expressing solidarity with the FARC was launched in the city of Ribeirão Preto, during the administration of its then city mayor Antonio Palocci. Currently Brazil's Finance Minister, Palocci is accused of being the "unofficial representative in Brazil of the Colombian narco-terrorist group called FARC".

In a March 10, 2002, interview with newspaper Folha de Ribeirão, one of his secretaries in the city council declared: "I don't think that elections will solve the problems of Brazil. It's the revolution. Today in Brazil there's no condition to make an armed revolution, but that's not the case in Colombia. They (FARC) have an organized military."

But the ruling party in Brazil is also accused of receiving money from the government of Cuba. As reported by Veja on November 2, 2005, a Cuban citizen by the name of Sérgio Cervantes, a diplomat in Rio de Janeiro and Brasília, may have sent three million dollars by plane to Brazil in two boxes containing Johnnie Walker whiskey and one box containing Cuban Rum.

Accordingly, the person who would have taken this money for the party would have been an economist and former auxiliary of Palocci when he was mayor of Ribeirão Preto. Also, another former secretary of Palocci would have taken the money at an airport, and then travelled by car to deliver this to the PT's treasurer Delubio Soares.   
 
The story makes a lot of sense for numerous reasons. Firstly, it is rich in details and has been confirmed by former aides of Palocci at Ribeirão Preto's city council. For instance, Rogério Buratti, a lawyer who worked as his legal advisor, has confirmed that PT members asked him about the best way to transport illegal money from Cuba.

What is more, everybody in Brazil knows that the relations between Fidel Castro and PT leaders "have always been cordial." José Dirceu, "the mastermind of the political generation that came to power with the election of Lula", worked and studied in Cuba until 1975.

He is regarded as the "architect of Lula's election as President' and often travels to Cuba at Castro's personal invitation. Moreover, President Lula himself is a self-declared admirer of the Cuban dictator. On his 2001 visit to Cuba, an admiring Lula gave this moving tribute to him:

"In spite of the fact that your face already is marked with wrinkles, Fidel, your soul remains clear, because you never betrayed the interests of your people. Thank you, Fidel, thank you for existing."  

The ruling party, however, claims the accusation of illegal money from Cuba is totally false and politically motivated. The government of Cuba, which openly financed Latin American parties and guerrilla movements in the 1980s, has also denounced the claims, as part of a supposedly 'orchestrated campaign of lies motivated by the aggressive plans of imperialism against Cuba and against Lula." The argument is lent weight particularly when one considers that money in Cuba is scarce, to the extent of not being able to place water filters in schools.

But then the allegations begin to make sense again when we observe that the Lula administration has eased the payment of Cuban debts to its federal bank (Banco do Brasil) by 20% and forced the National Economic and Social Development Bank (BNDES) to spend millions of dollars on a plant in Cuba used for the production of fuel from alcohol.

In addition, the Brazilian government has abstained from condemning the assassination of Cuban political dissidents at the U.N. Human Rights Committee, although Article 4 of the Brazilian Constitution explicitly states that the participation of the country in the international community must be guided by the "fundamental principle" of "respect for the prevalence of human rights."

Speaking on behalf of the Brazilian government, the ambassador to Cuba, Tilden Santiago, has openly approved of the execution of Cuban political dissidents, calling them traitors in the service of US imperialism who are attempting to "destabilise" the Cuban communist regime.

Whereas the Brazilian Constitution explicitly forbids the death penalty for opposition to the government, ambassador Santiago, who also says Brazil's political system should be based on the Cuban regime, has made this sinister statement: "Likewise, if they try to destabilise Lula, we will also have to take the same measures here."

The allegations of campaign donations from Fidel Castro "coincide with an alarming weakness in [Brazilian] foreign policy that benefits the Cuban dictator". Although Castro has aggressively sought to influence Latin American countries "on a scale not seen since the 1960s", the PT government has been oddly passive about the promise of his supporter in Bolivia, Evo Morales, to nationalise the energy sector of his country. The main victim of such expropriation will be Petrobrás, a Brazilian state oil firm with investments in Bolivia so large that they amount to about 20% of its business.

Although Morales promised during his successful presidential campaign to confiscate the assets of Petrobrás irrespective of existing contracts, President Lula openly supported his campaign, declaring that his election would represent an "extraordinary change" not just for Bolivia but for Latin America as a whole.

This candidate whom Lula and Castro have openly supported in Bolivia is a coca-growers' leader who reveres Che Guevara and had previously commanded the violent overthrow of two democratically elected presidents. On his ticket as his vice-president was a former guerrilla arrested in the 1990s for taking up arms against the country's fragile democratic system.

The major ally to the ruling Brazilian party, the Communist Party of Brazil (PC do B), dedicates an entire section in its website to the Cuban government. It is an orthodox communist party that joined the coalition which supported Lula's candidature in 1989, 1994, 1998, and 2002.

The political coordinator of the current government until September 2005 was the PC do B leader Aldo Rebelo. He only left the government's coordination after his successful election to chairman of the Chamber of Deputies.

The PC do B was created in 1958 as a result of a splinter inside the Brazilian Communist Party (PCB) following Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's denunciations of Stalinist atrocities. In an open letter to Khrushchev, founders of this party protested against his "revisionist" agenda, and aligned themselves with Maoism.

When the government of China initiated economic reforms in the 1980s, the PC do B aligned itself with Albania. But when Albania held its first democratic elections in 1992, the PC do B became non-aligned.

Dissidents from the PT and PC do B have now created a new political party, the PSOL (Party of Socialism and Freedom). Members of this party blame corruption in the current administration on the president's "betrayal" of his Marxist origins.

Its policies are directly inspired by the writings of Mr. Achille Lobo, an Italian terrorist who some years ago set fire to one of his political enemies' house in Rome, burning to death his two children. One of its members, a student leader from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), declared this to daily Jornal do Brasil on 28 August 2005:

"The idea of representative democracy is a bourgeois farce which serves only to keep this oppressing class in power. Those who are elected under the liberal-democratic political system are representatives of the bourgeoisie... Lula is a traitor. He was the only one who had a real social base, but he has now been corrupted by neo-liberalism."      

As well as members of the PSOL, numerous supporters of the ruling PT argue that "mistakes" (corruption) in the current government are solely brought about by the embracing of corrupt methods that characterize the right rather than the left.

PT founders like the "red priest" Frei Betto now suggest that corruption is only caused by the fact that the party, once in power, ignored its "revolutionary horizons" and "forced itself to compete in equality of conditions with the right".

Another PT founder, a radical extremist called Emir Sader, puts it in the following terms: "All the mistakes committed by the PT government are produced by its right-wing practices. All its merits, however, stem directly from its left-wing legacy of higher values and practices".

Brazil simply cannot develop a normal democracy in a political environment such as this. Unfortunately, as can be seen, the country's transition from military regime to a formal democracy has not changed certain patterns of undemocratic behaviour.

An empirical behavioural-analysis would be very useful to demonstrate how much the politicians in Brazil are still in need of developing a more positive approach toward liberal democracy, and, more specifically, a truly democratic government under the rule of law.

Augusto Zimmermann is a Brazilian Law Professor and the author of the well-known books Teoria Geral do Federalismo Democrático (General Theory of Democratic Federalism - Second Edition, 2005) and Curso de Direito Constitucional (Course on Constitutional Law, Fourth Edition - 2005). His e-mail is: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Comments (19)Add Comment
Simply stated !
written by Guest, January 11, 2006

Lula has legalized corruption in Brazil.

He even cricizes, publicly, the CMPI reports for the accusation of corruption.

The problem is that he originally was against the opening of an investigation, and when he finally accepted it, he assured that he wont interfere or influence the investigations.
But this did not stop him to criticize many times the reports issued.

He is always in total contradicition with what he said earlier, at every step of the crisis.
And always publicly.

Simply stated he is not a man of trust.

He betrayed not only his own promises constantly during all his life but he also betrayed those who voted for him.

Communists and the world
written by Guest, January 12, 2006
One wonders, if to be a communist and still believe in the theory one must be crazy. One definition of being crazy is continuing to do or believe in the same thing and expect different results. Where has communism been successful? Most communists govenments have run themselves into the ground. Some have learned from the mistake and are following Captialist tendencies. Even Communist China is following that path. The only question is how long can China's Communist Party remain in power.

The second point, I have is why do people lionize someone like Castro for the job he has done and the good works he has done for his people. Castro has only survived because of thre benafactos: the USSR until they collapsed, now Venzuela, the USA trade embargo has helped his image. He is not democratic and oppresses his people but he is still a hero for the people who say they are concerned with the needs of the people. Why don't they emulate the socialist democracies of France or Germany. Oh, I forgot they let their people decide on their futures. Communism the system already knows what you want and your future.
...
written by Guest, January 12, 2006
"Who will save democracy in Brazil?" One thing is certain: after 500 years with power in the hands of the elitist right wing, democracy can never go back there to find a saviour
...
written by Guest, January 13, 2006
after 500 years with power in the hands of the elitist right wing

Someone needs to crack open a history book or two...geesh
Brazil history !
written by Guest, January 13, 2006

For a long time, Brazil was dominated by Portugal. In those days slavery were by the millions, imported from Africa.

Later, Brazil found its freedom.

At that time a minority of the Portuguese descendants residing in Brazil took power either through manipulated elections or through military power.

Today, nothing has changed !
The minority elite still controls politically and economically the country.

Wealth inequality remains.
So much that you are almost the worst in the world on this subject.

Politics and economy are controlled by the minority elite and politicians, from left or or right.

Corruption is at the highest level ever and is the daily life of backdoors dealings, corruption so deeply rooted that even your civil servants are doing red tape to increase illegally their official wages.
Worse, under Lula mandate, not only corruption has been by now legalized, but the illegal money is now coming from state agencies and pension funds. They now use the money that is not their own money but money belonging to actual and future pensioneers and money paid through taxes to the government.
WHOAAAA what a shame and what an insult to the brazilian society.
Quite an innovation.

The one thing that has changed is the import of slaves.
NOW YOU ALREADY HAVE THEM BY THE MILLIONS, AT YOUR DISPOSAL, LOCALLY, PARKED EITHER IN THE POOREST STATES, OR IN THE FAVELAS OF THE RICHEST STATES.
Those who control the country have no wish or desire to provide them with enough food, jobs, education and healthcare. They can then control them better by just keeping them alive, at their disposal, to get their vote in time of elections, like this year for example..

Brazil reality is that all brazilian society belongs to this minority, and the country is their farms.
Therefore, by definition, slavery still exists in Brazil, even far more than 2 centuries ago.

Slavery is simply disguised in an apparent democracy.
YESSSS JUST AN APPARENT DEMOCRACY !!!!

50 years ago, actually developed countries were not richer than Brazil but were devastated by wars.
Cases in in mind, the whole Europe, Japan.

And in just the last 20 years or so, many poor countries grew far in excess than Brazil.
Cases in mind, South Korea, Taiwan, China, Singapor, Thailand, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Ireland, just to name a few.

If these countries have been able to grew far more than you, you cannot continuously put your own failures on the back of developed countries.

Even your failure of your decision to tie your currency to the US dollar has been a disaster.
In the meantime China and Hong Kong have successfully been able to maintain it during the same time !!!!
For those with a short memory, let me remind you that until 4 or 5 years ago, eveyone said that the China currency was way OVERVALUED and that a crisis looms like in South America.
Well, well, they continued to tie their currency to the US$ and now everyone says they are unfair because their currency is way UNDERVALUED.
While with a UNDERVALUED OR OVERVALUED currency, China demonstrated that any way you look at it, they were so far been able to beat all the world's growth.

Why have you not been able to do the same ?
Simply because of mismanagement by your political and economical elite.

When you fail when others succeed, you are simply unfair to accuse someone else of your own failures.

But unfairness is the daily life in Brazil, as explained earlier.
MY CONCLUSION: The United States...
written by Guest, January 13, 2006
... Is a Real Threat to World Peace.

Since the Soviet Union poses no longer a barrier, the USA is a bull out of control. Thank God for China, make the Washington thugs think twice and to counter balance American imperious hegemony.

Without challenges, it is a scary thought of George Bush at the control knob!

Good Day.
MY CONCLUSION: The United States...
written by Guest, January 13, 2006

... Is a Blessing to the World.

Since the end of the Soviet Empire, the threat to liberty now comes from Islamofascism and China.

Thank God for the people of this country, who have always given their own lives for the cause of freedom, against all the forces of totalitarianism.

God Bless America, and God bless George W. Bush!!!

Ass. A grateful Brazilian.
...
written by Guest, January 13, 2006
> Today, nothing has changed !
> The minority elite still controls politically and economically the country.

How would that be different from your country?

> 50 years ago, actually developed countries were not richer than Brazil but
> were devastated by wars.
> Cases in in mind, the whole Europe, Japan.

Not quite, Japan was already an industrialized country before the war, in some cases more advance than US. The bombs fell in two cities, not the entire country.

Well, Europe needed to be fixed by US in order to put some resistance to Soviet Union.

> And in just the last 20 years or so, many poor countries grew far in excess
> than Brazil.
> Cases in mind, South Korea, Taiwan, China, Singapor, Thailand, Mexico,
> Puerto Rico, Ireland, just to name a few.

Not quite.

>Even your failure of your decision to tie your currency to the US dollar has
> been a disaster.

Not quite. Who did that was Argentina, not Brasil. You see, it's two different countries...

But in face of you apparently complete lack of ground, this has been one of your minor mistakes so far.

> While with a UNDERVALUED OR OVERVALUED currency, China
>demonstrated that any way you look at it, they were so far been able to
>beat all the world's growth.

Moronic oversimplication. How old are you?

> Why have you not been able to do the same ?
> Simply because of mismanagement by your political and economical elite.

Wow, I guess all we need is a very intelligent person like you.

> When you fail when others succeed, you are simply unfair to accuse
>someone else of your own failures.

Well, maybe after 10 years of idiotic politics enforced by US as conditions for loans people have a point to think so. Let's see, diminish investments in education, health, etc, etc.
Dead wrong !
written by Guest, January 15, 2006

the industrial capacity of Japan was destroyed totally.

And the difference today between the EU and Brazil are obvious :
- No hunger
- No under nourrished citizens
- every one has more tha basic education
- every one can go to the universities if they do the studies efforts.
- more healthcare
- Even many of the the poors have a car, a PC.
- electricity is everywhere
- The minimum wage is around EU 1200 or
around Reais 3400 per month. And this is despite your currency went up sharply i the last 2 years or so.

And from what I know, the minimum wage in Brazil is Reais 340 or just 1/10th.
And your cost of living is not 10 times cheaper. NO WAY !
And millions of Brazilians dont even make the minimum wage !

If the above is not a difference, ask the question to YOUR POORS !
They a dreaming to get only half of what was mentionned.
But dreams it will remain for them, unfortunately.

Cheers
and the USA is a threat ????
written by Guest, January 15, 2006


Sorry but what has been the difference in Brazil between when the Soviet Union was still the second superpower and now ?

NONE.

YOU HAVE ALMOST JUST THE SAME INJUSTICE, CORRUPTION, HUNGER; SLAVERY, POVERTY, MASS KILLINGS OF INNOCENTS BY POLICE, INSECURITY, LACK OF EDUCATION, IMPUNITY, TAX EVASION, RED TAPE, BUREAUCRACY AND RACISM !.
Hey, don\'t be so hard on thet f**king i
written by Guest, January 15, 2006
1. The president has no brain of its own. It have to be fed mainly with s**t. It works fro the cattle anyway.
2. The president's brain cannot be shaken or all nuts and bolts get loose.
3. The persident is a puppet.
4. Comunist Brazil. Someone (or some-lots-of-one) just can't think straight. Too much Colombian "white powder" is being distributed to the president and his acolytes.
5. The whole World know that Comunism is dead-meat. Lula and his gangaters will revirve it?
No way,Jose!
6. Who will support the so called brazilian comunism? China? That's nice. Soon Pau Ling Flucking Ping Pong a*****e will be leading the country. Bye Bye lula and he rest of his sonofabitches.
7. Will the democractic USA and EU let this happpen?
8. Scary, the possibility of this president be re- elected again. Comunism? Where will they put the brazilian gulags? Rio, Bahia, Northeast? Caiman isles,
Gotta be somewhere cold and desolate. Will Russia lend some gulag places to brazil? For a fee of course
I got it, the gullag will be:

A) Tax the beaches
B) No more Carnival.
C) Close all soccer fields
D) No more beer or alcoholic beverage.
E) Shoot all the drug dealers.

That will be a REAL gulag and not the fancy one estabilished by the idiotcalled Stalin.
These five pints above are really sadistic.

9. Back in '64 the Government tried to install a communist heaven in brazil? What was the outcome?
Militarism. Which by the way was the seed to the corruption we see today.
10. Communism in brazil? That's the best joke I heard in years.
11. "...Marco Aurélio Garcia openly expressed his personal desire to re-establish Soviet-style communism" .
This guy is as stupid as a doorknob. Or` brain-dead.
Soviet-style comminism? That kind of communism is dead and buried. Perhaps this a*****e thinks he will also re-estabilish communism in todays' Russia.
12. ..."if the horizon that we search... bulls**t" is time to recontruct it? Who will finance the political winds towards communism? Colombia? Not a chance.
Colombia doeasn't have enough cocaine to feed into the brazilian politicians and elite.

I'm tired of writing all this .
The USA is indeed a threat to world peac
written by Guest, January 15, 2006
The vast majority of Americans are clueless regarding the past of faraway lands as well as their own, dangerous in so much as we share this planet with other ethnicities and historical illiteracy breeds misunderstanding which leads to wars. It has been said once before, "those who forget the past are condemned to relive it," or words to that effect, a caveat that the principle also applies to us all.

In 2002, President George Bush began to drum up a war fever in America with a view to toppling Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, alleged to be the possessor of weapons of mass destruction. Bush did so without providing any evidence, cost estimates (lives and money), or the "why now" explanation, or long-term implications of such a war. By October 2002, the United States Congress not only granted the president a virtual declaration of war for a historically unprecedented "pre-emptive war," but it did so without raising any questions of such an unprovoked invasion. Only a democratic society accustomed to and predisposed to the use of war would accept it so quickly, without asking questions or demanding answers. The reality is that war, whether on a large or small scale, have been an ever-present feature of American life from this country's earliest days. Violence, in varying forms, according to leading historians, has accompanied virtually every stage and aspect of American history, and now imprinted upon the American psyche, as propensity to violence. American leaders through most of the last century cultivated the national self-image, a myth of America as a moral "peace-loving" nation that the American population seems unquestioningly to have embraced.
It\'s been said once before!
written by Guest, January 15, 2006
The biggest crime since WWII has been the American foreign policy, and I tend to agree!

The cost of wars to the United States has been the decline of American prestige around the world, as the majority of world public opinion considers the US a "threat to world peace." I don?t think it is about ?right and left? but rather, about ?right and wrong!? What is the use of running when you are on the wrong road? My pursuit is to understand whether the United States is a ?peace-loving or warmonger? nation.

keol

Observer
written by Guest, January 19, 2006
Aren't the Government bored with the state of Brazil and the institutionalised corruption within its country?

How can the Government treat its own people with such contempt and then boast about technology, inflation, and statistics?

I do not understand how this Government thinks because most decent democracies think about its population as a whole and promotes fairness and equality for all.

Brazilian News seems repetative and tedious and there are never any forthcoming developments which one can feel and see that things are moving in the right direction.

I think Brazil needs reform from Top to Bottom so that it can root out all this corruption and get rid of this unnecessary red tap which is hindering progress and development.

The Government is spinning around like a dog trying to catch its tail and one day it will catch this tail and stop and see the mess it has made when the bubble bursts and reality sinks in.

Keep on spinniiiiiiing

The United States of Osama
written by Guest, January 20, 2006
America is the only nation in history which has miraculously gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without the usual interval of civilization?

Long Live Osama, Short Live the Chimp (Bush)

hehehe...Keol
To the last comment...
written by Guest, January 23, 2006
I'm just curious to know where your from. It's true that Bush and U.S. leaders have made wrong choices in the past. What government is perfect. If you find one let me know. One thing is for sure, I wouldn't trade living in the U.S. and having the freedoms I do for anything in the world. Without a doubt the U.S. government has flaws, but it still is doing one heck of a job. And for you to praise Osam Binladin is pretty messed up. I don't think your right in the head. I don't care if its the United States, Iran, China, Brazil, France, or any other country in the world, when you have 3,000 innocent people murdered by cowards flying planes into buildings, it's just not right. Those people didn't deserve that. No one does, no innocent person does. You need to re-examine the way you think.
The Observer
written by Guest, January 24, 2006
George Bush has been a blessing for the American people. He is moral, honest and has values that many Americans still cherish. He is a born-again Christian, which means he is going to heaven. His faith helps him to guide our country through rough times and practice "compassionate conservatism." Thank God George Bush is president.
...
written by Guest, January 24, 2006
Have any of you faggots ever been to brazil?? Because by the sound of it none of you have, you all make it sound as if the country is going to hell when in fact its recovering, why don't you all just stay in little old white america and talk about your own problems
...
written by Yep, Brazilian, December 06, 2007
Racism in Brazil? Really, i find it quite rare. I don't say we have only few, racism is EVERYWHERE. But really, i have never seen a REAL racist in brazil. You can see a mineiro mocking a carioca or vice versa, or even a white mocking a black (And vice-versa!) but they are never really serious. The only racism i see in Brazil is racist jokes, usually followed by surprised looks and "Man, that's racism! What the hell are you saying?!". There are, indeed, crazy people who kill blacks or homossexuals. But those cases are really lower than the avarage, specially U.S. Right, KKK? Right, Mosques burnt after 9/11? Right, largest muslim-hater population in the world?

And the good things U.S has done, really, they all say "OH, we saved the world from the evil russians!". Like if they really did it for the freedom of all. The same with the marshall plan or the help with abolishing slavery in many countries. I refuse to say "thank you". They did not do this because they wanted the world to feel better. They did dis because they could get profit.

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