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Whoever Becomes Brazil's Next President It Won't Be an Anti-Lula PDF Print E-mail
2010 - March 2010
Written by Arthur Ituassu   
Monday, 29 March 2010 16:33

Dilma Rousseff, José Serra and Brazilian president Lula As a cooling Rio summer sees the refreshing "March waters" clean the streets of Ipanema and the souls of the Cariocas after the Carnaval, the political season is warming up. Beyond the next big occasion for many Brazilians - the South Africa-hosted football World Cup in June 2010 - lies a series of nationwide elections on October 3: for the Brazilian congress, state governors and legislatures, and for the presidency itself where if necessary a second-round run-off will be held on 31 October.

What makes the presidential contest all the more riveting is that for the first time for a generation, one of the great figures of modern Brazilian politics, president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will not be a candidate. After waging three unsuccessful contests (in 1989, 1994, and 1998), Lula won the presidency in 2002 and has served two terms which in many ways have transformed Brazil.

Now he is leaving the stage, since Brazil's constitutional term-limits forbid a third consecutive period in office; though so successful has Lula been, that his return in 2014 must be at least a possibility. In any event, Brazilians are now faced with a great democratic test in which new figures - albeit in most cases familiar ones in the Brazilian political scene - will emerge to command the stage.

What does this moment reveal about the nature of Brazilian democracy in 2010, and about Lula's own impact and legacy?

The campaign starts officially at the beginning of April 2010. Brazil's leading parties are preparing intensely for the fight, none more so than the two giants: president Lula's Partido dos Trabalhadores (Workers' Party / PT) and the former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso's Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira (Party of the Brazilian Social Democracy / PSDB). Their competition promises to be one of the most intriguing aspects of the election.

The other parties' candidates are already flourishing their own wares and doing their best to attract media attention. A few days after the glamorous performances at Rio's Sambódromo, Marina Silva - Lula's former environment minister, now a senator running for president on the ticket of the Partido Verde (Green Party / PV) - lands in the city's Santos Dumont airport. The choking traffic delays her arrival at the powerful national radio station, CBN, so she tweets to say she is on her way.

In the interview, she declares that her campaign represents a "political realignment" in Brazil, one that could break the polarization between the PT and the PSDB: "My mission is to show people that we have to build a symphony, to create an orchestra - something that changes our way to produce, consume, and our relationship with nature."

It is an attractive image which also points to a deeper truth about the coming contest. For Brazil's presidential election of 2010 will in my view rather consolidate the current polarization in the country's political scene between these two major forces, making them and their leading politicians - and not candidates per se - decisive in the outcome. That is the logic behind the green senator's desire for a different alignment; and the reason why she has no chance of winning.

Moreover, I would argue that this current PT/PSDB standoff is a very positive trend for the Brazilian polity, and one that underpins the country's current economic advance that has received so much worldwide attention and praise. Whoever is victorious after (most likely) a second round on 31 October, there will be overall continuity. The political substance of this continuity is also worth noting: in Brazil today, nobody wants to be "on the right."

Across-Boundaries Agreement

A clue to the shape of post-Lula Brazil is that the two certain candidates for the respective major parties have each been close presidential servants. José Serra, the governor of São Paulo who represents the PSDB, is a very experienced politician with a huge profile in the country's richest state; but he also gained national visibility and power as health minister in Fernando Henrique Cardoso's administration (1994-2002).

In 2002, Serra actually won the political fight for succession against other of Cardoso's ministers, but lost to Lula in what was the former lathe-operator's first victory.

For her part Dilma Rousseff, Lula's chief-of-staff, has never been a candidate in any major election before. Her rise to power was facilitated by the mensalão (big monthly allowance) corruption scandals of 2006-07, which engulfed influential PT figures such as José Dirceu (Rousseff's predecessor as chief-of-staff) and Antonio Palocci (Brazil's former finance minister), who otherwise would have been certain candidates for the presidency.

Dilma Rousseff, a distant product, as her name suggests, of the great Bulgarian Diaspora that also produced Venezuela's Teodoro Petkoff, has for months been doing her best to accrue the benefits of closeness to an enormous popular incumbent.

Indeed, the influential Brazilian polling institute DataFolha measures Lula's approval-rating as the highest recorded for any president in Brazil since 1990, with 73% of Brazilians saying that Lula's government is "good" or "very good." No wonder that Dilma travels around the country with Lula and is often pictured alongside him.

It is already evident, however, that an effort is being made to transform the 2010 election into a comparison of Brazil's two longest administration's since the end of the military dictatorship in 1985: Cardoso's (1994-2002) and  Lula's (2002-10).

The rhetorical heat hasn't waited for the official campaign to start: the PT's new head, José Eduardo Dutra, said in November 2009 that Brazilians "will compare two projects known to them", while Cardoso retorted that "Lula is passing through an euphoric moment" that leads him "to distort what has happened in my government."  

This comparison will play out in coming months, with the (very similar) economic record of the two governments being a key issue. The Cardoso side are bound to argue that context is everything: for it was Cardoso's real plan that rebalanced the Brazilian economy after decades of chronic instability, and thus left Lula an enviable freedom of governance.

A Shared Road

The trend towards a stable political duopoly at the heart of Brazilian democracy is also favored by the pragmatic character of the country's politics since the restoration of democracy after military dictatorship. These two decades have strengthened the political parties and - even with a popular leader as Lula - diminished the once-dominant "personalizing" trend that elevated charisma into a political principle.

Indeed, the Brazilian political scientist César Romero Jacob has written that any candidate for the presidency in Brazil must now work in at least four "power-structures": the educated urban middle class, the evangelicals, the populism of the periphery, and the regional oligarchies.

Lula, for example, made an alliance with the evangelicals in choosing José  Alencar to be his vice-president. Alencar, from the Partido Republicano Brasileiro (Brazilian Republican Party / PRB), is a conservative politician who has been a vocal critic of same-sex marriage and of homosexuality.

The current president, always loved by the Brazilian urban middle class, has won many votes in the periphery and among regional oligarchies (often mediated through the support of politicians with a strong regional base, such as ex-president José  Sarney in north and northeast Brazil).

In addition, the success of Lula's social programs like Bolsa Família (Family Allowance) - which distributes a small amount of income to 15 million Brazilian families, and has had a huge progressive impact on their human security - both helps in poverty-reduction and also reinforces local political authorities in very poor regions against traditional oligarchies, thus guaranteeing political support (and votes) for the government on the periphery.

True, this process was started in Cardoso's administration but was consolidated and expanded in Lula's and this may work in Dilma Rousseff's favor. In fact, some polls suggest that 40% of those who receive the Bolsa Família will vote for Dilma Rousseff against 25% who prefer José Serra. In a broad sense, the alliances and strategies that made Lula's election possible in 2002 and 2006 - after three successive defeats - will be behind Dilma Rousseff in 2010.

The PSDB side, without the benefit of incumbency, also seeks to build a coalition for victory. The key figure for the party's political strategy is Aécio Neves, governor of the state of Minas Gerais. Neves is the grandson of Tancredo Neves, a politician of historic stature strongly linked to the democratization process in Brazil; he  was elected president by the Brazilian congress in 1985, in the first free election after two decades of the military regime, but died before assuming the presidency.

Aécio Neves has served two terms as governor of Minas Gerais, whose voting power is second only to that of São Paulo in Brazil, and retained 70%-plus levels of popularity among the Mineiros. He has never hidden his desire to be the PSDB candidate in the 2010 election, but as a younger man he has not yet been able to overtake position of Serra, an older and more senior figure, within the party.

This makes the prospect of a joint José Serra-Aécio Neves ticket very attractive to the PSDB, though Neves has yet to be persuaded of the virtues of being a vice-presidential candidate. This partnership could secure a majority of votes in Minas Gerais and heavy support from politicians linked to the powerful governor, and in addition deflect the criticism of those who see Serra as too Paulista and rather an arrogant politician.

Some in the PSDB even see opening a glorious path to a sixteen-year political hegemony, with a re-elected Serra in 2014 passing the baton to Neves for two further terms. Brazilians in the Lula era have, after all, learned to dream.

A Left-Hand Drive

At this early stage, the outcome in 2010 is in the balance. José Serra leads in the polls, though he has lost some ground to Dilma Rousseff: the DataFolha agency gives him 32% support and Dilma 28% (as against 37% for Serra and 23% for Dilma in December 2009). These emerging great rivals are also not very different from each other in political character: both are centralizers and politicians who value administration skills.

But whatever the election outcome, Brazil's current political map guarantees the existence of a strong opposition and an alternative source of power; it thus strengthens the country's political institutions and political continuity.

In general terms, the administrations of Cardoso and Lula were very similar. Both sustained economic stability and applied policy in social areas that had been completely neglected for decades. Cardoso put more emphasis on healthcare and basic education; Lula on the universities, the Bolsa Família and infrastructure.

It may be too that the Partido dos Trabalhadores believes more than the Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira in the capacity of the state to solve social and economic problems. The two parties also have somewhat different approaches towards foreign policy, though this too has its limits; both Serra and Cardoso would be considered "liberals" in the United States sense.

Thus the PSDB is most definitely not a party on the "right wing" of Brazilian politics, even if this is what the PT would like it to be. Psdebistas are much more social democrats than liberals or conservatives. But it is also true that the need for political alliances has moved the PT from the left to the center - and kept it there.

Within this context, Brazil's party-polarization both guarantees continuity and makes the center-left the dominant position in the country. It may seem paradoxical, but this makes the 2010 election more interesting than ever. It can be said again: welcome to politics, Brazil.

Arthur Ituassu is professor of international relations at the Pontifícia Universidade Católica in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. You can read more from him at his website: www.ituassu.com.br. This article appeared originally in Open Democracy - www.opendemocracy.net.



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Comments (30)Add Comment
Reply to Joao da Silva
written by Ricardo C. Amaral, March 31, 2010

Joao,

You might enjoy reading what I just posted on the Elite Trader Forum
about the international trade war that is underway:

"The coming international trade war"
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/...genumber=3

I also fixed the web links to my articles:

Author and Columnist: Ricardo C. Amaral
http://brazzilnews.blogspot.com/

I bought today the latest book by John Naisbitt - he is one of my favorite authors.

China's Megatrends - The 8 Pillars of a New Society
By: John and Doris Naisbitt
Published January 2010

.
.







Ricardo Amaral
written by João da Silva, March 31, 2010

Thanks for the link. Some info you exchanged with other bloggers there are news to me. For example, I did not know that Sarko is wooing Evo Moralles for accessing their lithium deposits to make batteries for the "New Electric" cars. On coming trade war? Might result in real war, according to another commentator.

Hopefully, our learned friends Dr.Cata and others read your comments in the link you have given and share with us their line of thoughts.

I still continue to think that the next few months are going to bring some unpleasant surprises.
Reply to Joao da Silva
written by Ricardo C. Amaral, April 01, 2010

Joao, I just posted the entire Business Week article on the Elite Trader Forum. I am sure you will find this article informative and very interesting.


March 31, 2010

SouthAmerica: I have a hard copy of the actual BW magazine, but here is a copy of the entire article for the people who don’t know how to find the information on the web.

This trade war is not only between the US and China – this is becoming an international trade war that also involves, Asia, Europe, and other countries such as Brazil.

And this international trade war is already spinning out of control faster than most people has realized, and the impact of such “international trade war” it will be devastating to many countries around the world.


*****


Business Week magazine - Cover Story: “The New Protectionism”

Business Week - April 5, 2010
China: Closing for Business? - Western companies are finding themselves shut out as Beijing promotes homegrown rivals
By: Dexter Roberts


You can read the entire article at:

http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/...ost2789317

.
hey, for the tea, crumpets and vodca crowd...
written by asp, April 04, 2010
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04...z.html?hpw

what a dick head idiot he is

what a glorius life there, trying to express oneself

oh maybe its just some empire paranoia
asp
written by João da Silva, April 04, 2010

hey, for the tea, crumpets and vodca crowd...


Col.Chavez is ensuring that he doesn't meet the same fate of Zelaya of Honduras! Oh, when I said what happened in Honduras was not a coup but..but..., impeachment of the President by legal means, I was attacked by many bloggers.smilies/sad.gif

In the case of the good Colonel, he has made sure that the dissident "elements" in his armed forces have been quietly retired off. He is going to be a pain in the butt for not only his country but...but.. for the entire region for many more years to come.

BTW, did you get to read the following news?:

http://wp.clicrbs.com.br/visor...,2,18,,,67

ha
written by asp, April 05, 2010
why is her security in a house 500 meters away?
asp
written by João da Silva, April 05, 2010

why is her security in a house 500 meters away?


Good question.You mean to say that the detachment should have been housed in her building itself?
...
written by João da Silva, April 05, 2010

What a shame, what a shame. Read the following:

http://www.clicrbs.com.br/espe...rkozy.html

Sarko is not a serious guy and still we want to outsource our defense to him ?>smilies/sad.gif
...
written by Lloyd Cata, April 05, 2010
Col.Chavez is ensuring that he doesn't meet the same fate of Zelaya of Honduras! Oh, when I said what happened in Honduras was not a coup but..but..., impeachment of the President by legal means, I was attacked by many bloggers.

...and I'm sure the lady will appreciate better the meaning of justice after having been served such indignities.smilies/shocked.gif Unfortunately, Mr. Chavez needed her salary to hire Mr. Zelaya as an oil minister.smilies/cheesy.gif Everyone is on edge these days not knowing when some US inspired plot will yank them out of bed in the middle of the night smilies/angry.gif

The US Sec.of State, Mrs. Clinton 'admitted' it was a coup. Any 'trial' of Zelaya would have been such a farce the Honduran courts knew it was useless to continue impossible allegations.

-----------------

Lula's daughter, I would think, would live in a more secure environment. That she chooses to live without barriers and armed security is noble, but perhaps naive. Yet, if anyone was to find 'compromising' information maybe they think to deter him from moving in certain directions. Or a warning not to move in certain directions smilies/sad.gif Just a thought!?!?

--------------------

Sarko is not a serious guy

Sarko is very serious 'guy'.smilies/smiley.gif He's a shrimp and Carla is an Amazonas so it would not surprise anyone if they 'switch up' every now and then.smilies/cool.gif They could not be more 'French' and so unlike the faux puritanism of the Americans.smilies/tongue.gif See how all his 'treats' never hurt Berlusconi, the Italian stallion of Euro-politics. smilies/cool.gif I expect Carla is a woman who wants to go back to having 'fun', and the intoxication of power is beginning to wear thin, in the tightly controlled atmosphere of the palace. smilies/cheesy.gif Poor little rich girl smilies/cry.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/cry.gif
asp
written by Lloyd Cata, April 05, 2010
Judge Afiuni contended that she was following United Nations guidance when she released Mr. Cedeño, who subsequently fled to the United States.

"following United Nations guidance" - I'm sure you can find some line in Venezuelan law which explains such judicial behavior.

Still, there appear to be relatively few political prisoners in Venezuelan jails, legal experts here say. Twenty to 30 Venezuelans, including Judge Afiuni

...and you don't even want to list the 'political prisoners' in the US, but...but...here's some who have not already been put to death(ughhh, like our Chinese communist friends)
http://www.thejerichomovement.com/prisoners.html

Just to keep you amused with the fantasy;

( http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04...cchrystal, iraq&st=cse )

( ttp://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/27/world/asia/27afghan.html )

You really try to keep count of outrageous behavior, but you can be assured that the families of the innocent will receive the $2,000 compensation, and the guilty will be required to join a 'private contractor' so they never have to worry about 'rules of engagement'.smilies/sad.gifsmilies/angry.gif
Reprint - Everything Old Is New Again
written by Lloyd Cata, April 05, 2010
As for your dollar, at least you have about 8000 tons (Is my figure right?) of gold reserve in Fort Knox to back it up. Well, we don't.

US has been 'selling' huge gold reserves to 'hold down' the price in support of the dollar. However this plan has backfired as other central banks 'quietly' buy as much as they can get their hands on.
( http://www.financialsense.com/.../0108.html )

There is 'no case' that can be made now for gold/dollar convertibility. The amount of dollars in circulation and the US debt load is impossible to consider in terms of any commodity or basket of commodities. It was
tried to 'diversify' the dollar, as in petro-dollars and currency baskets(yen-dollar, which the Japanese refused), but the 'real' valuation of the dollar cannot really be determined until there is unanimity of currency pricing - which is why the US is 'adamant' that the Chinese join in revaluing their own currency to 'stabilize' the dollar. It is the major creditors to the US who are going to decide on the dollar valuation, with an eye to their own vulnerability to the decline of the defacto 'world currency'.

Now the US is going to make the case at the next G-20 that China is 'manipulating' its currency to the detriment of the 'world economy'. In plain English, that means unless the Chinese agree to 'support' the
dollar, everything and everyone is in jeopardy. The Chinese know they cannot hold out alone, but it is not in their interests to leave the dollar in control, so there are disagreements even in China as to what the 'dollar policy' will be. There are hardliners, who would gamble that they could further destabilize the US economy, and there are pragmatists who want to build China until the US concedes economic superiority to Chinese capitalism. Remember that the economic crisis in the world was created by US financial adventurism and no responsible person in the financial community wants to see a repeat as could be the case without "significant financial reform" in the US. It is in the Chinese interests and the interests of the world community to 'force' the US to adopt practices(pass laws) that prevent a return to 'boom-bust' economics.

That is an argument the G-20 can understand, even if they wish it was not so. The Chinese economy should not be expected to bear the brunt of bad economic policy by US financiers when there are no mechanisms in place the prevent a repeat of the same behavior. How dare the US government threaten 'retaliation' against others when they are the culprits in the biggest economic swindle in the history of the world?!?! If you are too weak to clean your own house what is it you really think you can do to others? Will the Chinese make this argument, and can it lead to US reform? We shall soon see!
The Guilty Admit And Glorify Themselves For Their Genius, So Far
written by Lloyd Cata, April 06, 2010
Greenspan -
( http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...25563.html )
"almost everyone failed to predict the implosion of the subprime market and while some people predicted it by chance, there was a "very small group, most of whom are my friends, who got it right, for the right reasons." Burry, he said, may well have been one of those people"

I.e, the chairman is confirming what we knew all along; his "friends" and a few people like Mr. Burry knew what was going on, made the right adjustments for themselves, and left everyone else to pick up the pieces.

There is no accountability or outrage by a public admission that there were undeniable indicators of economic instability, and then Mr. Greenspan lowered rates even further, throwing fuel on the fire until there was a complete meltdown of the housing market and the ensuing world recession.

So some of those friends picked up about $25 billion paychecks last year when the rest of the world was scrambling for lost income. Nations like Iceland and Greece become IMF orphans. Americans watched their
hard-earned savings disappear. To pretend this was 'just business as usual' and strictly aboveboard to manipulate the economy, in this manner to benefit 'known persons', can only be interpreted as a 'conspiracy' to defraud the government and the people of the United States.

Mr. Obama and his Senate co-conspiritors are blocking any attempt to audit the Federal Reserve and make public the books of the American peoples finances. They are conspiring to continue the practices that created the crisis by offering weak and ineffective 'reforms'. It is beyond question that a 'special prosecutor' should be appointed, and a Federal grand jury be convened, to investigate these criminal acts, and if the President Of the United States Barack Obama is presently involved in a criminal conspiracy to defraud the American people. It is time for the truth!
Llyod Cata
written by João da Silva, April 06, 2010

Mr. Obama and his Senate co-conspiritors are blocking any attempt to audit the Federal Reserve and make public the books of the American peoples finances. They are conspiring to continue the practices that created the crisis by offering weak and ineffective 'reforms'. It is beyond question that a 'special prosecutor' should be appointed, and a Federal grand jury be convened, to investigate these criminal acts, and if the President Of the United States Barack Obama is presently involved in a criminal conspiracy to defraud the American people. It is time for the truth!


Dr.Cata, you are a bit inconsistent, aren't you? One day you praise PBO and another day bash him mercilessly. You were all excited about his getting the health bill passed and now you are calling him a "bunda mole" for not prosecuting the "economic criminals" that took the "unsuspecting and gullible" Americans to the cleaners. You forget that he has been in office for just over a year and it is difficult to clean up the mess that is left behind by his predecessors within a short span of time. Please remember that he is a trained lawyer graduated out of an Ivy League university and also was the editor of HLR. His Guru while he was a student was a Brasilian who went into "self exile" after our hard working and honest "scoundrels" came to power.

BTW, we are not complaining about being taken for idiots by our elected and selected officials. Contrary to you, we are very patient and pacific. My advice to you is the same that a remarkable "leftist" lady leader gave to us: "Relax and Enjoy" smilies/wink.gif

Lula's daughter, I would think, would live in a more secure environment. That she chooses to live without barriers and armed security is noble, but perhaps naive.


No, she does live in a very secure environment, without any "barriers". She is not naive either. Perhaps you are.smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif

I expect Carla is a woman who wants to go back to having 'fun', and the intoxication of power is beginning to wear thin, in the tightly controlled atmosphere of the palace. Poor little rich girl


She is already having lots of fun. It is good to have a rich father and a famous husband who think that the Brasilians are a bunch of idiots and can look down upon them with disdain and sell any overpriced junk they want.smilies/angry.gif
João da Silva
written by Lloyd Cata, April 06, 2010
Dr.Cata, you are a bit inconsistent, aren't you? One day you praise PBO and another day bash him mercilessly. You were all excited about his getting the health bill passed and now you are calling him a "bunda mole" for not prosecuting the "economic criminals" that took the "unsuspecting and gullible" Americans to the cleaners.

Indeed, Mr Obama has succeeded in passing health reform that has been attempted for over a hundred years, to join the rest of the industrialized nations on Earth. Finally, progress on a basic human right.smilies/smiley.gif It is an achievement that is not, yet, appreciated by the majority of Americans.smilies/sad.gif
What the American people wanted was to 'change' the 'business as usual' attitude in the economy and politics. Now we see that they are so intertwined that the American people don't trust either one. They have both contributed to the economic servitude of the people. Is it no wonder Obama is taking heat from both sides. The agenda he has followed is to let the same people run the economy who, we see daily, are the same ones who ran it into the ditch. Ahhh, same as Enron thinking; "the smartest guys in the room"(look it up).
I'm sure Obama would like to 'clean up the mess', but 'time' is not on his side. His party will weaken in November, and the other side will fight him on 'everything', so the 'special prosecutor' is the only weapon that they will understand. If there is going to be 'change' in the US economy, which is what the people want, then he will have to use the Law to get it. Make no mistake, now that business money can finance these elections, does anyone expect he can overcome the US Chamber of Commerce? Not many are going to give you their money on that bet.smilies/sad.gif
It is a move that will;
1)tell the American people that he is not ok with what was done to them and he wants the truth
2)alert the financial community that they can choose reform or prison
3)restore world confidence that the US will 'change' and restore 'confidence' in the economy.(Did you see that the US/UK rating could go to AA from AAA?)
For him to continue on this course of secrecy and deceit, bullying others, before putting his own house in order is not good for Americans or others around the world, who would return to "plantation economy".
No question the American people were "unsuspecting and gullible", but its like the guy who gets cheated. He knows he's been cheated and is looking to somehow 'even the score'. With 250 million guns among 300 million people; many who are 'violently' opposed to Obama anyway, there is little time to calm the mood of the country and advance the rule of Law for everyone, including the wizards of Wall Street. For God's sake man, 25% of the opposition think he's the anti-christ! How do you reason with that?smilies/shocked.gif

She is not naive either. Perhaps you are.

Not quite, my friend. You see, after having 'watched the watchers' for so long, I am practically immune to Mossad type tactics smilies/wink.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif

It is good to have a rich father and a famous husband who think that the Brasilians are a bunch of idiots

Yes, but...but..didn't Jane Fonda also have everything? smilies/cheesy.gif Perhaps Carla should spend time in Haiti to reconnect with her French history.smilies/wink.gif Perhaps she will meet a dashing Brazilian general there and Brazil can have its revenge on the French poodlesmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
João da Silva
written by Lloyd Cata, April 06, 2010
...and not to forget that I have vehemently supported Lula's foreign policy(not that it means squat) while also disparaging his performance in terms of Fomme Zero. I saw in Brazilian news that the poor and women are supporting Serra. Possibly because Lula has not done domestically what he promised for many and gave to the few?(Reaganomics) smilies/wink.gif
Llyod Cata
written by João da Silva, April 06, 2010

.and not to forget that I have vehemently supported Lula's foreign policy(not that it means squat) while also disparaging his performance in terms of Fomme Zero.


Please do not forget to include our friend Mr.Amaral & my humble self in your unwavering support of Mr.Lula´s foreign policy. At least Ricardo had the balls to call it one of the stupidest things to do.smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif.

I saw in Brazilian news that the poor and women are supporting Serra.


Our "poor and women" have a fascination with "Sorbonne and Cornell" trained "intellectuals" who spent some quality time in "self imposed exile" on top of Eiffel tower and Statue of Liberty. But..but... Serra is no match to the "Mother of PAC". His "Guru" talked a lot in an interview without making much sense even to the well educated middle class Brasilians.

Perhaps she will meet a dashing Brazilian general there and Brazil can have its revenge on the French poodle


I thought Carla has already met an ex-KGB Colonel and came back from "Russia With Love".smilies/wink.gifsmilies/cheesy.gif

I am not sure where our buddy ASP is, but..but.. I bet he would be delighted to take the "French Poodle" for a walk on the lovely beach where he lives, when he comes down here again. I will be happy to join them.smilies/grin.gif
always room for one more poodle in the cabana...
written by asp, April 06, 2010
you know what i mean, joao ?

i see cata hit the vodca too hard again, he cant even look at what is happening in venezuela with sober eyes, must be the red eyes
asp
written by João da Silva, April 06, 2010

i see cata hit the vodca too hard again, he cant even look at what is happening in venezuela with sober eyes, must be the red eyes


But...but...but..., Dr.Cata never claimed that he was infallible.smilies/wink.gif He analyses all the information and sometime makes the mistake of coming to a wrong conclusion. For example he was under the wrong impression that the lucrative market for the "product" of Kabul´s mayor was right here. It appears that the Lord Mayor still considers Dr.Cata´s own front yard as the primary market.You can read it in the following link:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/36...tral_asia/

With such "amigos" like Hamid, the Americans don't need more "inimigos". IMHO, the French Poodle was smart in sending his "Foreign Legion" to Afghanistan. You might be aware that the brave "Legionnaires" are not really French, but jobless ex-army personnel from erstwhile U.S.S.R and other "Eastern Bloc" countries hoping to get French citizenship when they return from their "mission" (alive and not in body bags).smilies/wink.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
João da Silva
written by Lloyd Cata, April 07, 2010
For example he was under the wrong impression that the lucrative market for the "product" of Kabul´s mayor was right here. It appears that the Lord Mayor still considers Dr.Cata´s own front yard as the primary market.

smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/cheesy.gif Everyone on the planet knows that the US is the #1 drug market in the world. smilies/sad.gif If you say there is 'no' heroin traffic in Brazil then I would simply suggest you prepare yourselves, because the 'Mayor of Kabul' has bumper crop.smilies/smiley.gif

Are you familiar with Luiz Paulo Guanabara? He seems to know more about the Brazilian drug scene than anyone else I have seen.
( http://stopthedrugwar.org/chro...aulo.shtml )
Llyod Cata
written by João da Silva, April 08, 2010

Are you familiar with Luiz Paulo Guanabara?


Not until you posted the link. He confirms what our distinguished fellow blogger ASP has been saying for months. The problem is not restricted only to the large urban centers, but also small towns in the interior of the country. The problem is made worse because we have a long porous borders with so many countries and it is very difficult to control the inflow of the "substances".

What is scary is not the consumption of the drugs but the increase in violence related to the "trade". Petty thefts, house break ins, murders, etc; IMHO, there is no short term solution. May be we will be forced to implement Felipe Calderon´s solution in the next couple of years!

meanwhile, look what hugo chavez sais :
written by asp, April 09, 2010
http://whitewatch.wordpress.co...-on-haiti/

god damnit get any form of security posible to protect yourself against this idiot, he is just plain crazy in the head...like dangerous crazy
asp
written by João da Silva, April 09, 2010

meanwhile, look what hugo chavez sais :


Calm down ASP. We are taking countermeasures. Read the following link:

http://www.brazzilmag.com/comp...years.html

You think that our Military consists of a bunch of "Bunda Moles"?smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
ok, pass the crumpets and vodca
written by asp, April 09, 2010
god only knows how this will play out...

i wonder if it actualy will deal with crazy man hugo

here is a guy who thinks the USA started the earthquake in haite just to militarily occupy it...i mean do people just sit there in venezuela and really beleive that crap ?
...
written by João da Silva, April 10, 2010

here is a guy who thinks the USA started the earthquake in haite just to militarily occupy it.


Didn't he say that Rudy & Poodle invented a secret weather machine and are testing it in Rio to cause floods? smilies/wink.gif
Weather Machines, Earthquakes, And The Empire
written by Lloyd Cata, April 12, 2010
Surely the US is the home to many strange, mad, and extraordinary experiments. DARPA, a US Dept. of Defense organisation, is the home for much of the funding for these experiments and other technologies. However, to attribute the Haitian earthquake or any earthquake to 'official' US policy is either crazy or lacking the basic capacity for truth.

If Mr. Chavez, and others, wish to criticize US technology they would do better to have the UN investigate and monitor the US plans to open 4 addition Bio-Hazard Level 4 facilities. By definition, these facilities contain potential WMDs that could affect the entire planet. Remember that the 'anthrax' crimes in the US came from US weapons research facilities. A single 'error' or calculated exposure of some of these materials could be more destructive than any nuclear weapon to the entire world.

The 'humanitarian' invasion of Haiti by the US has less to do with the well-being of Haitians as it has to do with the continued Franco-American domination of the people of Haiti. That would be a more valid argument consistent with the historical record. If history is any guide, most Haitians will have color TV's before they have running water or sanitation.

The US-Russian initiative in the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty is a direct result of research indicating possible generation of catastrophic events triggered by nuclear explosions. The US and Russia both have experimental programs that could affect the entire planet, but both sides know the results are unpredictable and could result in self-inflicted destruction.

Not since Adam ate the apple has mankind faced a more serious threat from the poisonous fruit of the tree of knowledge than it does today. So, 'highly educated' institutions and people have no claim to have created a better world when their knowledge and technologies have endangered the entire planet in ways never imagined...even by Mr. Chavez.
João da Silva
written by Lloyd Cata, April 12, 2010
...and that also goes for Mr. Lula and his aides with the "Mines and Energy" qualifications. Perhaps they are deliberately ignoring what is happening in Southeast Asia, partly due to the magnificent Chinese dam.smilies/shocked.gifsmilies/wink.gif
Support pra Dilma
written by John Miller, April 19, 2010

Como regra, não passar por essas "adicionar o seu nome", lista que aparece em e-mails,
Mas este é importante. Foi circulando há 9 meses e foi enviado a mais de 100 milhões de pessoas.
Nós não queremos perder nenhum nome na lista por isso só atingiu a frente e enviá-lo.

Por favor, mantê-lo ir!

Para mostrar o seu apoio, Dilma Rousseff, por favor, vá até o final da lista e adicione seu nome.

1. Senhor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
2.


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Ferrari 308 Parts
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Aecio
written by fred, October 28, 2010
I am from Minas Gerais State and i can tell you all that Aecio is not the better choice to Brazilian Presidential election than Serra. Aecio made tolls on every state roads in the state (and they are simply roads - with no double line ). The ICMS (states tribute) in MG are the highest in the country. The vehicle property tax is 4% ( one of the Brazil's highest). A fantastic popularity in a country that semi-literated people are the most means nothing. See TIRIRICA in Sao Paolo State - a former clown that won as the most voted Congress man for SP, he won with the sentence - Tiririca pior que tá não fica - worst than it is will not be, LOL. Saying again popularity means nothing, ask a state teacher from Minas Gerais, they know what i am talking about. (MG state: one of the lowest teachers wages in the country).

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