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Massacred by the Mainstream Media Brazil's New President Was Rescued by the Internet PDF Print E-mail
2010 - November 2010
Written by Michael Fox   
Monday, 01 November 2010 18:44

Lula and Dilma celebrate victory Worker's Party (PT) Candidate, Dilma Rousseff, will be the first woman president in Brazilian history. She was elected into office this Sunday, October 31st, with just over 56 percent of the votes, defeating conservative candidate José Serra by twelve points. In her victory speech Dilma called for unity and thanked outgoing president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Dilma supporters took to the streets, filling Paulista Avenue in São Paulo. But victory was not easy. The second-round campaign debate centered on abortion, religion, scandals, and a mainstream media deliberately set on defeating the left-wing front-runner.

"The electoral debate this year wasn't what we wanted it to be, a debate over the proposals for the country, for development, and social inclusion," said Celso Woyciechowski, President of Brazil's largest worker's federation, the CUT, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul.

"Unfortunately, the debate became polarized around issues that are important, but aren't the priority in terms of the proposals for the country. Especially when the candidate José Serra tried to focus on issues that divide society, like abortion, like religion," said Celso.

These issues rose to prominence in the debate a month ago, as both presidential candidates sought to attract evangelical voters who supported Green Party candidate Marina Silva in the first round, in large part responsible for her remarkable 20% of the vote. Serra staunchly opposed abortion, based on what he called his "Christian values."

Worker's Party candidate Dilma Rousseff came out softer on the issue, saying she supports abortion in extreme cases. Many believe she was pressured away from a more progressive stance by the electoral debate and the Catholic Church.

According to the Brazilian Statistics Institute, IBOPE, some 70% of the Brazilian population is against abortion, but many Brazilians say the issue has no place in the campaign.

"It's cowardly to take this to electoral debate. They've never brought this up with a serious democratic discussion where everyone can express themselves, especially the victims. Instead, they bring it up in the heat of the electoral moment to take down their adversary anti-democratically," says Cristóvão Feil, a sociologist and the editor of the popular 4-year-old blog, Dario Gauche.

The mainstream media picked up on the issue and widely criticized Dilma's soft position, weakening her lead in the polls.

On October 10, O Globo, the newspaper for Brazil's largest media chain, led with the headline: "Illegal Abortion Kills One Woman Every Two Days." Not until the end of the article on one of the back pages does the article mention that the majority of these deaths come to poor women who have no other option but to submit to dangerous procedures in clandestine clinics - an issue that could be resolved by treating abortion as a public health issue as many have called for, including president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Maria José Rosado Nunes, coordinator of the NGO Catholics for the Right to Decide (1).

Twelve pages into the same paper, another large headline reads: "Lula Admits: The Dispute Has Become More Difficult." This is followed by an equally large article entitled: "State Leaders will be the Triumph of Serra." Article after article of O Globo revealed a clear slant in favor of conservative candidate, José Serra.

"The media are pretty much campaigning for candidate [Serra]," said Jefferson Pinheiro this week, a member of the six-year-old local media collective, Catarse, in Porto Alegre.

"Many times they completely ignore journalistic ethics, they openly manipulate, they omit information. And although we expected this from these media, which is already disheartening, in these elections especially they crossed every line."

The media widely covered José Serra's wife, Monica, who accused Dilma of being in favor of "killing babies" while campaigning with her husband's vice-presidential candidate, Índio da Costa (DEM), in the state of Rio de Janeiro in September.(2) Ironically, Monica inadvertently brought the media's heyday with the abortion issue to an abrupt end in mid October, when it was leaked that she herself had an abortion. (3)

Just as it seemed the candidates could get down to a real debate, news broke on October 21st that José Serra had been hit by a projectile while campaigning in Rio de Janeiro. Serra took the afternoon off and blamed violent Dilma supporters. The Rio's TV network Globo quickly edited a video showing the attack. It turned out that the object was a paper ball. Bloggers debunked the media mock-up. Even employees at Globo's São Paulo office expressed their embarrassment at being affiliated with the production.

In the print media, the Folha de S. Paulo has been exposed for publishing fabricated Dilma Rousseff police reports, and other papers have printed stories of her alleged involvement in kidnappings while fighting against the Brazilian dictatorship.

Throughout the campaign, the right-wing magazine Veja published weekly stories linking Dilma to corruption scandals and painting her party as a power-hungry beast.

"The cover stories of the magazine Veja, for example, one after the next are criminal. What they are doing in fact does border on criminal, because they are disinformation, information out of context, lies many times, and they without a doubt will influence the vote of many people," says Pinheiro.

Shortly before this year's first round of the elections, members of Brazil's social movements, unions, and independent media protested in São Paulo against what they called the ongoing media coup. Outgoing president Lula reiterated last week that the Brazilian media is in the hands of 9-10 families.

Brazil has a long history of media manipulations. The 20 year-long dictatorship (1964-1984) was closely tied to Brazil's corporate media. Some analysts speculate that president Lula lost his first bid at the Presidential seat in 1989 because of manipulative coverage by the Globo Television Network. The 1993 British documentary, Beyond Citizen Kane, by Simon Hartog highlights the scathing role of the Rede Globo and its powerful owner Roberto Marinho.

"In Brazil, we don't have a monopoly, what we have is an oligopoly," says Pinheiro. "More than 90% of all of the information, news and journalism that is produced in Brazil is in the hands of six large groups, which are groups of businessmen. As we know across the planet, communication in the hands of businessmen serves their economic and political interests in the defense of their social class, which has the economic power."

The three largest conglomerates are Abril, Globo and Band. Abril controls the Brazilian editorial market and also owns MTV Brasil. Seven of the ten most read magazines in the country are owned by Abril, including Veja which is the weekly magazine with the largest circulation in the world outside of the United States.

Globo has the largest television network in the country, controlling 340 local outlets and affiliates across Brazil. Band, or the Bandeirantes Communication Group leads with sporting coverage leader with 144 local outlets and 22 affiliates.

But despite the history of media spin, grassroots analysts say this year's media coverage is even worst than normal.

"It was a more articulated campaign between Serra's party and the corporate media, using techniques from elections in the United States with Sarah Palin," says Claudia Cardoso, a longtime media activist and regional coordinator for the national communication congress. "They were organized. Newspaper, radio and TV representatives met in March of this year and they organized for this campaign. That is what is most concerning."

In an excellent analysis of the media bias during the campaign, journalist Alexandre Haubrich wrote in his blog, JornalismoB, on October 20th:

"In this campaign, we see the dominant press organizing itself against the Lula government and the candidacy of Dilma Rousseff, principally through three of its newspapers (Folha de S. Paulo, Estadão and O Globo), two magazines (Veja and Época) and one television channel (TV Globo). Through constant accusations in articles and direct attacks in editorials, the newspapers fulfill the powerful role of depoliticizing the campaign, and offering issues to the debate that have little or nothing to do with larger proposals for the country."

According to Cardoso, the Brazilian mainstream media is able to get away with things they wouldn't be able to elsewhere because media content and ownership are completely deregulated. Brazil has no public regulatory committee like the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The media collective, Intervozes, says that even if the FCC's attempted deregulation on media consolidation had passed in 2004, it would have left the United States with stronger laws than Brazil. (5)

"When you have media that runs wild, that's not regulated, and there is no way for society to participate in changing the way they function, they can do what they want. And that's the problem, the lack of regulation," says Cardoso.

This is one of the issues that she hopes Dilma will tackle once in office. But she will have a long road ahead. Hundreds of Brazilian politicians across the country are either partners or directors of mainstream media. Dozens of senators and congressional representatives have deep ties to the corporate media. (6) It's a strong lobby and a powerful voice.

In September, president Lula criticized the mainstream media for acting "like political parties." The Brazilian press responded that he was trying to crack down on the freedom of speech. The President of the Inter-American Press Agency (IAPA), Alejandro Aguirre, called Lula's comments "dangerous."

"We are very concerned with the situation in Brazil. In other statements we have expressed this, but we are hopeful that the person who succeeds Mr. Lula da Silva as president will be respectful of civil and human rights, and of freedom of expression as the cornerstone of democracy," Aguirre told Globo. (7) The fact that the IAPA has its own historic ties to the "oligopoly" and Latin America's former dictatorships was ignored. (8)

There is a growing media democracy movement in Brazil. Last December 1500 representatives of Brazil's independent and community media met for the country's first National Communication Congress. The goal was to take the first steps towards something like the new media law Argentina passed last year.

The Argentine law set aside two-thirds of the radio and TV spectrum for noncommercial stations, and required channels to use more Argentine content. It also forced the country's leading media company, Grupo Clarin, to sell off many of its holdings. (9)

But Brazil still has a long way to go. President Lula didn't present any of the proposals from the Communications Congress to Brazil's legislative branches for approval. Any president to do so would be quickly lambasted by an antagonistic press.

"Even if Dilma wins she won't be able to touch the media model," says Cardoso, who adds that the saving grace is the Internet.

During the electoral campaign "blogs, websites, and twitter have helped to organize the streets," she says. One of the major reasons why "so many things were debunked," and why she was able to pull off the resounding victory on Sunday.

It also doesn't hurt that Dilma's most important supporter, outgoing president Lula, currently has an approval rating over 80%. Dilma will take office on January 1st. She has promised to continue Lula's policies.

After victories last month in both the congress and senate, Dilma's political coalition has a solid legislative majority. This is the first time in democratic Brazil that a political coalition has held such a substantial majority in both the executive and legislative branches.

Given her double victory - at the polls and over the mainstream media's campaign against her candidacy - Dilma and her supporters have reason to celebrate.

Sources:
(1) O aborto e as eleições presidenciais, Carta Capital, September 30, 2010
http://www.cartacapital.com.br/politica/o-aborto-e-as-eleicoes-presidenciais
(2) http://www.advivo.com.br/blog/luisnassif/monica-serra-dilma-e-a-favor-de-matar-criancinhas
(3) http://noticias.r7.com/eleicoes-2010/noticias/mulher-de-serra-disse-que-fez-aborto-afirmam-ex-alunas-20101016.html
(4) Donos da Mídia, http://donosdamidia.com.br/levantamento/politicos
(5)
http://www.intervozes.org.br/noticias/as-reais-ameacas-a-liberdade-de-expressão-no-brasil
(6) www.intervozes.org.br
(7) http://en.mercopress.com/2010/09/23/lula-s-attacks-on-the-press-dangerous-and-has-him-on-track-with-chavez
(8 http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/3308
(9) http://www.foxnews.com/world/2009/10/10/new-media-law-approved-argentina/

Michael Fox is a freelance journalist, reporter and documentary filmmaker based in Brazil. This article appeared originally in Americas Program. He is co-author of Venezuela Speaks: Voices from the Grassroots, and co-director of Beyond Elections: Redefining Democracy in the Americas. His work can be found at www.blendingthelines.com.



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Comments (22)Add Comment
Great News
written by Estrangeiro, November 02, 2010
I don't know anything about this woman but it is great news she will expand Lula's Policies. She is hopefully incomparable to the Hillary Clinton... in the same way Elis Regina puts 'dixie chicks' in the shade.
Power Shift
written by adrianerik, November 02, 2010
If these observations are true, the implications are huge. The power pendulum is very lop-sided in Brazil. A small number of people wielding power as they will over the majority.

If the internet, in the hands of the people, can be used to balance the tyranny of the mass media, then that is a good thing, indeed. And if more and more sites begin to become outlets for video and original shows and movies then the internet will become a viable option to the oligarchial control of the mass media in Brazil.

I wonder if they know how dangerous an article this really is.
The most biased article I've ever read.
written by Silvio, November 02, 2010
Seriously, if this Michael Fox truly lives in Brazil, then he is either extremely naive or he is being a dishonest scumbag.

Firs of all, the vast majority of the PT/LULA/Dilma supporters don't even have access to or care about the internet. TV is the name of the game here, only few with college degrees bother to read newspapers. So there was never a need for "rescue" in the media, since the great majority of the TV channels and radio stations in the northeast are controlled by the PT supporter Jose Sarney and his family and affiliates. Go get yourself educated about CORONELISMO in Brazil, then you can talk about the media in Brazil.

Second point; learn about "CHAPA BRANCA". Globo historically supports whoever is in the Palacy in the Federal District. Be it Lula or Stan himself.

3rd, unlike in the U.S, there is no such thing as a "conservative" politician or party in Brazil. José Serra is a notorious social-democrat as is his party.

And finally, all the sources that you described in your biased article, are NGOs heavily sponsored by the current government. Not to mention Carta Capital, a pro-PT magazine which 80% of its ads are paid by state owned companies. Nice job as a reporter and journalist. I will make sure I don't watch any of your "documentaries" from now on...
Silvio is Correct!!!
written by Carlos 03, November 03, 2010
Silvio is 100% correct. Michael Fox does not know even the basics of Brazilian politics, this article is pure nonsense. Brazilians don't read the newspaper or "Veja", a very small minority do so. Carta Capital?? Are you kidding? This is like using a Nazi magazine to defend Hitler...what a moron.
Michael Fox
written by Estrangeiro, November 05, 2010
OK - I'll remember this 'name' as far as B Politics is concerned. Tx a Million.
Well......
written by adrianerik, November 05, 2010
I think that assumptions are being made as to how opinions are shaped in Brazil. Bassed upon the above comments Robert Marinho was a fool to think that his media empire could influence Brazilian politicians. It was all a myth.

Listen, I don't want to write an essay on how to influence mass populations but historically it only takes 20% of the population receiving the same information or viewpoint to influence masses of people. There was a study of President Obama's presidential victory in 2008 and how his use of his Blackberry to instantly inform 17 million people was instrumental in destroying propaganda coming from the Republicans.

Social scientists point out that in countries where at least 20% of their population have a TELEPHONE that it was difficult for a dictatorship to be established.

So, the assumption that the vast majority of a population must be subscribers to a particular media for that media to have great influence is faulty.

There is something called "level of discussive discourse". Fancy name for "what people are talking about and on what level do they begin the discussion."

For example: two potential headlines.

YOUTH ROBS MAN IN BARRA.
or
ANOTHER YOUTH, POOR, UNEDUCATED AND JOBLESS, ROBS MAN IN BARRA.

Both the same discussion but entered on two different levels. Both leading, potentially to two different societal responses: one short term and another long term.

Veja has a circulation of about 1 million, assuming the minimum journalistic estimate of 'turn over' of 8 to 1, that implies about 8 million will read those 1 million copies.

O Globo has a circulation of about 4 million, the same minimum estimate implies that 32 million will read those 4 million newspapers.

The main point is that if those millions of readers are university students who interact with their communities, store owners who become the 'voice' for their customers and others who share their 'knowledge' with others.

You don't need the vast majority of a population to be subscribed to a media for them to be affected by it.

Regarding television stations, the issue is not who buys a stake in a station, but who provides CONTENT. The content in the North is controlled by the late Bob Marinho's Globo. To my knowledge, Lula nor Sarney has production studios where they produce content. You can have local stations that have limited broadcast reach but nothing to match the potential of the Globo dominated networks, even SBT.

When Lula criticized the politicization of Brazil's media, he was not just referring to areas, such as Sao Paulo or Santa Catarina, but to the media's attempt to affect viewpoints in the Northeast and Sarney's so-called stranglehold on the North.

I believe that it's important to understand how a mass population is influenced. Bloggers and the hundred of political sites on Orkut and Facebook had a reach far beyond the few people able to log onto the internet.
adrianerik
written by João da Silva, November 05, 2010

When Lula criticized the politicization of Brazil's media, he was not just referring to areas, such as Sao Paulo or Santa Catarina, but to the media's attempt to affect viewpoints in the Northeast and Sarney's so-called stranglehold on the North.


You almost got it right, Dr.McCray! Over the past 8 years, the entire media in SC is in the hands of just one group.In spite of it, the "mass" media nor the Internet didnt "rescue" or elect the "New President".

But...But...But... , I want to give a little time to the "New President", before criticizing her. smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
True dat! True dat!
written by adrianerik, November 05, 2010
Yes, I wasn't even commenting on whether the article's premise was true or not. Only asserting that mass influence COULD be exerted by one or the other, traditional media or the 'new' media.

Yes, of course, this is all hindsight. But here's a heads up. I've been studying the sites of those Republicans who, in January, will take over the Congressional Foreign Affairs Committee. I have little fear of America's economy. It is huge elephant that has fallen on its side. It will right itself. But these anti-everybody nuts will now dominate the foreign affairs committee. That...I fear. Take a look.

http://mack.house.gov/index.cfm?p=PressReleases&ContentRecord_id=61a36f35-ed9d-4328-a6dd-0c15d5f94b4d

I'll copy it just in case you can't access the link.

Nov 01 2010
Mack Statement on Brazil Presidential Election Results

WASHINGTON – Congressman Connie Mack (FL-14), the Ranking Republican of the House Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, issued the following statement today on the results of yesterday’s run-off presidential election in Brazil, where Dilma Rousseff won with 55 percent of the vote.

Mack said:

“I’m hopeful that the election of Ms. Rousseff will allow our relationship with Brazil to move forward and lead to greater security and prosperity in the region. Cooperation with this important player in Latin America is a key to U.S. foreign policy in the region, and it is my hope we will be able to strengthen our partnership with Brazil under Ms. Rousseff.

“President-elect Rousseff must decide if she will continue outgoing President Lula’s relationship with thugocrats like Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, Cuba’s Castro Brothers, and Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Ms. Rousseff’s election is an opportunity for Brazil to reject Chavez and Ahmadinejad’s destabilizing influence in the hemisphere and strengthen freedom, security and prosperity for the entire region.”


Interesting, isn't! President Dilma has not yet taken office and already one of 535 congressmen are ordering her around.
adrianerik
written by João da Silva, November 06, 2010

I have little fear of America's economy. It is huge elephant that has fallen on its side.


Your viewpoint directly coincides with that of our distinguished fellow blogger ASP and contests Ricardo´s! I read that PBO is on a 10 day tour of Asian countries with the objective of boosting up the U.S. economy (through exports,defense ties, etcsmilies/wink.gif and surprised to note that China is not included. Here is the link:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40039589/ns/politics/

I am not sure how Dilma is going to play the "China Trade" card as well as our "foreign policy". Would love to see her reviewing them.
Dump the Dollar - Save the Economy - A Game of Chess
written by adrianerik, November 06, 2010
Okay... the Wall Street Journal is the next Holy Book next to the Bible.

http://online.wsj.com/article/...TopStories
...
written by João da Silva, November 06, 2010

Okay... the Wall Street Journal is the next Holy Book next to the Bible.


WSJ is now owned by Rupy M, right? I stopped reading that s**t a long time ago. So did Ricardo.smilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
To AdrianErik
written by wiseman, November 06, 2010
Excellent insights!

Re. the US economy as an elephant fallen on its side - agree. However, the same could have been said of Japan, however 20 years later, the Japanese economy is still on its side.

70%+ of the US economy comprises consumer spending. Most of this is being 'supplied' by factories & industries located outside the US - maybe foreign owned or US owned. Hence, the critical mass of the jobs base now resides outside the US.
The rest is:
Finance/Media/Services - which is no value add paper shuffling
Military/security complex - which doesnt produce for the real economy
Agriculture - highly subsidized by tax money & very capital intensive
Tech/Knowledge sector (IT, Pharma, etc.) - where even R&D is being moved offshore

So there is a real conundrum here.

'But these anti-everybody nuts will now dominate the foreign affairs committee. That...I fear. Take a look.' - Agree 100%. Connie Mack is a corrupt, treasonous zionist shill like most of the rest of them. The 1 I fear the most is Illeana Ros-Lehtinen - mentally irrational & criminally intentioned with her Cuban embargo fetish, etc.

This is why our Iron Lady should leave foreign policy on autopilot for a while & focus 100% on improving Brasil's domestic development & fast forwarding a domestic jobs creating Defense Industry. Let the Chinese, Russians, Persians, Turks, etc. deal with those clowns & morons.

Makes you wonder about the environment (& detergent pack degrees) that form & shape these people!

All Out War
written by adrianerik, November 07, 2010
Which is what I would recommend in the case of the foreign policy representatives in Congress.

No! Not with other countries...but among themselves. Cooler heads will still dominate the SENATE Foreign Affairs Committee. Thank god!

The thaw with Cuba MIGHT is in trouble with the election of Senator Elect Rubio in Florida. Son of Cuban immigrants. The confusion among the conservatives will be this - A large percentage of conservative Republicans support increased interaction with Cuba. It's all about business. The Spanish and Germans are snapping up the best locations for hotels and other enterprises in Cuba. The Americans are being frozen out.

The same with the western and southwestern farmers in America. Those farm owners are conservative Republicans, mostly, and are horrified at the thought of losing the thousands of illegal immigrants who harvest their crops.

There is a massive split among themselves on these issues. If they new right wing conservatives try to enter Congress with their 'crafted anger' rather than logic they will either implode themselves or implode America.

Regarding the specifics of America's economy. America has decided that it can't compete in the low skills manufacturing areas. The United States decided long ago that it can't compete in the labor intensive low-skills manufacturing industries. Americans are buying quality cotton shirts and Hanes underwear (four to a pack for $9.00) that would cost $22 reais for ONE! in Brazil. So by their spending habits, they aren't complaining about all of those MADE IN...China, Dominican Republic, Chile, Vietnam, etc tags on these items.

America's bet is that India's one billion and China's 1.3 billion and Africa's almost 1 billion will have societies that develop huge middle classes and will want want America does best.

Hence, Obama's trip to India right after devastating losses in congress.
Hence, the betting on a lower dollar to foster America's exports.
Hence, the allowing of certain American industries to lose out to foreign industries.

The battle in the American government will be this - the conservatives say that they want a more healthy environment for the 'small businesses'. That might be perfect in Brazil (and some of the conservative goals I would strongly support in Brazil - lower taxes, less bureaucracy in forming businesses, etc) where Brazilian businessses should be focusing on internal domestic consumption). But, AMerica, a more mature capitalist society, needs to make strategic decisions on what world industries they can most dominate. That will be painful and I agree that it should be something graduated...like cotton, without causing sudden industry collapses.

The worst that the Republicans can cause is a protectionist war. Why have a weak dollar and cheap exports if countries begin to enact high tariffs to exclude your goods and services.

It that were to happen, we would be stabbed in the back and chest. A weak dollar would turn away foreign investments, which is part of the demand mix (C + I + G) and a protectionist war would turn away foreign demand. We would be in deep do do!

But the only way Republicans can protect the small businesses (and industries: cotton, corn, etc) in these southern and western states is to protect them against foreign competition.

Tighten your seat belts.
adrianerik
written by João da Silva, November 07, 2010

All Out War


A fantastic essay, sir and my peasant´s hat off to you! I am not sure if PBO went on Asian tour because of the "devastating losses" in the congress. I would imagine his trip was planned months before your mid term elections. But never mind. You got the "objective" of his trip right. The market of 3.5 Billions is huge and not to be ignored.smilies/wink.gif

Coming back to our country, you made a statement:

That might be perfect in Brazil (and some of the conservative goals I would strongly support in Brazil - lower taxes, less bureaucracy in forming businesses, etc) where Brazilian businessses should be focusing on internal domestic consumption).


I support too! Also I support the "small" farmers and don't go overboard about making "Soy Kings", "Orange Juice Princes", etc; financed by Tax payers money.smilies/wink.gifsmilies/cheesy.gif

Hopefully, Madame Rousseff, being an Economist trained at UNICAMP will implement our suggestions.smilies/wink.gif
im scared s**tless about lowering the dollar....
written by asp, November 08, 2010
all college educated economists should be made to live in a country where the money is losing value on a regular basis

they need to see the absolute chaos and the hole that this policy can dig and how hard it is to get out of that hole

i like obama a lot, but, i was disapointed to see his article in the usa pushing exports as a solution. that is what the bush administration did when the dollar got unhealthaly low. its the mantra for administrations faced with falling economies , and, i dont think it works

what can work is this :
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/08/us/politics/08pot.html?hpw

notice how they are filling their coffers with tax revenues

these are the real solutions, not dicking around with the currency exchange

a weak dollar getting weaker is heading for a scary result

betting on local innovative production and consumption IS the solution

yet, dumb arcaic minds and logic are ruling now, hence they couldnt pass proposition 19, that would have saved california

the proof is in the pudding, there it is in plain sight in colorado

i could just cry out of frustration at the mind sets that are destroying the usa
lets try the linc again
written by asp, November 08, 2010
asp
written by João da Silva, November 14, 2010

im scared s**tless about lowering the dollar....


I am not and nor should you be. The dollar´s rear end is blocked and our buddy Ricardo has been writing about this fact for years.Even your buddies PBO, Bernacke, Daleys, etc have no faith in your worthless paper money, my friend. Better start hoarding your fortune in Renminbis.smilies/sad.gif
joao...
written by asp, November 20, 2010
if the nation did what that comunity in colorado was doing, then i would be actualy optimistic about what could happen.

there are real solutions to the problems. but, lowering currency to bolster exports is bad news and just arcaic thinking.

printing up money is disastorous...we saw that story down here, didnt we, joao ?

as long as people turn their backs on the real solutions , then the s**t will hit the fan.

if what you are saying is true, why shouldnt i be scared s**tless ?

i make a little money from my business in brazil and the states and europe , through distribution. any devalue from any side throws my peasant ass into the meat grinder
mascarad
written by customized paper, January 09, 2011
there are real solutions to the problems. but, lowering currency to bolster exports is bad news and just arcaic thinking.
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we are just confused with the idea.
respond this topic
written by DAWSONMariana18, June 26, 2011
People deserve good life and mortgage loans or just auto loan will make it better. Just because people's freedom depends on money.

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