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A Lesson Passed from Father to Son in Brazil: He Who Doesn't Steal Is a Sucker PDF Print E-mail
2011 - November 2011
Written by João Ubaldo Ribeiro   
Tuesday, 29 November 2011 00:12

Father and son Distinguished reader, lovely lady reader, put yourself in the shoes of someone who has to write every week. I am not referring to the obligation to produce a text regularly without fail. Sometimes, like everything in life is a little boring, but with experience this is a piece of cake, there are tricks and tips learned informally over the years and this is no sweat for the old hand.

What's really boring, in my opinion, is the "hook," the need that the text be based in the surrounding reality. Of course, nothing prevents you to write something entirely fanciful or delusional, but the usual is that the article or report is elicited by the daily life, something that is going on, or is drawing attention.

That's right. Today, once again, what's the hook? Whether you read the newspaper or hear on the corner, all we talk about is thievery. Widespread thievery, embezzlement, commissions, kickbacks. We steal everything, everywhere. We steal government funds in the Union, states and municipalities.

We steal humanitarian donations and emergency funds to help disaster victims. We steal material, we steal fuel, we steal whatever can be stolen. What's the hook then? It can only be thievery. There is no other, at least that I see. It is the theme of the day, no use trying to choose another, it imposes itself.

Today I believe there isn't a single Brazilian man or Brazilian woman (from time to time I do it right when using the new rule to distinguish between the genders) who do not have the conviction that at least most of the rulers, in the three powers, are made of abusive privileged people and thieves, in the broadest sense the term may have.

We got used to it, it's part of our daily routine, nothing surprises anyone anymore. Even the most jaw-dropping offense may be true. And  we're also used to the fact that nothing happens to the thieves. They not only stay out of jail, as they must carry on living happily with their stolen money, because we never hear any news about money being returned.

That is, as much as someone in authority tells us expressly to the contrary, using a dubious legalese and warped statistics, the truth is that in Brazil, crime pays. I assume that even the most inept burglars have at least a vague perception that all powerful people steal, so it is once again proven that he who doesn't steal is a sucker.

Sometimes it almost seems that there is a central location where fraud programs are written, because the thieves' ingenuity knows no bounds, and today, analyzing the dirty tricks applied in one or two ministries would require a skilled professional with years of study and experience. As soon as an organ or budget is created, a gang appears dedicated to stealing that organ or make away with that money.

We are suspicious of everything from public works to lotteries, from the police to the courts. We can count on the fingers of one hand the rulers in any of the three powers, that we still believe we can trust - and there's growing mistrust in them, as well as the cynicism and apathy in the face of a situation that seems insoluble as someone who meets a bad fate and can never get rid of it.

It would not be unreasonable at all to say that we are a lawless society. In some ways, we really are, because our laws have no teeth, they don't bite anyone. Even in the case of a murder being solved, which is far from the rule, we are tired of seeing murderers get away with practically no punishment thanks to labyrinthine and woefully formalist network of appeals, legal niceties and super short sentences.

The possibility of even a confessed murderer never being truly punished, just very lightly, is something that happens every day. Killing here becomes more and more trivial and many assailants shoot for the pleasure of shooting, kill for the pleasure of killing.

I do not know where else in the world the individual enters a police station carrying the corpse of the victim, showing the murder weapon and confessing being guilty of the crime, to be released soon afterwards, surrounded by lawyers and maneuvers to avoid jail time.

Hard to believe, even knowing that this is a documented fact. If the guy is a first-time offender, has known address, a job etc he goes home almost as if nothing had happened, perhaps even exchanging a handshake with the police chief, as I picture. I mean, it's crime, but killing in Brazil comes easy, the price is very affordable.

And this situation is not just for the rich anymore because others are also learning, as was the case of a young robber in São Paulo, that many of you have seen on TV. He presented himself at a police station voluntarily, he's first time offender, has fixed residence. etc.. Although he put the blame on the victim because the person reacted, he confessed the crime.

He was released shortly thereafter, leaving the police station with a big smile. And if one day he ends up convicted, he'll have a sea of resources at his disposal, having added to this the benefits to which he's entitled while serving his sentence.

I have already said that the best way to murder someone in Brazil is to get drunk, get out with your car and run the victim over. Getting drunk is an aggravating factor anywhere else. In Brazil, however, it  seems to work as a kind of mitigating circumstance.

We start discussing whether the homicide is willful or grossly negligent, if the Traffic Code or the Penal Code should be applied to the case but, at the end, what happens is that perpetrator pays bail, goes home and waits, at worst, to be considered guilty in one of those toothless laws and then serves his sentence in freedom, or close to that.

Which, in addition to what is said above, leads to the conclusion that, among us, crime pays. And perhaps thanks to the examples given by parliamentarians and other leaders, we are witnessing the democratization of impunity, which gradually stops being a privilege of the wealthy and powerful to become a right for all. We're good to go.

João Ubaldo Ribeiro, member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters, is a renowned Brazilian novelist, journalist, script writer and professor. Two of his most celebrated books are Viva o povo brasileiro (Hail the Brazilian People) and A casa dos Budas ditosos (The House of the Blessed Buddhas). He has lived in the US (as student and professor), Portugal and Germany.



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Comments (13)Add Comment
great article well written and quite accurate
written by us observer, November 29, 2011
great article well written and stunningly accurate ...bravo !!Mr Ribeiro !!!...
...
written by Johnny Corleone, November 29, 2011
João, you are soooo frigging right! And it´s going to get worse, without ever getting better! I guess I better carry my piece to keep the 'peace!"
much respect and honor to you sir keep writing your country cries out for your words
written by us observer, November 29, 2011
brazil needs more from this great writer of truths Mr Joao Ubaldo Ribeiro...
So true...
written by José Geraldo Gouvêa, November 29, 2011
The sad truth about this country was told, back in the eighties, by one Edgard Flexa Ribeiro, a lawyer and radio commentator. He said: In this country you won't ever go to jail if you are not one of the three unlucky "P"s: preto, pobre ou pagador de pensão (black, poor or wife support payer).

This was said in the context of a debate about a man who was sent to jail and lost his job because he was accumulating a debt with his ex-wife by not affording to pay the entirety of the pension he was sentenced to pay.

Since the eighties things have changed a bit: racial inclusion policies have assured the blacks same rights as the whites and now if you're black you won't go to jail if you can afford an attorney. So now you can't only go to jail for being poor of failing to pay wife support to a wife who can afford a good attorney...

There is an unspoken truth about Brazilian laws: they are so lax on almost anything that they look exactly like the laws the foxes would have written for the henhouse. Want an example: the privileges of the driver.

If you kill any given number of people using your car (it doesn't even have to be unintentionally) you won't go to jail. Ever. You may be fined or lose your driver's permit for a couple of years. But usually it is all. Recently a deranged man drove through a cyclists' demonstration in Porto Alegre. The bikers were demanding more spaces for bicycles. The driver was late for an appointment and decided to run over the bikers. Dozes were hurt, fortunately none was killed or seriously injured. The driver has not stayed in prison for a SINGLE day.

That's not to say that every Brazilian is a thug and that the country doesn't know what civility is. In fact, many families pass values to the children (the title of this article is misleading, to be polite). The problem is that the country had not had a true democracy yet, the laws are all skewed in favour of the powerful and the Judiciary is full of people connected with this elite, piously trying to preserve their privileges.

I don't know how long it will take, but mending the country will be a terrific work.
yes indeed Jose you are also a great man a writer of truths your country should hold you in very high regard .brazil needs you
written by us observer, November 29, 2011
Mr Jose Geraldo Gouvea you are proof that brazil has a future a place a respect and specialness to it because of your willingness to write great words of wisdom and truths brazil needs you!! you are the brazil that the world waits for hopes for and prays for . great well written comment sir
a world free of corruption /communism/ and marxism/ is ours for the asking
written by us observer, November 29, 2011
with the united states on the verge of purging itself of the leftist scourge and scum that is creating such problems in the usa..the left is being pushed back in the usa as barack obamas leftist agenda is about to be rejected and buried into the dust heap of unpleasant memories in america ..there is a huge conservative movement in the usa and it is unstoppable .illegal immigration to the usa is facing a wall of steel and measures to make it virtually impossible for illegals to continue on with business as usual their future is deportation and arrest if they don,t leave .us armed forces fresh back from our wars in iraq and afghanistan will be training their sharpshooters on the mexican border to stop the narcos and alien smugglers .colombia will see a us military base their to wipe out FARC .latin america should seriously consider pushing back the marxist/communists /socialists subjugating the people to grinding poverty and illiteracy and corruption .when latin america is willing to kick the door down of the rotten structure of corruption/communism/socialism then the whole rotten structure will fall..
Ha Ha . . .
written by capnamerca, December 01, 2011
Hey there US observer, you're smoking some pretty good stuff.
american imperialism is a romantic dreamy beautifull thing...
written by american dream, December 02, 2011
and they don,t call it south america for nothing !!... north america fought and defeated the spanish and the southern continent is the usa,s for the taking ....perhaps its time the americans collect and manage its spoils ...its meant to be .. just ask any south american girl what she dreams for ...
american dream
written by soviet dream, December 03, 2011
south american girls dream of turning us observer's 3" fully errect 'american dream' into a carnaval sparkler.....smilies/grin.gifsmilies/cheesy.gifsmilies/grin.gif
such jealousy and envy its all most comical if not pathetic...
written by the western democracies, December 03, 2011
one can easily conclude that it is like childs play and so very easy to lure and flush out beligerents ,vile wacked out anti-gringoe haters ,marxist wannabees,communist /anarchists,inferior sub-human brutes,extremely insecure jealous little men,brain-washed freshmen students,unionists,pt radicals ,reds,pinks,and yellow cowards .and weak grotesque little people with their anti-american hatred . if this is a war of ideology then all its going to take is a bitch slap and a shut the f*ck up ! ...caution: watch out for bananna peels ,rocks,sticks ,and cheap chinese firecrackers and flying shoes...
western democracies
written by soviet socialism, December 03, 2011
And who might be these 'western democracies' dear vice 1?
hit & run incident
written by Calandria Santos, December 07, 2011
Very interesting article that brings me to the foriegn country of Korea, where it was mentioned that when a person was runned over by car, the driver would casually get out of the car take the dead body and toss it to the side of the road, where he would then get back into his car and drive off. The attitude that these unjust situations are not regarded to a full extent is not a good policy. No regard for human life through weak laws are just sends a message that criminals can get away with murder. That, to me is an uncivilized way to about such matters. That is barbaric.
re:
written by Lee Shin, July 25, 2013
spot on with this write-up, i like the way you discuss the things. i'm impressed, i must say. i'll probably be back again to read more. thanks for sharing this with us.

Lee Shin
www.trendone.net

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