domingo, 10 de março de 2019

#BRAZILIAN HOUSE ON MARCH 13, 2019 AT 9 O’CLOCK A.M., IN THE PLENARY WILL AWARD WITH THE PATRIOT DIPLOMA AGAINST CORRUPTION THE ACTIVISTS WHO PARTICIPATE OF THE WEST WORLDWIDE GREATEST PROTEST THAT HAPPENED ON 13 MARCH 2016 IN BRAZIL


#BRAZILIAN HOUSE ON MARCH 13, 2019 AT 9 O’CLOCK A.M., IN THE PLENARY WILL AWARD WITH THE PATRIOT DIPLOMA AGAINST CORRUPTION 
THE ACTIVISTS WHO  PARTICIPATE OF THE WEST WORLDWIDE GREATEST PROTEST THAT HAPPENED  ON 13 MARCH 2016 IN BRAZIL

Federal Deputy Carla Zambelli
On 13/3 at 9am in the Chamber Plenary, we will honor the anti-corruption movements that have made the greatest manifestation of human history! And those who will be personally in Brasilia, do not forget, the solemn session will be 09 O’clock A.M. up to  3 O’clock P.M.  there will be a demonstration in front of the STF. If you want to participate, or send your story with photos to tell the session, contact:
 dep.carlazambelli@camara.leg.br If you want to receive the Patriot Diploma Against Corruption diploma, send us your complete address, this information will be kept confidential.




"THE AMETHYST COMMUNICATION" that has been acting specifically since 2011, had idea of ​​this essay, it is first of all a reflection on the Republic, and that a competition of facts happened with the New Republic from its installation until the present day . And that Brazil has undergone a succession of crises, one of the main ones being the Crisis of Representation and the successive corruption Scandals, which are not an exclusive Brazilian phenomenon, but also perceived in other countries and with their respective societies, because we could speak which is a universal problem. In this sense, we sought to reflect from Brazil starting from its origins by answering the question "FROM WHERE WE COME" and it was in this sense that this essay was outlined, seeking the causes with a brief and brief analysis of the Colonial Period, Kingdom United Kingdom / Brazil and Algarve, Brazil Empire, Republic-Proclamation. And, a critical evaluation was made seeking reasons for effectiveness of the Brazilian Republic and that one of the main problems is the Crisis of Representation.

Another important problem is the recent corruption scandals involving the Brazilian political class and the business sector, that is, the involvement of the Executive and / or Legislative Branch
Recent scandals have brought into evidence the growing corruption scandals involving the Brazilian political class and the business community, that is, involvement of the Judiciary, even considered the most closed Power of the three powers. "The Fall of the Berlin Wall" was an important promoter who leveraged a growing renewal of the yearnings for freedom, allowing the Brazilian thinking Elite, a clearer perception, of all these departures from the Republican Principles since its proclamation, as Saldanha points out. is the Republic of My Dreams. "Marinho, generated outrage from Brazilian citizens, and also from other countries, because what was perceived in Brazil was also a reflection of something that would be happening in other countries, especially those in the first world. However, the "Fall of the Berlin Wall" does not seem to have had much influence on the decadent yearnings of the Latin American Left, for they do not tire of using the most varied forms of persuasion to deceive populations with their populist governments, and that many elected with Brazilian electronic election system, which has become obsolete and fraudulent to the extreme.










"THE AMETHYST COMMUNICATION" that has been acting specifically since 2011, had idea of ​​this essay, it is first of all a reflection on the Republic, and that a competition of facts happened with the New Republic from its installation until the present day . And that Brazil has undergone a succession of crises, one of the main ones being the Crisis of Representation and the successive corruption Scandals, which are not an exclusive Brazilian phenomenon, but also perceived in other countries and with their respective societies, because we could speak which is a universal problem. In this sense, we sought to reflect from Brazil starting from its origins by answering the question "FROM WHERE WE COME" and it was in this sense that this essay was outlined, seeking the causes with a brief and brief analysis of the Colonial Period, Kingdom United Kingdom / Brazil and Algarve, Brazil Empire, Republic-Proclamation. And, a critical evaluation was made seeking reasons for effectiveness of the Brazilian Republic and that one of the main problems is the Crisis of Representation.

Another important problem is the recent corruption scandals involving the Brazilian political class and the business sector, that is, the involvement of the Executive and / or Legislative Branch
Recent scandals have brought into evidence the growing corruption scandals involving the Brazilian political class and the business community, that is, involvement of the Judiciary, even considered the most closed Power of the three powers. "The Fall of the Berlin Wall" was an important promoter who leveraged a growing renewal of the yearnings for freedom, allowing the Brazilian thinking Elite, a clearer perception, of all these departures from the Republican Principles since its proclamation, as Saldanha points out. is the Republic of My Dreams. "Marinho, generated outrage from Brazilian citizens, and also from other countries, because what was perceived in Brazil was also a reflection of something that would be happening in other countries, especially those in the first world. However, the "Fall of the Berlin Wall" does not seem to have had much influence on the decadent yearnings of the Latin American Left, for they do not tire of using the most varied forms of persuasion to deceive populations with their populist governments, and that many elected with Brazilian electronic election system, which has become obsolete and fraudulent to the extreme.
==//==

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More than a million Brazilians protest against 'horror' government

Widespread anger is targeted at Dilma Rousseff as the country grapples with recession and a major corruption scandal
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Crowds gather in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Sunday to protest against the government and demand the removal of president Dilma Rousseff.
More than a million Brazilians have joined anti-government rallies across the country, ramping up the pressure on embattled president Dilma Rousseff.
Already struggling with an impeachment challenge, the worst recession in a century and the biggest corruption scandal in Brazil’s history, the Workers party leader was given another reason to doubt she will complete her four-year term.
The demonstrations on Sunday – which reached all 26 states and the federal district – were expected to be bigger than similar rallies last year. The largest took place in São Paulo, where the polling company Datafolha estimated the crowd at 450,000, more than double the number it registered last year.
An inflatable doll known as ‘Pixuleco’, portraying Brazil’s former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, is seen inside a cage during a protest in Brasilia. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
Organisers, police and local media calculated far greater numbers. According to police sources cited by Globo, 3.5 million people took part nationwide in 326 cites, including 100,000 in Brasilia and 70,000 in Curitiba. The exact figures are contested, but undeniably huge.

In Rio de Janeiro, dense crowds stretched along the beachfront from Copacabana to Leme, and organisers estimated there were as many as a million participants. Police had yet to provide figures, but it looked likely to exceed 100,000.
Many protesters wore the canary yellow shirts of the national football team, or draped themselves in the national flag. Others carried banners expressing anger at bribery scandals and economic woes.

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An inflatable doll known as “Pixuleco” of Brazil’s former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is seen during a protest against Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment. Photograph: Paulo Whitaker/Reuters
Parents brought children, and some families wore matching “impeachment now” T-shirts. Neighbours travelled on public buses, chanting anti-Rousseff slogans.
“She’s a horror,” said Paulo Rodriguez, a 53-year-old businessman who came with his wife and daughter. “The Workers party is a horror. They’re a criminal organisation that is robbing state resources. They are destroying our country.”
Rodriguez’s primary frustration was with the economy. Sales at his crepe business were down 30% to 40% compared to last year, he said. Even though he believed opposition politicians were as crooked as those in government, he felt a change was needed.
“If Dilma goes, the currency will get stronger and confidence will return and people will start spending again,” he said.
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Brazil rallies call for president Rousseff’s impeachment - video
Worryingly for Rousseff, some of the major protests were in former Workers Party strongholds in the north-east.
In Rio, the crowd was predominantly white, middle class and predisposed to supporting the opposition. Several of the more prominent figures who spoke from sound trucks had rightwing backgrounds.
Among them was Marcelo Itagiba, the city’s former state security secretary and ex-federal police superintendent, who has been investigated for ties with militias and was one of the inspirations for the gritty film Elite Squad 2.
Now a congressman with the opposition Brazilian Social Democratic party, he led chants of “Fora Dilma!” (“Dilma Out!”) from the top of a sound truck, and tried to shout down a critic by labeling him “Petista” (a Workers party supporter).
Demonstrators take part in a protest to demand the resignation of Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff.
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Demonstrators take part in a protest to demand the resignation of Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff. Photograph: Miguel Schincariol/AFP/Getty Images
But compared to last year, the extreme right was less in evidence in Copacabana. The crowd also appeared more diverse.
“It’s not just the rich. Everyone is suffering,” said house cleaner Claudia Brasilina, who had travelled almost an hour to get to the protest from her home in the poor suburb of São Cristovão. “Dilma is ruining the country. She has to go.”
Like many of the demonstrators, she put her hopes not in the opposition but in the judiciary, particularly judge Sergio Moro, who has presided over the Lava Jato investigation into the kickbacks and bribes associated with Petrobras, the state-run oil company.
That case has spread to involve dozens of other companies and senior politicians from almost all of the major parties. A popular chant on Sunday was “Viva o Sérgio Moro! Viva a Lava Jato!”
Demonstrators take part in a protest to demand the resignation of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, on March 13, 2016 in Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo. Authorities in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s biggest city and an opposition stronghold, said they were bracing for a million protesters. AFP PHOTO / MIGUEL SCHINCARIOLMiguel Schincariol/AFP/Getty Images
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Demonstrators in São Paulo take part in a protest to demand the resignation of Dilma Rousseff. Photograph: Miguel Schincariol/AFP/Getty Images
Rousseff has not been implicated, but several close aides are either in prison or under investigation. For the protesters, she is tainted by association.
“At the very least, she is guilty of incompetence and arrogance,” read one placard. “Dilma: Institutionalising Corruption 2010-2016” said another. Many others called for her to be impeached.
Congress is debating whether the president should be removed on a separate allegation, of window-dressing government accounts ahead of the election in 2014. The legal basis for this challenge is weak, however, and the man leading the charge, speaker Eduardo Cunha, is himself under investigation for bribery.
But the political winds are blowing hard against the president. The biggest party in her coalition has said it will decide within 30 days whether to quit the government coalition.
Later this week, Rousseff supporters will stage a rally against what they see as a judicial coup, but allies are becoming harder to find.
Several protesters on Sunday said they had previously voted for the Workers Party, which came to power in 2002 with a promise to clean up Brazilian politics. The economic downturn and corruption scandals have turned many former supporters away.
“I voted for Lula, but now I think he is a thief,” said systems analyst Barbara Santos, referring to an ongoing investigation into claims that the former president received illicit benefits from construction companies.
“People are angry. We’ve had it up to here. Dilma needs to fall so we can have a new government. Right now all we have is drift. It’s hopeless.”

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comments (675)

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66 67
There is zero chance of impeachment.
And this guilty by association thing is borderline 'show trial'.
The country is at war with itself. There are plenty in the opposition who would gladly sacrifice the country's stability and wealth to get the Workers' Party out and go back to the good ol days of conservative 'let the poor sort themselves out' approach.
Regarding corruption, it's a fact of life in Brazil: PT got caught, that was their biggest mistake, but it wasn't just them - all the major parties were involved in the Petrobras scandal.
PT have been as corrupt as any other Latin American government in the last century, maybe even more so, but their social programs would not have seen the light of day under any other party's authority.
12 13
The Bolsa Familia became a good way of stoking inflation, devaluing currency, increasing cheap consumer imports and ultimately impoverishing the people it was intended to help. As we can now see. PT neither had the talent or competence to run the economy after Lula's team was replaced by Dilma's apparatchiks, chancers and craven ideologues. Even her second inauguration was chaired by a guy not long out of custody. But you are right about corruption running across all parties and levels of government. Even some of those commandeering the protests are just after their shot at it.
  • 16 17
    Good points, but the PT social programs aren't remotely effective due to the total corruption and massive incompetence in which they are immersed.
  • 25 26
    The biggest corruption scandal in Brazilian history was Banestado, in which the then right wing government leading the current "anti-corruption" protests illegaly remitted $100 billion in privatisation monies. Jonathon Watts doesn
    25 26
    So, we should do nothing? Overlook present corruption because there was "worse" before? Let them get away with it because they are "not as bad" as others? Corruption is corruption and they need to be punished. Hollow talk about quotas and family benefit. What about basic education, health, public services? No better, maybe worse. Never mind corruption - just look around at the poverty and misery on the streets. Maybe they did some good things in their time and moved the argument forward in some respects, but they are done. Time to go. And give some other corrupt party a chance...
  • 26 27
    Not only was there worse before, but the people protesting against the current government are the most corrupt of all. If you want to protest about corruption, great, but this is an anti-democratic "our flag will never be red" campaign led by Aécio, Fernando Henrique, Alckmin and sponsored by Globol, Veja and even Habib's, and with the backing of pro-coup anti-gay fascists linke Bolsonaro. So let's not pretend it's reallly an anti-corruption protest.

     
    ==//==

    SOURCE/LINK: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=491144108083298

    # HOMENAGEADOS EM DIA 13/3, ÀS 9H, NO PLENÁRIO DA CÂMARA DOS DEPUTADOS EM BRASÍLIA (D.F.) BRASIL
    ATIVISTAS QUE PARTICIPARAM MAIOR MANIFESTAÇÃO DO OCIDENTE EM 13 DE MARCO DE 2016    SERÃO ENTREGUE SE REMETIDOS DIPLOMA DE PATRIOTA CONTRA A CORRUPÇÃO





    Carla Zambelli
    Dia 13/3, às 9h, no Plenário da Câmara, homenagearemos os movimentos anticorrupção que fizeram a maior manifestação da história da humanidade! E os que estiverem pessoalmente em Brasília, não se esqueçam, a sessão solene será 09h e as 15h haverá manifestação em frente ao STF. Se quiser participar, ou enviar sua história com fotos para contarmos na sessão, entre em contato: dep.carlazambelli@camara.leg.br Se quiser receber o diploma de Patriota Contra a Corrupção, mande seu endereço completo, essa informação será confidencial.

    THE END


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