Фашизация

Oct 03, 2022 17:06


The. Same. Global. Problem. https://t.co/Dx0QhQF0Kr
- John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) September 30, 2022

В сумбурной речи Путина об аннексии новых территорий многие обратили внимание на гомофобный пассаж, который перекликался с выступлением преследовательницы Муссолини Джорджи Мелони, недавно избранной в премьер-министры на родине европейского ( Read more... )

война, lgbt, идеология

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tijd October 3 2022, 22:16:53 UTC


Бразилия (с населением 213 миллионов) - на третьем месте после США и России по избыточной смертности за время эпидемии ковида.

Важную роль в судьбе мирового фашизма и антифашизма сыграет второй тур президентских выборов 30 октября 2022.

Lula won the first round with 57m votes, or 48% of the total to Bolsonaro’s 43%. But Bolsonaro’s unexpectedly high share - pollsters had tipped him to claim 36% or 37% - has shattered predictions that re-election is beyond his reach in the 30 October runoff against Lula.
“After what happened yesterday, I rule nothing out - absolutely nothing at all,” said Maria Cristina Fernandes, a political commentator from the newspaper Valor Econômico. “Bolsonaro is not out of the picture.”
Bolsonaro celebrated what he declared “the greatest patriotic victory in the history of Brazil” while his senator son, Flávio, hailed “a victory over the mainstream media, which has been relentlessly anti-Bolsonaro”. The incumbent triumphed in two key south-eastern states, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, home to more than 47 million voters.
Adding to the progressive pain, a wave of Bolsonarista hardliners were elected to congress, with Bolsonaro’s Liberal party claiming 99 of its 513 seats - the largest bloc in more than two decades. The winners include Eduardo Pazuello, the army general-turned-health minister accused of bungling Brazil’s Covid response, and Ricardo Salles, the controversial environment minister under whom Amazon deforestation soared.
Lula won the first round with 57m votes, or 48% of the total to Bolsonaro’s 43%. But Bolsonaro’s unexpectedly high share - pollsters had tipped him to claim 36% or 37% - has shattered predictions that re-election is beyond his reach in the 30 October runoff against Lula.
“After what happened yesterday, I rule nothing out - absolutely nothing at all,” said Maria Cristina Fernandes, a political commentator from the newspaper Valor Econômico. “Bolsonaro is not out of the picture.”
Bolsonaro celebrated what he declared “the greatest patriotic victory in the history of Brazil” while his senator son, Flávio, hailed “a victory over the mainstream media, which has been relentlessly anti-Bolsonaro”. The incumbent triumphed in two key south-eastern states, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, home to more than 47 million voters.
Adding to the progressive pain, a wave of Bolsonarista hardliners were elected to congress, with Bolsonaro’s Liberal party claiming 99 of its 513 seats - the largest bloc in more than two decades. The winners include Eduardo Pazuello, the army general-turned-health minister accused of bungling Brazil’s Covid response, and Ricardo Salles, the controversial environment minister under whom Amazon deforestation soared.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/oct/03/jair-bolsonaro-brazil-election-strong-performance

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tijd October 3 2022, 22:29:45 UTC

Eduardo Bolsonaro celebrates the victory of Giorgia Meloni in Italy, evoking “God, Fatherland, Family".
the motto created by fascism and adopted by the Brazilian Integralists. Movement created in the 30’that adopted some characteristics of European mass movements pic.twitter.com/TLffGaOryZ
- Nathália Urban (@UrbanNathalia) September 26, 2022

Эдуардо Больсонару, сын президента Бразилии, играет особую роль в международной оси и обмене опытом.

When Steve Bannon described Brazil’s 2022 presidential election as the “most important of all time in South America”, the former Trump adviser had at his side a man as close as anyone to Brazil’s president Jair Bolsonaro - his son Eduardo.
Introduced by Bannon at an event in South Dakota last year as the “third son of Trump from the tropics”, Eduardo has become his father’s trusted international envoy and ideologue, forging close ties to overseas conservative allies such as the Trump family. <...>
Eduardo says he admires Trump “a lot” and the sentiment seems mutual. On his office wall is a framed copy of Eduardo’s Wikipedia entry with a handwritten endorsement from the former US president: “Eduardo, you are great. Big statement on your wonderful father will be coming soon - best wishes, Donald.”
“He has a unique gift for channelling America’s conservative movement, with a Brazilian twist,” said Gerald Brant, a US-based financier close to the Bolsonaro family. “He will carry his father’s mantle far.”
Eduardo was in Washington during the January 6 attack on the Capitol by Trump supporters but declines to comment on the insurrection, saying it is “an internal issue” for Americans. He has since held further meetings with Trump family members and allies, including last August’s South Dakota conference attended by Bannon.
Tom Shannon, a former senior state department official who specialises in Latin America, said he understood that Eduardo “looked very closely at January 6 to understand what went wrong and why Trump was unsuccessful”.
“The real takeaway for them was that Trump depended on the mob to be successful,” Shannon said. “They believe . . . they need institutional support, they need the armed forces.”
https://www.ft.com/content/4f150c07-41d7-4021-a911-a70ecacacb08

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tijd October 7 2022, 15:39:42 UTC

It didn't have to be this way. https://t.co/9HgwzZq1KF pic.twitter.com/LSgXKKUg1c
- Matthew Gertz (@MattGertz) October 7, 2022

From outside the US, across the pond, data scientist @jburnmurdoch @FThttps://t.co/XVxfx5dESw
"Over the past 18 months, the politicisation of science may have directly cost as many as 60,000 American lives" pic.twitter.com/lMFjwJlFXG
- Eric Topol (@EricTopol) October 15, 2022

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