theres a guy who lives in my city and he always dresses in crazy 80’s gear with teased hair and tights and the whole city just calls him the “80’s guy.”
do
you
think
i’m joking??
one time he led a posse through the city. all in costume.
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By now you must have heard about what’s happening in Brazil. If you follow me here, you know I’m not really the kind of person who posts these things, but i’d like to share this message with as many people as I can.
Explaining the reasons for those protests shortly: Brazil has been living a sad political reality. Tons and tons of money are stollen by the government every year. There’re no quality public education, public health care system or public transportation. You want it nice, you gotta pay tons for it. But then, apparently there’s just not enough money to make all those things work, but there’s money to build 345678 soccer stadiums for the world cup. anyways.
People got tired. Millions of people took the streets of all the main cities in this country. Peacefully, people told their government to start doing things right. Government replied with military police troops shooting, and throwing gas bombs against the crowd. Its the ultimate disrespect against our democracy.
Those are the pictures i find either the most beautiful or sad taken so far. On the old lady sign it reads “I’m 82, I’m not here to play, I came to manifest”.
Please, we need to be heard.
Thousands of Brazilians have protested in several cities over the past ten days, and organizers are planning for another march in Sao Paulo on Monday night.
Rising prices for public transportation was the original cause of the the protests, organized by Movimento Passe Livre. Since then, Brazilians have joined protests for various other reasons, including rising crime, income inequality, and corruption.
The protests are quickly becoming a sign of a weakening public confidence for Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff ahead of the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
The protest’s nickname “Salad Uprising” was coined in response to the arrests of those who carried vinegar with them as an aide against police tear gas.Tumblr blog Salad Uprising is reporting to collect stories and pictures from demonstrations across Brazil (Reuters cannot confirm individual posts on external blogs; please message the Reuters on Tumblr if you seek more information on any news).
When police tried to disperse the crowd on Thursday in Sao Paulo, violence erupted, injuring dozens and leading to nearly 200 arrests.
Photo: posters read, “Dilma, we are the ones who pay for your housing” and “Communities exist.” REUTERS/Alex AlmeidaMany people have asked me about this, because 1. there are a lot of Brazilian nerdfighters, 2. I am a huge fan of Brazil and see the last 20 years of its history as a model for other nations in the developing world, and 3. I like soccer a lot.
My honest opinions may be unpopular with Brazilian nerdfighters, and that’s okay. I might be wrong. I’ve been wrong before. Also, I don’t know much about Brazil, and I don’t want to pretend otherwise. But since you’re all asking:
1. 100% of the protesters’ concerns are legitimate.
2. I think the World Cup (and the Olympics) will happen regardless of whether they are a net economic good for Brazil. (I think they’ll be a net negative, but it’ll be closer than many people are saying.) Brazil has already spent more than 3 billion reals to prepare for the World Cup; yes, that is a ridiculous number, but making the World Cup a failure will not make it a less ridiculous number.
2a. Given that, I think non-Brazilians who are planning to go should go and spend a lot of money. The time to have the conversation about whether it was a bad idea to host the World Cup has passed: The cost of abandoning the World Cup (or the Olympics) at this point would be prohibitive and more damaging to the Brazilian economy than going through with it and hopefully getting a reasonable windfall from foreign tourists spending a lot of money.
3. I understand that money spent by tourists will be unevenly distributed, but that’s been the case for decades, and in Brazil at least, the rising tide really has lifted all boats: after decades of rampant inflation and extremely high poverty rates, absolute poverty has fallen by half since 1994.
3a. That said, poverty is still much higher in Brazil than it should be, and corruption remains a huge problem. (Compare Brazil’s corruption levels to Chile’s, for instance.) Income inequality is extremely high. Crime is a vexing problem, and a very complicated one. Public transportation costs should not have gone up (for a variety of reasons, but mostly because it amounts to a tax on non-rich workers, who are exactly the wrong people to tax).
4. HOWEVER: It is important to note that real and important economic progress had been made in Brazil in the last 20 years. For that progress to continue, corruption, income inequality, and crime must decrease. These protests are important because they remind the government that all is not well and that progress is fragile and only counts if it continues. They hold the government accountable to the people. But as far as the World Cup goes: Most of the money that will be spent on the World Cup has already been spent. It is gone. Let us hope that the crowds are large and that most of that money can be recouped.
The protests are not, I repeat, NOT, about the world cup, as media apparently wants you to think.
This is but 1/10 of the matter.
Today, for exemple, Brazilian Human Rights Comitee passed a bill allowing “gay cure” and everything started when the bus fares were readjusted for the third time this year, way, WAY beyound inflation rates.
The fight is against corruption and for Human Rights, the World Cup just happens to be subject to a LOT of corruption AND a Human Rights issue, for instance when they demolished our oldest Native museum and removed the indian population that resided there (leaving them nowhere but the slums to go) just so they could get more parking space for the stadiums.
So yeah, it sucks. No one here is actually against the actual happening of the World Cup, we’re just bringing forth major issues that need more money than stadiums.
I’m a teacher. Do you know the how much the government pays us teachers? About U$600, $100 of which is spent in public transportation alone.
NO NO N NO N O N ON NO NO ON NO NO NONO NOON NON N NOON ONOOOOOO
NINTENDO YOU ARE GOING TO GIVE ME A HEART ATTACK.
15 amazing things in nature you won’t believe actually exist
I am gonna make it my personal mission to see these places some day.
I’ll pass on the trees.
They’re in Oklahoma too, so you know
theres a guy who lives in my city and he always dresses in crazy 80’s gear with teased hair and tights and the whole city just calls him the “80’s guy.”
do
you
think
i’m joking??
one time he led a posse through the city. all in costume.
Brasilia - police shooting at the demonstrators sitting on the ground.
ATENÇÃO: Relato de violência policial cometida contra uma manifestante que estava no ato de ontem, 13/06/2013, em São Paulo. Circulem, façam rodar!
“Talvez o relato falhe por escaparem-me detalhes como os horários e a sequência dos fatos, pois estava sozinha - e perdida de todos que esperava…