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Brazil: The Media Is Not Beyond Suspicion
With the inevitable outcome, it is safe to say that the Federal Council of Journalism served the press an extraordinary purpose without the help of any
flagship merchant services
at the time. Despite sentenced
to termination on the shelf, the project and its mentors set off involuntarily
the most important debate over the press in the last decades. Brazilian
democracy, impawned, is grateful. There could be the potential for lawsuits in the future.
by Alberto Dines
Sorriso: a City Worth US$ 174 million
This is the GDP of Sorriso, a city in the midwestern state of Mato Grosso.
The 13 greatest soy producers in the state are organizing themselves in
order to export directly, in five years time, about 200,000 tons of soy.
This is equivalent, in today's values, to an income of US$ 55
million
per year minus
merchant services
fees. The city has the greatest soy productivity in the world, and
a per capita income above the Brazilian average.
by Joel Santos Guimarães
Between a Saint and a Sinner in Laguna, Brazil
Brazil never felt more like Spain or Italy. At the present time in Brazil,
evangelical Protestantism is making deep inroads into Catholicism. Everybody
seems excited and amused. A local man tells a miraculous story about a
sixty year-old retired teacher who had rather suddenly gotten married.
"The real miracle was that she was a virgin."
by Terry Caesar
In Brazil, It's Three Beers or Your Life
Bribe fishing, is nothing new in Brazil, having been incorporated into
Brazilian culture decades if not centuries ago. Things are getting worse,
however. Being honest and not choosing to play the corruption game can
endanger the life of anyone who defies the "system". The bribery industry
is installed at all levels of society.
by Leila Cordeiro
In Brazil, All Is Allowed… After the Elections
There are those in Brazil who believe that the government will propose
in November, after the elections, the infamous labor reform, extinguishing
all remaining rights after the Cardoso sociological hurricane blew by.
It seems the scale will tilt toward the economic team's side, which will
certainly be kept in place if Cardoso ever returns to power.
by Carlos Chagas
What Brazil Lacks Is a Project of Inclusion
Over the decades we have created in Brazil the idea that economic growth
is the road to building a solid nation. History has already shown, however,
that the economy is a necessity but that, far from solving Brazil's problems,
it can in some cases aggravate them. Growth does not solve social justice
questions.
by Cristovam Buarque
Brazil Celebrates Pessoa. Woe the Poet!
In the last decades, literature studies have been the major propeller—
not in literature—for tourism. A large literary conference is always a
party for airlines, travel agents, and hotel and restaurant businesses.
The one to profit the least is literature itself; after all, conferences
generate a lot of hullabaloo and zero literature.
by Janer Cristaldo
Brazil's Latest Fad: the Narghile
The table pipe, which is very appreciated in the Arab countries, became
popular in Brazil during the last three years. Today the narghile has
become a way to lure Brazilian youths to the hip bars, and is used by
many, not only Arab immigrants descendants. Importer Maxifour alone sells
up to 300 units every month.
by Isaura Daniel
Arabs Love Brazil. They Are 7% of the Country.
They started arriving in Brazil in the nineteenth century. In their luggage
was a great desire to work and dreams of riches. Today the Arabs, their
children and grandchildren total 12 million people. Their culture, customs
and entrepreneurship can be seen in the Brazilian industry, cuisine, music,
and vocabulary.
by Marina Sarruf
Why Can't Brazil Stand Up to Bush?
Brazil's so-called Shoot Down Law was approved seven years ago by the
Brazilian Congress, but it was never enforced because the US would not
permit. By way of an imperial gesture, US president, George Bush, is now
allowing Brazil to shoot drug-carrying planes as if he were dishing out
a handout to a hobo.
by Carlos Chagas
Brazil May Be a Country, But It's Not a Nation
In order to be a country, only a territory and a president are needed.
To be a nation, what is needed is a long-term project that unifies all
the inhabitants. The small number of medals won in Athens and the many
violent deaths in our streets originate from the lack of a project to
build a winning and integrated Brazil.
by Cristovam Buarque
Can't Brazil Leave the NY Times Alone?
On giving in to the temptation of again confronting the powerful New
York Times, the Brazilian government is issuing an affidavit that
the Federal Council of Journalism is its own initiative, and not the journalists'.
Brazil's National Federation of Journalists has behaved as a Brasília's
godchild throughout this episode.
by Alberto Dines
Brazil Sounds: Stalking Veloso and Gil's Ghosts in London
During the years Brazilian composers Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil spent
in London they lived in several different addresses. But it is the first
house, the one in which Veloso and Gil lived in together which Veloso
still recalls: "The recollections of the house in Chelsea, the inside
of it, are more enduring than those of the other houses."
by Guy Burton
Brazil's Monica Gang to Take On the World
Brazilian comics creator Mauricio de Souza and his characters like Monica
and Jimmy Five are already known in Italy, Portugal, Japan, Greece, France,
and Indonesia besides Brazil. The father of the most popular comics in
Brazil now wants to widen even more his universe taking his creatures
to Arab countries and China.
by Isaura Daniel
In Brazil, the Poorer the Better for the Rich
Brazil is a very class conscious culture. The majority of politicians
and the elite in control have little desire to change the lives of the
poor. The lower class is viewed as a source of affordable domestic labor.
Street children are seen as nuisances and favelas as crime areas which
should be left to the police to deal with.
by Jennifer Grant
Kids from Brazil. How Cool Are They?
Life in Brazil and in Rio, in particular, tends to be more focused on
the family than in the United States. The child is made to feel an important
part of a larger unit. Brazilian parents find less occasion to discipline,
and the families tend to be less authoritarian. Teenagers rarely rebel
against their parents like they do in the US.
by Jennifer Grant