For O Estado, Brazil Only Didn’t Sue US Pilots’ Moms Because It Couldn’t

With the title "Now, is this any time for joke?," Jornal da Tarde, the afternoon edition of O Estado de S. Paulo wrote this Monday, December 11, a scathing and ironic editorial lambasting the bad shape of air control in Brazil and the "biggest chaos in the country’s commercial aviation history."

The crisis in the sector, notes the daily, would have supplied enough material for a book of jokes if it weren’t for the fact that everything started with the crash of the Boeing 737, the deadliest accident in Brazil’s aviation history.

The editorial remarks that the Brazilian authorities tried all conceivable ways to accuse the Legacy jet’s two American pilots, whose plane collided with the Boeing, "until it became impossible to hide that a series of mistakes had  occurred in the national control towers and that there was a communication failure due to the easy-to-understand fact that controllers and pilots don’t speak the same language." 

And Jornal Tarde continues: "Since only 3% of our controllers understand English and the Americans haven’t learned Portuguese, ones didn’t know what the others were talking about. Nevertheless, they only were able to go back to the USA after they were charged by the Federal police with putting the aircraft at risk. Certainly because their mothers could not be sued for not having taught them the ‘uncultured and beautiful’ language invented by Luí­s de Camões."

The editorialist then comments: "Another tragicomic detail of the episode is the fact that, living outside the country, all they have to do to escape the legal proceedings’ disastrous consequences is not coming back ."

The opinion piece goes on pointing out that Brazil’s Congress is  restless for not having any of the spotlight turned to them in the crisis: "The Congress leadership decided to enter the playing field with obvious requests that Defense Minister, Waldir Pires, also known as Softy Waldir, be ousted and they are threatening to take over in order to solve the problem."

The Jornal da Tarde also observes that the usually fragmented Congress has been united to ensure impunity for its members:  

"At the same time that they promised to intervene into a subject that doesn’t concern them, our Congress didn’t mete out any punishment to the last of the mensaleiros (those involved into the votes for cash scandal), José Janene from the PP party of Paraná state.

"With their moral authority wasted in the national general pizzeria, the congressmen have as much authority to intervene in the flight control crisis as the bey of Tunis, the caliph of Baghdad and the king of spades from a deck of cards." concludes the editorial.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil to Host Conference of African Diaspora Intellectuals

Today, March 21, marks the end of a two-day encounter between representatives of African ...

Brazil Proposes Brazilian Center at National Australian University

Brazil and Australia, represented by their Foreign Ministers, Alexander Downer and Celso Amorim, during ...

Brazil Declares War to Piracy and Promises Zero Tolerance

In his recap of last year, the executive secretary of the Brazilian Ministry of ...

Brazil Starts 8,000-Men War Games on Border as Message to Neighbors

With the "main target" being the recovery of a bi-national hydroelectric dam that has ...

Brazil’s Odebrecht Gets a Foot in Arab Door

Construction company Norberto Odebrecht, from Brazil, started the construction of a new maritime terminal ...

Brazil Has Reason to Smile, Says Lula

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva devoted today’s edition of his biweekly radio ...

A couple from Brazil's Northeast

20,000 Rich Families Rule Brazil, But the Poorest Elect the President

According to polls, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has emerged unscathed from ...

Obama’s Charm Offensive to Conquer Brazil and Latin America

US President Barack Obama has begun moving on several fronts to repair strained US ...

Detail of Follow Your Dreams cover

Dumont, a Brazilian Aviation Pioneer the World Forgot

Brazil has a wonderful hero the world needs to know about. His name is ...

Infant Mortality Falls in Brazil While Killing of Youngsters Shoots Up

Violence affects Brazilian children and adolescents in different ways. Consequently, different instruments and programs ...