Thank you Brian for all insights.

My friend Frederico Freitas wrote this article about the causes and the
context of this tragedy:
https://www.currentaffairs.org/2018/10/the-brazilian-nostalgia-for-dictatorship

I would like to highlight the following passage:

"Bolsonaro has spent his three-decade career in the Brazilian Congress
building a public profile as an apologist for the military regime. His
discourse reproduces a more pedestrian version of the mentality of the
generals who ruled Brazil when Bolsonaro spent as an Army captain,
following his graduation from the Agulhas Negras military academy in 1977.
It reflects a shallow nationalism and an obsession with persecuting
internal enemies—“communists,” “f—-ts,” “subversives,” and “Indians”— and
appeals to using clandestine violence to purge the nation of them. It shows
an extreme reverence for the Armed Forces, particularly the Army, as the
bedrock of the republic, and displays bitter contempt for the electoral
process based on the belief that the “rabble” does not know how to vote. In
a now famous TV interview <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIDyw9QKIvw> from
1999, Bolosonaro declared that the military dictatorship— its hundreds of
extra-judicial killings
<https://www.smh.com.au/world/brazils-torture-report-brings-president-dilma-rousseff-to-tears-20141212-125fzz.html>and
thousands of people tortured notwithstanding—had failed to “finish its
job.” He continued, “You are not going to change anything through voting.”
Change, whatever that meant, would only come through a “civil war,” with
the Army resuming the dictatorship’s campaign against internal enemies and
“killing at least 30,000” more, including most of the political class. In
his rhetoric, LGBT and other minorities must learn their place and
disappear from the public sphere. Political adversaries are crooked
subversives who should be straightened with a “good” beating and electric
shocks. And death squads are the permanent solution for common criminals.

There is no question Bolsonaro is a fascist. But he is a Brazilian kind of
fascist, astute at drawing upon the aesthetics of violence of the Southern
Cone military regimes for his own political gain. Bolsonaro spent most of
his political career as a fringe politician. He was a joke to the
mainstream media and nothing more than a curiosity nationwide. For a while,
his appeal seemed limited to a niche electorate of retired military, police
officers, and the then-minuscule far right in Rio de Janeiro. His rallying
point, besides diatribes against democracy and human rights, was to improve
the salary of personnel in the Armed Forces. This helped elected him to
Congress seven times.

Things changed with the profound economic and political crisis that
engulfed Brazil in the last four years. With mainstream parties, including
Rousseff’s center-left Workers’ Party (PT), mired in corruption scandals
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Car_Wash>, Bolsonaro managed to
reinvent himself. He became a crusader against corruption, an outsider who
would drain the swamp of Brasília (despite his three decades as a
congressman), and the embodiment of antipetismo, the middle-class identity
built on class hatred for the moderate welfare policies introduced by the PT
<https://www.jacobinmag.com/2018/10/brazil-election-fascism-bolsonaro-haddad-pt>.
Swiftly, Bolsonaro transformed his obscure PSL into the second largest
party in the lower house, only behind the PT. The politicians elected by
the PSL comprise a colorful band of right-wing crackpots that include
Bolsonaro’s
sons, an heir of the Brazilian royal family, a porn actor, and police
officers.
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/oct/08/bolsonaro-allies-ride-conservative-wave-in-brazil-elections>By
supporting Dilma Rousseff’s illegitimate impeachment in 2016, the
mainstream center-right parties helped sustain the PSL’s growth. Though the
left kept its numbers in Congress, the center disappeared, leaving a void
to be filled by the far right. Of course, Bolsonaro is not an isolated
phenomenon. He is a Latin American expression of the recent rise of the far
right in Europe and North America. Still, the question begs: how could 49
million Brazilians vote for an apologist of the darkest period in the
recent history of the country?"



Em ter, 9 de out de 2018 às 17:49, Brian Holmes <
[email protected]> escreveu:

>
>
> On Tue, Oct 9, 2018 at 2:21 PM Andre Mesquita <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> This is terrible, friends, unfortunately
>>
>> *How Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro used Trump tactics to move to 2nd round of
>> presidential race*
>>
>> It's devastating. The upsurge of the extreme right is global in scope.
>
> Andre, what are the causes are in your view? Yes, Bolsonaro used Trump's
> rhetorical tactics - but those have ever been available. In the totally
> incomplete picture I have, two additional factors stand out:
>
> First, the legal and legislative coup by Brazilian capital (which
> fractions beyond agriculture, I don't know) that removed Dilma from office
> and then imprisoned Lula to prevent him from from running again.
> Second, the perception by large sectors of the middle class of extreme
> personal insecurity, motivating their vote for an otherwise despicable
> law-and-order candidate.
>
> When capital allies with the military and security forces, it's fascism in
> the classic sense of the word. We are headed there in the US too. It's not
> something I say lightly.
>
> I have never been clear on how much corruption can really be ascribed to
> the Workers' Party. Nor is the security issue really possible to grasp from
> a distance. You know, even from up close it is hard to gauge. In Chicago I
> am anti-cop because of real, proven institutional racism. But meanwhile
> three people have been killed just a block from me in the past three years
> and about fifteen shots were fired a couple weeks ago into a house three
> doors down the street. Why do I think this level of violence is OK? Has
> there been any change in the levels of street violence in Brazil?
>
> Chicago where I live is continually used by Trump as a scarecrow for
> security panic. If the cop who killed a black teenager named Laquan
> McDonald had not been rightfully convicted for murder just days ago we most
> likely would have had a giant riot in this city, which could have set the
> national stage for previously unthinkable things. Elements on the right are
> waiting for exactly such an event. We are walking a tightrope in this
> country, like everywhere.
>
> The left should never abandon its minority focused social-justice agenda,
> but it needs to couple that with universal welfare and security policies as
> well as climate-change mitigation strategies that can achieve corporate
> buy-in. Of course those things are contradictory, but the job of politics
> is resolving contradictions. Those who think that fascism is finally a
> chance to fight the real system, unmasked, have not taken a very good look
> at what happened in the 1930s and 40s. Militarized regimes can be
> instituted under whatever ideology. That's exactly what killed the
> progressive/socialist movement in the US, from Roosevelt's third term
> onward.
>
> We need a workable vision. It has to be both idealistic and calculable,
> buildable, institutional, productive and enforceable. These things don't
> just spring full-blown from charismatic leaders, nor are they spontaneously
> generated at the grassroots. Progressivism was an urban, middle-class
> movement that grew out of the ruins of late-nineteenth century agrarian
> populism. Socialism of the kind that inspired the welfare state grew out of
> a mix of communist idealism and unionist pragmatism. All that stuff had to
> be created. Even at its most idealistic, it was always coupled with real
> universalist plans developed to solve complex problems. We are so far from
> that right now, it's tragic.
>
> I am devastated by this news from Brazil. Courage and fortitude to all.
>
> Brian
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