Posted on 02/06/2017 12:16:34 PM PST by TigerClaws
Police in Brazil have gone on strike, leaving the country unarmed and left in a "Purge" like chaos. In 30 cities across Brazil, militarized police are refusing to do their jobs. According to an anonymous source in the city of Espirato Santo, Brazil, the chaos can be comparable to the 2014 thriller "Purge", with people running rampant with guns and machetes, stealing from malls, and even dead bodies lying in the streets. As buses are set ablaze on night streets, and people crawl for shelter covered in blood, Brazil is slowly becoming overtaken by it's people.
"A pm is on strike and the thugs are randomly shooting at anyone who passes the street in Espírito Santo, my God what is happening" says one Brazilian resident.
BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Schools have been cancelled following "Purge" like chaos in Brazil. Click here to read the full story and exclusive images obtained by Political Outsource.
Twitter has become the only outlet for Brazilians to show what's going on, as no major media has picked up on the anarchy that's ensuing in cities across the country. According to the Brazilian source reporting to Political Outsource, the most affected areas are South in Espirito Santo.
Live happenings from "Purge" like choas:
This isn’t happening, haven’t heard a whisper of this on the msm.
Any doubt that something similar would be happening in American cities (especially like Chicago but in others too) if police were gone? Chicago is an example of what happens when police are partially withdrawn.
I guess they could watch the film Brazil if they really just can’t cobble a clue together.
Venezuela next?
Is this fake news?
Apparently there is a kernel of truth to this
https://www.yahoo.com/news/brazil-sends-troops-state-torn-violence-due-police-183009012.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4195318/Thugs-randomly-shooting-passes.html
Kinda like Berkley
Apparently there is a kernel of truth to this
https://www.yahoo.com/news/brazil-sends-troops-state-torn-violence-due-police-183009012.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4195318/Thugs-randomly-shooting-passes.html
As has been the case with Venezuela, I continue to be amazed to the point of being incredulous, that a country can supposedly be in total meltdown but with electricity, telecom and cell phone service somehow fully intact for Twitterers to twit about it. If surreality can be palpable, it is.
The only other reference that I have seen was small article on Drudge .
luvbach1 wrote: “Any doubt that something similar would be happening in American cities (especially like Chicago but in others too) if police were gone? Chicago is an example of what happens when police are partially withdrawn.”
Read the BLM manifesto. One of their principles is elimination of police forces and using the money for reparations.
Apparently there’s something to it.
Brazilian city of Vitoria hit by police strike
6 February 2017
Two hundred federal officers in Brazil are being deployed to the city of Vitoria, in the eastern state of Espirito Santo, where police went on strike on Saturday over pay.
There have been 51 murders in Greater Vitoria since Saturday, compared with four in January, the police union says.
...
The officers stopped patrolling the streets of the city on Saturday morning.
The commander of the force has been sacked and a new commander has been tasked with “restoring order and discipline”, Espirito Santo security chief Andre Garcia said.
Reuters has a story too
and the Daily Mirror has a brief one but with awful pictures.
Yes, but a lot of the dead bodies would be the criminals.
Oh, so it’s like a Chicago weekend or a Trump haters’ protest.
AND YET, many countries in the Middle East undergoing bomb strikes every day, yet those 'services' are still available and TWEETS do get out.
I read that the death toll in Brazil is over 20.
So, just like Saturday night in Chicago.
Not only that, but foreign nationals ‘escaping’ from the horrendous massacres in their countries seem to have no trouble calling in for airline reservations nor applying online for VISAS.
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