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Brazil - The communists take a large and important country
www.jrnyquist.com ^ | 4 April 2003 | Igor Taam

Posted on 05/05/2003 4:13:28 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

We can say that Brazil is undergoing a revolutionary process because the history of the PT (Partido dos Trabalhadores), and the left wing in Brazil, is the story of communist strategy in action. Those who know the communists can see what is happening. Those who do not know, see nothing. For them the revolution is invisible. And the more time passes, the stronger it becomes.

Father Lula, Brazil's revolutionary leader

In the Jan. 25 edition of O Globo - the greatest journal in Brazil - psychoanalyst Fernando Coutinho perceived that "Lula is using the same image as Tito and Stalin and even if he condemns their political acts, Tito and Stalin had also been controllers that assumed the father role. And coincidently they were not people of great intellectual ability." The psychoanalyst did not try to compare Lula, Tito and Stalin politically, but he offered a good and exact profile of the new president.

In his speech to the World Social Forum, Lula said to tens of thousand of listeners that he wanted to treat them, each one of them, as he deals with his "little boy." What the psychoanalyst still does not know is that the universal communist program is a law that determines the behavior of communist leaders.

It is therefore clear that paternalism alone does not explain the affirmation at the beginning of this text. Paternalism does not occur "coincidently." At any rate, the speech of Lula does not stop there.

The speech at the World Social Forum

When they hear the speech of Lula at the WSF, people are so deluded that they cannot or will not see what is under their noses. Two parts of the speech of Lula are enough to make everything clear: "I know the hope that the world's socialists have in the success of our government," Lula explained. "So many people died before us, trying to get here." Regarding the first statement, we can see that the PT belongs to the team of Cuba, China ... and the Soviet Union. It is socialist. Prepare yourselves for an inevitable tyranny:

(1) in this case it is the tyranny of communism. Why Communism? Reading the second sentence, Lula remembers the years of struggle "trying to get here," and he talks of those who died in the process. And who died in trying to establish socialism in Brazil? It was Lamarca, the communist assassin and traitor. It was Carlos Marighella, it was the terrorists of the MR-8, the VPR, the VAR-Palmares.

(2) But others survived, like the current Minister of Mines and Energy, Dilma Vana Rouseff; like Genoino, the former Maoist guerrilla and current president of the PT. Also take a look at Jose Dirceu, the Cuban agent and current Head of the Civil House. Present, past, and the past in the present.

The PT is a party that includes, since its foundation, syndicalists and those dedicated to communist terrorism. The examples are innumerable, from Carlos Minc to Tarso Genro. Despite all the evidence Lula acts as a lawyer, as always, defending his communist friend, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, saying, "We cannot accept a 40-year blockade of Cuba."

Today's blindness is such that some columnists in the great media, on the occasion of the celebration of Lula's victory, asked what the Cuban dictator was doing as a guest of the party of democracy. When will they wake up? They Failed to perceive that Lula is a communist; that Lula presides with Fidel Castro at Forum de São Paulo, where, among co-religionists and sponsors we find representatives of the narco-terror organization FARC, Tupac Amaru and the main communist parties of Latin America. The PT is co-founder of the Forum de Sao Paulo, and was the first to convoke this frightful organization. According to their official Web site, the Forum "came to debate the fall of socialism in Eastern Europe and its consequences." Even an elementary school student knows that the socialism of Eastern Europe was communism [i.e., Marxism-Leninism]. And this is what they discuss besides their resolutions. In Havana, before this Forum, Lula made a warning to its members: "Many times we speak as if we wanted or we could build socialism in four years. History does not correspond to the rhythm of our apprehension."

Communists always talk about famine, peace, a better world and "democracy," but these are slogans that do not reveal their true intentions. If we know what communism is then we know its code words and what these words really signify. And we can also identify the communists at work in our midst.

Perhaps Lula does not think of himself as a pure-blood communist, but this will not keep him from behaving as one. He did not make an ipsis litteris declaration, "I am a communist." Refraining from such declarations is part of the communist strategy of taking power by stages and by stealth.

Revolution by stages

It is instructive that Lula considers Fidel Castro to be his "example." Think of Castro's method. He promised to reconstruct the economy, to restore Cuban democracy and oppose dictatorship. He was even recognized by the North American government and it still didn't stop him from making Cuba the dreadful island it is today. Lenin had previously warned his followers against preaching communism to everyone. One should only preach this message to a handful of fanatics.

The most important thing, in grabbing power, is to discover the yearnings of the great masses, and to elaborate programs with a popular following. Being thus enabled, the communists can manipulate the masses toward communist ends. In an election for the office of British Prime minister, Lenin gave the following instructions to the members of the Communist Party of England: "At the moment it is very hard for the English communists to get a fair hearing from the masses. If I declared my communism openly and addressed the workers, stirring up them to vote for Herdenson (candidate of the Labour Party) against Lloyd George, of course I would ... be supporting Herdenson in the same way that a rope supports the hanged."

There will be great leaps and small steps along the path of building a socialist state in Brazil. The election of Lula was a great leap indeed. What the left wing media calls the "party of the democracy," Nikita Khrushchev would call a "national-popular revolution" or a "popular-democratic revolution" similar to what Dirceu advocated from the "moderate" wing of the PT.

In Czechoslovakia, after World War II, we did not see the communists directly seizing power. But in three short years they were suddenly in control of everything. Before taking power, the red dictatorship had fashioned political alliances with the social democrats. Communists were infiltrated into all the key positions. Then it happened. The country fell at a single blow.

What is happening in Brazil has happened before. The communists have already used these methods to take other countries. People here do no see what is happening. Their thinking is mistaken and nobody does anything to stop the inevitable communist takeover. Brazil is like a patient who has all the symptoms of cancer. When a doctor tries to warn the patient of his condition, the patient rambles deliriously that the disease will save him.

In Hayek's book, The Road to Serfdom, we are reminded that a socialist government inevitably becomes tyrannical. This is confirmed by many historical examples. Brazil cannot be an exception to the rule. We must remember that Brazilian Communist organizations tried to take power by way of terror in the 1960's and the 1970's.

It is also important to remember resolution no. 9 of the "X Meeting" of the Forum of Sao Paulo from December 4th to 7th of 2001, in Havana, where they decided to "ratify the legitimacy, justness and necessity of the fight" of the FARC in Colombia, a communist drug-trafficking and para-military organization. (See the Jornal da Tarde, Nov. 29 of 2000.) It is amazing to learn that our president and the cupola of his party admire gangsters who suppressed the most basic freedoms; that he admires a Cuban tyrant who nationalized not only the nation's companies, but also the people. You would think that anyone who idealizes a dictator who suppresses the right to come and go, the right to choose your own job, the right to speak freely, would find himself politically isolated. But this "magically," does not happen in the case of Lula and the PT. The Brazilian people are so doped on lies that they do not care about what is happening. Instead, they are offended by those who point out the facts.

What is to be done?

And now we come to the final phase of Brazil's descent into communism. It is necessary to clearly show the direction of Brazil's revolution. This cannot be an easy job because most people ignore what communism really is. They do not understand its tendencies. They do not recognize its many faces, its strategies, its dialectic, its directions and misdirections. Another thing that obstructs our understanding is the leftist hegemony in the Brazilian media, prettifying the red monster while ignoring vital information. But once we learn what communism is and how it operates, it is easy to understand the red revolution in Brazil.

The present reiterating the past

The PT is a party that includes, since its foundation, men and women dedicated to terrorism and to communism. The ministers of Lula’s government include such people. Let us see the past of some of the current ministers and secretaries of the State (see the ONG Terrorism Never More – www.ternuma.com):

The Secretary of Sports, Agnelo Queiroz, is an important member of the Communist Party of Brazil (PC do B).
Antonio Palocci, Secretary of Treasury was a Trotskyite militant. Recently his “moderate” Government in Ribeirão Preto announced the creation of a pro-FARC committee.
Dilma Ruseff, Minister of Mines and Energy, participated in the activities of the VAR Palmares, famous organization for its armed action.
Jose Dirceu, Head of the Civil House, was banished to Mexico in exchange for the life of the U.S. ambassador. Later he left for Cuba to study the “Course of guerilla warfare," and also became a Cuban agent. In Cuba, between 1960 and 1970, he was trained in weapons, logistics and financial subversion. Dirceu recently affirmed that he is “eternally grateful to the people of Cuba, particularly President Fidel Castro” and "I do not forget them. I hold in my heart, in my memory, the image of each one and the ideals of all."
Luiz Dulci was a Trotskyite militant of OSI (LIBELU). He is the General secretary of the presidency.
Luiz Gushiken came from the OSI (LIBELU) too. He is the Secretary of Communication in the government.
Marina Silva, Environment Minister, was a militant of the Communist Revolutionary Party (PRC).
Nilmário Miranda, Human Rights Minister, participated in the origin of the Organization of Leninist Marxist Combat-Labor politics (OCML-PO). As a member of the House of Representatives for the PT he was detached in the defense of Communists.
Tarso Genro was a member of the Communist Party of Brazil (PC do B). Attracted by armed action he entered the Ala Vermelha – “Red Section." He was also a militant in the Communist Revolutionary Party before joining the PT. He is now the Secretary of Economic and Social Development.
Olívio Dutra, Minister of the Cities, deserves a whole chapter.

Well, nobody should deny that our new government ministers are a frightening bunch. Is it true that the PT changed, that it is now a moderate organization? Did the communist rage, which made men like Jose Genoino into Maoist guerrillas, suddenly evaporate? Or have they merely changed tactics while their ideals continue to animate them beneath the surface?

Following the declarations of the Heads of PT it is possible to arrive at a definite conclusion:

“The PT, as a laical party, politically and philosophically plural, knows that the construction of a Socialist State, that combines the mechanisms of a representative democracy with direct control from a council, is not opposed to the revolutionary seizure of power." [Taken from page 102 of The PT and Marxism: Notebooks of Theory & Debate, a publication of the PT, 1991.]

“... A long dispute for hegemony ... in building a political culture with a socialist ideology in groups organized for revolution, moving toward a rupture with the bourgeois State ... duly warned to limit itself to confrontations in the political sphere with the institutions of order, playing up to these....” (Tarso Genro, Theory and Debate, no. 4, 1998, pp. 38-41).

“A new critical thought won’t deny the past, but will learn from its errors and the experiences of past revolutions the hope, generosity, and the knowledge that illuminated even the darkest nights. If this new horizon is still called communism, this is the hour of its reestablishment” [Marco Aurélio Garcia, The Manifesto of the reestablishment of Communism, 1998. It is proper to point out that Garcia, as special assessor of the president, here explains the external politics of the PT.]

“Castro is an ethical example," Luís Inácio Lula da Silva, Jornal da Tarde, Nov. 29 of 2000. It’s always good to remember, beyond the slavery of the Cuban people, the involvement of Fidel Castro in drug trafficking as related by for former employees of his government.

"Private, Lula, 56 years of age, thinks the election is necessary 'humbug' for taking power," Le Monde, 1 October 2002.

"I know that four years is not too much. But if we do not forget the commitments of our fight of many years, we will be resting on a solid foundation with some walls raised and some rooms finished." Lula’s recent discourse regarding the Itaipú – the greatest Dam and Hydroelectric Power Plant in the world. (Foro de São Paulo.)

These declarations are crystal clear. The commitments of PT and its Marxist and revolutionary co-religionists are obvious. But these commitments are nowhere being discussed. I shudder to remember that Franklin Roosevelt once assured his friends that Stalin was not communist. We are seeing a replay of this foolishness.

The FARC cheered the victory of Lula in the Brazilian elections. What did the elected government do? Did it publicly repudiate the narco-guerrillas of Colombia? No, there was silence. Readers may also consider the pride that Pravda took in Lula's victory.

Olivia Dutra

Olívio Dutra has been disobedient to the Gramscist strategy of taking power. Olívio Dutra has given the game away. Unlike Lula, when asked about his relations with the FARC, he simply utters ironies. Olívio Dutra, Minister of the Cities, constantly disclosed his (socialist) communist leanings while working in the government in the Rio Grande Do Sul.

Nelson Sirotsky, director of the periodical Zero Hora, had already confirmed that Olívio Dutra used government money and the threat of withdrawing official advertisements in order to pressure publications to remove inconvenient journalists. Here we see the old road to serfdom and the results of economic dependence on the State. Trotsky already said that “in a country where the only employer is the State, opposition means slow death by hunger.”

Someone who lost his job in this arm-twisting game was Simões Pires, who showed on TV a photo in which the former-governor and his Secretary of Education posed between red flags with college students holding up "clenched fists." Here we see the use of children for violent ideological propaganda. But this still is not everything. The representative of the FARC, Hernan Rodriguez, was received with great tenderness by the governor. Hernan, as later disclosed in an interview, bragged of being assured protection inside Brazil. The local government of Olívio Dutra also instigated the invasion of one of the most productive farms of the Rio Grande do Sul, coloring a gross expropriation with judicial legitimacy.

The possibilities of Tarso Genro – talking too much

In his most recent article, “Socialism and Lula’s government," written for the Folha de São Paulo on 30 January 2003, Tarso Genro affirmed that socialism must be considered not only a "regulating idea" of public politics (from total inequality to greater equality) but also the rationale for a transition from formal democracy to "substantive" democracy under a system of compromised socialist parties. And what is the attitude of this "regulating idea"? According to Tarso: “that attitude conscientiously promotes a type of utopia."

The doubt of Tarso

Tarso once explained, “The greatest question that exists today isn’t whether socialism 'died.' The greatest and true question is, honestly, whether we have ... the possibility of 'another socialism' on the horizon."

Admitting the possibility of the communists taking power, Tarso stated: “Taking a position with regard to this expectation [i.e., the possibility of another socialism] is basic to understanding ... Lula’s government. It is by taking such a position -- by having such a project before us -- that we derive the possibility of accepting a repetition of the totalitarian and bureaucratic experiences of the East."

Tarso knows that the failure of Lula´s government would create "an emergency within a revolutionary crisis." These are Tarso Genro's words, and he is one of the main intellectuals of the PT and secretary of the economic and social development of the government.

Despite close contact with revolutionary organizations, despite the armed wing of the PT (MST) which occupies a territory equal to five Denmarks, despite a spreading net of doctrinaire communist schools throughout the country, Tarso says that he does not intend to repeat what happened in Eastern Europe. But he knows, and affirms, that there is an enormous risk of a communist dictatorship emerging from the failure of Lula´s government. This willingness to risk the country is a crime. By experimenting with communism his party might easily create a regime of slavery and mass murder. Tarso runs this risk consciously, as do the heads of the government -- but not the people.

And what if Lula's government succeeds? According to Tarso, there is a “possibility of a socialism with a consensus that subordinates the economy and the market to social politics as it redesigns ... a new and better way of life.” Clearly, if Lula’s government fails a communist dictatorship will be established. If Lula's government succeeds (i.e., socialist utopia is established) we will have the absurdity of "a new type of utopia."

With regard to that utopia I transcribe the words of the philosopher Olavo de Carvalho: "Each generation of Communists starts by saying that their predecessors had not understood the spirit of communism.... Between hideous failures and macabre successes, this humanity walks: its perpetual 'script' is the revolutionary novel. But it’s okay. What is wrong with millions of corpses as the price for the most fascinating hallucinogenic experience ever invented?"


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: brazil; farc; forumdesaopaulo; latinamerica; latinamericalist; lolita; pt; stupidbrownies

Communist Axis of Evil?

1 posted on 05/05/2003 4:13:28 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
-The Fire Down South...( Latin America--)--
2 posted on 05/05/2003 4:24:00 PM PDT by backhoe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The reds made a big try before WWII, when they succeeded in stirring up dock workers and some of the landless farmers.
3 posted on 05/05/2003 4:26:16 PM PDT by genefromjersey (Gettin' too old to "play nice" !)
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To: backhoe
Latin America really in the dumps.
What about Argentina that thing
is such a mess they might take over
there?
Then what happens when this turns
north and comes to Mexico?

Anyone still want NAFTA extended
over all Latin America.

And no one is talking about this.
4 posted on 05/05/2003 4:39:18 PM PDT by Princeliberty
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To: genefromjersey
If the reds succeed in Brazil they will collapse economically but they will have first spread much poison into our unassimilated southern immigrants who long for Aztlan.
5 posted on 05/05/2003 5:12:07 PM PDT by ThanhPhero
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To: ThanhPhero
You think so ?

Wouldn't the language barrier create problems ?
( Brazil - O Portugeso ; Aztlan - Espanol )
Different Indio languages/customs/etc.

Don't get me wrong : I've depised communism since - I guess 1946, and the thought of them succeeding anywhere gives me major discomfort.
6 posted on 05/05/2003 5:30:48 PM PDT by genefromjersey (Gettin' too old to "play nice" !)
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To: *Latin_America_List; Cincinatus' Wife
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
7 posted on 05/05/2003 5:42:34 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: genefromjersey
Different cultures and customs for sure, but there really isn't much of a language barrier between Portuguese and Spanish. I've done business in South America, and I have heard many a conversation where a Brazilian was speaking Portuguese to an Argentine (or Chilean or whatever) that was speaking Spanish, each conversing in their own language. Pretty amazing to this gringa that doesn't have a command of either language! The languages are similar enough that they have no trouble understanding one another.
8 posted on 05/05/2003 5:56:30 PM PDT by RedWhiteBlue
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Augusto Pinochet, we need you !!!
9 posted on 05/05/2003 6:04:26 PM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~Remember, it's not sporting to fire at RINO until charging~)
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To: RedWhiteBlue
My second language is Spanish and I can indeed understand enough Portuguese to get by. I just can't speak it worth a d#*$!
10 posted on 05/05/2003 6:10:01 PM PDT by GOP_1900AD (Un-PC even to "Conservatives!" - Right makes right)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Creeping into the Western Hemisphere Bump
11 posted on 05/05/2003 6:30:10 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi .. Support FRee Republic)
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To: Tailgunner Joe; Libertarianize the GOP; backhoe; All
FARC Executes Hostages - Emotional President Urges Colombia to Resist Terror Trained by US, Colombia unit gains - Reports successes against guerrillas*** In February, the United States gained a new impetus for its fight against the rebels. Three Americans identified by US authorities as civilian contractors were captured by the FARC after their plane crashed in southern Colombia. Two members of the crew -- one American and one Colombian -- were believed to have been killed by the guerrillas.

''We know specifically who is responsible,'' Jackman said. ''If I was the FARC, I would seriously reconsider what I have done and what my actions are.''

The upsurge in military action comes amid other signs that the United States is prepared to increase its presence in Colombia.

On Thursday, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said the United States is considering transferring some military equipment from Iraq to Colombia. Tomorrow, a group of House members is to introduce legislation to begin US military surveillance flights tracking Colombian arms traffickers.

Meanwhile, the US-trained Colombian battalion, taking a page from the US antiterrorism playbook, is targeting more rebel leaders. The strategy is ''to capture or kill those high-value targets'' such as senior FARC, ELN, and AUC commanders, leaving the groups in disarray, Jackman said.***

12 posted on 05/06/2003 2:18:29 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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