Posted By Cliff Kincaid On March 18, 2015 @ 1:23 am In AIM
Column |
With the Middle East in turmoil and Russia’s Vladimir Putin
threatening nuclear war, most of our media have missed a big story south of the
border. President Barack Obama’s fellow Marxist, Dilma Rousseff, is coming
under tremendous pressure to resign her presidency in Brazil. As many as three million
Brazilians took to the streets on Sunday to demand the impeachment of Rousseff,
a former Marxist terrorist, and the end of the rule of the Brazilian Workers
Party.
Such a development would be a major blow to the
anti-American left in Latin America, which has been operating since 1990 under
the rubric of the São Paulo Forum, a pro-communist movement started by
Rousseffs predecessor,
Luiz Inácio Lula de Silva, and Fidel Castro.
In a growing scandal, the treasurer of the ruling Workers
Party has been charged with corruption and money laundering linked to the
state-run oil company, Petrobras, a firm which has benefitted from U.S.
taxpayer loans
provided through the Export-Import Bank under Obama.
While Obama has attempted to stifle oil development and
production in the United States, his administration officially launched an energy
partnership with Brazil in August of 2011.
We want to work with you. We want to help with technology and support to
develop these oil reserves safely, and when you’re ready to start selling, we
want to be one of your best customers, Obama told a group of Brazilian business
leaders.
<http://www.aim.org/aim-column/no-joke-obamasoros-promote-%E2%80%9Copen-government%E2%80%9D/>
Some stories appearing in the Western press did note that as
many as one million Brazilians turned out on Sunday to protest massive
corruption linked to the Rousseff administration. One photo from the march
showed a Brazilian waving a sign that said, We won’t be another Venezuela, a
reference to another Marxist basket case of economic failure and corruption.
But sources contacted by Accuracy in Media say the turnout
was far larger, with as many as three million Brazilians in the streets.
Alessandro Cota, a Brazilian who is currently a philosophy
and political science researcher at the Inter-American Institute for
Philosophy, Government, and Social Thought told AIM, This March 15 is certainly
a new beginning for Brazil and probably the end of the dreams of all those who
wanted to turn the largest country of Latin America into a socialist republic.
After 12 years under the rule of the Brazilian Workers Party 8 years under
President Lula (2003-2011), and 4 years under President Rousseff (who was
re-elected last October for another four-year turn)the Brazilian people, tired
of waiting for opposition politicians to take action against the government,
took the lead and decided to make history by themselves. <http://theinteramerican.org/>
Brazilian philosopher Olavo de Carvalho, President of the
Inter-American Institute for Philosophy, Government, and Social Thought, said, Never
and nowhere has a government been so completely rejected by its own population.
But it is more than that. It is not only the rejection of a
government, or a President. It is the rejection of the whole system of power
that has been created by the Workers Party, which includes intellectuals and opinion-makers
in the big media. People are no longer afraid of going against the Workers
Party. Brazilians realized that all the power that
President Lula, President Rousseff, and their minions had
was based on a bluff, and now they are calling it.
In Brazil, Cota said, the actual turnout was three million
people who made it clear that they want President Rousseff and the Workers
Party out. The figure of one million people who took to the streets was from
the city of Sao Paulo alone.
He added, It was the largest nationwide anti-government
demonstration in the history of Brazil, and it happened just two days after the
Workers Party’s allies organized their own popular demonstration in support of
President Rousseff. He said the March 15 wave of protests was genuinely popular,
a massive embodiment of the seven percent approval rating that Rousseff
received only a few days ago. He said the March 15 demonstrations took place in
26 of the 27 Brazilian states and at least 160 cities, not to mention the
anti-government protests that happened abroad.
<http://veja.abril.com.br/blog/augusto-nunes/feira-livre/confira-os-locais-das-manifestacoes-marcadas-para-15-de-marco/>
By contrast, Cota said a pro-government demonstration was
attended by a mix of card-carrying union members and people who got paid the
equivalent of $10.
It appears that the Brazilian mainstream media have decided
to deliberately play down the anti-regime sentiment. Cota said, According to
Datafolha, a local polling company linked to the leftist newspaper Folha de São
Paulo, there were only 210 thousand people gathered on Avenida Paulista, the
main thoroughfare of the city of São Paulo, a number that not only contradicted
the official estimate of the State Police of São Paulo, but also the eyes of
those who use them to see. <http://g1.globo.com/politica/ao-vivo/manifestacoes-no-brasil.html#/glb-feed-post/5505e8cdc22d6279e4840119>
The protests in Brazil are giving hope to those who see an
opportunity to defeat Marxism in the Western hemisphere.
The pro-communist association called the São Paulo Forum was
created in 1990, after the collapse of the Soviet Union led many to believe
communism itself was on the wane. However, that was when Fidel Castro reached
out to
Luiz Inácio Lula de Silva of the Workers Party of Brazil,
who would later become President of Brazil. An event was hosted in São Paulo,
Brazil, bringing together what came to be known as the São Paulo Forum. The international
movement included many different leftist groups, such as the
communist narco-terrorists known as the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia (FARC), and communist and leftist parties in the region.
Incredibly, a report appeared which seemed to demonstrate a
possible link between the Obama presidency and this leftist group.
On March 1, 2008, before U.S. presidential elections,
Operation Phoenix was launched by Colombian special security forces just inside
the Ecuadorian border. Raúl Reyes, second in command of the FARC, was killed.
Documents found in Reyes computer after his death disclosed that gringos representing
Obama wanted to meet with the FARC and that they were opposed to U.S. military
aid for the Colombian government. Obama had been publicly
critical of the Colombia government’s human rights record.
The Bush administration, using the services
of the NSA, helped the Colombian government of President
Alvaro Uribe in its war with the Cuban-backed FARC by locating and killing
terrorist leaders and decimating the organization. But Uribe’s successor,
President Juan Manuel
Santos, the former defense minister, suddenly opened up
negotiations with the FARC in Havana and has recently suspended the bombing of
FARC camps and bases. As a result, the Santos-led negotiations could enable the
FARC to
escape criminal charges and emerge in the political process
in Colombia as a respectable opposition movement.
<http://www.aim.org/aim-column/nsa-helped-target-communist-terrorists/>
Supporters of Uribe accuse Santos of allowing Castro-Chavism
in the country, a reference to the long-time Cuban dictator and former Marxist ruler
of Venezuela. Although the members of the São Paulo Forum do not believe in
democracy, the FARC seems to have learned the lesson that they have to disguise
themselves as democratic forces in order to further their goals, as their armed
struggle has not been successful.
Like Obama in the U.S., these Marxists work through the
system and slowly dismantle democratic institutions and checks on their power.
On Saturday, March 21, at 1:00 p.m., the Washington Conclave
for Democracy will be held at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. to
discuss freedom, democracy and free elections in Latin America. The conference
is aimed to expose fraud and deception in electoral processes in
Latin America, says organizer Dalmo Accorsini. The event is
open to the press and the public and will feature several speakers with
knowledge of the communist advance in the Western hemisphere, including in the
U.S.
<http://www.resistirbrasil.com/Conclave/event/the-washington-conclave-for-democracy/>
Article printed from Accuracy In Media: http://www.aim.org
<http://www.aim.org/aim-column/anti-marxist-counter-revolution-in-brazil/print/#comments_controls>
And it turned out this "counter-revolution" was actually a coup by the corrupt, it is time to realize this.
ReplyDelete