Life and Death Matters

I'm good at trivia, listen to progressive rock, drink Gin & Tonics, and read philosophy when nature calls. Curiously enough, I'm also single.
Showing posts with label brazil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brazil. Show all posts

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Ebeneezer, Conspiracy Theories, and Misunderstanding Occam's Razor

Ebeneezer, a very good friend of mine, is probably one of the more interesting people I know. He is, first of all, bright and clever -always a welcome combination (or not). Moreover, he is a man of extreme talent, ever ready to learn something new, whether in music, technology, or cooking fish. He has also studied political science, history, and psychology whilst in college and when completing his masters, but for some reason hates discussing any of these topics. Be it some dinner conversation on Brazil's future or some musing (at, say, a bar) on the political economy, Ebeneezer, for whatever reason, dislikes (or so he tells us) discussing these or similar matters.

He also gets extremely annoyed when someone does indeed start discussing history, political science, or psychology and says that a certain event has taken place for something other than the simplest of reasons. (This would be Neezer's insistence on Occam's Razor, though he's getting the definition wrong, as most people do, confusing topicality with simplicity). Like when I insist that the latest war in Iraq began for reasons other than messianism (i.e., bringing Jesus and free markets to those heathen Muslim protectionists for the sake of all civilization). According to him, these are conspiracy theories and therefor ridiculous.

Like many, many others, my friend of old assumes that there are no conspiracies, that people do not get together and conspire to do a, b, or c. Funny and tragic at the same time: being from Brazil, he should understand that not only do many conspiracy theories exist, but some of them are no longer theories, such as Globo Television attempting to defraud the 1982 Rio de Janeiro elections for Governor. To Ebeneezer, this would be absurd: never would Globo's owner, Roberto Marinho, do such a thing! Never would he have such power! Then again, there's that BBC documentary from 1993, Beyond Citizen Kane, which Globo had courts prohibit from circulating in Brazil, and the very helpful book on Globo by V.C Brittos and C.R.S. Bolaño, which detail (beyond doubt, in my opinion) just how powerful Marinho was and Globo continues to be. Ebeneezer would do well to check out these sources, but something tells me he won't.

As Noam Chomsky once observed (actually, he did so many times, since he is incredibly repetitive), a lot of folks, usually from sectors of the establishment, like to dismiss any notion that several individuals might conspire against the public good as, again, conspiracy theories. They do so with disgust, a frown or menacing look on their faces. So when we suggest Florida's Secretary of State, Kathleen Harris, helped steal the 2000 election for George W. Bush, it's a conspiracy theory. When it is pointed out that wars are started to increase corporate profits, (amongst other reasons, obviously) we're lunatics, the kind of people that think no one ever landed on the moon. When it is suggested that the American Media purposefully presents the Israel-Palestine conflict in a very biased fashion, with an obvious favoritism towards the Jewish State, we're crazy, prone to hateful "anti-semitic" propaganda (the quotes are due to the fact that anti-semitic is used in a mistaken fashion in the US and much of the world, implying that only Jews are Semites). And, of course, the latest episode recently seen in the news showing a willingness by some of its major participants to conspire against the public good is the latest financial crisis, with Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke continuously cheating the American public out of hundreds of billions, soon to be trillions of dollars to help out banks, financial institutions, and other major corporations that, since the eighties (at least), have been making one outrageous mistake after another, creating a shitball of ill-conceived choices that has ultimately led us to the present state of things -that, my friends, is just hippie Marxist ranting.

I'm sure Neezer would simply read a post like this and piss all over it, since it is presumably full of crap: to my good friend, Iraq was but a series of debacles born of dumbfounding incompetence, oil was never a real issue; Globo and its (thankfully) now-defunct owner Marinho aren't/weren't as powerful or mean-spirited as they are/were made out to be; the 2000 US Presidential election was never stolen, it was simply organization incompetence at work; wars are started with a dynamic all their own (very true), but never due to private interests (laughable); Israel just chanced into unbridled, unquestioning support from the American government and population; and Paulson and Bernanke would never act out of naked self-interest or to shamelessly help out their rich finance mates. In Ebeneezer's magical world, when something doesn't happen in a vacuum, we can always understand events as people fucking up or getting really lucky; otherwise, the explanation's faulty. There are no class interests, folks don't conspire, people don't scheme.

Again, it would be funny were it not tragic; it's like a brilliant mind going to waste. Ultimately, I understand complaints that the lament I just uttered in this post is without importance, for indeed it is; actually, this post is here just so I can tell Ebeneezer, should he ever again make fun of my "tendency to believe in conspiracy theories", that he can go fuck himself, with evidence provided. But all kidding aside, I do hope that this post might help my ever-talented, ever-skeptical good friend and bandmate to see the world is actually more complicated than his misreading of Occam's Razor would have him believe.

Obs. 1: Neezer, in case you're wondering: yes, I love you, and for trashing you I owe you a nice single malt and a blowjob, though I guess you'll only want the former.

Obs. 2: The video concerning the American Media's bias towards Israel is quite revealing but I can't embed it; I strongly urge the reader to see it, though, it brings to light issues with which many are not familiar.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Priorities in Brazil

According to political scientist Cecília Olivieri, there is a direct correlation between overall success and promotion of land reform for nineteenth century societies, i.e. societies which promoted land reform have more equality, social justice, etc.

Which helps explain why Brazil is such a champion at inequality, lack of social justice, and those other wonderful indicators we have upside down: we've never promoted land reform (actually, one of the reasons for the '64 coup was the mere mention of such reform by our then-president João Goulart), and our rural elite continues to shit on the idea.

Luckily, our Agriculture Ministry has its priorities straight and through its official gazette shall let the world know what the guidelines for our famous caipirinha drink are. That's right, people, Brazil still has landless peasants, a quasi-guerrila in the southeast of the state of Pará, quasi-paramilitary squads wrecking havoc across states such as the one just mentioned, but the world can now know just how a caipirinha should be made. Officially.

The New York club scene must be thrilled.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Back From the Holy Land

In response to Marcos's comments on my post "Trip to the Holy Land":

1) The Monthly Review is a pretty decent publication: it's authors write well, back themselves up, and serve a clearly-stated editorial line. The magazine's been around for some thirty years, it's founders were two well-known economists (Sweezy and Huberman), and many of its writings seem vindicated on economics (our current meltdown) and Israel (given PM Olmert's latest statements and what Israel must do to obtain peace).

2) I criticize Brazil and the US just as much, probably more. Israel is just that much worst because it is automatically suppose to be a Saintly nation, its people innocent of any wrong-doing, and all of us Jews are apparently to stand by its side right or wrong. It's annoying, and these old men from São Paulo are exactly the type of fascist assholes that get on my nerves. And the reason I started this blog is to give my nerves a break.

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Brazil's Forced Democracy

Today, at around 15:45, I was forced to vote. Not that I wouldn't've, since I think the voting process is worth one's while, but being forced to vote (or forced to justify one's absence from the voting booth) is nothing short of pathetic; it is the acknowledgment by our political class that our democracy is a sham, that people would refrain from voting in droves if they had the opportunity. This country is a fucking joke, there is not a pubic hair of seriousness to our public lives and affairs. Our political institutions have as their sole goal their own continuity, and those that participate in them are, when not absolute scum, well-meaning individuals who face impossible odds when they attempt any positive change. Our political class takes positive and negative freedom and mixes it all up into whatever stew will guarantee them a job for the next four years and therefor some immediate monetary gain and a few more years at the possibility of racketeering or trafficking of influence.

It's not like our American friends to the north are any better, but they at least have democracy at the local levels, electing judges, sheriffs, and what-not. All we do is either elect clowns or those who are flat-out the scum of the Earth. I'm tired of this shit, but quite depressed at the notion that it is, at least from my perspective, impossible to change. But that's why we have meteors, I suppose.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Super Tuesday

It's now 17:31 here in Brazil. Which means Larry King will soon begin his masturbatory session on CNN as he and his team of "analysts" spend hours and hours predicting who'll win the Democratic primaries. Millions'll watch. Fox News will pretend not to care. MSNBC will pretend they're actually competition. Jon Stewart will make fun of the whole thing. I'll miss it.

Super Tuesday. I bet even folks at MoveOn.org think today's ballot casting is meaningful. I bet even third-party activists think there's a choice to be made. I'll bet even the most cynical have stopped comparing Super Tuesday to the Super Bowl (you know, commercial breaks that cost millions, yada yada yada).

That's cute. It must be feeling good right now, them butterflies, the cheering, maybe some are comparing it to The First Time. Maybe the more informed are making comparisons to moments like Luis Inácio Lula da Silva's election. That's adorable, probably makes people think the US has a functioning democracy. Here, let me pinch your cheeks you cute little thing you...

But then again, you all know it don't mean shit. You all know our buddy Barack and our Sista Hillary work for the same people that crazy nutjob McCain works for. You know, donors and such. Did you donate money to their campaign? No? Hmm, guess you're shit outta luck, then.

But more than that, maybe their message really touched your heart, a message I'll bet my left testicle you can't even repeat, unless you look it up or Ctrl+C Ctrl+V that shit. The two candidates from the Democratic party with actual messages, whether you agreed with the messages or not, are gone or never had a chance. Ending poverty? Pfffft. Make the US a non-belicose state? Pffffft.

No, fuck that. Better to go for PR campaigns. After all, that's what American democracy has been about since the Cold War. The fact that Obama '08 folks actually believe Barack Obama was ALWAYS against the war should have George Orwell smiling right now. And to know that so many wish to turn a blind eye to the fact that Hillary Clinton is a crazy belicose "let's bomb the Persians NOW" bitch who is so corrupt she would fit right in in Brazil and vote for her because she's a woman and "stood by her man"... it all boggles the mind.

It'll make absolutely no difference if Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama make it to the White House (after George Bush's presidency, it's doubtful John McCain can win). Hillary and Barack belong to a tainted party, one that is just as corrupt, just as sold out, as the Republicans. Both candidates have spent millions upon millions of dollars saying nothing for the better part of four years (remember Obama at the Democratic Convention that chose John Kerry?), tricking people with well-made speeches and carefully placed editorials by Joe Klein. People should know better by now, especially those who follow politics, who know American history, and who are fully aware that marketing is a derivative of propaganda.

Lexington or Charlemagne, one of the three editorial pages in the Economist (I forget which one exactly), commented, about a year after the onset of the Second Iraq War, that, had Al Gore made it to the White House, he'd have made the exact same decisions after 9/11 that G.Bush made. I wholeheartedly agree.

Monday, February 04, 2008

Carnaval

So this is my blog. It begins now, 3 February, 2008, and I'm 26. It's 23:26 and I've a veritable boner. My blog!!!!!

First off, to those Brazilians still reading this and wondering why I'm being so fucking pretentious as to write in English... I'm pretentious, I intend this blog to be... yes... for FOREIGNERS!!! I actually think people of other nations, individuals other than my closest of friends, will read this. I also believe in the saci pererê, but only on leap years.

In any case, if you're having trouble with the English thing, you can translate this with Foxlingo, a Mozilla Firefox extension. But if my blog interests you that much, just fucking buy me a drink and let's go have sex already.

* * *
The latest edition of Carta Capital (which, for those not in the know, is Brazil's only decent weekly) featured an article on a recent wave of protests that took over parts of the Pela-Porco favela (slum, or shanty town) in Salvador, the capital of Bahia, due to the assassination, on the part of the Bahia Military Police, of four young black males. The article is certainly revealing as inside much information can be gleaned, especially the fact that there are actually protests, not just episodes of crying in front of television cameras at the four mens' funerals. The situation is so fucked-up, so ridiculous, that several people have manifested themselves in all sorts of very unBrazilian ways (one of the boys' mothers, a handicap mother of 3 -now 2- is in hiding for fear of retaliation, since she has spoken to the press).

But, alas, this isn't what the current post is about. I got really interested in a YouTube post the article mentioned, entitled Carnaval 2007 - Salvador Negro Amor??? It reminded me exactly of why I hate (and I'm using the word hate, not detest or anything like that) Carnaval. It reminded me of why I sometimes (but only sometimes, mind you) hang my head when walking the streets of São Paulo (or any Brazilian city, for that matter).

The video, as one can see, details police acting during one or more Chiclete com Banana (a Brazilian axé band) shows in Salvador. More than that, it details the entire social dynamic of these concerts. What happens is that, to "jump" behind one of these shows during carnaval in Salvador (the band is playing atop a moving truck), you have to buy a shirt (an abadá) that could cost several hundred reais, maybe upwards of one thousand. A rope is then set around the people who have the abadás (the green and blue shirts in the video) and anyone without them cannot come inside and "jump" along with the band.

Typical Brazil, in other words: black people create something -axé, the moving truck business, Carnaval- and only white people doing ether get to enjoy it. Part of what's seen in the video is this: blacks and pardos, the vast majority of Salvador's population (83%, according to the Brazilian Geography and Statistics Institute), attempting to enjoy something they're not allowed. However, as other blacks noticed, people of color can serve as protection for whites inside the ropes and sell 100ml cups of water.

Or better yet, they can go work for the Bahia Military Police and beat the shit out of other black people.

The reason I liked this video is not it's message, which I wasn't too hot for (the guy who edited the video seems to think everything in Brazil comes down to race when, in fact, problems are much deeper-seated. I would reckon a guess he just got into a Federal college and finished reading Marx.). I liked it because it's funny... in a sadistic way. You could show this shit to most of the white people I know (reactionary Jews, quasi-fascist Christians, etc.), and they would not only find it normal (a regular complaint from the video's editor), they'd find it amusing. Brazilians these days, especially the rich ones, dig violence, the love it, they get off on it; many only wish they could make sure the State could monopolize power just to make sure poor people would "stay in their proper place" (hence the ignorant and misplaced nostalgia for the 64-85 dictatorship, one of the principle reasons we've such rampant violence these days).

But my hatred of Carnaval is much deeper. Pray tell: do people even know what they're celebrating? Is it Ash Wednesday, the religious component of the holiday? If it is, it's funny, cuz that's when everyone's back to work. Are we celebrating our joy as a people? Then do tell me, what joy this is? Is it the joy those people at the Pela-Porco favela are feeling? Maybe it's the joy the almost half-a-million people who died of violent crime in the past ten years felt.

"Oh, Rafael, you fucking pussy," is what you're probably saying, am I right? Really, am I right?

Then tell me, is Carnaval about this country, Brasil, the winner of five fucking MEANINGLESS World Cups? What fucking country, I ask you? You go to Belém, Pará, and come back to São Paulo, São Paulo, and it's like you've been to two separate nations. And it has nothing, NOTHING, to do with regional accents or any such thing.

Oh, I know, maybe its revealing thoughts by shit pseudo-journalists like Ali Kamel, from Globo (where else?): Brazilians are not racists. Yes, and then there's Veja Magazine, which I remember telling me about Brazil not being homophobic either.

I was once talking to a friend of mine, a guy who'd recently just returned from living abroad. He told me two things, one of which left me dumbfounded, the other which left me... I don't know... curious. The first one is that people don't have a class consciousness. The second is that I shouldn't pity poor people for being poor.

On account of the first argument, I don't even know where to begin. Maybe he was fucking with me. Maybe he wasn't himself that day. Hell, even a fucking Nazi can see that rich people are completely aware that they're part of an elite, and wish to remain so. What's so terrible about the Brazilian elite is that it not only knows it's a class of extremely filthy-rich white people but it has absolutely no conception of what it even means to be an elite.

As for the second argument, I don't pity the poor of Brazil for being poor; I pity them for having to deal with us, with people that read books that enlighten us as to our lack of racism and our acceptance of fags and dykes because (and I swear on my mother's eyes that this was Veja Magazine's central argument) São Paulo has a Gay Parade.

But I rant, as a certain comedian once said. I'll now continue to ignore this bullshit holiday.

Cheers.

A Random Post for your Random Pleasure

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