O que o presidente Bolsonaro quer não é nenhum Plano Marshal, ao contrário do que pensa a grande mídia brasileira.
O presidente quer algo parecido com o New Deal de Roosevelt.
São coisas bem diferentes.
CLIQUE AQUI para saber o que foi o Plano Marshal.
CLIQUE AQUI para saber o que foi a política do New Deal.
7 comentários:
Enquanto isso, diz o Diário do Poder, de Brasília...
"Entendimento de Moraes impediria a nomeação do próprio Moraes no STF
Moraes chegou ao STF por ser auxiliar de confiança e amigo do ex-presidente Michel Temer, além do seu notório saber jurídico"
— Ou seja... é isso aí. Pura e simples retaliação.
Mas o Bolsonaro é que nem peixe. Não pode ver uma isca... e logo morde.
Precisa aprender com o Maluf. Quando perguntavam a ele sobre petróleo, ele respondia sobre berinjela... e dava o maior nó no jornalista.
"Plano Marshall" seria algo parecido com o que no brasil é chamado de "indústria da seca", e essa continua a todo o vapor no governo bolsonaro. Reportagem do New York Times de 1993:
Santa Cruz Journal; White Flight in Brazil? Secessionist Caldron Boils
By James Brooke May 12, 1993
Wielding a black felt pen on a road map, Irton Marx traced the outline of what he envisions as Latin America's newest, and fourth most populous, nation: the Republic of the Pampas.
By lopping the three southernmost states off Brazil, Mr. Marx would create an instant nation: 22 million people living in a fertile farming area the size of France.
"In five years, we will eliminate poverty," Mr. Marx said, offering his vision of an independent future for Brazil's most developed region. "We will be a first-world nation."
Over the last 150 years, southern Brazil has been the scene of sporadic separatist revolts. But once a strong central Government emerged 50 years ago, secessionists were brushed off as dreamers or cranks. 'Playing With Fire'
But now the improvised map taped to Mr. Marx's living room wall here has set off a furor. Prompted by a recent television report, Brazilians have suddenly realized that Latin America's only major separatist movement is gestating in the southern corner of their huge country.
Addressing an estimated 44 million viewers on May 2, the host of "Fantastico," Brazil's most widely watched television program, condemned Mr. Marx's movement as "racist." Veja, Brazil's most widely read news magazine, warned in an article on May 3 that the separatists are "playing with fire."
President Itamar Franco has ordered a federal police investigation of the movement, and the Governor of this state, Rio Grande do Sul, has voiced the view that separatist ideology was "Nazi-fascist" and that separatist leaders "could not pass a mental sanity test."
"They've called me a nut, a dreamer and now a Nazi," said Mr. Marx, a 45-year-old sone of German immigrants in a state where 85 percent of the population is of European descent. "But, now there is no way the press or the Government can hold us back."
[ Starting on May 6, the federal police began seizing separatist literature and called in four separatist leaders, including Mr. Marx, for questioning. ] Weak Central Government
...
...
Polls indicated that about one-third of Brazil's southerners vaguely favor some form of secession, and the jitters caused by the fractured and disorganized separatist movement mirror the current weakness and insecurity of Brazil's central Government.
The roots of its problems lie in the economy. The monthly inflation rate is running at nearly 30 percent, and per capita income has been stagnant since 1980.
"Brazil is falling apart -- time is in our favor," said Edgar Granata, an official in the Farroupilha Republic Party, one of half a dozen separatist movements that have sprung up since 1990 in Rio Grande do Sul.
The largest group, The South Is My Country, maintains committees in two other southern states often mentioned as candidates for secession: Parana and Santa Catarina. Complaints Over Economy
Southern Brazilians have long complained of funneling trillions of cruzeiros into the Amazon and the northeast. In one measure of regional hostility toward poor migrants from the northeast, about a dozen cities and towns in this state have adopted migration controls. Last year Novo Hamburgo blocked the entrance of 380 trucks containing the household goods of unemployed job seekers.
Trying to steal the separatists' banners, Alceu Collares, the Governor of Rio Grande do Sul state, has prepared a "fact booklet" outlining what is seen as Brasilia's discrimination against Brazil's southernmost state.
According to this pamphlet, the federal Government returns here only 63 percent of federally collected tax revenues. This would mean that Rio Grande do Sul ships $1 billion a year to the Amazon and the northeast.
"Over the last 20 years, it has been $20 billion," the Governor said. "We send to the northeast more than the Marshall Plan sent to Europe." North Holds Majority
https://www.nytimes.com/1993/05/12/world/santa-cruz-journal-white-flight-in-brazil-secessionist-caldron-boils.html
...e no link do editor o Presidente Roosevelt aponta Getúlio Vargas como coautor do "New Deal".
Conclusão: o brasil continua o mesmo país confuso e intervencionista.
Nada de "Mais Brasil, menos Brasília".
ASSOLAM O PAÍS
A velha malandragem dos políticos continua eficaz:
Sempre promete mudar ou reformar “o que aí está”.
Sai e entra governo e “o que aí está” segue
Ofendendo toda a nação ao sugarem o Estado.
Ladinos artistas nas artes de interpretar e camuflar,
A vez agora é do Mito e, surpreende: arremeda,
Mais irritado ainda, a Mita Estocadora de Vento!
O sucessor interpretará Nine ou Caçador de Marajá?
Partidos? Excelentes negócios para seus donos.
As reformas quando aprovadas contém adendos em
Itens críticos e desconstruindo os reais propósitos.
Sagas de ex-parceiros do Nine e Mita? Mantidas, viu?
AHT
30/04/2020
produção subsidiada. por faor...
Bolsonaro sequer sabe o que são essas coisas. Ele só conhece kit gay.
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