Brazil; the poor rise up against the BS of corrupt priorities

tay

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Here we go again. Brazil has been bamboozled into blowing $13bn on next year's football World Cup, and then on a similar sum to be later extorted by the International Olympic Committee to host the 2016 Games. Brazil's leftwing leader, Dilma Rousseff, was bequeathed the games by her populist predecessor, Lula da Silva. She has desperately tried to side with the protesters, but she is trapped by the oligarchs of Fifa and the IOC.


Brazil's citizens are being hit with higher bus fares and massive claims on health and welfare budgets. Up to half a million people may take to the streets this weekend to complain of "first world stadiums, third world schools". What is impressive about the demonstrators is that they appear not to be against sport as such, but against the extravagance of their staging. They are talking the language of priorities.


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Brazil is saying what we could not: we don't want these costly extravaganzas | Simon Jenkins | Comment is free | The Guardian
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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So Mass Protests Might Actually Work



Protesters say they want higher funding for education and health and a cut in salaries of public officials. They are also protesting against what they viewed as rampant corruption within the political class.

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff has unveiled a series of reforms in an attempt to end days of nationwide protests against bad public transport and healthcare, corruption​
- government would create a national plan for public transportation​
- Congress to invest all oil revenue royalties in education
"It's citizenship and not economic power that must be heard first," she said


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Brazil president unveils series of reforms - Americas - Al Jazeera English