those brats don’t know when to stop

PROTESTOS EM NOVA YORK!
And now in other new:
Brazil is a fucking caos.
All the cities are protesting against the government, Rio de Janeiro is on fire, the entire city of Belo Horizonte is on the streets, the people of Sao paulo are matching to take the biggest street in the city, and the capital Brasilia was taken by the people. The police ia beating the shit out of everyone ( >:c )
The anonymous have taken control of the site of the most sensationalist magazine and this Thursday my city will start another protest.
Now, the weather. …
It all started with the Movimento Passe Livre (“Free Fare Movement”), with protesting against the increase of R$0,20 for tickets of public transportation. Different cities adhered to the idea, including São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Porto Alegre, and millions of people gathered in the streets to scream against the taxes.
It all started with R$0,20, but it was never just about that. It was about our high taxes and low quality public services, it was about comparing the minimum wage to the R$3,20 (or small variations, depending on the city) of the bus, it was about watching in silence this price getting bigger and bigger each year. It was about seeing various problems from a distance, from schools and work, from our living rooms and from casual conversations, talking and joking about the corruption or failures in the system, rightfully angry, but doing nothing.
It started with the Free Fare Movement, with knowing that we need to pay at least R$130 (of a R$678 minimum wage for a large number of people, or more, but also forced to afford high prices for everything else) to work weekdays in a month.
It was - and still is, because it didn’t stop, not in São Paulo, not in other cities - a fair complaint. It was a fair complaint, and the protesters were right in being angry. They were shouting for “No violence”, and were answered by rubber bullets, pepper spray, tear gas, concussion grenades (here called “moral effect bombs”), spankings and arrests.
The right-wing media is calling the protesters vandals and rioters (although some people broke things, it was a very small group, largely criticized by the rest), the conservative middle and upper classes are saying it’s an exaggeration. I say it’s in time. Since the dictatorship and Fernando Collor’s impeachment, Brazil’s middle class (more than 50% of the country) was caught in a lethargic state, but 2013 is trying to change that, and now we finally have a chance to rise, and fight against violence, inequality, and taxes most of the population cannot afford to pay.
Reblogging myself again. Spread the word.
“Somos filhos da revolução.”