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Brazil

The Brazilian Riot Was Not Inspired by January 6

The riot in Brasilia arose from the local tradition of political mob violence.

Daniel Raisbeck | 1.10.2023 4:20 PM

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Rioters in Brazil | Ton Molina/www.fotoarena.br/Newscom
(Ton Molina/www.fotoarena.br/Newscom)

On Sunday, over 1,000 supporters of Brazil's former president, Jair Bolsonaro, stormed the seat of the country's government in the capital city of Brasilia. Claiming that last year's election of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was illegitimate, the rioters demanded a military intervention to reinstate Bolsonaro, who has yet to recognize his electoral defeat to da Silva, the leader of Brazil's Workers' Party. Bolsonaro has been in Florida since before the current president's inauguration on January 1.

Twitter soon became flooded with images of shattered windows and flag-waving ruffians who, clad in the yellow jerseys of the national soccer team, plundered the insides of Brazil's Congress, the Planalto presidential palace, and several ministries. Without delay, the global media began to feel reverberations of the Trumpist insurrection of January 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C.

"Brazil capital riot echoes Jan. 6," quipped MSNBC. "Bolsonaro supporters storm Brazil's Congress, echo Jan. 6 invasion," Newsweek reflected. "In echo of Jan. 6 attack in U.S., Brazilian protesters storm their Congress, high court and palace," added USA Today. The BBC's Mike Wendling, a "US disinformation reporter," went further and expounded on "how Trump's allies stoked Brazil Congress attack," noting, for instance, that Donald Trump's former adviser Steve Bannon had questioned the validity of Brazil's 2022 election in his podcast.

For all the global echoes of January 6—and the many instances of foreign correspondents echoing each other—Brazil's riot on January 8 was very much part of the local tradition of political mob violence, a tactic that the Brazilian left has fully mastered. For certain locals, in fact, yesterday's act of Bolsonarista thuggery was rather more reminiscent of the country's general strike in May 2017 than of the assault on the U.S. Capitol two years ago.

At the time, Brazil was in the midst of a fiscal crisis as the economy struggled to recover from a profound two-year-long recession. Then-President Michel Temer, a left-winger who had replaced the impeached Dilma Rousseff in 2016 (Temer had been Rousseff's vice president), sought to implement mild reforms to the country's notoriously rigid labor laws and set the minimum age of retirement at 65. As Reuters explained then, it was common for Brazilian workers to "retire with full benefits in their 50s." Brazil's leading labor unions, however, had other plans.

Together with the Workers' Party and the Communist Party, among others, union leaders claimed that Temer, whom the Supreme Court was investigating for corruption under the wide-reaching Odebrecht scandal, was an illegitimate president. They demanded his resignation and an ensuing election even though, had Temer resigned, an interim president would have been installed by law until the end of the established term. Taking the law into their own hands, however, the unions called a general strike that sought to bring down the government.

On the evening of May 24, 2017, Bloomberg reported the following:

Amid frequent clashes with police, demonstrators mobilized by Brazil's main labor unions broke into several ministries, causing widespread damage and setting fire to the agriculture ministry, according to GloboNews. All ministry buildings were subsequently evacuated and civil servants sent home.

That might sound eerily similar—if not identical—to Sunday's ruinous events in Brasilia, except for the fact that government buildings were empty last weekend. Not all commentators, however, have regarded both assaults as equally censurable. 

Take the case of Brazil's current justice minister, Flávio Dino, who has taken to the airwaves to condemn the Bolsonarista riot with Churchillian flourishes and impeccable law-and-order rhetoric. "They will not succeed in destroying Brazilian democracy," Dino stated in a press conference. "We need to say that fully, with all firmness and conviction. We will not accept the path of criminality to carry out political fights in Brazil. A criminal is treated like a criminal."

In 2017, however, Dino, who was then governor of the state of Maranhão, a Workers' Party stronghold in Brazil's northeast, took a rather different view of the general strike and its aims. Taking to Twitter on the morning of May 24, weeks after the strike had proven to be an inherently violent affair, Dino wrote that "the voice of the people will make itself heard today in Brasilia. It is an essential political actor that analysts often ignore. May all take place in peace."

As things unfolded, "the voice of the people '' turned out to be a euphemism for a throng's violent disregard for the rules-based system that Dino claims to uphold today. As Helio Beltrão, president of Brazil's Mises Institute, comments: "Five years ago, Flávio Dino encouraged the protests that burned down ministries. Those leftists who today correctly repudiate [the events], what did they say in 2017?"

Having cheered the attempted overthrow of a president with a constitutional mandate just five and a half years ago, da Silva denounced Sunday's events against his own government as "barbaric" and "abominable." Naturally, his regional allies have parroted this line, in some cases with even less moral authority to decry political violence than the Brazilian premier himself.

Chilean President Gabriel Boric, for instance, condemned "the disgraceful attack against the three branches of the Brazilian state by the Bolsonaristas," and yet he helped to topple his country's constitutional order and only came to power after taking advantage of the most violent protests in recent Latin American history. Colombian President Gustavo Petro likewise denounced "fascism's coup" in Brazil, adding that "the right has been unable to maintain the pact of non-violence." As recently as last year, however, Petro was hinting that he would take up arms once again—he began his political career as a member of the murderous M-19 insurgency—if he lost the presidential election. Much like Bolsonaro, Petro warned that, were he to lose, it would be due to electoral fraud, so he would not accept an unfavorable result. Those concerns dissipated the moment he was declared the victor.

Sunday's events in Brasilia are indeed contemptible. But Latin America's hard left has excelled at the art of political sabotage and the tactical use of violence against legitimate sitting governments, all the while selling a global media narrative of the fight for social justice, a noble stance against "austerity," or the principled defense of human rights. Instead, both sides exhibit a troublingly hypocritical will to power.

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Daniel Raisbeck is a policy analyst on Latin America at the Cato Institute. He ran for mayor of Bogota, Colombia, in 2015 as an independent libertarian.

BrazilJair BolsonaroLatin AmericaForeign PolicyCongressJanuary 6
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  1. Chumby   2 years ago

    It might have just been motivated by a questionable election.

    1. Ted AKA Teddy Salad, CIA/US Ballet Force   2 years ago

      Indeed. Another scam put forth by scheming Marxists.

      1. Tony   2 years ago

        If you're going to quote Mein Kampf, you should provide an attribution.

    2. LauraBrooks   2 years ago (edited)

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    3. ThanksForTheFish   2 years ago

      Every election is questionable unless your preferred side wins,

      1. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

        That is the looter altruist position.

  2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

    According to MSDNC and DNN, it's all the same. "1/6 iSpIrEd 1/8!!!!111!!!!1!!".

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  3. Dillinger   2 years ago (edited)

    >> Was Not Inspired By January 6

    inspired by election fraud, not the 1/6 parade

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago (edited)

      And possibly a few undercover informants. Such as the ones here.

      https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/08/us/politics/oath-keepers-trial-january-6.html

      Or

      https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2022/11/14/kpst-n14.html

  4. JesseAz   2 years ago

    You'll never get a full time gig at this site with this kind of analysis. At least CATO hasn't been fully overrun yet.

    1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      It hasn't?

  5. BikeRider   2 years ago

    " very much part of the local tradition of political mob violence, a tactic that the Brazilian left has fully mastered"
    That's not possible. Only the right uses violence and riots. The left just has peaceful protests.

    1. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      "Fiery but mostly peaceful."

      It's important to get that word "mostly" in there, that way if anyone complains they can say "well, it was 'mostly peaceful' ... something something ... a few bad apples ... mumble mumble..."

  6. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

    This wasn't inspired by Trump. Reason still hasn't weighed in on the storming of the Bastille.

  7. Chumby   2 years ago

    Good to see Reason wax Brazilian.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

      That was smooth.

      1. Chumby   2 years ago

        Was plucked out of nowhere.

      2. Ted AKA Teddy Salad, CIA/US Ballet Force   2 years ago

        Well, they got to the bare truth.

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    2. mad.casual   2 years ago

      A Brazilian Rioters may seem like an awful lot, but with the exchange rate it's only about 1/6.

      1. Ajsloss   2 years ago

        Just hope the military doesn’t get involved, casualties would be in the Brazilians. (Thanks, Rick Sanchez)

  8. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    The Brazilian Riot Was Not Inspired by January 6

    No, reason, that's not how you do it. You'll never get invited to sit with the cool kids unless you find some way to blame everything bad that happens anywhere in the world on Trump and/or "because J6 (AKA The Darkest Day in American History (trademark)."

  9. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    The BBC's Mike Wendling, a "US disinformation reporter,"

    At least he's honest that he reports disinformation. Oh wait... that's not what he meant? Hmm.

  10. Jerryskids   2 years ago

    The riot in Brasilia arose from the local tradition of political mob violence.

    One man's political mob violence is another man's mostly peaceful protest. Just because the CIA was down there nudging the Brazilians to elect the right President doesn't mean the election wasn't an exemplar of robust democracy.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

      Yeah U.S. election meddling in Brazil is pretty well documented and is part of our long tradition of election meddling worldwide. Having said, that I doubt we'll ever know if the Brazilian election was rigged. Sure looks that way to me but the author here doesn't go there so no real insight. But overall informative article.

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Some of the pro Lula rulings by the Brazilian courts are pretty obvious as a means to fortify the elections.

      2. Sevo   2 years ago

        And it's becoming clear that US gov't meddling in US elections is well-documented.

        1. Ted AKA Teddy Salad, CIA/US Ballet Force   2 years ago

          It’s well known that Biden threatened Bolsonaro around the time of the election. The fix was clearly in, and we were part of it.

          The US government is officially the bad guy.

    2. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

      I cannot recall a single instance except for some anarco-antifans breaking a tubular bus stop in Curitiba. They were protesting against vandalism being illegal. Now I see that Trumpanzees finally got another of their own (besides Steph) a Fifth Column in Reason.

  11. JFree   2 years ago

    One thing that is almost certain though. Bolsonaros visa for entry in the US is now illegal. So rather than let that pig use sanctuary in the US to further his political challenges, it is time for the US to stop the games.

    Load him and all his medical baggage in a helicopter. Fly it to Brazil. And let it all be dumped from altitude on some rancid favela.

    1. Mother's Lament   2 years ago

      Bolsonaro accepted Lula's win and said "Peaceful demonstrations, in the form of the law, are part of democracy. However, depredations and invasions of public buildings as occurred today, as well as those practiced by the left in 2013 and 2017, escape the rule".

      Lula's the one deliberately inciting his opponents now.

      1. Tony   2 years ago

        What even are you?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          A far smarter and better commenter than you, Tony. You're outclassed here.

  12. Tony   2 years ago

    But Bolsonaro supporters were shouting "Facebook, Facebook!"

    Social media has been weaponized against the stupid to make them even more stupid and use them as cannon fodder in coup attempts. Guess what politics is universally common in this phenomenon.

    90% of the Reason commentariat: "But we have to protect the children from drag queens all of a sudden! Point me in the direction of a cannon, sir!"

    1. Chumby   2 years ago

      Social media was key in the BLM and Antifa riots.

      1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

        Sorry. Per the narrative Antifa was not involved in any riots, or even protests. It was all false flag by the MAGAs.

      2. Tony   2 years ago

        True, social media does help people organize for good causes too, but unfortunately the fascists can simply overwhelm those attempts (a la Arab Spring), a function of the reach of the global authoritarian movement and the nature of propaganda. This has been scienced.

    2. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

      Tony got it right this time. The morning after Christianofascist Riots 2.0, the "Ideias Radicais" Youtube channel (anarco-vomitorium of von Mises, Vargas, Lobato, Franco, Alex Jones & Pucker Carlson screeching, relabeled as "libertarian") obligatory moaning over excesses ends with "the left will now decree shoot whitey and four-year-old sex-change operations with no parental meddling allowed" as a matter of policy. This, at 17 minutes, is exactly what Murrican Trumpanzees prophesy at every opening here.

    3. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

      Another true observation. Lula's first term wiped out Brazil's foreign debt. Campaign ditties reminded voters of the guy's record. Prohibition-barking christianofascists only belch prophecies, divinations, auguries, foretellings and apocalyptic revelations about what "would surely happen" if non-nazis were to win an election. To be fair, communists make similar predictions on behalf of non-communist victories. Both looter wings avoid mention of past accomplishments.

  13. TJJ2000   2 years ago

    And that BIG FAT ELEPHANT in the room?

    Both are places where Gov-Gun FORCES have gone Power-Mad with National Sozialist(Nazi) social justice warriors. This is just history repeating itself over and over and over again....

    Give the Marxists an inch and they take an entire nation over. The USA isn't and never has been a "democracy"... It's a **CONSTITUTIONAL** Union of Republican States. That is the *ONLY* thing that will save this nation from following in the footsteps of these other nations collapsing.

    1. TJJ2000   2 years ago

      Gov-GUNS only asset to humanity is to ensure everyone's Liberty and Justice for all.

  14. Jerry B.   2 years ago

    "...to condemn the Bolsonarista riot with Churchillian flourishes and impeccable law-and-order rhetoric. "They will not succeed in destroying Brazilian democracy," Dino stated in a press conference."

    Not "Churchillian". Democratian and Washington Postian.

    I used the Post's search function and found the phrase "threat to democracy"108 times in articles since 1/1/2022.

  15. Uomo Del Ghiaccio   2 years ago

    A conspiracy is simply a theory that lacks enough evidence to convince the majority. Many but not all conspiracies over time are revealed as being true or partially true once additional evidence is found or revealed.

    Time will tell if these elections were actually stolen or simply one side taking advantage of the situation to serve their purposes. Personally, I believe that there is a degree of corruption, but not convinced that there was enough to sway the difference.

    I do believe that the stage was set and elites used their influence to push the populace toward once side as opposed to the other. I believe that some of this influence is ill-gotten.

  16. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

    Raisbeck conveniently elides Christian National Socialist Fernando Collor who defeated "commie" Lula as Biden-Reagan asset looting triggered Weimarish hyperinflation. Collor FROZE EVERY BANK ACCOUNT IN THE COUNTRY exactly the way Bert Hoover led FDR to do 04MAR1933. Brazil is today swamped with MAGA-style anarcho-fascist girl-bulliers cheered on by Brazil's version of Alex Jones (Raphael Lima). Trumpanzee-see, Monkey-do imitation of redneck idiots is the same ideologically as it is onscreen. Compared to superstitious fascists, Lula has performed like a model president.

  17. Libertariantranslator   2 years ago

    Ambrose Bierce had a good prescription in The Devil's Dictionary:
    GRAPESHOT, n. An argument which the future is preparing in answer to the demands of American National Socialism.

  18. John Gall   2 years ago

    I was at the Demonstration on 01/06/21, and it was a peacful, uneventful gathering, on the West side of the Capital.

    The tongue-wagging fracas occurred on the East side, to which everyone in the Demonstrtion was oblivious to, nothing happened at the Demonstration.

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