terça-feira, 2 de novembro de 2010

Rafael Saldanha Compara o Brasil de Ontem com o Brasil de Hoje

01
NOV

 Postei do Brizola 

Neto:



O Brasil de FHC
comparado
ao Brasil de Lula

 e Dilma



O Tijolaco é seu-5


O Brasil de ontem e o de hoje

Rafael Saldanha
O Brasil de ontem ficou marcado como um país que ignorou os seus aposentados. Um país do arrocho salarial. Um país que devia 20 bilhões de dólares ao FMI. Um país que privatizou diversos patrimônios energéticos e naturais e, ainda, os venderam a preço de “banana”! Um país que não aguentava nenhuma crise econômica vinda de países do exterior. Um país do “apagão”. Um país que abandonou os miseráveis e excluídos dessa nação. Um país da desigualdade social exacerbada. Esse foi o país de FHC/Serra e que quase privatizou a Petrobras.
O Brasil de hoje é o ver o filho de pedreiro formando em medicina graças ao ProUni. O Brasil de hoje é você ser livre para ter a sua crença em uma religião ou filosofia e saber que o Estado não pode interferir nela pois este é laico. O Brasil de hoje é o que concedeu emprego a mais de 15 milhões de brasileiros e brasileiras. O Brasil de hoje é ver motorista de ônibus fazendo churrasco no domingo. O Brasil de hoje é saber que mais de 20 milhões de brasileiros saíram da miséria. O Brasil de hoje é entender que a classe média cresceu, pois são mais de 30 milhões que adentraram nela. O Brasil de hoje deixou de dever o FMI para se tornar credor desta. O Brasil de hoje conseguiu enfrentar uma crise econômica mundial oriunda dos EUA e, ainda, teve a invejável maestria de ser o último a entrar nela e o primeiro a sair. O Brasil de hoje é respeitado no mundo todo e não abaixamos mais a cabeça para americanos e europeus dizendo: “Yes, sir”, pelo contrário, nós lideramos o G-20 e queremos mostrar ao mundo e, principalmente ao G-8, que todos os países tem liberdade e o direito de expressar as suas opiniões sobre questões ambientais, econômicas, políticas sem sofrerem sanções e invasões.
O Brasil de hoje é acreditar que existe um futuro ainda melhor. Entretanto, isso só irá se concretizar se você conhecer a dor do passado, perceber a alegria do presente e confiar que Dilma Rouseff fará um amanhã ainda de modo mais perfeito como nunca antes na história desse país.

segunda-feira, 1 de novembro de 2010

The Washington Post Destaca a Vitória de Dilma

Dima Rousseff: Big task ahead for Brazil new leader

SLIDESHOW
  Previous        Next    
Supporters of Brazil's President-elect Dilma Rousseff wave flags of the Workers Party, in front of a campaign banner that shows her with current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during the victory rally in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday Oct. 31, 2010. Governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff was elected Brazil's president, becoming the nation's first female leader, and will take office Jan. 1. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)
Supporters of Brazil's President-elect Dilma Rousseff wave flags of the Workers Party, in front of a campaign banner that shows her with current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during the victory rally in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday Oct. 31, 2010. Governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff was elected Brazil's president, becoming the nation's first female leader, and will take office Jan. 1. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)(Jorge Saenz - AP)

By BRADLEY BROOKS
The Associated Press
Monday, November 1, 2010; 3:34 AM
SAO PAULO -- From three years in a dictatorship's jail cell to just two months away from the presidential palace, the journey has been long for Brazil's newly elected leader Dilma Rousseff, who will be the first woman to direct Latin America's biggest nation.
She is a career civil servant who has never held elected office, but Rousseff easily won Sunday's presidential runoff election. That was thanks to the wholehearted backing of outgoing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who for decades has been a presence on Brazil's political scene and will leave office as its most popular leader.
Now, the difficult part begins. Rousseff must make good on her campaign promises to continue Silva's programs that have led Brazil to new international economic and political heights. She acknowledged the challenge in her victory speech late Sunday after overcoming centrist rival Jose Serra by winning 56 percent of the vote against his 44 percent.
"It's a challenging and difficult task to succeed him, but I will know how to honor his legacy," she said of Silva. "I will know how to advance and consolidate his work."
This is exactly what her supporters and most of the base of the governing Workers Party expect.
"Now we are certain that the country will continue in the right direction," 26-year-old teacher Hobert dos Santos said while waving Rousseff campaign flags at a celebration on a main avenue in Sao Paulo. "Dilma will be able to continue working for the people, to continue improving many of the things that Lula started and didn't have time to finish."
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A former Marxist guerrilla who was jailed and tortured for three years in the early 1970s for fighting against Brazil's dictatorship, Rousseff is known as a demanding and skilled manager. She first served as Silva's energy minister and from 2005 until earlier this year was his chief of staff, running the day-to-day operations of the administration.
Despite her tough exterior, she betrayed emotion when speaking about Silva after the election results were announced.
"The joy I feel with this victory today is mixed with the emotion of his farewell. I know that a leader like Lula will never be away from his people," she said, her eyes welling with tears and voice cracking. "I will always be able to knock on his door and I'm sure that it will always will be open."
In his concession speech, Serra said he respected the voters' decision and wished the president-elect good luck.
Beginning Jan. 1, Rousseff, 62, will lead a nation on the rise, a country that will host the 2014 World Cup and that is expected to be the globe's fifth-largest economy by the time it hosts the 2016 Summer Olympics. It has also recently discovered huge oil reserves off its coast.
Silva used his 80 percent approval ratings to campaign incessantly for Rousseff, who lacks the charisma that transformed Silva from a one-time shoeshine boy into one of the globe's most popular leaders.


CONTINUED     1    2    Next >


The Washington Post Destaca a Vitória de Dilma

Dima Rousseff: Big task ahead for Brazil new leader

SLIDESHOW
  Previous        Next    
Supporters of Brazil's President-elect Dilma Rousseff wave flags of the Workers Party, in front of a campaign banner that shows her with current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during the victory rally in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday Oct. 31, 2010. Governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff was elected Brazil's president, becoming the nation's first female leader, and will take office Jan. 1. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)
Supporters of Brazil's President-elect Dilma Rousseff wave flags of the Workers Party, in front of a campaign banner that shows her with current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during the victory rally in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday Oct. 31, 2010. Governing party candidate Dilma Rousseff was elected Brazil's president, becoming the nation's first female leader, and will take office Jan. 1. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz)(Jorge Saenz - AP)
By BRADLEY BROOKS
The Associated Press
Monday, November 1, 2010; 3:34 AM
SAO PAULO -- From three years in a dictatorship's jail cell to just two months away from the presidential palace, the journey has been long for Brazil's newly elected leader Dilma Rousseff, who will be the first woman to direct Latin America's biggest nation.
She is a career civil servant who has never held elected office, but Rousseff easily won Sunday's presidential runoff election. That was thanks to the wholehearted backing of outgoing President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who for decades has been a presence on Brazil's political scene and will leave office as its most popular leader.
Now, the difficult part begins. Rousseff must make good on her campaign promises to continue Silva's programs that have led Brazil to new international economic and political heights. She acknowledged the challenge in her victory speech late Sunday after overcoming centrist rival Jose Serra by winning 56 percent of the vote against his 44 percent.
"It's a challenging and difficult task to succeed him, but I will know how to honor his legacy," she said of Silva. "I will know how to advance and consolidate his work."
This is exactly what her supporters and most of the base of the governing Workers Party expect.
"Now we are certain that the country will continue in the right direction," 26-year-old teacher Hobert dos Santos said while waving Rousseff campaign flags at a celebration on a main avenue in Sao Paulo. "Dilma will be able to continue working for the people, to continue improving many of the things that Lula started and didn't have time to finish."
ad_icon
A former Marxist guerrilla who was jailed and tortured for three years in the early 1970s for fighting against Brazil's dictatorship, Rousseff is known as a demanding and skilled manager. She first served as Silva's energy minister and from 2005 until earlier this year was his chief of staff, running the day-to-day operations of the administration.
Despite her tough exterior, she betrayed emotion when speaking about Silva after the election results were announced.
"The joy I feel with this victory today is mixed with the emotion of his farewell. I know that a leader like Lula will never be away from his people," she said, her eyes welling with tears and voice cracking. "I will always be able to knock on his door and I'm sure that it will always will be open."
In his concession speech, Serra said he respected the voters' decision and wished the president-elect good luck.
Beginning Jan. 1, Rousseff, 62, will lead a nation on the rise, a country that will host the 2014 World Cup and that is expected to be the globe's fifth-largest economy by the time it hosts the 2016 Summer Olympics. It has also recently discovered huge oil reserves off its coast.
Silva used his 80 percent approval ratings to campaign incessantly for Rousseff, who lacks the charisma that transformed Silva from a one-time shoeshine boy into one of the globe's most popular leaders.

CONTINUED     1    2    Next >

Brésil : Dilma Rousseff remporte la présidentielle

Après avoir remercié "avec beaucoup d'émotion" Lula, la présidente élue a affirmé : "Je frapperai souvent à sa porte et je sais qu'elle sera toujours ouverte."
Après avoir remercié "avec beaucoup d'émotion" Lula, la présidente élue a affirmé : "Je frapperai souvent à sa porte et je sais qu'elle sera toujours ouverte."REUTERS/BRUNO DOMINGOS
Propulsée par la popularité record de Lula, Dilma Rousseff a été élue au second tour de la présidentielle avec 56 % des voix contre 44 % à son rival social-démocrate José Serra. Elle devient ainsi la première femme à diriger la huitième économie du monde. L'abstention a marqué le second tour : 21 % des Brésiliens, selon les résultats partiels, ne sont pas allés voter bien que le vote soit obligatoire. Les résultats ont été reçus par des ovations et des cris de joie au siège du comité de campagne de Mme Rousseff, où arrivaient ministres, gouverneurs et dirigeants de la coalition gouvernementale. Les militants du Parti des travailleurs (PT), euphoriques, revêtus de chemises rouges et agitant des drapeaux, se massaient devant le siège du comité du parti, dans un hôtel de Brasilia.
La candidate du PT a bénéficié de l'énorme popularité de son président sortant et du succès de sa politique. Dilma Rousseff a suivi les résultats avec Lula. Après l'avoir remercié "avec beaucoup d'émotion", la présidente élue a affirmé : "Je frapperai souvent à sa porte et je sais qu'elle sera toujours ouverte." "La tâche de lui succéder est difficile et représente un défi, mais je saurai honorer cet héritage et amplifier son travail", a-t-elle assuré devant ses partisans réunis dans un grand hôtel de Brasilia. Elle a ainsi réitéré son "engagement fondamental : l'éradication de la misère pour tous les Brésiliens et les Brésiliennes". "Nous ne pourrons avoir de repos tant que des Brésiliens souffriront de la faim", a-t-elle ajouté.
"DES RÈGLES PLUS CLAIRES CONTRE LA SPÉCULATION"
Plus tard dans la soirée, son adversaire José Serra l'a félicitée mais s'est abstenu de saisir la main tendue. "Pour ceux qui nous imaginaient vaincus, nous ne faisons que commencer la lutte véritable", a dit l'ancien gouverneur de Sao Paulo. Dilma Rousseff, dans un discours aux allures de programme loin des improvisations de Lula, a aussi critiqué le protectionnisme des pays riches et demandé des "règles beaucoup plus claires" contre la spéculation qui augmente la volatilité des monnaies. Elle devait ensuite célébrer sa victoire sur l'esplanade des ministères, au cœur de la capitale fédérale, envahie par ses partisans.
A l'étranger, le président français Nicolas Sarkozy a été le premier à la féliciter, soulignant que sa victoire "témoigne de la reconnaissance du peuple brésilien pour le travail considérable qu'elle a accompli avec le président Lula pour faire du Brésil un pays moderne et plus juste". Le chef de file de la gauche radicale en Amérique latine, le président vénézuélien Hugo Chavez, a lui aussi salué la victoire de la candidate du Parti des travailleurs, disant qu'il allait"envoyer un baiser à sa chère Dilma".