IBOV 173,825.27 ▼ 1.24% IPSA 10,947.38 ▼ 0.70% IPC MEX 66,409.65 ▼ 0.18% MERVAL 3,185,257 ▼ 3.22% COLCAP 2,285.11 ▼ 0.30% BVL PERÚ 57,112.22 — — USD/BRL5.10▲ 0.45% USD/MXN17.42▲ 0.18% USD/CLP924.00▼ 0.22% USD/COP3,224▼ 1.11% USD/PEN3.38▼ 0.06% USD/ARS1,475▼ 0.07% USD/UYU40.18▲ 1.21% USD/PYG6,030▲ 1.35% USD/BOB10.63▲ 3.73% USD/DOP58.14▼ 0.19% USD/CRC447.87▲ 1.07% USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.25% USD/HNL26.73▲ 0.09% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.34% USD/VES725.63▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD157.49▲ 0.31% USD/TTD6.75▲ 1.34% EUR/BRL5.84▲ 0.54% BRENT 84.93 ▼ 0.02% WTI 78.96 ▼ 0.80% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.29 ▼ 0.12% GOLD 3,980 ▼ 1.58% SILVER 55.82 ▼ 2.27% SOY 1,194 ▼ 0.71% CORN 463.50 ▲ 3.58% WHEAT 674.25 ▼ 0.48% COFFEE 313.95 ▼ 6.13% SUGAR 14.41 ▼ 2.96% ORANGE JUICE 134.95 ▼ 2.81% COTTON 79.07 ▼ 1.85% COCOA 5,441 ▼ 5.16% BEEF 223.05 ▼ 3.07% CATTLE 346.88 ▼ 0.88% LITHIUM 68.86 ▼ 3.10% PETR4 39.89 ▼ 1.72% VALE3 72.98 ▼ 2.05% ITUB4 42.55 ▼ 1.37% BBDC4 18.41 ▼ 1.02% ABEV3 15.60 ▲ 0.19% BBAS3 20.76 ▲ 1.02% B3SA3 15.39 ▼ 1.91% WEGE3 43.49 ▼ 1.74% PRIO3 56.79 ▼ 1.23% SUZB3 41.70 ▲ 0.53% RENT3 38.86 ▼ 3.69% AZZA3 18.53 ▼ 0.70% CSAN3 3.88 ▼ 1.27% RAIZ4 0.29 — 0.00% PCAR3 2.59 ▼ 1.15% GMAT3 3.92 ▼ 1.51% PSSA3 55.22 — 0.00% CVCB3 1.35 ▲ 0.75% POSI3 3.88 ▼ 1.77% SLCE3 13.61 ▲ 0.81% NATU3 8.56 ▼ 1.27% BRKM5 6.10 ▼ 4.84% RANI3 8.08 ▲ 1.25% CSNA3 5.10 ▼ 2.67% CMIN3 5.45 ▲ 4.01% USIM5 7.90 ▼ 3.66% GGBR4 23.91 ▼ 1.20% ENEV3 25.95 ▼ 3.71% CPFE3 47.19 ▲ 0.77% CMIG4 11.09 ▼ 0.54% EQTL3 39.85 ▼ 1.19% LREN3 13.65 ▼ 3.19% VIVT3 35.47 — 0.00% RAIL3 13.93 ▼ 1.00% KLABIN 17.36 ▼ 0.17% RAIA DROGASIL 18.52 ▼ 0.80% RDOR3 35.87 ▼ 0.39% HAPV3 10.95 ▼ 0.36% FLRY3 16.42 ▼ 0.55% SMTO3 15.72 ▲ 1.22% UGPA3 31.99 ▲ 2.86% VBBR3 34.37 ▲ 1.84% BBSE3 41.18 ▲ 1.15% BPAC11 56.59 ▼ 0.79% CURY3 31.29 ▼ 4.40% AERI3 2.02 — 0.00% VIVARA 23.35 ▼ 0.72% COMPASS 24.91 ▼ 0.80% VAMOS 3.16 ▲ 1.28% SANB11 26.83 ▼ 0.63% ASAI3 8.56 ▼ 1.15% SBSP3 29.30 ▼ 2.27% WALMEX 49.59 ▼ 0.22% GMEXICO 198.85 ▼ 0.68% FEMSA 225.20 ▲ 0.86% CEMEX 22.74 ▲ 0.53% GFNORTE 180.87 ▼ 1.41% BIMBO 58.25 ▲ 1.27% TELEVISA 9.52 ▼ 0.42% AMX 22.78 ▼ 0.09% GAP 391.88 ▼ 1.31% ASUR 280.94 ▼ 0.89% OMA 231.98 ▼ 1.37% KOF 179.47 ▲ 1.42% GRUMA 286.75 ▲ 1.92% KIMBER 38.78 ▲ 0.13% SQM-B 66,050 ▼ 2.72% COPEC 6,126 ▼ 1.35% BSANTANDER 78.16 ▼ 0.61% FALABELLA 5,853 ▼ 0.37% ENELAM 84.80 ▼ 1.11% CENCOSUD 2,005 ▼ 1.72% CMPC 1,074 ▼ 2.63% BANCO CHILE 188.88 ▼ 0.33% LATAM AIR 25.40 ▲ 2.01% YPF 75,975 ▼ 3.28% GGAL 7,860 ▼ 4.20% PAMPA 5,110 ▼ 2.48% TXAR 662.00 ▼ 1.34% ALUAR 940.00 ▼ 2.03% TGS 9,360 ▼ 4.00% CEPU 2,260 ▼ 3.58% MIRGOR 16,850 ▼ 0.74% COME 44.60 ▼ 2.26% LOMA NEGRA 3,558 ▼ 1.52% BYMA 301.50 ▼ 0.82% TELECOM ARG 4,198 ▼ 2.72% ECOPETROL 15.82 ▼ 1.00% BANCOLOMBIA 79.47 ▼ 2.55% GRUPO AVAL 4.97 ▼ 1.19% CREDICORP 387.44 ▼ 2.70% SOUTHERN COPPER 175.66 ▼ 3.24% BUENAVENTURA 30.17 ▼ 1.76% MERCADOLIBRE 1,857 ▲ 0.77% NUBANK 13.79 ▼ 0.65% XP 16.68 ▼ 1.13% PAGSEGURO 9.15 ▼ 0.65% STONE 11.20 ▼ 0.71% GLOBANT 32.20 ▲ 0.69% TECNOGLASS 46.83 ▲ 2.54% GAP AIRPORT 225.96 ▼ 0.81% ASUR 280.94 ▼ 0.89% OMA AIRPORT 107.21 ▼ 0.64% AMX ADR 26.14 ▲ 0.11% FEMSA ADR 129.49 ▲ 0.56% CEMEX ADR 13.10 ▲ 0.23% PETROBRAS ADR 17.47 ▼ 2.18% VALE ADR 14.22 ▼ 3.07% ITAU ADR 8.30 ▼ 1.78% SANTANDER BR 5.30 ▼ 0.93% AMBEV ADR 3.05 ▲ 0.66% CSN 1.00 ▼ 2.91% GERDAU 4.72 ▼ 1.77% LATAM ADR 53.18 ▼ 3.08% BTC 64,064 ▼ 1.00% ETH 1,874 ▼ 2.25% SOL 75.68 ▼ 2.05% XRP 1.09 ▼ 1.73% BNB 574.99 ▼ 0.88% ADA 0.16 ▼ 1.88% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 1.60% AVAX 6.58 ▼ 1.73% LINK 8.39 ▼ 1.75% DOT 0.86 ▲ 1.60% LTC 45.21 ▲ 0.19% BCH 222.01 ▼ 0.51% TRX 0.32 ▼ 0.33% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.40% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 1.79% NEAR 2.02 ▼ 2.28% ATOM 1.52 ▼ 2.22% AAVE 91.54 ▼ 4.48% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 81.77 ▼ 0.70% EMBRAER ADR 64.37 ▼ 0.82% JBS 12.03 ▼ 0.58% JBS BDR 61.50 ▲ 0.11% MBRF3 15.29 ▼ 0.71% MBRFY 2.93 ▲ 2.09% INTER 5.54 ▼ 1.42% IBOV 173,825.27 ▼ 1.24% IPSA 10,947.38 ▼ 0.70% IPC MEX 66,409.65 ▼ 0.18% MERVAL 3,185,257 ▼ 3.22% COLCAP 2,285.11 ▼ 0.30% BVL PERÚ 57,112.22 — — USD/BRL 5.10 ▲ 0.45% USD/MXN 17.42 ▲ 0.18% USD/CLP 924.00 ▼ 0.22% USD/COP 3,224 ▼ 1.11% USD/PEN 3.38 ▼ 0.06% USD/ARS 1,475 ▼ 0.07% USD/UYU 40.18 ▲ 1.21% USD/PYG 6,030 ▲ 1.35% USD/BOB 10.63 ▲ 3.73% USD/DOP 58.14 ▼ 0.19% USD/CRC 447.87 ▲ 1.07% USD/GTQ 7.62 ▲ 2.25% USD/HNL 26.73 ▲ 0.09% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.34% USD/VES 725.63 ▼ 0.13% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 157.49 ▲ 0.80% USD/TTD 6.75 ▲ 1.81% EUR/BRL 5.84 ▲ 0.54% BRENT 84.93 ▼ 0.02% WTI 78.96 ▼ 0.80% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.29 ▼ 0.12% GOLD 3,980 ▼ 1.58% SILVER 55.82 ▼ 2.27% SOY 1,194 ▼ 0.71% CORN 463.50 ▲ 3.58% WHEAT 674.25 ▼ 0.48% COFFEE 313.95 ▼ 6.13% SUGAR 14.41 ▼ 2.96% ORANGE JUICE 134.95 ▼ 2.81% COTTON 79.07 ▼ 1.85% COCOA 5,441 ▼ 5.16% BEEF 223.05 ▼ 3.07% CATTLE 346.88 ▼ 0.88% LITHIUM 68.86 ▼ 3.10% PETR4 39.89 ▼ 1.72% VALE3 72.98 ▼ 2.05% ITUB4 42.55 ▼ 1.37% BBDC4 18.41 ▼ 1.02% ABEV3 15.60 ▲ 0.19% BBAS3 20.76 ▲ 1.02% B3SA3 15.39 ▼ 1.91% WEGE3 43.49 ▼ 1.74% PRIO3 56.79 ▼ 1.23% SUZB3 41.70 ▲ 0.53% RENT3 38.86 ▼ 3.69% AZZA3 18.53 ▼ 0.70% CSAN3 3.88 ▼ 1.27% RAIZ4 0.29 — 0.00% PCAR3 2.59 ▼ 1.15% GMAT3 3.92 ▼ 1.51% PSSA3 55.22 — 0.00% CVCB3 1.35 ▲ 0.75% POSI3 3.88 ▼ 1.77% SLCE3 13.61 ▲ 0.81% NATU3 8.56 ▼ 1.27% BRKM5 6.10 ▼ 4.84% RANI3 8.08 ▲ 1.25% CSNA3 5.10 ▼ 2.67% CMIN3 5.45 ▲ 4.01% USIM5 7.90 ▼ 3.66% GGBR4 23.91 ▼ 1.20% ENEV3 25.95 ▼ 3.71% CPFE3 47.19 ▲ 0.77% CMIG4 11.09 ▼ 0.54% EQTL3 39.85 ▼ 1.19% LREN3 13.65 ▼ 3.19% VIVT3 35.47 — 0.00% RAIL3 13.93 ▼ 1.00% KLABIN 17.36 ▼ 0.17% RAIA DROGASIL 18.52 ▼ 0.80% RDOR3 35.87 ▼ 0.39% HAPV3 10.95 ▼ 0.36% FLRY3 16.42 ▼ 0.55% SMTO3 15.72 ▲ 1.22% UGPA3 31.99 ▲ 2.86% VBBR3 34.37 ▲ 1.84% BBSE3 41.18 ▲ 1.15% BPAC11 56.59 ▼ 0.79% CURY3 31.29 ▼ 4.40% AERI3 2.02 — 0.00% VIVARA 23.35 ▼ 0.72% COMPASS 24.91 ▼ 0.80% VAMOS 3.16 ▲ 1.28% SANB11 26.83 ▼ 0.63% ASAI3 8.56 ▼ 1.15% SBSP3 29.30 ▼ 2.27% WALMEX 49.59 ▼ 0.22% GMEXICO 198.85 ▼ 0.68% FEMSA 225.20 ▲ 0.86% CEMEX 22.74 ▲ 0.53% GFNORTE 180.87 ▼ 1.41% BIMBO 58.25 ▲ 1.27% TELEVISA 9.52 ▼ 0.42% AMX 22.78 ▼ 0.09% GAP 391.88 ▼ 1.31% ASUR 280.94 ▼ 0.89% OMA 231.98 ▼ 1.37% KOF 179.47 ▲ 1.42% GRUMA 286.75 ▲ 1.92% KIMBER 38.78 ▲ 0.13% SQM-B 66,050 ▼ 2.72% COPEC 6,126 ▼ 1.35% BSANTANDER 78.16 ▼ 0.61% FALABELLA 5,853 ▼ 0.37% ENELAM 84.80 ▼ 1.11% CENCOSUD 2,005 ▼ 1.72% CMPC 1,074 ▼ 2.63% BANCO CHILE 188.88 ▼ 0.33% LATAM AIR 25.40 ▲ 2.01% YPF 75,975 ▼ 3.28% GGAL 7,860 ▼ 4.20% PAMPA 5,110 ▼ 2.48% TXAR 662.00 ▼ 1.34% ALUAR 940.00 ▼ 2.03% TGS 9,360 ▼ 4.00% CEPU 2,260 ▼ 3.58% MIRGOR 16,850 ▼ 0.74% COME 44.60 ▼ 2.26% LOMA NEGRA 3,558 ▼ 1.52% BYMA 301.50 ▼ 0.82% TELECOM ARG 4,198 ▼ 2.72% ECOPETROL 15.82 ▼ 1.00% BANCOLOMBIA 79.47 ▼ 2.55% GRUPO AVAL 4.97 ▼ 1.19% CREDICORP 387.44 ▼ 2.70% SOUTHERN COPPER 175.66 ▼ 3.24% BUENAVENTURA 30.17 ▼ 1.76% MERCADOLIBRE 1,857 ▲ 0.77% NUBANK 13.79 ▼ 0.65% XP 16.68 ▼ 1.13% PAGSEGURO 9.15 ▼ 0.65% STONE 11.20 ▼ 0.71% GLOBANT 32.20 ▲ 0.69% TECNOGLASS 46.83 ▲ 2.54% GAP AIRPORT 225.96 ▼ 0.81% ASUR 280.94 ▼ 0.89% OMA AIRPORT 107.21 ▼ 0.64% AMX ADR 26.14 ▲ 0.11% FEMSA ADR 129.49 ▲ 0.56% CEMEX ADR 13.10 ▲ 0.23% PETROBRAS ADR 17.47 ▼ 2.18% VALE ADR 14.22 ▼ 3.07% ITAU ADR 8.30 ▼ 1.78% SANTANDER BR 5.30 ▼ 0.93% AMBEV ADR 3.05 ▲ 0.66% CSN 1.00 ▼ 2.91% GERDAU 4.72 ▼ 1.77% LATAM ADR 53.18 ▼ 3.08% BTC 64,064 ▼ 1.00% ETH 1,874 ▼ 2.25% SOL 75.68 ▼ 2.05% XRP 1.09 ▼ 1.73% BNB 574.99 ▼ 0.88% ADA 0.16 ▼ 1.88% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 1.60% AVAX 6.58 ▼ 1.73% LINK 8.39 ▼ 1.75% DOT 0.86 ▲ 1.60% LTC 45.21 ▲ 0.19% BCH 222.01 ▼ 0.51% TRX 0.32 ▼ 0.33% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.40% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 1.79% NEAR 2.02 ▼ 2.28% ATOM 1.52 ▼ 2.22% AAVE 91.54 ▼ 4.48% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 81.77 ▼ 0.70% EMBRAER ADR 64.37 ▼ 0.82% JBS 12.03 ▼ 0.58% JBS BDR 61.50 ▲ 0.11% MBRF3 15.29 ▼ 0.71% MBRFY 2.93 ▲ 2.09% INTER 5.54 ▼ 1.42%
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Bolsonaro Repeatedly Pushed to Relax Weapons Control Measures During Pandemic

By · May 27, 2020 · 4 min read

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RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – The August 12th, 1937 cover of the Correio da Manhã newspaper is all over social media. The headline reads: “Mussolini says only an armed people is strong and free.” At the time, the Italian fascist leader addressed 100,000 people in Sicily.

Does the statement sound familiar? At the April 22nd cabinet meeting, President Bolsonaro said “I want everyone to be armed; an armed populace can never be enslaved.”

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro. (Photo: internet reproduction)
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The same reasoning surfaced in President Jair Bolsonaro’s speech during the notorious April 22nd cabinet meeting. “The people are indoors. That’s why I want (…) the people to arm themselves,” he said. The next day, the then Minister of Justice and Public Safety, Sérgio Moro, and the Minister of Defense, Fernando Azevedo, signed an inter-ministerial ordinance that increased the amount of ammunition that can be bought by each citizen per gun by a factor of 12 – from 50 to 600 per year.

“A shit Mayor’s shit issues a shitty decree, shackles people, forces everyone indoors. If they had a gun, they’d go out on the street. (…) Sign this ordinance today, that I want to send a fucking message to these shits! Why am I arming the people? Because I don’t want a dictatorship,” continued the President.

According to the NGO Instituto Sou da Paz, it was the fourth measure signed by Bolsonaro that week relaxing weapon control in the country. Before that, he had overturned three other Army ordinances that “introduced significant progress for the marking, control, and tracking of weapons and ammunition,” according to the organization.

But the President made other attacks against disarmament during his year and a half in office. In the early days of his government, he signed a decree to relax possession of weapons at home.

Later, in May 2019, the President signed a decree authorizing more professional categories to carry guns – a measure that ended up being overturned in Congress. Summing up all these initiatives, Sou da Paz estimates that Bolsonaro has already taken six measures to enforce his desire to arm the population.

The Disarmament Statute has been in force in Brazil since 2003, which Bolsonaro and the “bullet-backbenchers” have targeted because it has set strict rules for the acquisition of weapons. Currently, an ordinary citizen is authorized to own a weapon inside his/her home based on several criteria, but carrying it on the streets is prohibited.

Before it came into effect, guns and revolvers could be purchased free of bureaucracy in sports stores or large department stores, as is the case in the United States.

Fascist rhetoric

Historian Federico Finchelstein, an expert on fascism and populism, explains that Bolsonaro’s pro-gun rhetoric observed during the April 22nd cabinet meeting is inspired by the totalitarian and fascist regimes of Benito Mussolini in Italy and Adolf Hitler in Germany.

But the President also echoes the discourse of Venezuelan Hugo Chávez, who even advocated that a million people should arm themselves to prevent a purported US invasion; he channels the pro-gun lobby in the United States, which equates being entitled to carry weapons with freedom. Some groups have even argued that Jews could have prevented the Holocaust had they been able to acquire weapons.

“On the one hand, Bolsonaro promotes the fascist policy of the disease, according to which the most vulnerable, in general, the poor and the elderly, must die,” explains the historian, in reference to the fact that the ruler remains indifferent to the more than 20,000 deaths by coronavirus in Brazil. The New School for Social Research professor has been saying since the 2018 elections that the current President is one of the populist leaders closest to fascism.

“On the other hand, violence is central to fascism. Relating this promotion of political violence by Bolsonaro to the destruction within democracy promoted by fascist regimes is necessary,” he adds. “They created the illusion that the streets were violent and, with that, they promoted the creation of fascist militias. In other words, it was a self-fulfilling prophecy, because those who promoted chaos and death were the fascist agents of disorder”.

The foundation of fascist militias occurred both in Mussolini’s Italy and in Hitler’s Germany. “The SA and the SS were armed civilians within the Nazi party who were later incorporated into the state,” explains the historian. He claims that the creation of paramilitary groups in dictatorships is normal, but points out that another factor that draws Bolsonaro closer to fascism is “the advocacy of violence as an end in itself”.

Although he believes that Bolsonaro also bears similarities to Chávez, the historian explains that in Venezuela violence was promoted as “a means”. There, the Chavista regime fostered the creation of organizations, paramilitary groups that operate in the communities. In Brazil, the Bolsonaro family is under investigation for its links with militiamen in Rio de Janeiro, among them the head of the so-called Crime Bureau, former police officer Adriano da Nóbrega, who was killed in Bahia this year.

“The notion that people need to arm themselves to defend themselves is false, we know that Bolsonaro wants to destroy democracy from within. It is the State that holds the monopoly on violence within a democracy, so why would a ruler want to undermine that monopoly?”, Finchelstein questions.

“He wants a strong and violent State, but also for his followers to encourage this violence. He wants people to arm themselves against the autonomy of the judiciary, against Congress, against the press, against governors and mayors,” he concludes.

Source: El País

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