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  • O BRASIL EH O QUE ME ENVENENA MAS EH O QUE ME CURA (LUIZ ANTONIO SIMAS)

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    Fragmentos de textos e imagens catadas nesta tela, capturadas desta web, varridas de jornais, revistas, livros, sons, filtradas pelos olhos e ouvidos e escorrendo pelos dedos para serem derramadas sobre as teclas... e viverem eterna e instanta neamente num logradouro digital. Desagua douro de pensa mentos.


    sexta-feira, outubro 24, 2025

    Ele fux pra segunda turma

     
     
     
     

     
     
     
     

     

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    CHUCK BROWN & THE SOUL SEARCHERS, BUSTIN' LOOSE




    Busting loose in the evening
    Busting loose can be pleasing
    Talking 'bout busting loose y'all
    Busting loose in the meantime
    Busting loose makes you feel fine

    quinta-feira, outubro 23, 2025

    GAMBOA


     

    Mauricio de Sousa, o homem de 1 bilhão de gibis, sai dos quadrinhos e chega à tela grande

     Mauricio de Sousa, o homem de 1 bilhão de gibis, sai dos quadrinhos e chega à tela grande

     

    "Para viver o papel, Mauro mergulhou em um processo intenso. “Busquei fazer tudo da forma mais fiel possível. Durante as gravações, conversava muito com meu pai, ligava para esclarecer certos momentos, ouvia relatos antigos, revivia lembranças de família.”

    Mais do que reproduzir fatos, o objetivo era compreender sentimentos, destaca. “Quis entender como ele enfrentava medos, alegrias, incertezas. Foi uma preparação de muita escuta e imersão na história dele — que, de certa forma, também é a minha”, diz."


    leia material de Gonçalo Silva Junior 

    Mauricio de Sousa, o homem de 1 bilhão de gibis, sai dos quadrinhos e chega à tela grande - NeoFeed

    Quem foi o Barão de Itararé, o jornalista irreverente que enfrentou presidentes usando humor |

     

    Fotografia do jornalista satírico e político Aparício Torelly, autdenominado Barão de Itararé, 1937.

    "Apparício, então, se autoproclamou “Barão de Itararé”, nobre de uma batalha que não existiu. Era uma ironia sobre o país das promessas que não se cumprem.
    O pseudônimo resumia sua visão de mundo. Para ele, a solenidade era uma forma de fingimento. Seu humor atacava o autoritarismo e o moralismo com frases que atravessaram gerações: “De onde menos se espera, daí é que não sai nada”; “Este mundo é redondo, mas está ficando muito chato”; “Negociata é todo bom negócio para o qual não fomos convidados”.

    leia materia de LUIZA LOBO

    uem foi o Barão de Itararé, o jornalista irreverente que enfrentou presidentes usando humor | Super

    Dead Fox - Courtney Barnett

    4 x Procissão





     

    Caiu nuvem

    SERI

     

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    Foz do Amazonas

    MIGUEL PAIVA 
     
     

     
     
    FRAGA
     
     
     
    AMORIM
     

     

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    quarta-feira, outubro 22, 2025

    Lula Queiroga & Marcelo Falcão, Lenine - A Ponte (Álbum Capibaribum)



    esse lugar é uma maravilha
    mas como é que faz pra sair da ilha
    pela ponte, pela ponte 

    GAMBOA


     

    “We cannot pretend this is normal.”

     

     an American: Heather Cox Richardson ...

    HEATHER COX RICHARDSON 

     

    On this, the twenty-first day of the government shutdown, President Donald J. Trump invited all but one Republican senator to lunch today at what he calls the “Rose Garden Club,” a patio where the White House Rose Garden used to be. The missing senator was Rand Paul (R-KY), whose determination to cut the national debt has led him to vote consistently against measures that will increase it, including the Republican continuing resolution to fund the government.
    Trump boasted that the shutdown was enabling the administration to cut funding for what he continues to say are Democratic priorities, although the executive branch has no legal power to stop appropriations for congressionally approved projects, and Republican voters will also be hurt by the administration’s attempts to cut public programs and infrastructure projects. Trump called out director of the Office of Management and Budget Russell Vought, calling him “Darth Vader” as he slashes through funding and fires government workers.
    Jay O’Brien of ABC News reported this afternoon that a number of states are warning that they will not be able to continue to provide Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits after November 1 unless the shutdown ends. SNAP serves about 42 million Americans and was already under pressure because the Republicans’ budget reconciliation bill of July—the one they call the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act—cut about $186 billion out of the program over ten years. Now, Texas, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and New York have warned they cannot fund the program if the shutdown continues.
    Meanwhile, House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is refusing to call the House into session, keeping its members out of Washington, D.C., and thus continuing to jam the Senate into passing the House continuing resolution. As Mychael Schnell of MSNBC noted, keeping the House out of session also keeps members away from the congressional press corps, where the divisions in the Republican conference could go public.
    Johnson also insists that keeping the House out of session is preventing him from swearing in representative-elect Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ), who was chosen by voters on September 23, although speakers have sworn in representatives during pro forma sessions in the past. Grijalva has said she will be the 218th signature on a discharge petition that would force a vote on whether to demand the release of the Epstein files, the final signature needed.
    Today the state of Arizona and Grijalva sued the House of Representatives over Johnson’s refusal to swear Grijalva in, thus depriving her Arizona constituents of representation. Arizona Attorney General Kristin Mayes wrote: "This case is about whether someone duly elected to the House—who indisputably meets the constitutional qualifications of the office—may be denied her rightful office simply because the Speaker has decided to keep the House out of ‘regular session.’” Mayes has asked the court to authorize someone else to swear Grijalva into office.
    Kate Riga and Emine Yücel of Talking Points Memo note that the lawsuit addresses Johnson’s excuse for delaying Grijalva’s swearing-in by saying that then–House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) delayed the swearing-in of Representative Julia Letlow (R-LA) until about a month after her election. In fact, Pelosi contacted Letlow to see when she would like to be sworn in. “Ms. Grijalva would be delighted if Speaker Johnson would contact her to commit to a mutually agreeable time, as Speaker Pelosi did for Dr. Letlow,” the lawsuit notes.
    Johnson called the lawsuit “absurd” and said it was “a publicity stunt.”
    Meanwhile, Michael Stratford of Politico reported today that the United States has signed an “economic stabilization agreement” with Argentina’s central bank, offering extraordinary assistance to Argentina as its economy under Trump ally Javier Milei plummets. The agreement commits the U.S. to swapping $20 billion in currency to prop up the Argentine peso, in addition to at least two previous direct purchases of pesos.
    Treasury secretary Scott Bessent has also said the government is arranging for private lenders or sovereign wealth funds to put another $20 billion into the Argentine economy. But, as Alexander Saeedy and Santiago Pérez of the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday, banks want security from the United States that they will get their money back if the Argentine economy continues to sink.
    On Sunday, Trump suggested to reporters that the U.S. might also buy Argentine beef, saying such a purchase would help bring down prices in the U.S. But with Argentina having undercut U.S. soybean farmers in the Chinese market, U.S. cattle farmers met this suggestion with anger. As Lori Ann LaRocco of CNBC reported today, they say that their own herds are dwindling because of drought and the parasitic screwworm and that the government isn’t doing enough to address those problems.
    Bessent claims that Argentina is a “systematically important ally” of the U.S., but as economist Paul Krugman noted in his newsletter last week, that importance is not economic. Unlike Mexico, which borders the U.S. and which accounted for 10% of U.S. exports when the U.S. stepped in to help stabilize its economy in 1994, Argentina is not geographically close and accounts for less than 0.5% of U.S. exports.
    Argentina’s systematic importance to the administration is, as Krugman notes, both that the administration wants a Trump-like politician to succeed and apparently that some of Bessent’s hedge-fund billionaire associates invested heavily in Argentine bonds in a bet on Milei. Bailing out the government even for a short while will let them get their money out.
    In contrast to the administration’s approach to Argentina, with its right-wing government, Trump announced on Sunday that the U.S. would raise tariffs on Colombia and end funding to the country, although Jeff Mason, Andy Sullivan, and David Ljunggren of Reuters note that funding in the past primarily came from the U.S. Agency for International Development, which the Trump administration has already shut down. Trump claimed that leftist Colombian president Gustavo Petro is “an illegal drug leader,” calling him “low rated and very unpopular.” He added that Petro “better close up” drug operations “or the United States will close them up for him, and it won’t be done nicely.” Trump complained that Petro has shown “a fresh mouth toward America.”
    For his part, Petro posted on social media that “U.S. government officials have committed murder and violated our sovereignty in territorial waters.” He was referring to a September 16 strike by U.S. forces on a boat in the Caribbean that killed at least one Colombian national. “The United States has invaded our national territory, fired a missile to kill a humble fisherman, and destroyed his family, his children,” Petro wrote. Yesterday, Colombia recalled its ambassador to the U.S.
    Catie Edmondson of the New York Times reports that despite the shutdown, the administration has found $172 million to buy two Gulfstream private jets for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other Homeland Security officials. The initial request of the department was for $50 million for a single new plane. The Department of Homeland Security called the new purchase “a matter of safety.”
    Devlin Barrett and Tyler Pager of the New York Times reported today that Trump is demanding that the Department of Justice hand over about $230 million to compensate him for investigating the ties between his 2016 campaign and Russian operatives and for violating his privacy by searching Mar-a-Lago for classified documents in 2022. Trump filed the claims in 2023 and 2024. Now his own appointees will decide whether the American taxpayers should pay the compensation Trump wants.
    When Kaitlan Collins asked Trump about the demand tonight, Trump answered that media outlets had paid him settlements because “what they did was wrong. And, you know, when somebody does what’s wrong—now, with the country, it's interesting, because I'm the one that makes a decision, right? And, you know, that decision would have to go across my desk, and it's awfully strange to make a decision where I'm paying myself. In other words, did you ever have one of those cases where you have to decide how much you're paying yourself in damages? But I was damaged very greatly, and any money that I would get, I would give to charity.”
    The demolition of the East Wing of the White House continued today.
    This afternoon, Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) took the floor of the Senate to hold it through the night “to protest Trump’s grave threats to democracy.” He said: “We cannot pretend this is normal.”

     

     

     

    In Fuks we trust



    HIPPERT

     

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    Harém • Luedji Luna feat. Liniker



    A boca do ventoMe trouxe a notícia ao pé do ouvidoEle não prestaComo se eu não soubesseComo se eu precisasseInventar o amor

    terça-feira, outubro 21, 2025

    Nick Drake - River Man



    Betty came by on her waySaid she had a word to sayAbout things todayAnd fallen leaves

    GAMBOA

     


    Two years of displacement and destruction in Gaza – photo essay



    "The statistics are shocking but impersonal. Through her photographs, Enas Tantesh has recorded what those crude numbers mean in intimate terms – what it looks like when your home and community are pulverised."

    Two years of displacement and destruction in Gaza – photo essay | Gaza | The Guardian



    Danny Thompson, Bassist Who Defied Folk Conventions, Dies at 86
















    "Danny Thompson, a genre-warping bassist who transcended sideman status to become a centerpiece of the eclectic British folk group Pentangle, as well as a sought-after accompanist to a long list of musical innovators, including Nick Drake, Kate Bush, Tim Buckley and Eric Clapton,"

    read the obit>
    Danny Thompson, Bassist Who Defied Folk Conventions, Dies at 86 – DNyuz

    blood orange - Mind Loaded (feat. Caroline Polachek, Lorde & Mustafa)


    Dark weather, new order
    New packet, light smoker
    Help me on my way
    Bright morning, airplane mode
    High fusion, headache goes
    You still seem the same

    segunda-feira, outubro 20, 2025

    4 x Procissão





     

    The Surprising Power of Diane Keaton’s Emotional Transparency

      In a scene dominated by images of beige, a woman in a darkened interior looks warily off in the distance.

    "Keaton’s emotional openness, her readability, is critical to “The Godfather” because of what Kay and Michael mean to each other and how their relationship speaks to the shadowy whole. The film is the story of a family and a criminal syndicate, but it is also a tragedy about a marriage, its secrets and lies. Kay’s love for Michael, her innocence and sweetness, help make him an immediately sympathetic presence, while the hurt that later clouds her eyes foreshadows Michael’s betrayal of her and his dramatically shifting role from the family’s baby boy to its patriarch. From the start, Kay is a mirror for the viewers, who are also similarly seduced by Michael, as well as fascinated, repelled and helplessly hooked on him"

    read article by MANOHLA DARGIS  

    The Surprising Power of Diane Keaton’s Emotional Transparency – DNyuz

    Ace Frehley

    KLEBER

     

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    How Virginia Giuffre Finally Vanquished Prince Andrew

     

     

    "Virginia Giuffre’s long-awaited memoir, completed shortly before her suicide at the age of 41 in April, does not, in fact, offer anything new about Andrew’s sexual predations. But just being reminded again in full, revolting detail of Giuffre’s 25 months in the clutches of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, whom Giuffre describes as “less as boyfriend and girlfriend, and more as two halves of a wicked whole,” redoubles disgust for anyone who continued to consort with them. I found it especially poignant that Giuffre tried to delude herself that the chillingly detached Epstein actually cared about her, a self-deception banished after he handed her over to service a “former prime minister” who raped her so brutally she was bleeding profusely when she emerged from his cabana on Epstein’s private Caribbean island. Though Epstein knew about this assault—“you’ll get that sometimes,” he told her insouciantly—he nonetheless instructed her to board a private plane a few weeks later for sex with an unnamed friend, who turned out to be that same savage former prime minister."

    READ STACK BY TINA BROWN  

    How Virginia Giuffre Finally Vanquished Prince Andrew

    Guillermo del Toro Compares Adapting Mary Shelley's Frankenstein to "Marrying a Widow"

     https://reactormag.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Frankenstein-1100x618.jpg

     "“I have dedicated my life to the Romantic movement and Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley, Lord Byron, and Gothic literature. This is decades of study and absorption,” del Toro says. “My Frankenstein is an amalgam of her biography, my biography, the Romantic movement, the novel, et cetera, et cetera. The movie is not just the book, and Mary Shelley is not just that book.”"

    read more>  

    Guillermo del Toro Compares Adapting Mary Shelley's Frankenstein to "Marrying a Widow" - Reactor

    Lowell Fulson - Why Don't We Do It In The Road (Lennon - McCartney)

    GAMBOA


     

    “The frogs (and unicorns and dinosaurs) will be defining ideographs of this period of struggle.”

     

    HEATHER COX RICHARDSON

    All last week, Republican leaders tried to portray the No Kings protests scheduled for Saturday, October 18, as “Hate America” rallies. G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers partnered with Atlanta-based science newsroom The Xylom to estimate that as many as 8.2 million people turned out yesterday to oppose the Trump administration. The mood at the protests was joyful and peaceful, with protesters holding signs that championed American principles of democracy, free speech, equality, and the rule of law. As the Grand Junction, Colorado, Daily Sentinel put it in a front-page headline: “‘This is America’ ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump bring a street party vibe to cities nationwide.” 
     
    Then last night, after the protests, the president’s social media account posted an AI-generated video showing Trump in a fighter jet with “KING TRUMP” painted on the side. The president sits in the airplane in front of something round that could be seen as a halo. He is wearing a gold crown; weirdly, the oxygen mask is over his mouth and chin, rather than mouth and nose. 
     
    Once in the air, the plane drops excrement on American cities, including what seems to be New York City. The excrement drenches protesters, one of whom is 23-year-old liberal political commentator and influencer Harry Sisson. Journalist Aaron Rupar of Public Notice, who shares media clips that reflect politics, commented: “Trump posts AI video showing him literally dumping sh*t on America.” Historian Larry Glickman noted that media outlets make much of alleged Democratic disdain for ordinary Americans, but have had little to say about the disdain for Americans embodied by Trump’s video.
     
    Several administration videos and images have responded to Americans saying “No Kings” by taking the position “Yes, We Want Kings,” an open embrace of the end of democracy. But they are more than simple trolling. Led by Trump, MAGA Republicans have abandoned the idea of politics, which is the process of engaging in debate and negotiation to attract support and win power. What is left when a system loses the give and take of politics is force.
     
    The idea that leaders must attract voters with reasoned arguments to win power and must concede power when their opponents win has been the central premise of American government since 1800. In that year, after a charged election in which each side accused the other of trying to destroy the country, Federalist John Adams turned the reins of government over to the leader of the opposition, Thomas Jefferson. That peaceful transfer of power not only protected the people, it protected leaders who had lost the support of voters, giving them a way to leave office safely and either retire or regroup to make another run at power. 
     
    The peaceful transfer of power symbolized the nation’s political system and became the hallmark of the United States of America. It lasted until January 6, 2021, when sitting president Trump refused to accept the voters’ election of Democrat Joe Biden, the leader of the opposition.
     
    Now back in power, Trump and his loyalists are continuing to undermine the idea of politics, policies, and debate, trying instead to delegitimize the Democratic opposition altogether. Yesterday, during the protests, President Donald Trump, Vice President J.D Vance, and the official White House social media account posted a video of Trump placing a royal crown on his head, draping a royal robe around his shoulders, and unsheathing and brandishing a sword (an image that raises questions about why Trump wanted one of General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s swords so badly that he had the museum director who refused to hand it over fired). In the video, Democratic leaders including former House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and what appears to be Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) first kneel and then bow to Trump. 
     
    Administration imagery doesn’t simply insult opposition leaders; it undermines the idea of politics by suggesting that Democrats are un-American. Last night the White House continued its racist crusade against Democratic leaders by posted an AI-generated image of Trump and Vance wearing jewel-encrusted crowns positioned above an image of House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) wearing Mexican sombreros. The caption reads: “We’re built different.”
    The administration’s hostility to loyal opposition is translating into direct assaults on our government. House speaker Mike Johnson is refusing to seat a member of the opposition. Voters chose representative-elect Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ) on September 23 to fill a vacant House seat, but Johnson has come up with one reason after another not to seat her. Until she is sworn in, she has no access to government resources and cannot represent her constituents. She also cannot be the 218th signature on a discharge petition that would force a vote on whether to demand the release of the Epstein files, the final signature needed.
     
    Grijalva recorded a video reinforcing the political system, saying: “We need to get to work, get on the floor, and negotiate so we can reopen the government.” 
     
    But Republican congressional leaders are refusing even to talk with Democrats to reopen the government, let alone to negotiate with them. They are trying to force Democrats simply to do as they say, despite the fact that 78% of Americans, including 59% of Republicans, support the Democrats’ demand for an extension of the tax credit that lowers the cost of healthcare premiums on the Affordable Care Act markets. Lindsay Wise, Anna Wilde Mathews, and Katy Stech Ferek of the Wall Street Journal reported today that more than three quarters of those who are insured through the ACA markets live in states that voted for Trump. 
     
    A video of Trump in a bomber attacking American cities carries an implied threat that the disdain of throwing excrement doesn’t erase. This morning, Trump reinforced that threat when he reminded Fox News Channel host Maria Bartiromo: “Don't forget I can use the Insurrection Act. Fifty percent of the presidents almost have used that. And that’s unquestioned power. I choose not to, I’d rather do this, but I’m met constantly by fake politicians, politicians that think that, that you know they it’s not like a part of the radical left movement to have safety. These cities have to be safe.”
     
    That “safety” apparently involves detaining U.S. citizens without due process. On Thursday, Nicole Foy of ProPublica reported that more than 170 U.S. citizens have been detained by immigration agents. She reports they “have been dragged, tackled, beaten, tased and shot by immigration agents. They’ve had their necks kneeled on. They’ve been held outside in the rain while in their underwear. At least three citizens were pregnant when agents detained them. One of those women had already had the door of her home blown off while Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem watched.” 
     
    On Friday, the Trump administration pushed its attempt to use the military in Democratic-led cities, asking the Supreme Court to let it deploy troops in Chicago immediately. Chris Geidner of Law Dork notes that four judges, two appointed by Democrats and two appointed by Republicans, have rejected the administration’s arguments for why they must send in troops. Now the Department of Justice has appealed to the Supreme Court, asking for a decision on the so-called shadow docket, which would provide a fast response, but one without any hearings or explanation. 
     
    The administration's appeal to the Supreme Court warned that there was “pressing risk of violence” in Chicago—a premise the judges rejected—and said preventing Trump from going into the city “improperly impinges on the President’s authority.” 
     
    How much difference will the No Kings Day protests, even as big as they were, make in the face of the administration’s attempt to get rid of our democratic political system and replace it with authoritarianism? What good is an inflatable frog against federal agents?
     
    Scholar of social movements Lisa Corrigan noted that large, fun marches full of art and music expand connections and make people more willing to take risks against growing state power. They build larger communities by creating new images that bring together recognizable images from the past in new ways, helping more people see themselves in such an opposition. The community and good feelings those gatherings develop help carry opposition through hard moments. Corrigan notes, too, that yesterday “every single rally (including in the small towns) was bigger than the surrounding police force available. That kind of image event is VERY IMPORTANT if you’re…demonstrating social coherence AGAINST a fascist government and its makeshift gestapo.” 
     
    Such rallies “bring together multigenerational groups and the playfulness can help create enthusiasm for big tent politics against the monoculture of fascism,” Corrigan writes. “The frogs (and unicorns and dinosaurs) will be defining ideographs of this period of struggle.”
     

    Fatback Band - Yum Yum (Gimme Some)


    I like ice cream
    And I like cake
    But most of all
    I like the girls, for goodness, goodness sakes
    Yes, Yes

    Som Imaginário - Nepal



    No Nepal tudo é barato
    No Nepal tudo é muito barato

    domingo, outubro 19, 2025

    Excelente Quimica

    NOVAES 
     
     

     
     
     

     
     
     






    DALCIO M ACHADO
     
     
     

     

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    4 x Procissao





     

    Aracy de Almeida - NÃO SOU MANOEL - Wilson Batista - Roberto Martins - ...



    Não sou Manoel
    Não sou casado
    Não sou Joaquim
    O que é que vou fazer em Niteroi?

    Na na Hey hey

    MARIO BAGG
     
     

     

    Lord Beginner : Jamaica Hurricane



    Oh what sorrows and pain in Jamaica with the hurricane
    The winds was so terrific as you know
    A hundred miles an hour was an awful blow
    A sad calamity, so awful sympathy, to friends and their family
    While houses was falling, ay ay
    And people was bawling, oy oy
    Convicts didn′t fail, to run away from Kingston jail


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