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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.


    segunda-feira, abril 13, 2026

    plantando o futuro


     

    domingo, abril 12, 2026

    The Gaza Doctrine

     


     

     

    Over the course of two years, Israeli forces systematically destroyed the Gaza Strip’s health system. Their attacks in Iran and Lebanon follow a disturbingly similar pattern.  

    "Since the start of Operations Roaring Lion and Epic Fury, critics have charged that Israel is expanding its Gaza doctrine—a combination of mass displacement, mass killing, and mass destruction of civilian infrastructure—to other parts of the Middle East. (In some sense this is a return of “the Dahiyeh doctrine,” named after the neighborhood in Beirut’s southern suburbs that the Israeli military ruthlessly pummelled during the 2006 Lebanon War—only in Gaza the destruction was not confined to a specific area and the people living within it but became the military’s modus operandi throughout the territory.) Israel, surprisingly or not, has embraced the accusation, dropping leaflets on Beirut reminding the city’s residents of the Israeli military’s “great success in Gaza.” One of the more pronounced features of the Gaza doctrine—and of contemporary warfare more generally—is turning life-saving medical sites like hospitals, health clinics, and ambulances into targets: it was the “deliberate and systematic dismantling of Gaza’s health and life-sustaining systems” that Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) cited to argue that the Israeli military’s conduct in the Strip met the legal definition of genocide. The reports emerging out of Iran and Lebanon raise the deeply troubling prospect that Israel hopes to replicate that “success” abroad."

    read article by NEVE GORDON

    O ultimo Dodô

    DODÔ
     
     

     

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    The Cult of Cesar’: Inside the Mountain Compound Led by Cesar Chavez

     

    In his remote headquarters, the United Farm Workers leader began to see himself as not just a union leader, but a visionary healer. 

      Several buildings and a dumpster stand next to brush-covered hills and palm trees.

     READ newstory Shawn HublerSarah Hurtes and Manny Fernandez

    Quem é Amanda Ungaro, a ex-modelo brasileira que acusa Trump e Melania no escândalo do caso Epstein?

     

     

     

     

    O nome da ex-modelo brasileira Amanda Ungaro, de 41 anos, voltou a movimentar as redes sociais neste sábado, quando foi ao X para fazer uma série de desabafos (e ameaças). Em resposta a um vídeo de Melania Trump em que ela negava ter relação com o criminoso sexual Jeffrey Epstein, Amanda afirma que esteve “ao redor” do casal Trump por 20 anos e que vai tomar medidas legais contra Melania e “seu marido pedófilo”, o presidente dos Estados Unidos Donald Trump. Mas quem é Amanda Ungaro
     ? 

     

    Marina Lima - Stromboli (Alvin L)

     

    IN MEMORIAM ALVIN L

    Todos eles querem
    Fama, poder
    Dinheiro e diamantes
    Flashes excitantes
    E ela nadando
    Em lava fervendo
    E ela entrando
    Em erupção

    sábado, abril 11, 2026

    Sylvan Road


     

    Que tal prorrogar a CPI?

    AMORIM
     
     

     

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    Tim Bernardes - A Balada de Tim Bernardes

     

    Quanto mais o tempo passaMais eu acho graça nessa enganaçãoChamada virar adultoO tempo é todo junto, sem separação
    Sem ter barra de compassoSem ter ponto ou traço, sem ter travessãoProcurando estar presenteNesse encontro entre o antes e o depois


    sexta-feira, abril 10, 2026

    paquetá


     

    Melania Throws Donald Under the Bus

     


    read stack by William Kristol Melania Throws Donald Under the Bus

    "Shakespeare knew that rats instinctively leave a sinking ship. Yesterday, Melania Trump made her move to quit the rotten carcass of her husband’s presidency."
     
    read stack by William Kristol
     

     

    Rua São José


     

    quinta-feira, abril 09, 2026

    Sylvan Road


     

    Afrika Bambaataa & The Soulsonic Force - Planet Rock (in memoriam)

     

    Everybody just rock it, don't stop it
    You gotta rock it, don't stop Keep tickin' and tockin', work it all around the clock Everybody keep rockin' and clockin' and shockin' and rockin', go house Everybody say, "Rock it, don't stop it!"


    Dancinha da Vitória

    AROEIRA
     

     
     

     
     
    MOR



     

    Marcadores: , , ,

    "Pra ninguém (por enquanto)" - Nila Branco (Alvin L) in memoriam

     

    Ninguém pra ligar e dizer onde estouNinguém pra ir comigo onde eu vouPor outro ladoNinguém pra abaixar o volumeNinguém pra reclamar dos pratos sujosNinguém pra fingir que eu não amo


    Jack McDuff - Hot Barbeque 1966

     

    hot barbecue today!

    Of Monsters and Men - Little Talks

     

    I don't like walking around this old and empty houseSo hold my hand, I'll walk with you my dearThe stairs creak as you sleepIt's keeping me awake


    quarta-feira, abril 08, 2026

    ‘Her head was broken’: parents at Iranian school bombed by US describe their worst day


    "Nothing prepared him for what he saw when he entered the gates. “Arya’s classroom had been completely destroyed – there was absolutely nothing left,” he says. “It was flattened to the ground.” This moment – the sight through the gate, the thick cloud of dust obscuring the blue sky – was the worst he endured. Then, Bahadori stepped to the ruins to look for his boy. Over and over, he and the men would grip a piece of rubble, heave it upwards together, look for a child underneath."

    read report by Tess McClure and Shah Meer Baloch

    ‘Her head was broken’: parents at Iranian school bombed by US describe their worst day | Children | The Guardian

    At last, David has landed a double punch on the tech Goliaths. Now to hit them even harder



    "She describes how the company, able to track users’ activity on and off the platform, could see when, for example, girls aged between 13 and 17 deleted a selfie. Realising that signalled the girls’ dissatisfaction with their appearance, the company saw a way to monetise that unhappiness. For a fee, a cosmetics company could serve a beauty ad to those children at that very moment.

    Facebook did not hide this behaviour; they boasted of it. Wynn-Williams reveals how Facebook made a presentation for an Australian client, bragging that its ability to monitor users’ online lives – their posts, their photos, their conversations with friends – enabled them to know exactly when teenage girls were feeling “worthless”, “insecure”, “stressed”, “defeated”, “anxious”, “stupid”, “useless” and “like a failure”. Those were optimal moments for selling."


    read article by Jonathan Freedland

    At last, David has landed a double punch on the tech Goliaths. Now to hit them even harder | Jonathan Freedland | The Guardian


     

    Trump consultou o Oráculo de Delphos



    "Creso, que entrou para a história como anedota, enviou um emissário para consultar o Oráculo de Delphos. O emissário perguntou se o rei deveria atravessar o rio e lançar-se à guerra contra os persas. A resposta do oráculo foi uma dessas obras-primas da ambiguidade: se Creso atravessasse o rio, destruiria um grande império. Satisfeito, o rei ouviu apenas a parte que agradava ao seu desejo, entendeu que destruiria a Pérsia. Atravessou o rio, iniciou a guerra e destruiu, de fato, um grande império: o seu."

    leia artigo de EDGARD PICCINO

    Trump consultou o Oráculo de Delphos - Revista Fórum

    Redes pariram esse mundo apocalíptico

     Sérgio Rodrigues

    A ascensão da extrema direita no mundo é filha das redes sociais —eis uma verdade que, se ainda não foi provada cientificamente, acredito que logo será.

    Quando explodiu de vez, perto da virada do século, a internet vinha embalada em fumos humanistas de biblioteca universal e plataforma democrática de informação e voz para todos. Quem se lembra?

    Era um progressismo vago que não negava a origem pós-hippie do Vale do Silício. Seu teor de ingenuidade era elevado. A internet permitia fazer coisas antes impensáveis, mas aquele otimismo inicial padecia de um grave viés do bem.

    Cena do filme 'Hair' (1979), de Milos Forman
    Cena do filme 'Hair' (1979), de Milos Forman, que aborda o movimento hippie e a Guerra do Vietnã - Reprodução

    O sonho era que, tendo subitamente acesso imediato a toda a informação disponível na Terra, cada pessoa teria a chance de desenvolver ao máximo seu potencial humano e comunitário.

    Os seres humanos se tornariam mais sábios e, devido ao debate permanente de suas sabedorias na ágora imaterial —sempre com a vitória do melhor argumento—, infinitamente ponderados na média.

    Corta para o presidente dos EUA anunciando em rede social: "Uma civilização inteira morrerá esta noite". Opa, parece que alguma coisa deu errado, não? Convém voltar algumas casas.

    Sim, é óbvio que a internet nunca foi um empreendimento humanitário —aquela era só uma das histórias que ela contava sobre si mesma. Nova fronteira de negócios basicamente privados, logo começava a bombar.

    Ao lado da biblioteca e da sala de aula que os idealistas trataram de transferir para o mundo digital, transferiram-se também partes menos nobres e mais rentáveis do empreendimento humano.

    Prerequisites to prove you’ve got what it takes to run DHS under Trump:

     

    JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

    + Markfortwayne Mullin describing, with evident pleasure, his daughter pleading with him not to spank (ie, abuse) her…“She’s like, ‘No, Daddy. No, Daddy, No, Daddy, No. I’m sorry, Daddy. I’m sorry, Daddy.’ … She just couldn’t bring herself to even bend over for me to be able to bust her butt.”

    Does Markfortwayne wear his white hat when he beats his daughter?

    + Prerequisites to prove you’ve got what it takes to run DHS under Trump: 1. Shoot your own puppy in the head for being disobedient and toss its body in a gravel pit; 2. Abuse your own daughter for being disobedient.

    If you can publicly brag about beating your own child for political points, you probably won’t have much of a problem ripping children, some of them born in the US, from the arms of their parents, keeping them locked up in concentration camp-like prisons hundreds of miles away from their moms and dads, making them act as their own lawyers in immigration court or forcing them to make an impossible choice between being wrongfully deported with a parent or being left in the US as one or both of their parents are shipped off to El Salvador or Haiti.

    + 11,000: the minimum number of children who have had a parent detained by ICE/CBP since Trump retook office.

    Imensa Cratera

    LUTE

     

    Marcadores: ,


     

    Ultimatos do Trump


    MARIO BAGG

     

    Hemingway - Alvin L (in memoriam)

     

    hoje eu sei 
    onde eu errei
    se houver outra vez

    quero ser hemingway

    Did Iran Just Win This War?

     


    ZETEO>

    Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened to destroy Iran’s “whole civilization” unless its leaders agreed to a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

    By Tuesday evening – instead of trying to kill the 90 million people living in Iran, or bombing Iran’s power plants and bridges as he had promised – Trump announced “a double sided CEASEFIRE!” for two weeks. In doing so, Trump all but admitted the reality that his illegal war is going terribly – and Iran is winning.

    “We received a 10-point proposal from Iran, and believe it is a workable basis on which to negotiate,” the president announced on Truth Social – apparently referring to the 10-point plan that Iran had presented to the US before he threatened to murder its entire population.

    Using this 10-point plan as a framework for a deal, rather than the previous American 15-point plan, is obviously a major win for Iran – which is, indeed, declaring victory. Experts and commentators see it that way, too.

    “If Iran did in fact secure guarantees based on the ‘10 principles’ Trump referenced, that is not a marginal outcome, it is a strategic win for Tehran, reinforcing its narrative and positioning,” wrote Danny Citrinowicz, a former top Israeli intelligence officer who focused on Iran. As former US State Department official and veteran Middle East negotiator Aaron David Miller put it, “Iran has won another round.”

    Political scientist Robert A. Pape writes: “Huge strategic defeat for the US, biggest loss since Vietnam.”

    The 10-point plan would allow Iran to continue its control over the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial waterway that Iran has closed since the start of the war, stopping the flow of oil and throttling the global economy.

    Just a day earlier, Trump was fantasizing about the US “charging tolls” for ships to transit the strait. Now, it looks much more likely that Iran will keep doing this instead, and that it will get to charge “a $2M fee per ship.” In another win for Iran, the plan would involve lifting “all US sanctions on Iran.”

    Under Iran’s proposed framework, the US would allow Iran to continue its uranium enrichment program – which would mean folding on the entire supposed basis for Trump’s illegal war. This point was included in the Farsi version of the plan, but reportedly omitted from English versions shared by Iranian diplomats.

    Some liberals will invariably revel in memes about how Trump always chickens out. But, as we reported at Zeteo on Tuesday, none of this is over. The ceasefire, as of now, is only temporary. As Trump advisers and others in the upper tiers of Trumplandia warned us, there’s still a decent chance that he escalates the war again soon.




     

    terça-feira, abril 07, 2026

    The Long War: Iran’s Oldest Strategy




    "Most discussions of Iran revolve around oil, escalation, and regime change. Yet Iran today feels easier to understand as part of a much older pattern. For more than 2,500 years, states on the Iranian plateau have favoured patience, distance, and endurance over any kind of immediate full-on confrontation with stronger enemies.

    To understand Iran today, it therefore helps to trawl through Persian military history."


    read article by PETER BACH
    The Long War: Iran’s Oldest Strategy - CounterPunch.org

    The “Indian” wars have never ended.

     

     

    JEFFREY ST. CLAIR 

    Since the appalling ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals last week on Oak Flats, where the US judicial system (so-called) has given the green light for a multinational mining company to annihilate one of the most sacred Native American sites in the Southwest, I’ve been thinking about the many Native Rights campaigns I’ve covered and/or been involved in over the last 35 years: Black Mesa, San Francisco Peaks, Mount Graham, Enola Hill,  Rainbow Bridge, Navajo Generating Station, Lyle salmon fishing site, mining and logging in the Black Hills, Zuni Salt Lake, Oak Flats, ANWR, Klamath River dams, Chaco Canyon uranium mine, Bolsa Chica and Ballona wetlands in LA, Nevada Test Site, Willamette Falls lamprey and salmon fishing site, Jemez/Los Alamos, Standing Rock, the Thacker Pass lithium mine. 

    These were/are often bitter, lonely, and dangerous campaigns, especially for Native activists. Not long after moving to Oregon, I received a three-day tour of many of the most intense battle zones in the Four Corners region by the Navajo environmental and tribal activist Leroy Jackson, who took this photo of me outside of Kayenta in the shadow of Black Mesa. Leroy was a very intense person and he was fighting extremely powerful interests, like Peabody Coal, Duke City Lumber and corrupt members of the tribal government of the Big Rez. 

    I flipped through my journals of that week and was struck by a conversation we had about the relations between tribal activists and Gang Green and how unreliable the professional environmental groups are as coalition partners with Native people because of their unfailing tendency to compromise for political reasons on issues, such as sacred sites, where there can be no compromise. I jotted down that’d I’d relayed to Leroy one of my favorite admonitions from Dave Brower: “When we win, it’s merely a stay of execution. When they win, it’s forever.” 

    Leroy responded by saying, “For so many of you guys (white male activists), this is like a game. You’re here for a while, then back to school or onto some other issues. You can’t be counted on. But we live here. We have to play for keeps.” (I didn’t take offense at this, knowing firsthand the truth of what he was saying.) Leroy did play for keeps. A few months after our road trip, he was found dead in his car in northern New Mexico. The cops called it a suicide/drug overdose. But Leroy wasn’t a drug user. He wasn’t depressed or suicidal. He was almost certainly murdered. Yet, like so many killings of Native Americans, especially activists, the cops didn’t care enough to even investigate his death. They were glad he was dead. 

    The “Indian” wars have never ended.

    COUNTERPUNCH 

      

     

    Rambling Irishman {De Dannan} Dolores Keane - in memoriam

     

    I am a rambling Irishman
    In Ulster I was born in
    And many the pleasant days I spent
    Round the shores of sweet Lough Erne
    But to be poor I could not endure
    Like others of my station
    To Americay I sailed away
    And left this Irish nation


    FRAGA no mundo da Lua



     FRAGA

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    Filho do presidente do Irã revela bastidores da guerra em diário no Telegram

     


    "Ele também compartilhou algumas anedotas sobre sua vida pessoal. Ele fala sobre colorir com seus filhos, levá-los para brincar no parque, comprar balões para eles. Ele escreve sobre encontrar um amigo para uma longa caminhada no parque e sua determinação de se exercitar para manter sua resistência mental.

    Uma vez, disse ele, recebeu uma mensagem misteriosa direcionando-o a comparecer a um endereço. Ele entrou em pânico, suspeitando de uma armadilha israelense. Depois de verificar com a segurança, disse ele, percebeu que era apenas um convite de iftar de amigos para quebrar o jejum do Ramadã com eles."

    leia reportagem de Farnaz Fassihi

    Iran Thinks It Can Win a Long War

     An illustration of an hourglass filled with missiles that are slowly falling from the top half of the glass to the bottom. The background is a rich gold.

     

     

    Dina Esfandiary and

     

    Iran didn’t want this war, but now it has reasons to prolong it. That’s a problem for ‎President Trump, who appears unable to reopen the Strait of Hormuz despite his threats. It’s a problem for ‎the global economy, which is buckling under a surge in energy costs. It’s a problem for Gulf ‎leaders hemorrhaging oil revenue. And it’ll haunt future American presidents: Hormuz has been ‎closed once; it can be closed again.‎

    Despite the climbing death toll and destroyed infrastructure, surging oil prices are ‎cushioning Iran’s economy against the war’s costs. Iran has met virtually every strike with a counterstrike, every ‎threat with a matching threat. Its leaders’ logic is cold but calculated: make this war so costly for everyone ‎that no one wants to start another.‎ For Tehran, the goals are simple. The Islamic Republic must survive this moment and ensure it is not attacked by the United States and Israel again. To achieve this, Iran believes it must impose a cost — to the United States and Israel, to the Gulf states’ image of stability and to the global economy. So far, it’s succeeding: Iran has learned how easy and comparatively cheap it is to hold the global economy hostage.

    For Tehran, the moment is existential. It faced years of economic hardship as sanctions and mismanagement resulted in high inflation and a weaker currency. It also faced political and legitimacy crises — both worsened by the brutal repression of protests, as well as social and environmental pressures so severe that dire water shortages prompted the country’s president to warn Tehran might have to be evacuated. Then came the American and Israeli onslaught in which officials from both countries talked openly about regime change in Tehran.

    Sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter  Get expert analysis of the news and a guide to the big ideas shaping the world every weekday morning.

    That situation led to Iran’s response: ruthless, step-by-step escalation. Unlike the short war in June, the escalation wasn’t symbolic. Iran continues to hit the Arab Gulf states where it hurts, from energy to tourism. Tehran now holds the global economy hostage by choking off the Strait of Hormuz — a move it long threatened but never before executed.

    Some saw these moves as unjustified; Tehran saw them as carefully calibrated. At the beginning of the war, the Iranian military hit regional energy infrastructure to sabotage production, taking some of the region’s production temporarily offline. But it was only when Israel conducted an attack against Iran’s South Pars gas field on March 18 that Iran went for the jugular. After the Israeli attack, Iran targeted energy infrastructure in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, seemingly aiming to cause longer-lasting damage. The hit on the world’s largest liquefied natural gas export facility was so significant that it is likely to cause an estimated $20 billion of lost revenue and five years of repair. Iran demonstrated it was willing and able to retaliate in kind.

    Iran is doing all this on the cheap. It uses a mix of relatively low-cost drones and missiles to overwhelm its adversaries’ defenses. Those defenses are more expensive: Iran is deploying drones worth $20,000 to $50,000 against interceptors worth more than $4 million. It’s also using mines, drones and explosive-rigged boats to scare off shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Put simply, Tehran is on the right side of the cost curve. And while Iranian munitions aren’t unlimited, the country’s military is getting better at striking targets as the war goes on. They might be shooting less, but they’re shooting better.

    This dynamic has created two advantages for Iran. First, high oil prices are hurting the United States but strengthening Iran’s hand. This led to the Trump administration’s paradoxical policy of relaxing sanctions on Iranian oil. Second, the closure of the strait is less damaging to Iran than to its neighbors. Iranian oil exports have fallen only modestly since the war began, while its neighbors’ exports have tumbled. With the jump in crude prices, Iran is probably earning more from its oil today than it did before the war. Even the country’s long-troubled currency has gained ground.

    All this comes at a cost. Iran continues to sustain heavy bombardment, affecting residential areas and its energy grid. Tehran has antagonized its neighbors, several of whom are now calling for Trump to finish the job. While Iran’s strategy initially surprised its adversaries, over time, everyone will adjust. The Gulf may find alternatives to the strait, investing in diversion routes and pipelines. The United States and regional powers will most likely prepare plans to prevent future closures of the strait. None of this will help Iran’s new rulers stay in power. Once the war is over, they will still have to contend with their internal economic, political, social and environmental crises — as well as the deaths of many of their fellow leaders.

    Iran didn’t want this war, but it has learned how to use it. The Strait of Hormuz is a major vulnerability to the global economy. Tehran will remember the value of being able to close it. That leverage won’t fix its deep domestic problems. But it will anchor the United States more firmly in the Middle East, despite years of talk about pivoting away from the region.

    “A Whole Civilization Will Die Tonight”. He’s Out of His Motherfucking Mind

     

    "Donald Trump is a fucking sociopath—full stop—and I am done pretending there’s a more polite, more “balanced,” more media-friendly way to describe a man who woke up on Easter Sunday and decided the appropriate use of presidential power was to talk about ninety million human beings like they’re something you hose off the planet, like they’re animals—and then woke up this morning and started talking about an entire civilization dying like it’s some throwaway line he can tease and move on from—while a pack of suit-wearing, spine-missing media mannequins keep polishing this fascist fuckstain into something vaguely presentable and the MAGA foam-flecked faithful clap along like it’s strength instead of the deranged, bloodthirsty bullshit it is.

    Because he didn’t misspeak. He didn’t get tangled up. He didn’t wander into bad wording and then scramble back toward humanity. He planted both clown shoes at the edge of the abyss and started tap-dancing, making it unmistakably clear that he thinks mass violence becomes perfectly acceptable once he’s stripped the victims of their humanity and slapped together some dogshit justification about how their own government mistreats them, therefore we can do whatever we want—which is the kind of logic you get from a consequence-dodging, draft-ducking, leather-skinned layabout sadist who has never had to sit with the aftermath of a single goddamn thing he’s ever done and therefore treats human life like it’s just more scenery he can blow past at full speed."

    read stack by JoJo from Jerz  

     

    O que tá acontecendo com o sonho americano?

    FRAGA 

     
    LUTE
     

     
     
     MOR


     
     
     
    PAULO BATISTA

     

    Marcadores: , , , ,

    4 imagens a partir da barca | 4 images from the ferry

     






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