They will be, from 2 to 12 of this September.
There will be bumps, but not enough to shake a country that has faced two impeachments of presidents, has gone through a century of scammer episodes, has suffered two dictatorships, articulated a democratic transition and is now about to overcome an attempt to interrupt these 40 years. Brazil catches and resists. It is like samba: “dying, but it does not die.”
For the first time, a former President of the Republic will be tried by and will also be unheard of the fact that high-patent military personnel appear as defendants in the Federal Supreme Court.
The tension will be due to the reflexes of the internal clash of the government forces and opposition and expecting the reaction from the external environment, contaminated by Donald Trump’s aggressor and his delirious idea of imposing himself in the process.
From the list of adversity surpassed we do not forget the death of the president -elect in the electoral and hospitalized college on the eve of the inauguration, on March 14, 1985. Before that, the rejection of the Dante de Oliveira amendment, followed by the successful popular movement for direct elections, resumed in 1989.
In that half-time, we had a constituent assembly that, despite the military dictatorship still in the heels, approved, in the words of Ulysses Guimarães, the Citizen Charter-which to this day leads us with their mistakes and many hits.
We also supplanted the hyperinflation with the engagement of society in a state project based on the public commitment of Fernando Henrique Cardoso and supported by the then President Itamar Franco, deputy of the prevented Fernando Collor.
This happened under the aegis of uncertainty, but we went ahead between the leaps of the circumstances. There is therefore no reason not to overcome this obstacle to the direction of a nation that preserves the freedom based on the defense of legality.
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