Bolsonaro’s admiral was more influential than Mauro Cid

Because of his own role, Lieutenant Colonel Mauro Cid was the most noticeable figure in Jair Bolsonaro’s team.

More discreet, influential and expansive, although he did not concern himself with the chief’s personal affairs, was Admiral Flávio Rocha, who will retire next year. He headed the Secretariat for Strategic Affairs.

At Bolsonaro’s fateful meeting with foreign ambassadors to discredit electronic voting machines, Cid made many appearances, but Rocha carried much more weight, from conception to implementation.

Ministerial inequality

Racial Equality Minister Anielle Franco must review the expiration date.

Placed in a folder intended to encourage positive intentions, it managed to turn it into a source of inertia and anger.

Madame Natasha

Madame Natasha is sad about the resignation of Minister Rosa Weber. He respected her for what she said and also for the civilized manner in which she managed her silence.

Natasha was pleased with the classification the minister gave January 8th: “Day of Shame”.

The good lady realizes that it was not the minister’s job to capture the most famous reference to an infamous day, but it is worth remembering President Franklin Roosevelt’s speech to the American Congress after the attack on the Pearl Harbor naval base :

“Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a day that will live in infamy, the United States was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan…”

The CNJ and the Republic of Curitiba

In silence and with technical reports, the Penitentiary Department of the National Judicial Council draws up a detailed description of the omnipotence of Operation Lava Jato and the Federal Court, headed by the then judge Sergio Moro.

The Internal Affairs Department does not talk, research or write. Anyone who reads his plays learns. If you don’t read them, you should read them.

October 1963

Sixty years ago, Jacqueline Kennedy took a twoweek cruise aboard the yacht of Greek millionaire Aristotle Onassis, who would eventually become her second husband. Three days later, the first, President of the United States, agreed that he would travel to Dallas, Texas on November 22nd.

Lee Oswald, a man who at 24 had never made a breakthrough in his life, was in Mexico. After returning to the United States, he decided to go to Dallas, where his Russian wife lived with their daughter.