vfreire85

joined 11 months ago
[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago

back in the 80s my father worked for the largest state-owned bank here in brazil. apart from all benefits and a generally more laxed culture back then (goals were not that enforced, for example), the employees were more of a closely-knit community. they had clubs and were involved with it (the bank still has but not everyone care for it, the one we had in my home town was closed), organized a coop supermarket in state capitals during the inflation years, they were friends usually helped and cared for each other, the families used to visit each other, organized parties for the children, barbecues and the sort. in the 90s, there were heavy talks of privatization, people were fearful for their jobs, layoffs, and the bank generally had a lax policy on security at a time when robberies became more common. the employees slowly began to leave the bank and the few who were admitted to their places had not that culture, were more individualistic. it happened to other state owned companies, and all hell broke loose when many of them were actually privatized (state-level banks, telephone companies, electric distributors were among the most significant examples). now it seems that we're getting more and more individualistic and losing the meaning of community and society.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

i love to fuck commies, they generally fuck better.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

brazilian portuguese here. my english accent is a mix of standard european english and american english. i tend to speak in a mix of european and latin american spanish (mostly chilean). my french is shitty enough to have a barely european accent.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 month ago

to anyone who says "why don't you compare communist eastern europe to democratic western europe?". sure, first thing to notice is that eastern europe didn't had companies exploiting underdeveloped nations for their cheap labour and raw materials, their oppression of labour organizations and the support of corrupt rulers. since brazil was mentioned (heh), let us remember that west german companies such as vw or mercedes-benz used to report on syndicalists and communists working and organizing on their plants to the brazilian military during the dictatorship, and sold equipment to the military and police. that siemens sold nuclear reactors to the dictatorship during the late 70s. that many former officials of the dictatorship got leadership jobs in these companies and in basf, hoescht, atlas-schindler, mwm. behind the "economic success" of the rich countries of the west there's always some degree of exploitation of poorer countries.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 month ago (2 children)

i won't give a cry for fascists getting banned.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 53 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (23 children)

you know, i tell you what. i'm fed up with all this gringo self-righteousness when you talk about "oh communism was bad, oh people where killed, oh people had no food, oh people had no liberty, oh people could not buy ataris, oh our countries are so democratic". your countries were democratic during the cold war in the first place because you had people to sort things out for you here in the global south. for each person complaining about how the food rations in eastern europe were not tasty enough, there were 10 dying of hunger or malnourishment here in the global south. for every person complaining they had to wait 5 years in a queue to buy a trabant or an oka, there were 10 who got no school in a range of 50 km. for every person complaining that their 8 hour shifts in state owned factories were overwhelming, there were 10 who were indentured workers. for every person complaining about how the stasi, kgb or the stb had bugged their apartment, there were 10 suffering the most horrific tortures inside black sites of the military of u.s. allies here in the "third world". for every person complaining about dull standard apartment blocks in mikrorayons, there were 10 who lived in mud shacks and slums, and those are just who were lucky enough to have a roof over their heads. finally, for everyone complaining about chinese sweatshops, which are indeed a problem, there are 10 americans who work and yet cannot afford proper housing.

you wanna complain about how communism was bad? go ahead. you wanna complain how your parents lived under communism and could not drink coke? do so if you wish. but there are still millions of people down here who would give an arm and a leg to have a polish ration, an apartment in a russian gray building, or a yugoslav job. and while the chinese maoist red guard was bad, surely it won't be an inch closer to the harassement people endured on a daily basis by our police forces.

again: you wanna complain? be my guest. but for me that's an encyclopedic example of white privilege.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 month ago (2 children)

oh, the khmer rouge, that one that the u.s. supported along with britain, china (not so dirty back then, right) and who were toppled by the socialist regime of vietnam?

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 month ago (1 children)

"Life was miserable almost from the start of the Bolshevik revolution for most people", said the romanovs.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

it seems that those new directives from the hegemon have just arrived to its satellites. the thing is that trump tries to appease russia because he believes they are useful white allies in their containment and aggression strategy against china, which they see as a "yellow menace" to the primacy of white nato-stan.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

funnily enough, the cops are behind the fist-magnets.

[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

normally in brazil you have three alternatives:

  • find someone who sponsors you: increasingly in disuse, since your sponsor needs to have property paid in full within municipality's limits, metro regions or in neighbouring cities, and a monthly income that is at least 3 times the rent and other associated expenses;
  • pay an insurance: generally it amounts for an increase of 10-25% on top of your rent. however, by the end of the contract you won't have it back;
  • traditional deposit: most tenants and real estate agents will charge you three rents in advance, since normally contracts have a standard 30-month length. after an year elapses and you decide to leave, you will receive your deposit in full with the inflation that incurred during that time. if you decide to leave before that year, you will have to pay a penalty of your rent multiplied by the number of months that are left in your contract divided by 10 (e.g. if you leave with about 24 months left, the penalty will be rent * 2.4). this penalty is usually waivered after 12 months. however, if you didn't really trashed out your former house, they will charge you painting and cleaning expenses (sometimes even if you paint and clean yourself, depending on how much son-of-a-b*tch they are).
[–] vfreire85@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

not to say that they have a taste for human flesh.

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