sábado, 5 de julho de 2025

THE COUP NO ONE IS TALKING ABOUT: BRAZIL’S JUDICIARY HAS SEIZED POWER

 


A quiet yet devastating coup has taken place in Brazil – not by tanks or generals, but by unelected judges in robes, wielding censorship tools and backed by globalist structures.

At the center is Alexandre de Moraes, a Supreme Court justice who recently invalidated a lawful and democratically approved vote in Congress to repeal a tax hike. One judge, acting alone, overturned the will of hundreds of elected legislators. It was not judicial review – it was a direct attack on representative government.

This incident is part of a larger transformation: Brazil is rapidly becoming a narco-judicial regime, propped up by authoritarian alliances, domestic cartels, and international complicity.

The Robed Leviathan

The Brazilian Supreme Court, particularly under de Moraes, no longer interprets the law – it dictates policy. It censors dissent, arrests opposition figures without trial, rewrites tax codes, and supervises elections, all under vague pretexts like “digital militancy” or “anti-democratic speech.”

In 2022, Brazil’s presidential election was conducted entirely through non-auditable electronic voting, protected by the Court from external review. Parallel vote counts were banned. Forensic audits forbidden. Even questioning the system became a criminal offense.

Meanwhile, the 2018 stabbing of then-presidential candidate Jair Bolsonaro, likely a political assassination attempt, was quickly covered up. The attacker was declared mentally unfit, never faced trial, and the investigation remains sealed.

Terror, Cartels, and International Blindness

Brazil’s leftist government, under President Lula da Silva, has openly aligned with Venezuela, Russia, Iran, China, and even Hamas – while domestic narco-organizations like the PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital) and Comando Vermelho operate with near impunity. These criminal syndicates extend their networks into Europe, especially Portugal, where Supreme Court Justice Gilmar Mendes hosts annual forums that launder Brazilian legal overreach through elite European academia – on taxpayer money – and the protection given by some Supreme Court Ministers to drug trafficking in Brazil is well known.

Brazil is a founding member of the Foro de São Paulo, a regional alliance of Marxist regimes and revolutionary parties that openly seeks to dismantle Western institutions and liberal democracy in Latin America.

And yet the West remains silent.

Silicon Valley and the American Left: Partners in Tyranny

Social media platforms – Twitter/X, Google, Facebook, Telegram, Instagram – have been coerced into obeying Brazil’s judicial decrees. Content is deleted, accounts suspended, user data seized – all without legal appeal or due process.

And here lies the deeper scandal: U.S.-based NGOs and progressive figures within the Democratic Party have embraced and supported this regime. These are the same networks now promoting Tarcísio de Freitas, a globalist-approved, “moderate technocrat” who is being groomed to neutralize the conservative movement and absorb it back into the system – a Brazilian version of Mitt Romney in military uniform.

This is the “managed democracy” model exported from Brussels and Davos to the developing world. It is being perfected in Brazil – and soon, it will be replicated elsewhere.

Brazil Is Gagged. Will the West Stay Silent?

As Americans celebrate Independence Day, and Europeans still can enjoy the luxuries of some free speech and liberal democracy, Brazilians live under judicial censorship. They are arrested for memes. Their votes are filtered by black-box machines. Their elected Congress is overruled by unelected judges.

And every day, they are invited to a civic masquerade – a “Tea Party,” but with no RSVP. The table is set. The orchestra plays. But the people are absent – afraid, silent, trained to obey.

This is not a domestic crisis. It is a blueprint for global technocratic tyranny, with Brazilian judges as its first vanguard.

The World Must Respond

We call on Western governments, human rights organizations, and conservative leaders across Europe and North America to:

  • Demand independent audits of Brazil’s electoral system.

  • Impose sanctions on institutions that empower or validate judicial overreach.

  • Provide support and platforms for Brazilian dissidents and whistleblowers exposing this judicial cartel.

If Brazil falls completely, it will not be the end – it will be the beginning of a new era of digital despotism, veiled in legal language and backed by cartel cash.


Walter Biancardine





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