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    Home » Lula’s Latest Delirium: Brazil Will Make Trump “Worry” About Rare Earths
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    Lula’s Latest Delirium: Brazil Will Make Trump “Worry” About Rare Earths

    HotspotorlandoNewsBy HotspotorlandoNews11 de July de 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Lula’s Latest Delirium: Brazil Will Make Trump “Worry” About Rare Earths

    By Hotspotnews

    In yet another episode of presidential bluster, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva gathered ministers and mining officials at the Planalto Palace and declared that Brazil is about to leap from raw material exporter to global technology powerhouse in rare earths and critical minerals. With characteristic swagger, he told the world — and Donald Trump in particular — that if America is concerned about China’s dominance, it should start worrying about Brazil instead. The self-proclaimed champion of the working class even joked that these “famous rare lands” were new to him personally. For a man who has spent decades in politics, the admission was refreshingly honest; the rest of the speech was pure fantasy.

    Let’s be clear about what happened. On July 10, Lula convened a meeting to discuss developing technologies for rare earth elements — materials vital for electric vehicles, wind turbines, smartphones, and advanced defense systems. He insisted Brazil must stop shipping unprocessed ore abroad and begin exporting “intelligence and knowledge.” He mocked Trump’s well-founded concerns over Chinese supply chains and claimed Brazil would soon match or surpass Beijing’s capabilities. The usual leftist cheers followed: sovereignty, development, the future is ours.

    Conservatives have seen this movie before. Ambitious rhetoric from Brasília rarely survives contact with reality. Brazil does sit on enormous reserves of rare earths — second only to China by some estimates. The country also leads in niobium and holds significant deposits of other critical minerals. On paper, the potential is undeniable. In practice, turning that potential into a sophisticated processing and technology industry requires capital, innovation, rule of law, and minimal political interference. None of these are strengths of the current administration.

    For years, leftist governments in Brazil have specialized in grand announcements while presiding over bureaucratic paralysis, regulatory uncertainty, and cronyism. Environmental licensing takes forever, taxes punish investment, and corruption scandals have become routine. Serious investors — especially those bringing advanced refining technology — demand stability and clear property rights. They are unlikely to rush in because Lula waved his hands and invoked national destiny.

    Meanwhile, China spent decades methodically building its near-monopoly through state subsidies, lax environmental rules, and strategic patience. Replicating that success is not achieved by a single meeting or presidential decree. Processing rare earths is technically complex, capital-intensive, and environmentally challenging. Brazil’s track record on large-scale industrial projects under Workers’ Party leadership inspires little confidence. Remember the endless delays, cost overruns, and scandals that plagued infrastructure initiatives during previous PT administrations? The rare earths dream risks becoming another chapter in the same book.

    Lula’s dig at Trump reveals more than bravado — it shows a troubling worldview. The United States under President Trump is rightly focused on reshoring critical supply chains and reducing dependence on an adversarial China. America is courting reliable partners who share democratic values and respect markets. Brazil could be a natural ally in this effort, offering resources while benefiting from American technology, investment, and markets. Instead, Lula chooses to taunt Washington and flirt with the very power that dominates the sector he claims to challenge. This is not strategic sovereignty; it is ideological posturing that isolates Brazil from its best potential partners.

    True economic development does not come from government councils and laboratory promises. It emerges when entrepreneurs are free to invest, innovate, and compete. A conservative approach would prioritize:

    • Streamlining regulations to speed up responsible mining and processing.
    • Strengthening property rights and the rule of law to attract serious capital.
    • Partnering with private enterprise and friendly nations like the United States rather than relying on state planning.
    • Ensuring environmental safeguards that are realistic, not tools for political obstruction.

    Brazil’s conservatives, rooted in values of liberty, family, faith, and national pride, understand that genuine progress honors the country’s God-given resources and the hard work of its people — not the delusions of lifelong politicians. Turning raw minerals into advanced products is a worthy goal. Pretending it can be achieved through speeches and ministerial meetings while continuing failed policies is simply another round of the same old leftist daydream.

    Lula may enjoy playing the global statesman in his white hat, but Brazilians know the difference between rhetoric and results. The nation’s vast mineral wealth should be developed responsibly and profitably — for the benefit of Brazilian families and workers, not as fodder for another cycle of grand promises and disappointing outcomes. If the current government truly wants Brazil to rise, it should step aside and let free enterprise and sound policy do what decades of statism never could. Until then, the world — and Donald Trump — will continue focusing on real competitors rather than political theater in Brasília.

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