Brazil’s Breaking Point: Lula’s Outrageous Millions to Cuba While Brazilians Die in Floods
By Hotspotnews
Let that sink in.
In late February 2026, torrential rains slammed the Zona da Mata region of Minas Gerais. Entire neighborhoods in Juiz de Fora and Ubá were wiped out. Landslides buried homes, bridges collapsed, roads vanished. Official counts put the death toll between 64 and 71 people—mothers, fathers, children—washed away or crushed under the weight of a disaster that caught everyone off guard. Thousands more lost everything: homes, businesses, livestock, the little savings they had. Over 4,000 people displaced, living in shelters or with relatives who can barely feed their own families. The images are heartbreaking—mud up to the rooftops, coffins lined up in churches, survivors clutching nothing but the clothes on their backs.
Lula showed up on February 28 for the photo-op, wearing his usual concerned face, promising “integral support” modeled on Rio Grande do Sul. We’ve heard that line before. In 2024, when RS was devastated, the same government pledged billions. Months later, victims were still waiting for houses, businesses were still shuttered, and the money disappeared into bureaucratic black holes and political pork. Now the same script is being recycled for Minas Gerais: some emergency Bolsa Família advances, a few FGTS withdrawals, vague credit lines, and endless talk. But real reconstruction? Still crawling at snail speed while people suffer.
And what does Lula do the very next week? He green-lights R$ 50 million—**fifty million reais**—to Cuba. Cash, food shipments, agricultural inputs, all coordinated through the Brazilian Cooperation Agency and Conab. Minister Paulo Teixeira even bragged about it, tying the package to the FAO conference and some global hunger alliance. Lula himself defended the giveaway, claiming Cuba’s food shortages are all because of “external political decisions” (read: the U.S. embargo) and not the decades of socialist incompetence that turned one of the most fertile Caribbean islands into a starving basket case.
This isn’t solidarity. This is ideological insanity. This is a failed administration openly choosing to prop up a fellow leftist regime while its own citizens are literally dying in the streets. Brazil is not a charity for bankrupt dictators. We are a country of 200 million people facing skyrocketing crime, collapsing public services, record debt, and now back-to-back climate disasters that expose how hollow the government’s preparedness really is. Yet Lula’s priority is sending our hard-earned money to a country whose leaders live like kings while their people eat once a day—if they’re lucky.
Where does this money come from? From the same taxpayers whose salaries are taxed to death, whose businesses are strangled by bureaucracy, whose children attend crumbling schools and wait months for basic healthcare. From the flood victims who lost their only source of income and now face months without proper housing. From the farmers in Rio Grande do Sul still waiting for the compensation they were promised after the 2024 floods. Every real sent to Havana is a real stolen from Brazilian reconstruction, Brazilian security, Brazilian futures.
This administration has caused too much damage already. Two and a half years of Lula 3.0 have delivered inflation that eats savings, energy prices that punish the poor, a justice system weaponized against critics, and a foreign policy that treats Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua like brothers while treating Brazilian taxpayers like ATM machines. The RS floods exposed the incompetence; the MG floods proved it wasn’t a one-off. And now this Cuba scandal is the final straw—the moment when even the most patient citizens can no longer pretend this is normal governance.
Brazil cannot support this craziness any longer.
We cannot watch our money fly overseas while our dead are still being counted at home. We cannot accept a president who lectures us about “solidarity” while turning his back on his own people. The disasters are hitting harder and more frequently, and instead of fixing the dams, clearing the rivers, building real flood defenses, or speeding up aid distribution, the government chooses Havana.
The Brazilian people have had enough. We are not cold-hearted—we help when we can—but charity begins at home. Rebuild Minas Gerais. Finish Rio Grande do Sul. Protect our own before playing savior to a regime that has failed its citizens for 65 years. The R$ 50 million for Cuba isn’t generosity; it’s betrayal.
This failed administration has caused too much damage. It is time—past time—for Brazil to say: **no more**. Not one real more to Cuba while Brazilians bury their children in the mud. The people are watching. The outrage is growing. And sooner or later, this government will have to answer for every flooded street, every empty promise, and every peso it wasted on a dying dictatorship instead of saving its own nation.
Brazil first. Always. Anything less is treason against the suffering people who pay the bills.

