Brazil’s Latest Outrage: Arming Invaders While Farmers Bleed By Hotspotnews
In a move that reeks of socialist fantasy colliding with harsh reality, Brazil’s leftist government has unleashed Decree 12.710, a so-called “National Plan for Protecting Human Rights Defenders.”Landless workers again causing a commotionIssued just yesterday on November 5, 2025, this executive fiat doesn’t just tip the scales— it hurls them into the abyss, prioritizing the safety of radical activists over the very fabric of property rights and law-abiding citizens. This isn’t protection; it’s provocation. It’s an absolute shame, shielding criminals under the guise of human rights while productive farmers and landowners live in fear of the next torch-wielding mob.
Let’s cut through the bureaucratic fog. The decree promises coordinated federal security measures for “defenders” of rural workers, indigenous communities, and other marginalized groups. Sound noble? Dig deeper, and you’ll find it’s a green light for the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST), the infamous landless workers’ movement that’s spent decades masquerading as a social justice crusade while orchestrating illegal occupations, arson, and intimidation campaigns against Brazil’s agricultural heartland. These aren’t peaceful protesters; they’re organized agitators who storm private farms, destroy crops, and squat on land they’ve no legal claim to, all while the government cheers them on as heroes.
Under this new plan, we’re told these “defenders” could receive police escorts and integrated public safety support. Police escorts? For the very people who treat law enforcement as an optional suggestion? Imagine the scene: a convoy of armored vehicles rolling through the countryside, not to safeguard honest ranchers from theft and violence, but to babysit the invaders as they plot their next raid. It’s absurd, a grotesque inversion of justice where the state becomes the muscle for Marxist militants. Farmers, who feed the nation and fuel its economy, are left to fend for themselves—barricading doors, arming up, and praying the next dawn doesn’t bring flames to their fields.
This isn’t hyperbole; it’s the bitter fruit of Lula’s return to power. Since 2023, Brazil’s rural producers have watched helplessly as MST occupations surged, backed by rhetoric that paints property owners as colonial villains. Crop losses run into the billions, families are terrorized, and now? The government formalizes their protection. Decree 12.710 builds on existing handouts like Decree 9.937, but it escalates the farce by embedding these radicals into federal security protocols. Why stop at subsidies and propaganda? Why not issue them badges and badges of honor while you’re at it?
Conservatives have long warned that coddling chaos breeds catastrophe. Brazil’s land reform debate isn’t about equity; it’s a Trojan horse for expropriation, where “human rights” becomes code for “seize the means.” This decree doesn’t solve poverty—it weaponizes it, pitting the idle against the industrious in a zero-sum war. The MST’s track record is a litany of lawlessness: over 2,000 farms invaded since Lula’s inauguration, countless clashes turning deadly, and a philosophy that glorifies violence as “necessary” for revolution. Yet here we are, in 2025, with Brasília bending the knee to this thuggery.
The hypocrisy burns brighter than an MST bonfire. While these “defenders” get taxpayer-funded shields, the real victims—smallholders evicted by force, agribusinesses crippled by sabotage—get platitudes and paperwork. Where’s the national plan for them? Where’s the escort for the widow whose husband was beaten by a mob claiming “land for the people”? This policy doesn’t defend rights; it erodes them, one occupied acre at a time.
Brazil’s conservatives must rise in unison. Demand repeal. Rally the rural vote. Remind the world that true progress comes from rule of law, not rule by riot. Decree 12.710 isn’t a shield for the vulnerable—it’s a sword against stability, a shameful betrayal of the hardworking backbone that built this nation. If Lula’s Brazil wants to flirt with failed ideologies, let it. But history’s verdict is clear: protect the criminals, and you’ll soon have none left to protect but yourselves. It’s time to draw the line in the soil—before it’s all scorched earth.

