Coca-Cola Cozies Up to Sanctioned Brazilian Censorship King

By Hotspotnews-November 17, 2025

Folks, in a world where free speech is under fire, American companies should be the last ones throwing fuel on the flames. But guess what? Coca-Cola just did exactly that. Last week, from November 11 to 14, Brazil’s Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes took the stage at the XXVI National Congress of the Public Ministry. He wasn’t there as a quiet judge—he was lecturing like some big-shot professor. And who sponsored this shindig? None other than our old friend Coke, along with other big names.

Now, why does this matter? Simple: Moraes isn’t just any judge. Back in July, the U.S. Treasury slapped him with sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act. That’s the law we use to punish human rights abusers and corrupt officials around the world. Why him? Because he’s been locking up folks without fair trials and cracking down hard on free speech in Brazil. Think arbitrary arrests of journalists and politicians who dare criticize the government. It’s the kind of stuff that makes you glad for the First Amendment.

By September, the sanctions hit even closer—his wife and close buddies got tagged too. Brazil’s leaders cried foul, calling it “foreign meddling.” But come on, if someone’s trampling rights, the U.S. has every right to call it out. That’s standing up for freedom, plain and simple.

So, picture this: While Moraes preaches to prosecutors at this fancy event, Coca-Cola is footing part of the bill. Under U.S. law, that could count as “material support” to a sanctioned bad guy. It’s like handing cash to a thug and pretending it’s just a handshake. Does Coke want Magnitsky sanctions of their own? Do they really think Americans will keep buying their fizzy drinks while they back a man who’s turned Brazil into a speech-free zone?

This isn’t just about one judge or one soda company. It’s a wake-up call for every red-blooded American who values liberty. We’ve seen it before—tech giants censoring conservatives at home, now global corps cozying up to foreign tyrants abroad. Moraes has targeted folks like former President Jair Bolsonaro’s supporters, jailing them for posting online. Sound familiar? It’s the same playbook: Silence the opposition, control the narrative.

On social media, everyday people are fired up. They’re tagging U.S. officials like Senator Marco Rubio, demanding real enforcement. No more slaps on the wrist. If we let companies like Coca-Cola slide, what’s next? Sponsoring events for other rights-busters around the globe?

Conservatives have been saying it for years: Free markets thrive on freedom, not on propping up dictators in robes. Time for Coca-Cola to pick a side. Pull the plug on events like this, or face the boycott from folks who actually read the labels—on their drinks and their principles.

America, let’s make our voices heard. Skip the Coke next barbecue. Demand our companies stand for truth, not tyranny. Because if we don’t, who will?

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