Janja Needs to Stop Accusing and Face the Truth on Women’s Safety

By Hotspotnews

Oh, how touching. First Lady Janja Lula da Silva has once again graced social media with her heartfelt lecture, scolding federal deputy Nikolas Ferreira for the grave sin of questioning a bill that cleverly equates “misogyny” with racism. In her passionate video, she accuses critics of shielding hate speech and turning a blind eye to violence against women. How noble. If only the facts weren’t so inconvenient.

Because here’s the uncomfortable truth the First Lady seems eager to gloss over: violence against Brazilian women has stubbornly refused to improve under Workers’ Party (PT) governance. Official statistics reveal a nearly 10 percent rise in feminicides during the PT’s extended reign from 2003 to 2013. Even in the very first year of President Lula’s latest term, the numbers ticked up by another 1.6 percent. Northeast states, blessed with left-wing leadership for two full decades, keep setting unfortunate records in female homicides. A woman is killed roughly every six hours in Brazil, yet Janja’s outrage appears curiously selective—loud when it scores easy political points, strangely muted when it comes to the governance failures that keep making things worse.

Rather than tackling the real drivers of this tragedy—family breakdown, weak law enforcement, and soft-on-crime policies that let predators roam free—the PT rolls out bills like this one, criminalizing “misogyny.” Sold as a shield for women, the proposal carries the distinct aroma of a censorship tool. Vague language about “hatred or aversion to women” could snare pastors who still believe in traditional families, journalists skeptical of radical gender experiments, or ordinary citizens who dare criticize public figures. Including, heaven forbid, the First Lady herself. But surely that’s just a coincidence.

Nikolas Ferreira’s rebuttal video, which has racked up millions of views while Janja’s lags far behind, actually offers something rare in these debates: substance. He points out the PT’s consistent resistance to measures that might genuinely protect women and children—chemical castration for pedophiles, a national registry for rapists, and stiffer penalties for rape and robbery. Meanwhile, Ferreira has pushed exactly those tougher punishments. Funny how the side that claims to care most about victims keeps voting against the tools that punish the criminals.

The broader PT record on public safety only adds to the irony. Criminal leniency under their watch has too often favored offenders over victims. Northeast regions long dominated by leftist administrations somehow keep producing some of the grimmest statistics on lethal violence against women. Yet the solution from Brasília remains the same: more speech codes, fewer consequences for actual predators.

Janja’s selective indignation doesn’t stop at policy. She has stayed remarkably quiet on certain uncomfortable realities closer to home, from personal family matters to cozy alliances with regimes like Venezuela’s, where women face systemic brutality on a daily basis. Her video scolds Ferreira while skating past these inconsistencies, revealing a familiar pattern: weaponize women’s suffering for partisan advantage, then look the other way when the mirror gets too clear.

Real protection for women requires honesty, not carefully scripted outrage. Conservatives like Nikolas Ferreira stand for strong families, secure communities, rigorous prosecution of sex offenders, and a culture that respects biological reality and time-tested values that actually produced safer societies. They reject the left’s habit of emptying prisons while filling courtrooms with speech trials.

Janja and her PT colleagues would do well to retire the accusations for a moment and confront the data. Brazilian women deserve safer streets, real deterrents against monsters, and the freedom to speak without ideological minders—not another bureaucratic layer that distracts from two decades of policy disappointment. The numbers don’t lie, the public is waking up, and empty lectures are wearing thin. It’s long past time for substance over spectacle.

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