Lula’s Dream Beijing Delegation: Because Nothing Says “Anti-Corruption” Like Packing the Plane with Old Pals
Oh, what a glorious sight it would be. President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva touching down in Beijing, chest puffed out, ready to “demand reciprocity” from Xi Jinping like a true global statesman. And who would he bring to back him up? Not some boring merit-based entrepreneurs or tech visionaries pushing Brazilian innovation. Perish the thought. Lula would roll up with the greatest hits of Brazilian crony capitalism — the same crew that makes opposition journalists reach for their “ Lava Jato 2.0” notepads.
Leading the charge: the Batista brothers from J&F/JBS, fresh from whatever settlement or steak dinner they’re currently enjoying. Nothing builds international leverage quite like meatpacking moguls with rap sheets longer than the Amazon. They’d be followed by a parade of soy kings, iron ore barons, and construction tycoons whose companies mysteriously thrive every time PT-friendly governments open the BNDES coffers.
Picture it: two hundred and fifty “business leaders” crammed onto the presidential jet, all coincidentally heavy donors, coalition partners, or folks who know exactly which palm to grease in Brasília. The official narrative from Lula’s cheerleaders in the press? “Historic South-South partnership for development!” The reality? A floating barbecue of political IOUs, where every deal comes pre-seasoned with future scandals.
Meanwhile, if Trump brings Elon Musk, Tim Cook, and Jensen Huang to hammer out real market access for American tech and manufacturing, it’s “genius economic diplomacy.” But let Lula try the same move and suddenly every CEO on board has a “corrupt background” according to the very same voices who spent years defending PT-era slush funds. Kkkkkk, the selective outrage is almost artistic.
No pesky innovators or disruptors on Lula’s list — those types might actually want lower taxes, less bureaucracy, or (gasp) real competition. Instead, expect the usual commodities club: agro exporters who live off Chinese demand, infrastructure players waiting for the next round of sweetheart loans, and a few token “progressive” industrialists who know the importance of staying in the government’s good graces.
The left would spin it as brilliance. The rest of Brazil would roll their eyes and wait for the next plea bargain to drop. Because in Lula’s Brazil, economic diplomacy isn’t about national strength — it’s about keeping the right people fed at the right tables.
Trump uses leverage to put America First. Lula uses it to put allies first. One delivers results. The other delivers headlines… and probably another investigation.
The double standard isn’t even subtle anymore. It’s just Brazilian politics as usual — now with extra Chinese flags and zero self-awareness.
So, if you want change, if you want a great country, that really counts, pay attention, and get your mind of the dirty old game. Fight, instead of accuse, build instead of destroy. Make Brazil better, avoid the noise. Elect Flavio Bolsonaro and get out of the hell hole Brazil is in.


