I just stopped to imagine 2026. Only a miracle can save Brazil! If you think for a minute, the situation is darn critical.
From a conservative standpoint, the spectacle unfolding in Brazil under Lula’s third term is nothing short of a tragic farce—a once-vibrant nation being dragged back into the abyss of socialist excess, corruption, and institutional decay. The INSS scandal alone should be a death knell for any administration with a shred of integrity: billions siphoned from retirees’ pockets through fraudulent schemes, all while the government pats itself on the back for “social justice.” This isn’t compassion; it’s criminal negligence, a blatant betrayal of the working class who foot the bill through skyrocketing taxes. And yet, Lula sails on, untouched, as if the rules don’t apply to him or his cronies.
Then there’s the fiscal nightmare—a deficit ballooning out of control, with spending sprees that make even the most reckless gambler blush. Record revenues vanish into black holes of inefficiency, funding pet projects and bureaucratic bloat while everyday Brazilians grapple with inflation and stagnant wages. COP30? What a joke. Billions wasted on a climate circus in the Amazon, where delegates jet in to lecture about emissions while the real issues—illegal logging, mining, and drug trafficking—rage unchecked. It’s green virtue-signaling at its worst, propping up an international elite on the taxpayer’s dime, with zero tangible results for Brazil’s environment or economy.
Accountability? Forget it. Janja, the first lady, jets around the globe like it’s her personal playground, burning through public funds with the arrogance of someone who knows there are no consequences. And the STF—our Supreme Court—has morphed into a rogue activist body, selectively freeing criminals and meddling in politics to shield the left while hammering conservatives. The streets are less safe, justice feels like a partisan tool, and the rule of law is eroding before our eyes. Bolsonaro’s harsh sentencing for “coup plotting” reeks of revenge, not righteousness, while actual threats to democracy—like the PT’s history of graft—get a free pass.
Now, Lula dares to run again in 2026? At 81, after health scares and a legacy marred by scandalous spending, corruption, dark alliances with dictatorship, sanctions from the USA. This isn’t leadership; it’s suicide—for his party, his ideology, and the country. He’s betting on fragmented opposition and short memories, but conservatives see through it. Another term would cement Brazil’s slide into dependency, debt, and division, rewarding the very failures that have plagued us. It’s time for real change: fiscal discipline, free markets, strong borders, and leaders who put Brazil first, not their egos or ideologies. Anything less is national self-sabotage.
i sincerely hope to wake up one day and realize it was just a horrible nightmare.

