The witch Hunt Continues

By Hotspotnews

The Brazilian Federal Police’s latest report targeting Eduardo Bolsonaro represents yet another chapter in the ongoing assault on political dissent under the current leftist regime in Brasília. Far from an impartial investigation into criminal activity, this move exposes the weaponization of state institutions to silence critics of an increasingly authoritarian government.

Eduardo Bolsonaro, the former congressman and son of Brazil’s most popular conservative leader in modern history, Jair Bolsonaro, finds himself in the crosshairs simply for exercising his right to speak out from exile in the United States. The police report accuses him of attempting to influence Brazilian judicial processes by engaging with American officials—figures like President Donald Trump, Senator Marco Rubio, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. The alleged “crime”? Advocating for the restoration of individual liberties in Brazil through legitimate legislative channels, particularly the amnesty bill under debate in the National Congress.

This accusation is absurd on its face. If the supposed intent was to sway government policy, why does the Federal Police conspicuously omit the very American authorities who hold actual decision-making power? The selective targeting reeks of political theater rather than serious law enforcement. It suggests not courage in pursuing justice, but cowardice in confronting real power while persecuting a Brazilian citizen living abroad.

Eduardo Bolsonaro resides under American jurisdiction, where the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution robustly protects freedom of speech and the right to petition the government. These are foundational principles of any free society—principles that once defined Brazil before the slide into judicial overreach and censorship. To criminalize private family conversations, normal exchanges between a father and son discussing the fate of their nation, is not law enforcement; it is intimidation. Leaking such exchanges to manufacture scandal only underscores the regime’s desperation to damage its political opponents rather than address legitimate grievances.

The real outrage lies in what this episode reveals about Brazil today: a nation where criticizing the ruling elite is treated as subversion, where the judiciary acts as an arm of political vengeance, and where institutions once respected for combating corruption now serve to shield power and punish dissent. The same Federal Police that once dismantled massive corruption schemes during Operation Car Wash now fixates on “crimes” like sharing videos critical of the government or privately discussing ways to restore democratic norms.

This is the hallmark of a dictatorship masquerading as democracy. When a former deputy, the most-voted politician in Brazilian history, must flee his own country to avoid persecution, and when his advocacy for amnesty and freedom is branded criminal, the rule of law has been inverted. The true delinquents are those who pervert police powers to target political families while ignoring rampant crime, economic decline, and threats to sovereignty.

Conservatives across the Americas stand with Eduardo Bolsonaro and the Bolsonaro family in their fight against this oppression. The cause is not personal ambition but the defense of fundamental freedoms: the right to speak, to petition, to assemble, and to oppose tyranny without fear of state reprisal. If fighting a dictatorship is a crime, then Eduardo declares himself guilty—and millions of freedom-loving Brazilians stand guilty alongside him.

The path forward remains clear: restore genuine democracy through legislative action, end the abuse of judicial power, and ensure that no citizen is hunted for holding conservative convictions. Until then, the struggle continues, and the international community—especially those who value liberty—must take notice of Brazil’s descent into authoritarianism. The Bolsonaro name endures not because of privilege, but because it represents resistance to exactly this kind of overreach.

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