Where the Hell is Congress? The Fight for Brazil’s Soul By Hotspotnews
Once again, the Brazilian Congress has proven itself a toothless watchdog, a collection of suits more interested in photo ops than in safeguarding our nation’s future. As Lula’s regime sells our sovereignty to the Chinese Communist Party for a song, where is the uproar? Where are the fiery speeches, the late-night sessions, the righteous indignation that should be echoing through the chambers of power? Congress, it seems, is nowhere to be found when we need it most.
This isn’t just another policy decision; it’s a betrayal of the highest order. The sale of our strategic nickel mines to China’s MMG, despite a nearly double offer from CoreX Holding, is a slap in the face to every Brazilian who believes in the promise of a sovereign, prosperous nation. Nickel isn’t just another resource; it’s the backbone of the global energy transition, a critical mineral that could have positioned Brazil as a global player. Instead, we’ve handed it over to Beijing, tying our economic future to a regime that views us as nothing more than a resource colony. As Lula the thieve screams sovereignity to the USA who call him on his crimes, what is he doing now. This not just about Injustice and witch hunt it is about thievery, giving away Brazil riches to a communist government.
And where is Congress in all this? Silent. Complicit. More concerned with maintaining the status quo than with standing up for the Brazilian people. This is their job, their sacred duty—to fight for our interests, to hold the executive accountable, to ensure that our resources are not squandered for ideological gain. Yet, they sit idle, allowing Lula to dismantle our sovereignty piece by piece, dollar by dollar.
The excuses are as hollow as their resolve. “It’s a private transaction,” they might say, ignoring the broader implications of such a move. “It’s not our place to interfere,” they might claim, as if the future of our nation isn’t worth a fight. But let’s be clear: this is not just about economics; it’s about national security, about maintaining our independence in a world where resources are power. And Congress, with its constitutional mandate to oversee and protect, has failed us spectacularly.
The global backlash is already mounting. CoreX Holding’s appeal to CADE and the European Commission underscores the gravity of this decision. The risk of market concentration, the threat to supply chain security—these are not abstract concerns. They are real, immediate dangers that Congress should be addressing with urgency and resolve. Instead, we get silence, a deafening silence that speaks volumes about their priorities.
This is not just a failure of leadership; it’s a failure of courage. Congress was supposed to be the bulwark against such recklessness, the institution that stands firm when the executive overreaches. But where are they now? Where are the voices demanding transparency, demanding accountability, demanding that Brazil’s interests come first? They are absent, and their absence is a betrayal.
The Brazilian people deserve better. We deserve a Congress that fights, that rallies, that refuses to let our nation be sold off to the highest bidder. We deserve leaders who understand that sovereignty is not negotiable, that our resources are not just assets to be traded but the foundation of our national strength. And if Congress won’t step up, if they won’t do their job, then it’s time for the people to demand change, to demand that those who swore to protect our interests be held accountable for their inaction.
So, where is Congress now? They’re supposed to fight, but it seems they’ve forgotten how. And in their forgetfulness, they’ve left Brazil vulnerable, exposed, and on the brink of a future we cannot afford. It’s time they remember their duty, or it’s time we find leaders who will.

