Gabriel Lopes

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Gabriel Lopes

Gabriel Lopes

@solgabriel10

Katılım Ağustos 2020
496 Takip Edilen39 Takipçiler
Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@TayQuinnnn Vc que é limitado e não enxerga a dimensão de ser a maior de TODOS OS TEMPOS. Qual, ATUALMENTE, É A MAIOR campeã de todos os tempos? Qual, ATUALMENTE, foi a única que participou de TODAS as copas? Qual, ATUALMENTE, foi a que mais fez gols? A nova geração aprende com a velha
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Владимир
Владимир@TayQuinnnn·
@solgabriel10 Vc tem uma visão da seleca totlmente diferente das novas gerações cara, consegue entender que seus filhos (se vc tiver) n tem nenhuma admiração pelo Bras que vc conheceu?
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@TayQuinnnn Eu já vi 2. E nos 40 anos de vida, foi a seleção mais vitoriosa que vi até hoje. Acorda pra vida, a história do futebol não se resume a insignificantes 24 anos.....
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Владимир
Владимир@TayQuinnnn·
@solgabriel10 Quem vive de passado é museu, para com essa porra, eu tenho 24 anos e nunca vi o Brasil sequer passar das quartas, n tem como ficar se vangloriando de glórias passadas pra sempre
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@Ramon48390404 Eu já vi 2. E nos 40 anos de vida, foi a seleção mais vitoriosa que vi até hoje. Acorda pra vida, a história do futebol não se resume a insignificantes 28 anos.....
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Ramon
Ramon@Ramon48390404·
@solgabriel10 vai toma no seu cu gabriel, eu nunca vi o brasil eliminando uma seleção europeia em copa e eu já tenho 28 anos
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@Yilder_ome Podemos fazer os dois. A MAIOR SELEÇÃO DE TODOS OS TEMPOS. A MAIOR CAMPEÃ. A UNICA A PARTICIPAR DE TODAS AS COPAS. A SELEÇÃO QUE MAIS FEZ GOLS NA HISTÓRIA DAS COPAS. CHORA!!!
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Fabiansk
Fabiansk@Yilder_ome·
@solgabriel10 @nicoIodi Part of the reason you are shit now is this kind of reply, are you forgetting who you are ? You are Brazil, you cannot keep adoring old glory's while your present is a disgrace. Time to work hard for your present and future if you don't want to be an Uruguay
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Raphael Machado
Raphael Machado@camaradamachado·
"Maior rival do Brasil no futebol são os argentinos" Enquanto isso, no mundo real, toma mais uma eliminação nas mãos de seleção europeia:
Raphael Machado tweet media
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Jesucristo García
Jesucristo García@IamJesucristo·
Cuartos que me imagino: 🇵🇹 Portugal 🆚 🇺🇸 EEUU 🇦🇷 Argentina 🆚 🇨🇴 Colombia 🇲🇦 Marruecos 🆚 🇫🇷 Francia 🇧🇷 Brasil 🆚 🇲🇽 México ¿Con cuál no estás de acuerdo?
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Jesucristo García
Jesucristo García@IamJesucristo·
Mis 8 pronósticos para los Octavos del Mundial 2026. Habrá sorpresas. Me la juego. 🇵🇹 Portugal elimina a 🇪🇸 España 🇲🇽 México elimina a 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Inglaterra 🇦🇷 Argentina elimina a 🇪🇬 Egipto 🇨🇴 Colombia elimina a 🇨🇭 Suiza ↓↓↓
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@folha São ignorantes assim por causa da imprensa que os deixa alienados à realidade.....
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
On Lebanon. · Hezbollah will keep rejecting the deal loudly while quietly giving up on the ground. · The Lebanese army takes over the south gradually, moving into space as Hezbollah fades or quietly integrates rather than fighting it for control. · No civil war. The threat of one gets used as leverage and then walked back. Aoun will successfully manage Lebanon's transition. · Hezbollah ends up as a political party that has lost its veto over the state, not as an armed force. · A rival Shia movement grows around jobs, services, and reconstruction, eating into Hezbollah's base. · Israel pulls out of the 2 agreed areas, then stalls on the rest and points to incomplete disarmament as the reason. · The buffer zone settles into a semi-permanent presence, and the gas waters off the coast are the real reason Israel never fully leaves. TPS leverage. · Gulf states pay for most of the rebuild and buy lasting influence over Lebanese politics by doing it. · The currency finds a floor and the economy will stabilize, but recovery runs over years, not months. · Aoun holds his position despite the treason accusations and gains standing with Washington and the Gulf. · Low-level Israeli strikes continue, framed as enforcement, without tipping back into open war. · Iran stays out of Lebanon and does not re-arm Hezbollah, holding to the June deal. · Iran keeps the Strait of Hormuz as a pressure tool, with occasional incidents but no closure that holds. · The US keeps the deal alive with limited, calibrated strikes on Iran rather than a return to full war. · Saudi normalization with Israel stays blocked until there is a credible path to a Palestinian state. I said almost all of this 18 months ago. All remains unchanged.
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@juliovschneider Assista aos melhores momentos do amistoso com a França e me diga depois se temos chances ou não.....
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Julio Schneider 🇧🇷🇺🇸
Julio Schneider 🇧🇷🇺🇸@juliovschneider·
Sem paixão, responda sinceramente: Se a final da Copa for Brasil x França… o Brasil tem time para vencer?
Julio Schneider 🇧🇷🇺🇸 tweet media
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
Across the rich western world, birth rates have collapsed below replacement. The political class has an answer ready, and it points outward. The foreigner is taking your country, your jobs, your future. When the reality is that the system failed the population to the extent that procreation unaffordable, unsustainable and outright undesirable. The system is sterilizing the Wests future. Housing was financialised into an asset class, so a home became a speculative instrument instead of a place to raise a family. Wages decoupled from productivity for two generations, so a single income no longer builds a household. Childcare, education and healthcare were turned into debt-loaded markets that price young couples out of a second child, then a first. None of this was done by migrants. It was done by capital optimising for yield, and by governments that protected asset prices over family formation. The result is a population that cannot reproduce itself because reproduction has been made economically irrational. The genius of blaming the outsider is that it sends anger sideways and downward, never upward. A worker furious at the immigrant next to him is a worker not asking why his rent doubled while his pay stalled. The demographic panic is not a defence of the nation. It is a narrative that shields the exact interests that hollowed it out. As long as the foreigner is the story, the financialization of housing and the suppression of wages continue completely unexamined, which deepens the precarity that suppresses birth rates in the first place. And this newfound racism only guarantees the collapse it claims to prevent. An ageing society has only two demographic inputs. It can produce more children or it can import more workers. Nativism attacks the second lever while doing absolutely nothing to repair the first. It removes the one input still functioning and offers nothing in its place. The maths is merciless. Fewer workers must support more retirees, pension and health systems strain, the tax base shrinks, and the economy that was supposed to be saved by exclusion instead starves. The same societies that demonize migrants are the ones whose labour markets, care sectors and innovation pipelines now depend on them. So you build a country that needs the outsider to function and hates the outsider on principle, a contradiction that cannot hold. When it breaks, the state does not turn outward. It turns inward. Surveillance expands, austerity bites, and the machinery of control built for the border gets pointed at citizens. The decline gets repackaged as renewal, and the people sold the lie keep voting for the thing that is eating them. Understand that this racism framing is the trap, not the truth. It is an identity construct that keeps the exploited fighting each other while the structure that drained them stays invisible. The honest question was never how to keep others out. It was why a wealthy civilisation made it impossible for its own people to afford the future. That’s the real question. The ones screaming about demographic doom are not protecting anyone. They are guarding the machine that caused it, and the louder the scapegoating gets, the faster the whole thing comes apart.
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
America losing the 'war' with Iran was the objective Trump had to achieve for his handlers. That was his assignment. And he achieved it. I know how that sounds. But that's the truth. The idea that America suddenly forgot how to win in bombing countries is a very moronic understanding of geopolitics, indicating those who think like this do not understand how power works. For eighty years the US has been the host that housed the most powerful private sector the world has ever seen. This private sector, established the dollar as the world's settlement system, it instituted the Treasury market as the vault where the planet stores its savings, it set up the Pentagon as the collection agency, and gave life to Wall Street as the engine that decides where money goes. The capital that was born out of this, was never loyal to America. It needed America while America was useful. That moment has passed. The factories are gone, the politics are frozen, the debt is a number no one expects to be paid back in anything that holds value, and the dollar's share of global reserves has been bleeding for twenty years, from around 71% at the turn of the century into the high 50s now, with gold and bilateral settlement absorbing what leaves. The replacement platforms; your Gulf capital, the Chinese settlement rails and the wider BRICS plumbing, are getting stronger on the exact measures where America rots. When that gap opens, capital does what it did when it left Amsterdam for London and London for New York. It writes the dead host down and moves to the next one, shifting its ownership across quietly and letting the old shell collapse in public. So the weakness you are watching is real. But it is also the plan. A tired hegemon is a sad story that helps no one. A hated hegemon is an asset, and the hatred gets harvested two ways. The first is migration. Every sanction, every tariff threat aimed at a supposed ally, every veto for Israel, every carrier group parked off a coast, teaches every government that leaning on the American system is a dead end. American coercion used to produce obedience. Now, it produces defection; pushing states into the alternative system the same capital networks already built and already control. America has become the recruiter for the order designed to bury it. The second is the alibi. When the host can no longer carry the weight, someone has to take the blame, and it cannot be the money that ran the whole thing. So the collapse gets a cover story the American public will buy, that the country was hijacked, betrayed, dragged into other people's wars by foreign cash and a rotten establishment. That story is already being built, and its sharpest version is the claim that Israel controls America, a line that points every angry citizen toward foreign corruption and away from the capital and the policy class that actually drew the plans. The hatred is the fuel for the exit. It has to be loaded before it can be burned. This is why America is spending its one irreplaceable asset in broad daylight, in Gaza, in Ukraine, in one confrontation after another. That asset was never the military. It was actually impunity, the power to break the rules and pay nothing, and it is being incinerated on camera in a way that does not regenerate. Understand that when it comes to America and the transnational private sector, the system wears two faces, like good cop bad cop. One is the brute, the one you are allowed to hate. The other is the reasonable partner who arrives after the brute has done his work, offering to help you rebuild on terms that look kind next to what just happened to you. Both serve the same owner, and the hatred aimed at the first is what makes the second look like salvation. America is the brute now, and the role is being fed to it on purpose, because its name is already ruined and there is nothing left to spend. The reasonable partner is the TPS in fresh clothes, working in the dark by design. It does not sanction you. It arrives as patient capital offering a settlement rail outside the dollar and a reconstruction check instead of an ultimatum. It is the IMF racket Washington ran for fifty years with the logo changed. We have watched this exact play before, run end to end, on the boogeyman the West built. Iran spent thirty years cast as eternally two weeks from a bomb, a label that was never about the bomb and always about the use, a villain whose existence justified the bases, the weapons sales, the grip on every nervous monarchy nearby. Iran did the destabilizing, ate the sanctions and the assassinations, and the arrangement quietly paid everyone holding a bet on it. Now the same role gets handed to the US. America does the coercion, takes the disgust, and stands cast as the one thing blocking a multipolar world everyone else claims to be building in good faith. That is also how every other state gets handled from here, and the loop has no honest way out. A government steps out of line, or just sits on something the money wants? Washington gets pointed at it: tariffs, sanctions, a recognition fight, a banking cutoff, a fleet. The pain and the fear shoves the target toward the alternative rails, which was the whole purpose. If the government refuses and defies Washington to its face, the trap shuts from the other side, through a currency attack and a managed crisis, and on the far side its best assets get bought up cheap by patient money on terms it could never have been forced to sign in calm weather. Obey and you are swallowed as a partner. Resist and you are swallowed as a fire sale. Both doors lead to the same room, and the brute exists to keep you walking through one of them. There is no army required for any of this. You do not invade an economy. You distress it, you close its options, and then you write the check. The wars are just the expensive, unsubtle version of a result that money buys at a discount. Global capital has every reason to move to the rising platform and none to defend a dying one. The capital still chained to American power, the defense base, the enforcement apparatus, has every reason to keep doing the brutal work that feeds it, right up to the end. Each plays its own hand. The hands land on an America that does the dirty work, eats the blame, and gets left behind. So before you call the man at the top stupid, ask who profits from him looking stupid. Trump is a FIC representative. Every move he makes, benefits private sector power when you're assuming he is meant to make America great again. He is expediting the hate for America, in preparation for the new multipolar order. And understand that America is no longer the enemy. It's the capital allocators that have exited the dead country and are housing themselves across the globe.
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
Trump says Israel wouldn't exist without him. He goes after Netanyahu in public. He floats the idea that maybe Syria should be the one to handle Hezbollah. He's reportedly unfreezing Iranian money and openings channels for a $300 billion investment. He says he has no interest in regime change in Tehran. And with half the internet insisting Israel owns Washington, despite Epstein files owning these leaders, Trump flatly declares Netanyahu will do whatever he asks. Netanyahu holds a defeatist speech, basically reinforcing Trump's power. Then you have this US-Iran war that gets written off everywhere as the most pointless war in living memory; a war that started, did almost nothing, and stopped. Nobody can hold all of that without it falling apart in their head. If all this looks like paradoxical chaos to you, it means you don't understand geopolitics or in the least, have been brainwashed to interpret reported events as the source of truth. If you've followed me long enough, you know my read and you know I've said all this before. Israel does not run American foreign policy. Israel is the most valuable asset American foreign policy holds, and there's a difference between an asset that's treasured and an asset that has turned into liability. When the principal decides to trade the asset, the asset can't stop him, and a sitting president is disciplining an Israeli prime minister on camera while that prime minister's expansion project becomes inconvenient. For thirty years the region ran on one bet. Iran would eventually lose. Iran played the boogeyman, forever two weeks from a bomb and never getting there, the permanent and defeat-able threat. That role paid everyone. It kept American forces, arms sales, and leverage in the region under the banner of containment. It gave the defense machine a procurement cycle with no end date. It gave Israel cover to run its expansion under an existential enemy. And it paid Iran, who got reach and Shia influence across Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, and a standing on the Arab street no Arab government could match. As long as everyone assumed Iran would eventually be beaten, the smart move was to keep the tension at exactly the right temperature and never let it boil. A controlled threat, not an existential one. The conflict was the product. Then Iran stopped digging its own grave. Tehran looked at the boogeyman role and decided it no longer paid, because the proxies that once kept Israel from finishing its work had become the ceiling on Iran's own future, the thing locking it out of the Gulf normalization track and the capital flows and the integrated order the Gulf and BRICS were building. So Iran started shedding the skin. Proxies phased down. Strikes on its own commanders absorbed with a calm that doesn't match a state fighting for survival. The moment Iran moved, everyone's math moved. The Gulf doesn't want a war, because it's mid-construction on an economic project a war would burn down, and a calm Iran inside the tent is worth more to Riyadh than a bombed Iran outside it. The transnational private sector doesn't want it either, because no version of a real US-Iran war avoids the Strait of Hormuz, an oil shock, a global recession, and a generational bill, and the people who allocate capital in Washington have no appetite to pay it. That left one player whose project still needed the old game running. Netanyahu's expansion faction, the one actor who still needed the existential enemy, because the enemy was the permission slip for everything else. So what was the point of the war? The war was a soft landing built to avoid the real one. A settlement like this normally dies in the room because nobody trusts anybody to move first. A managed crisis fixes that. Under the cover of a war nobody has to move first and nobody has to trust anybody, everybody moves at once, and the war becomes the enforcement no treaty could provide. Iran got to shed its proxies signaling compliance to opponents, while telling its base it was overwhelmed, not betrayed. Netanyahu got to claim he neutralized the threat while complying. The defense machine got its activity. The Gulf got the board cleared. Every player walked out of that pointless war with an unsolvable problem solved. Same with Syria, where everyone got the read backwards. Assad's fall didn't hand Syria to Israel. The mercenary tools that broke Syria in 2011 under American and Israeli handlers are now under Turkish and Gulf handlers, and the agenda flipped from fragmentation to consolidation. A unified Syria under Ankara and the Gulf is a wall against Israeli expansion, which is why Israel kept bombing a country it supposedly just won. When Trump says maybe Syria should handle Hezbollah, he's handing the cleanup to the new owner of the neighborhood. The cleanup guy changed. The $300 billion is predominantly Gulf money, and will be routed to Wall St players. A calm, integrated Iran isn't a security headache to the people who allocate capital. It's a market. Reconstruction, energy, a hundred million consumers, a new node in the trade architecture the Gulf is building. For thirty years war was the product. Now integration is the product, and the $300 billion is the TPS entry fee. None of this is paradoxical. Everything can be clearly mapped out if you choose to submerge your ego, deprogram what the West has taught you and your misunderstanding of who is in charge. Some have woken up. Most still haven't. I have been saying all this for almost 2 years on here. Go through my timeline. There is no paradox. Private sector power has decided to swap military-first foreign policy in the Middle East, to a policy of economic boom. For that to happen, de-militarization, de-nuclearization must be conducted across the region. This is coming. Like I've said this was coming for almost 2 years now. And once Middle East settles, in the way I have said it will, the next seismic shift is in Central Asia, the band of former Soviet republics wedged between Russia, China, and Iran. It will break into an open great-power contest somewhere 2-3 years from now. Again I am calling this early. And once again, hardly anyone outside a few mining desks and foreign-policy shops will see this coming.
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
If you truly understand geopolitics, the Musk - Jack Ma contrast is the best example of how different power structures treat two visionary entrepreneurs. One treats private scaling as the primary engine and subordinates everything else to it. The other treats private scaling as a conditional tool that must remain subordinate to centralized continuity. Two very distinct power architectures. In the US, capital allocators extract fees most efficiently when wealth concentrates upward. Large asset managers and index vehicles earn a percentage of assets under management; the bigger and more concentrated the pools, the higher and more stable the fee income with minimal marginal effort. This logic rewards actors who compound at the top; whether through technology platforms, defense-linked contracts, energy transitions, or satellite infrastructure, while treating broad citizen welfare as a secondary externality rather than a binding constraint. Subsidies, regulatory carve-outs, tax treatment, and procurement flows consistently align with the return profiles of these allocators. The US state does not function as an independent sovereign imposing requirements on society for welfare. Its a platform that clears obstacles for private sector power. When this produces extreme outcomes at the bottom; like record high homelessness, the system registers it as a local governance issue rather than a structural failure requiring reversal of the upward tilt. China operates under the opposite priority. The party-state apparatus retains decisive authority over capital direction, financial architecture, and information flows. China halted Ant Group because Ant was about to load the entire Chinese consumer-credit market onto its own balance sheet; systemic risk dressed up as innovation. Cutting it down wasn't jealousy. It was preventing uncontrolled private autonomy from threatening public affairs. The IPO was halted, the founder was sidelined, and the entity was restructured under tighter supervision. This was not punishment for success per se; it was enforcement of the rule that no private actor may grow large enough to constrain the state’s ability to direct resources toward its own continuity priorities. Visible street homelessness in major Chinese cities remains bare minimal because the state treats housing stability and public order as core legitimacy inputs. Containment, relocation, shelter provision, and suppression of visible disorder are executed as operational requirements, not optional welfare spending. The American pattern therefore produces trillion-scale personal fortunes for those whose activities feed the dominant extraction chains, alongside accelerating visible social costs that the system is structurally reluctant to internalize. The Chinese pattern clips individual compounding when it risks becoming an independent power center, while delivering tighter management of visible disorder. Both outcomes follow directly from which actor holds final authority. And it's not Elon or Jack. It's transnational private capital networks that migrate toward highest returns, or a state apparatus that will not permit private networks to outgrow its control layer.
Ken Cao-The China Crash Chronicle@KenCao_onChina

Ten years ago, Elon Musk and Jack Ma both looked like avatars of the future. Musk was building electric cars, rockets, satellites, and AI. Jack Ma was building Alibaba, the crown jewel of China’s internet economy. Fast forward a decade: Musk is worth $1.1 trillion. Jack Ma was forced into silence, Ant Group’s IPO was crushed, Alibaba lost its aura(its stock plunged by more than 60% since 2020), and China’s tech sector went from world-beating to politically domesticated. One entrepreneur was allowed to compound. The other was reminded who really owns the scoreboard. This is not just a story about two billionaires. It is a story about two systems. One system lets madmen build rockets to Mars. The other cuts down its most successful entrepreneur for flying too close to the sun. That is why Musk became the world’s first trillionaire. And Jack Ma became a warning label.

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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
Israel has ZERO autonomy, zero control, zero leverage, over this deal with Iran. Netanyahu is on Trumps side. The rest of Israel will watch this deal substantiate before their eyes and wonder what just happened. Just like the majority of the people trying to still understand all this. Go through my timeline. I explain everything. Go all the way back to start of last year. I’ve explained everything since then. Middle East has been placed on a new trajectory before Trump became president, and people still think WW3 is coming. This has been a major learning experience for me, as to how people are the architects of their own failure. You educate them explicitly at length, and they still voluntarily choose to be ignorant. Then they wonder why opportunities never come their way.
Paris Shillton τ,τ 🌍☮️🫛@ParisShillton_1

@EvanWritesOnX If Israel don’t play though, how is this sustainable? They’re not going to stop the expansionist doctrine.

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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@bbbrezenski Cadê a invasão ao Irã e a terceira guerra que vc tava boquejando há uns meses atrás? Kkkkkkkkkk Sua análise é muito fraca.....
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Bruno Brezenski
Bruno Brezenski@bbbrezenski·
ISRAEL ⛔️🇮🇱⛔️ ESTÁ SENDO ISOLADA Uma análise completa da situação do maior aliado dos EUA que está perdendo as possibilidades de se conectar com a região que mais se desenvolve no mundo porque não sabe fazer diplomacia e acha que pode conseguir tudo pela força. Vem comigo nessa analise contínua, nem cortes, deixei no fluxo contínuo mesmo. Duvidas, criticas, pontos de macumba, podem mandar nos comentários que eu respondo. Ofensa eu também respondo, principalmente de quem acha que me ofender sem apresentar argumento contra o que eu falei é dialogo. Gostou? Me ajude compartilhando para que consiga fazer mais vídeos assim. E pra quem quiser me ajudar no Apoia-se deixo meu pix: bbrezenski@hotmail.com Se monetização pagasse o custo não pediria ajuda, mas só quem fala de entretenimento consegue ser financiado pelas plataformas. Obrigado pelo apoio.
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Gabriel Lopes
Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@ArturoMcfields Idiota, todo o mundo depende da China....e o mérito disso são dos comunistas chineses que não seguiram o modelo neoliberal ocidental.
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Arturo McFields Yescas
Arturo McFields Yescas@ArturoMcfields·
Gobierno de Lula emitirá sus primeros «bonos panda» en yuanes. Brasil no se está diversificando; está aumentando su dependencia de China. El país ya vende a Beijin la mayor parte de su soja, petróleo y hierro, pero ahora se dispone a endeudarse en yuanes. Lula está vendiendo la soberanía de Brasil pedazo a pedazo.
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Gabriel Lopes@solgabriel10·
@Samuelsworld Tu ainda deu um jeito de passar pano para a privataria dos anos 90, que atrasa o país até hoje. Outra coisa, não existe "cartel de ditadores árabes", o petróleo Brent é cotado na bolsa de Londres e as petroleiras ocidentais têm um grande peso nisso.
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Truecaller
Truecaller@Samuelsworld·
🇧🇷🛢️💪🏼 Avoaaaaaa Brasil!!! Zema não vai ter nem 5% dos votos por querer privatizar a Petrobras, o castelo tá-tim-bum ainda não entendeu que a população não quer seguir os preços internacionais do cartel de ditadores Árabes. Nos anos 90 as privatizações foram necessárias para levantar dinheiro, quitar dívidas e ter caixa para lançar o plano Real. Além de não ter funcionário públicos competentes o suficiente para todas estatais da época e também não tinha dinheiro para investimentos. Hoje a situação é totalmente diferente e enquanto todos países do mundo buscam independência energética, tem idiota no Brasil que quer abrir mão da soberania logística e de controle da inflação.
Folha de S.Paulo@folha

Produção de petróleo do Brasil bate recorde pelo terceiro mês consecutivo em abril www1.folha.uol.com.br/mercado/2026/0…

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Rogerio Anitablian 🇧🇷🇦🇲 🇫🇷🇪🇺
Editorial É difícil entender. O cidadão corretamente condena a invasão covarde da Ucrânia pela Rússia, mas se recusa a enxergar que Bolsonaro sempre orbitou o mesmo ecossistema político, ideológico e geopolítico do putinismo. O bolsonarismo vive de culto à força, desprezo institucional, propaganda emocional, paranoia ideológica e proteção de oligarquias travestidas de “patriotismo”. Falam em soberania enquanto se ajoelham para interesses estrangeiros, bilionários apátridas e redes internacionais de extrema-direita. Vendem patriotismo com múltiplos passaportes no bolso e patrimônio fora do país. A lógica é a mesma: poder acima da democracia, propaganda acima da verdade, fanatismo acima do interesse nacional. A ideologia cega tanto que muita gente consegue enxergar a barbaridade do Kremlin na Ucrânia, mas não percebe a afinidade estrutural entre o putinismo e o bolsonarismo.
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