
The unpredictable and unbearable Boris Johnson
By Flávio Aguiar*
In Brexit, the past won, defeating the future. There, fears of immigration seen as uncontrolled came together with the nostalgic feeling of an empire that no longer exists.
By Flávio Aguiar*
In Brexit, the past won, defeating the future. There, fears of immigration seen as uncontrolled came together with the nostalgic feeling of an empire that no longer exists.
Gilson Schwartz
The United Kingdom is once again called upon to be the stage for the recurring challenge of being avant-garde and having eyes and minds focused on the almost unbearable memory of its own human, white, sexist and imperial past.
By Ricardo Gebrim
No leftist current or organization can avoid a profound assessment of the process that led us to the coup and our strategic limits, producing the necessary self-criticism
By Flávio Aguiar*
In Brexit, the past won, defeating the future. There, fears of immigration seen as uncontrolled came together with the nostalgic feeling of an empire that no longer exists.
Gilson Schwartz
The United Kingdom is once again called upon to be the stage for the recurring challenge of being avant-garde and having eyes and minds focused on the almost unbearable memory of its own human, white, sexist and imperial past.
By Ricardo Gebrim
No leftist current or organization can avoid a profound assessment of the process that led us to the coup and our strategic limits, producing the necessary self-criticism