
Donald Trump's foreign policy
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Trump has never hidden the fact that his views on foreign policy were openly chauvinistic, but unlike both the Democrats and the neocons, geared towards protectionism and isolationism.
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Trump has never hidden the fact that his views on foreign policy were openly chauvinistic, but unlike both the Democrats and the neocons, geared towards protectionism and isolationism.
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The swift and stunning defeat of Bashar al-Assad's regime indicates more of a kind of internal implosion than a military defeat
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The election proved that 2022 had, in fact, been an exception. Lula only won because he was Lula and because Jair Bolsonaro had committed many atrocities in the middle of the pandemic
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Boulos has and will continue to have immense difficulties in his campaign due to the way it has been conducted. If the political line does not change, the risk of not winning is real.
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: In a somewhat dogmatic and brutal way: there is no politics in Brazil. Or rather: there is only the politics of capitalo-parliamentarism, therefore no politics
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Capitalo-parliamentarism is not a mere state structure, but a hegemonic subjectivity since the mid-80s
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Alain Badiou's vision of love does not aim to reinforce any belief in monogamy, much less in the traditional family or other normative regime of romantic arrangement
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Commentary on the left-wing militant who combined political experience and deep intellectual knowledge
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The ambiguity of the Slovenian intellectual in the face of the war in Ukraine
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The three trends that define current geopolitics and the place of the Lula government
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
Considerations based on controversies between members of the PCB and the PC do B
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
Irrational conflict between peoples or struggle for justice?
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: No religion, in itself, is inherently fascist, despite often serving as fuel for reactionism
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
What bothers Caetano's interview is that the liberal consensus was questioned and now there are socialists who don't just have a relationship of denial and hatred of their own history
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Trump has never hidden the fact that his views on foreign policy were openly chauvinistic, but unlike both the Democrats and the neocons, geared towards protectionism and isolationism.
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The swift and stunning defeat of Bashar al-Assad's regime indicates more of a kind of internal implosion than a military defeat
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The election proved that 2022 had, in fact, been an exception. Lula only won because he was Lula and because Jair Bolsonaro had committed many atrocities in the middle of the pandemic
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Boulos has and will continue to have immense difficulties in his campaign due to the way it has been conducted. If the political line does not change, the risk of not winning is real.
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: In a somewhat dogmatic and brutal way: there is no politics in Brazil. Or rather: there is only the politics of capitalo-parliamentarism, therefore no politics
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Capitalo-parliamentarism is not a mere state structure, but a hegemonic subjectivity since the mid-80s
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Alain Badiou's vision of love does not aim to reinforce any belief in monogamy, much less in the traditional family or other normative regime of romantic arrangement
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: Commentary on the left-wing militant who combined political experience and deep intellectual knowledge
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The ambiguity of the Slovenian intellectual in the face of the war in Ukraine
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: The three trends that define current geopolitics and the place of the Lula government
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
Considerations based on controversies between members of the PCB and the PC do B
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
Irrational conflict between peoples or struggle for justice?
By DIOGO FAGUNDES: No religion, in itself, is inherently fascist, despite often serving as fuel for reactionism
By DIOGO FAGUNDES:
What bothers Caetano's interview is that the liberal consensus was questioned and now there are socialists who don't just have a relationship of denial and hatred of their own history