To build a better Brazil
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Every public policy must be monitored to verify the good allocation of resources
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Every public policy must be monitored to verify the good allocation of resources
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: The European Zionist movement was soon associated with the colonization of Palestine, therefore considered by critics to be a colonialist or racist movement
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: The meritocratic discourse that states that the super-rich as a rule are rich because they have more merits is false
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Rich countries, during their development phase, taxed the export of primary and semi-processed or industrialized products
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: In the Brazilian tax system, the poorer you are, the more tax you pay; the richer, the less tax you pay
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Without needing authorization, the BC will spend approximately 740 billion this year just on interest payments for a handful of ultra-rich
By JÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Cryptocurrencies have virtually no regulation, why?
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS & ARTHUR HARDER REIS:
The exploitation of mineral resources in Brazil has been an instrument of abusive accumulation of capital, leading to tragedies such as that of Vale in Brumadinho
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Corruption as the biggest problem in Brazil is one of the many myths of the fiscal context that circulate freely and strongly in the imagination of a large part of the Brazilian population.
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Holes, pollution, public debt, poverty, high concentration of income and wealth, millions of poor people and a very few ultra-rich
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Every public policy must be monitored to verify the good allocation of resources
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: The European Zionist movement was soon associated with the colonization of Palestine, therefore considered by critics to be a colonialist or racist movement
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: The meritocratic discourse that states that the super-rich as a rule are rich because they have more merits is false
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Rich countries, during their development phase, taxed the export of primary and semi-processed or industrialized products
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: In the Brazilian tax system, the poorer you are, the more tax you pay; the richer, the less tax you pay
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS: Without needing authorization, the BC will spend approximately 740 billion this year just on interest payments for a handful of ultra-rich
By JÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Cryptocurrencies have virtually no regulation, why?
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS & ARTHUR HARDER REIS:
The exploitation of mineral resources in Brazil has been an instrument of abusive accumulation of capital, leading to tragedies such as that of Vale in Brumadinho
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Corruption as the biggest problem in Brazil is one of the many myths of the fiscal context that circulate freely and strongly in the imagination of a large part of the Brazilian population.
By JOÃO CARLOS LOEBENS:
Holes, pollution, public debt, poverty, high concentration of income and wealth, millions of poor people and a very few ultra-rich