
Who offends the ranks
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Those who offend the Brazilian military corporations are their commanders
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Those who offend the Brazilian military corporations are their commanders
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Russophobia has become a necessity for the dying world order
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Thirteen questions about the war in Europe
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Any country project should know what to do with the Armed Forces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Antônio Barra Torres, the new hero of the democrats, was part of the consortium that threw the country into the mud
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Since the last dictatorship, political representation has been intimidated by the military
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Pazuello and his colonels-companions went to fulfill a mission assigned by a superior hierarchy in the Ministry of Health
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO & ROBERTO AMARAL: Out with Bolsonaro is a rallying cry for a growing social malaise
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Bolsonaro is guided by the desire to destroy what has been built over more than a century in universities
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Party acronyms and electoral rules are instruments for the exercise of a façade democratic system, erected to deny the principle of popular sovereignty
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The sudden occupation of key positions in the federal public administration by military personnel is no longer a disaster in the making. It has become a tragedy with fatal victims.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: More than nostalgic for the Cold War, Brazil's Law and Order guarantors are truly fixated on colonial times
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Fascism is taking over all spaces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The sending of Paulo Mendes da Rocha's collection to Europe at this moment is a flagrant of the ongoing process of suffocation of Brazilian memory
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: A nation is a complex community, formed by numerous, differentiated social segments that are always in conflict with each other.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Brazil needs respected Armed Forces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The immediate future of the country depends on the robed and the uniformed
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The manipulation of statistical data on the pandemic by General Eduardo Pazuello, still in active service in the Army, feeds the arguments of those who believe that we are already under a dictatorial regime.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Two ministers-general grotesquely manipulated statistics to please their boss and downplay the devastation of the pandemic. Where did you see the military getting in the way of scientists and doctors who are working hard to protect the people?
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Those who offend the Brazilian military corporations are their commanders
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Russophobia has become a necessity for the dying world order
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Thirteen questions about the war in Europe
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Any country project should know what to do with the Armed Forces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Antônio Barra Torres, the new hero of the democrats, was part of the consortium that threw the country into the mud
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Since the last dictatorship, political representation has been intimidated by the military
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO:
Pazuello and his colonels-companions went to fulfill a mission assigned by a superior hierarchy in the Ministry of Health
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO & ROBERTO AMARAL: Out with Bolsonaro is a rallying cry for a growing social malaise
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Bolsonaro is guided by the desire to destroy what has been built over more than a century in universities
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Party acronyms and electoral rules are instruments for the exercise of a façade democratic system, erected to deny the principle of popular sovereignty
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The sudden occupation of key positions in the federal public administration by military personnel is no longer a disaster in the making. It has become a tragedy with fatal victims.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: More than nostalgic for the Cold War, Brazil's Law and Order guarantors are truly fixated on colonial times
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Fascism is taking over all spaces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The sending of Paulo Mendes da Rocha's collection to Europe at this moment is a flagrant of the ongoing process of suffocation of Brazilian memory
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: A nation is a complex community, formed by numerous, differentiated social segments that are always in conflict with each other.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Brazil needs respected Armed Forces
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The immediate future of the country depends on the robed and the uniformed
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: The manipulation of statistical data on the pandemic by General Eduardo Pazuello, still in active service in the Army, feeds the arguments of those who believe that we are already under a dictatorial regime.
By MANUEL DOMINGOS NETO: Two ministers-general grotesquely manipulated statistics to please their boss and downplay the devastation of the pandemic. Where did you see the military getting in the way of scientists and doctors who are working hard to protect the people?