This post can also be read in Portuguese
Hello friends, how are you? For those who are actually outside the bubble, you know very well that we are currently living in very difficult times and I'm not going to dwell too much on politics here, especially because I believe that I don't need to take a position so that you can agree with almost everything I'm going to say here. . It's not new that Brazil is no longer the country of football, much less the country of joy, of Carnival that many people from abroad like to say. Today we are better known as a place where corruption reigns and where “freedom of expression is for me, but for you it is censorship”. Thanks to the [internet](), today we are able to have more access to [decentralized and distributed information]() and therefore, it becomes easier to unmask any “fake news” that traditional media may present. Generally on X for example, news travels much faster than any press. But when it comes to Brazil, the laws often don't apply to everyone equally, unfortunately... I don't know what it's like in your country, but know that a person who steals food doesn't have the same weight. ” with someone who has a luxury car and runs over a pedestrian. Maybe it becomes even easier to say who could escape from prison first. Here is the country of impunity, it seems that Brazilians are “induced” from a young age to have a “Brazilian way”. I once used this expression here and Task didn't understand it. Perhaps the translation distorted how it actually means. This very common term here, depending on its context and also depending on the person, can mean that someone can use [creativity, corruption or also breaking social norms](). The “Brazilian way” is basically that.
## Uruguayans terrorize in [Rio de Janeiro]()

Hello friends, how are you? For those who are actually outside the bubble, you know very well that we are currently living in very difficult times and I'm not going to dwell too much on politics here, especially because I believe that I don't need to take a position so that you can agree with almost everything I'm going to say here. . It's not new that Brazil is no longer the country of football, much less the country of joy, of Carnival that many people from abroad like to say. Today we are better known as a place where corruption reigns and where “freedom of expression is for me, but for you it is censorship”. Thanks to the [internet](), today we are able to have more access to [decentralized and distributed information]() and therefore, it becomes easier to unmask any “fake news” that traditional media may present. Generally on X for example, news travels much faster than any press. But when it comes to Brazil, the laws often don't apply to everyone equally, unfortunately... I don't know what it's like in your country, but know that a person who steals food doesn't have the same weight. ” with someone who has a luxury car and runs over a pedestrian. Maybe it becomes even easier to say who could escape from prison first. Here is the country of impunity, it seems that Brazilians are “induced” from a young age to have a “Brazilian way”. I once used this expression here and Task didn't understand it. Perhaps the translation distorted how it actually means. This very common term here, depending on its context and also depending on the person, can mean that someone can use [creativity, corruption or also breaking social norms](). The “Brazilian way” is basically that.
## Uruguayans terrorize in [Rio de Janeiro]()
