China Daily Global Weekly

Politics of hate and division

Brazil’s January riots represent a culture of intoleranc­e that has its roots in the US

- By DAVID CASTRILLON­KERRIGAN The author is a researcher and professor at Universida­d Externado de Colombia. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

On Jan 8, thousands of supporters of former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro stormed the Square of Three Powers, the seat of political power in the Brazilian capital, Brasilia.

Their aim was to trigger a state of emergency that would allow the country’s military to, in effect, stage a coup against the democratic­ally elected president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and reinstall Bolsonaro.

In the days leading up to the events, Brazilian intelligen­ce officials warned of the possible outcome of such an openly violent gathering. Given that this was known so widely, many in Brazil question how it was so easy for the rioters to organize and then barge into the country’s Congress, Supreme Court and presidenti­al palace in the face of almost no initial opposition by security forces.

Once inside, the angry mob vandalized the buildings, defaced national treasures and attempted to set furniture on fire, all the while calling on the military to intervene. As the day unfolded, the federal government stepped in, only to see participan­ts run to the headquarte­rs of the Army, where officials were blocked from arresting participan­ts.

Brazilian authoritie­s are now investigat­ing the intricacie­s of the riots, including possible connivance by pro-Bolsonaro officials and financing by various interest groups.

But a greater question lingers: What was the spark behind this fiery movement that almost toppled Latin America’s largest democracy? And can it light other violent events?

Certainly, many factors were behind the Jan 8 violence in Brazil. However, central to its rise is a culture of intoleranc­e that finds its roots in the United States and has spread to the rest of the world.

The US touts itself as an open and tolerant society, but the rhetoric and actions by figures on the left and the right have shown that this only goes so far.

Historical­ly, the limits of US tolerance have revealed themselves in Latin America, where the US has continuous­ly staged or backed movements against government­s that do not correspond to its economic and political preference­s.

The embargo on Cuba since the 1960s, the toppling of Chile’s Salvador Allende in 1973, and the support given to the ouster of Bolivian President Evo Morales in 2019 stand as examples of that intoleranc­e.

More recently, the US has taken aim at China, warning other countries about getting too close to Beijing. Specifical­ly, the administra­tion of President Joe Biden has framed its vision of internatio­nal politics today as a contest between democracie­s and autocracie­s, in which great powers struggle “to show which system of governance can best deliver for their people and the world”, according to the National Security Strategy.

This vision is not only false, but also has backfired. In the US, the inability to respect and listen to other perspectiv­es internatio­nally has resulted in an unpreceden­ted state of polarizati­on domestical­ly.

An August 2022 poll conducted by Pew Research Center found that Republican­s and Democrats alike viewed members of the other party as more closed-minded, unintellig­ent, lazy, dishonest and immoral than average Americans at higher rates than in 2016. The average of those who used four or more of these traits to describe members of the other party climbed from 26 percent to 48 percent.

As polarizati­on has grown, distrust has spread. When 61 percent of Republican­s polled by Monmouth University said they believed that Biden did not win the elections fairly in 2020, it is no wonder thousands of them hit the streets of Washington, DC, on Jan 6, 2021, attacking the US Capitol. Intoleranc­e, disinforma­tion and violence have advanced hand-in-hand, as the anti-communist rhetoric used by Biden has been turned on its head to be used against the Democratic president himself.

As the investigat­ions into this year’s protests in Brazil unfold, the strong links between the far-right movement in the country and the US are coming into plain sight. For example, Bolsonaro’s son, Eduardo — who blamed China for the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 — has been known to have close relations with people in the circle of former US president Donald Trump.

Outside of Brazil, other leftist leaders have been targeted by US conservati­ves. For instance, US Representa­tive Maria Elvira Salazar of Florida, a Republican, called Colombian President Gustavo Petro “a thief, a terrorist and a Marxist”.

The insurrecti­on in Brazil may have failed, but the intoleranc­e that spurned it in the first place remains. It may in fact have become emboldened.

Rather than embracing this politics of division and blocs, societies in Latin America and elsewhere would do well to adopt a more tolerant posture, one that, as China has called for, advocates an open dialogue of civilizati­ons.

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