Luiz Inácio da Silva was born in Garanhuns, state of Pernambuco, on October 27, 1945, the seventh of eight children of the illiterate peasant couple formed by Arístides Inácio da Silva and Eurídice Ferreira de Melo (Dona Lindu). The mother and children, fleeing from misery, moved to Guarujá in 1952 and later to Santos, the port agglomeration of São Paulo. The couple separated in 1956.

From trade unionism to politics

Luiz Inácio, nicknamed Lula by his relatives, combined elementary school with work as a shoeshine boy, street vendor and errand boy. He followed a course at the National Industry Service, for professional training, and specialized as a mechanical lathe operator in 1963. He worked in several metallurgical companies and lost the little finger of his left hand in a work accident in 1964, the year in which the military dictatorship was installed.

In 1966 he was hired by Industrias Villares, in São Bernardo do Campo, where he was initiated into trade unionism by his brother José (Frei Chico), a communist militant, arrested and tortured by the military. In 1972 he was elected secretary of the local metallurgical union, which he went on to preside three years later, and became the leader of 90,000 workers in the country's most important industrial zone.

Lula was the main promoter of the large strikes and demonstrations that weakened the power of the dictatorship and hastened its fall. On February 10, 1980, under the protection of the amnesty and the timid opening, he founded in São Paulo the Workers' Party (PT), of socialist orientation, with the support of trade unions and several intellectuals, clergymen and professors.

In April of the same year, he led a forty-one-day strike, harshly repressed, in which almost 300,000 São Paulo workers participated and which earned him a month's arrest. Charged with public disorder, a court martial sentenced him to three years and six months in prison, but the sentence was overturned on appeal. On August 26, 1983, several São Paulo unions merged into the Central Única de Trabalhadores (CUT), linked to the PT.

Once democracy was restored, in the constituent elections of November 15, 1986, the PT was the leading force of the left, with 6.9% of the votes and 16 deputies, Lula among them, who strongly defended some of the demands of the CUT: the right to strike, reduction of the working day, partially paid vacations and wage revisions according to the cost of living.

New leader of the left

In the second round of the first direct presidential elections, on December 17, 1989, the populist Fernando Collor de Mello, defeated Lula, but the latter obtained 47% of the votes. For the first time in Brazil, a workers' leader presented an alternative program of rupture with the system.

At the initiative of Fidel Castro, for whom he maintains an unwavering admiration, Lula convened in 1990 the First Meeting of Left Parties and Organizations of Latin America and the Caribbean, known as the São Paulo Forum, pacifist and anti-globalization, which brought together more than sixty parties and guerrilla organizations from twenty-two countries.

During the course of the first national congress of the PT (December 1, 1991), re-elected president, he advocated an ideological revision in the name of moderation, which implied the renunciation of armed struggle. The PT was defined as a "socialist party" which rejects both liberal capitalism and Soviet socialism, but also social democracy. Lula compared it to a tree with a socialist trunk whose branches were flexible enough to include diverse currents, from Trotskyists to ecologists and liberation theologians.

Consecrated as the leader of the new left, having overcome the inconveniences of the splits of the more radical groups, the PT led the popular campaign and mobilizations against corruption that precipitated the trial and infamous resignation of President Collor de Mello in December 1992.

He returned to compete for the third time in the presidential elections of October 1998, in which he reached the second round and was defeated with 31.7% of the votes, although he was the most voted candidate in ten capitals -São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Bahia among them-, and the PT maintained its ascendancy with the conquest of three states.

Ideological shift

The strategic shift occurred at the beginning of the electoral campaign at the end of 2001, when Lula's advisors adopted a less radical vision of political combat and turned the labor leader into a professional politician. Under the direction of Duda Mendonça, a political marketing guru in charge of the electoral campaign, the PT president underwent a true metamorphosis in his appearance, eliminated from his program any reference to socialism and allied himself with the textile magnate José Alencar, of the Liberal Party, designated candidate for the vice-presidency. The advisors imposed an unprecedented image of the candidate, less sullen, with suit and tie, affectionate father and husband, who did not disdain populist manifestations.

Lula pledged to respect the agreement between the Cardoso government and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a "transition pact" that obliged him to maintain budgetary austerity in exchange for international loans that guaranteed financial stability.

With this decision culminated the ideological evolution of a genuinely working class leader beset by the contingencies of political pragmatism, who went from preaching "the rupture with the capitalist system" to bowing to the demands of the financial markets, despite the protests of the most radical PT militants.

President of Brazil

Lula da Silva was elected President of the Republic in the second round of elections on October 27, with more than 50 million votes (61.27%), becoming the most voted candidate in the history of Brazil. The victory of the candidate of the poor, who in the first round, on October 6, had obtained 46.44% of the votes, was a milestone in Latin America, since it was the first time that the radical left came to power through the ballot box. Lula took office on January 1, 2003.

Although Lula's electoral momentum made the PT the leading party in both Houses of Congress, the new president could only count on the support of 180 of the 513 deputies and 30 of the 81 senators, which forced him to a permanent negotiation to push through his projects, as required by a presidential coalition regime.

During his administration, Lula opposed maintaining an economic model similar to that of his predecessor Fernando Henrique Cardoso. In practice, however, the country has continued on a path based on very similar fundamental principles. Policy on interest rates, tax burdens, fiscal responsibility, the government's relationship with the Central Bank and its relationship with the International Monetary Fund followed essentially the same course.

After his second presidency, on March 4, 2016, Lula was arrested and his house was raided in the case that has been investigating Petrobras for corruption for several months. According to his detractors, Lula allegedly received US$ 8 million in payments for lectures, trips and gifts. eventually, on July 3, 2019, the Brazilian courts unanimously declared Lula innocent in one of the ten cases brought against him (the "purchase of silence of the former Petrobras director).

This month Lula launched his candidacy for the next brazilian presidential election.

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  • 1000mH [she/her, they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    Slowly but surely learning Mandarin for no real reason other than it's neat.

    If I ever get to the point that I'm able to sorta-read Chinese news I'll be a happy cat.

    • Cherufe [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Doing things because they are neat is cool and good

    • Nagarjuna [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      If you learn simplified Chinese, you'll be able to read mandarin, taiwanese, and cantonese. If you also learn japanese particles, you'll also be able to read Japanese.

    • soy_disantra [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      I really wish I payed more attention when I took mandarin in school, literally took 6 years of it and I don't remember anything. :deng-stoned: tho in my defense it's hard as fuck to learn when you're coming from only knowing english.

  • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    I see they hired a black man to play the Doctor in Dr Who. a lot of very very normal people are going to have a normal ass reaction to this. :frothingfash: YOU CAN'T HAVE A BLACK MAN PLAY THE SHAPE SHIFTING ALIEN WITH 2 HEARTS, THAT'S JUST NOT HOW IT WORKS

    • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      I stopped watching that shit when I was like 16, but I saw how people reacted when they gave the role to a white woman, so you already know what this is gonna be like

      • CTHlurker [he/him]
        ·
        3 years ago

        Haven't paid much attention, is this actually getting traction? Because some times it feels like libs will make these performative gestures (writing articles about how progressive the show has gotten for casting a poc/woman/literally anything non-white-cishet), and in the same vein decry the bigots who complain about it. Then the reaction by the bigots is either extremely mild or limited to a few chud spaces making a ruckus for like an hour.

    • anaesidemus [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      I saw some people get upset when they cast an "ugly old guy" in Peter Capaldi, so casting a woman and now a black guy!? is probably too much for some.

    • BillyBat [comrade/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      I still watch. The fans were absolutely horrible to Jodie Whittaker for must of her run. Slowly the blame is being shifted to the head writer of the series Chris Chibnall where it belongs honestly. He's not a guy you want in charge of the writing, and he wasted her pretty much. For the most part I've seen fans that are pretty welcoming of the change. I haven't seen or heard anything that bad. I also think Jodie's hire pretty much pissed off all the chuds anyway, so anybody who's still a fan wouldn't care about what kind of actor they hire to play the doctor.

  • Boxy_Brown [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    Man, the :chomsky-yes-honey: emote is gonna be alot more bittersweet after the man himself is actually gone...

    I feel like part of the humor of it is knowing that he is still kicking despite it all.

    • vertexarray [any]
      ·
      3 years ago

      I still don't understand original sin. Didn't Christ die for our sins? Can't we do infinite sins?

      • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
        ·
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        I thought it went like, Christ cleansed us of original sin which is what makes it so people can actually make it into heaven, as long as they are baptised or whatever and all the other crap, but our own personal sins still matter to wether we get put in hell or purgatory first.

        Although it might differ from all of the different sects of christianity.

        Edit: Ok yeah did a little googling and Jesus getting crucified for our sins apparently is mainly considered to have basically reopened the bridge between us and god, which is what allows people to go to heaven at all. Everyone who died before Jesus seems to basically have gone to hell or limbo, where they waited until the time between jesus dying and resurrecting for jesus to come down and grant them passage to heaven.

        But original sin still has to be cleansed through baptism it seems like, if you believe in original sin at all, cause some sects say that original sin was never handed down but just the flawed nature that brings people to sin, and some sects also say that original sin cant ever be cleansed and you just have to do your best and hope that god saves you.

        Theres also the problem of babies dying before baptism, which technically should put them in limbo or hell, but that kinda sucks shit so it seems like its either kinda handwaved as "The lord will surely in his mercy save them" or explicitly said like, "You cant bear original sin before you're like 8".

        • vertexarray [any]
          ·
          3 years ago

          I guess "christ died for some and/or part of your sins" is worse ad copy. I get hung up on the nonspecificity of the short version.

          • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
            ·
            3 years ago

            Yeah, I mean the concept of original sin is not even explicitly in the bible but extrapolated from various interpretations and later writings, plus with all of the different things various sects of christianity believe its probably easiest to just blanket go "Yeah uh he died for your sins basically" and have it be pretty much generically correct.

  • AvgMarighellaEnjoyer [he/him,any]
    ·
    3 years ago

    just want to comment that Lula has not been declared innocent, the Supreme Court just declared a mistrial. a new judge will be assigned and there will be a retrial.
    also, don't have any illusions with Lula. he's barely a social democrat, partially because of how the bourgeois political system operates in Brazil and partially because of the numerous concessions he's made in the name of 'pragmatism'. don't get me wrong: in terms of bourgeois politics he is incredible and if it weren't for him and the Worker's Party Brazil would probably be in worse shape given that the radical left was in deep crisis in Brazil after the fall of the Soviet Union. still, Bolsonaro (as a political heavyweight) was partially born out of the unwillingness of the Worker's Party to recognize class struggle and see reality as it is.

    if anyone has any questions regarding Lula or Brazil i'd be happy to answer them to the best of my abilities.

    • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      too many western leftists see below the bare minimum of not being fully a fascist neo lib as this huge amazing thing. when the failures of these social democrats on the electoral left are part of why the right is so able to canvas, they're the only ones offering change as a weak willed left is too scared to challenge the status quo

  • Diogenes_Barrel [love/loves]
    ·
    3 years ago

    i swear to fucking god anti-bullying foundations have got to be the purest example of nonprofit grifting

    has anyone seen them do a single material thing besides put up posters and shaking down passerby for donations?

  • layla
    ·
    3 years ago

    I think I'm a third worldist. Not because I actually know that that is, but because every time I really fuck with what somebody is saying, it turns out that they're a third worldist.

      • layla
        ·
        3 years ago

        Why can't you be a third worldist if you live in the first world?

        • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
          ·
          3 years ago

          it's not of a case of you can't, it's a case of I don't think it's fair to just go full doomer and basically say the third world has to bring socialism to us through defeating our governments and our system for us. as Lenin said, the greatest thing you can do for international socialism is to fight your own nationl bourgeoisie at home

          • layla
            ·
            3 years ago

            I'm going to be a third worldist but still try to defeat the capitalists here because I have nothing better to do

            • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
              ·
              3 years ago

              that's just a matter of perspective then. to me, an ideology is an active thing you do, not a label you wear, and that's why I don't think I can be a first world third worldist

              • layla
                ·
                3 years ago

                I agree with you on an ideology (or labels generally for the most part) being an active thing you do, which makes this hard to reconcile. My sympathy to third worldism isn't just laziness or doomerism though, I will absolutely do what I can here, but anti-imperialism is basically all I care about and the only ones I see give it the primacy I give it are first world third worldists

                It is complicated in my case because I have strong ties to the third world, even though I don't live there anymore

                • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
                  ·
                  3 years ago

                  I don't think just being an anti imperialist makes you a third worldist. it's a whole system of analysis of economic relations and a theory on how to shift those toward an ultimate end

                  • layla
                    ·
                    3 years ago

                    Right, and to go back to my original comment, I don't really know what third woridlism is, so I'm not actually going to use that label. It's just a trend I've noticed. For now, I'll stick with ML/MLM

                    • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
                      ·
                      3 years ago

                      so MLM is the shining path thing, what you mean is ML-MZT Marxism Leninism Mao Zedong Thought. unless you think Gonzalo was based

                      • layla
                        ·
                        3 years ago

                        Lmao yeah, that's it, do they go by "Maoists" as well? Think Breht from RevLeft said that. No I'm not pro boiling babies

                        • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
                          ·
                          3 years ago

                          MLMs have tried to claim the legacy of Maoism since Deng, they claim China took a revisionist turn and so they need to take up the mantle to further Marxism and Mao's ideas with a higher stage of Marxist analysis. and hey- they never boiled babes, they just threw boiling water at babies. boiling babies is revisionism

          • Ideology [she/her]
            ·
            3 years ago

            I don’t think it’s fair to just go full doomer and basically say the third world has to bring socialism to us through defeating our governments and our system for us.

            I agree, but holy shit if libs don't make it tempting.

              • Ideology [she/her]
                ·
                edit-2
                3 years ago

                Oh definitely. I agree with your stance most days. But on bad days, for me, it feels like talking to "normal" people is: :wall-talk:

          • layla
            ·
            3 years ago

            Okay, and which books should I read to learn more about it?

            • GoroAkechi [he/him]
              ·
              3 years ago

              There is no definitive third worldist text, but the writings of Ho Chi Minh and Che Guevara are good places to start. General post-colonial theory is important as well, so Fanon (but you should be reading Fanon anyways)

              • layla
                ·
                3 years ago

                Yeah already ready some Fanon, thanks for the recommendations

    • Ideology [she/her]
      ·
      3 years ago

      It's really hard to convince first worlders to have empathy for outgroups. The rare people that do just go all in.

  • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]
    ·
    3 years ago

    tiocfaidh ar la. still can't believe Sinn Fien won, like I expected it and it could have been better for sure, but it's still kinda wild. bro if shit kicks off in NI I'm deadass there at the first RUC bombing

  • Eco [she/her, he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    i wonder how many people type f when someone dies without knowing why that became a thing