Sarah's sin
No, Sara, you were never part of the top of the pyramid where Bolsonaro and his sons are entrenched, fawned over by people who, like you, believe they are part of something good for Brazilian society. On the contrary, you are pawns, used and exploited until your last breath, then discarded.
Far-right activist Sara Winter was arrested on the 15th by the federal police, following a decree issued by Minister Alexandre de Moraes of the STF - Supreme Federal Court. The case was then handled by the PGR - Attorney General's Office.
Sara declared herself the leader of a group, the 300. She announced she had weapons to confront those who disagreed with her thinking. She proposed the closure of the national congress and the imprisonment of all ministers of the supreme federal court. Something unthinkable, even for those who scored the goal and established the 1964 dictatorship.
But among so many crazy images published on the internet by this group, the one that caught my attention the most was that of Sara leaving her house and being escorted by the federal police. She was asking someone, probably one of the members of the 300, to film the scene.
That young woman, whom even her brother admits abandoned her own son, leaving him to be raised by his grandmother, seems to have believed that her arrest would cause some commotion in society so that she would be welcomed with open arms and paraded through the public square as a martyr.
No, Sara, you were never part of the top of the pyramid where Bolsonaro and his sons are entrenched, fawned over by people who, like you, believe they are part of something good for Brazilian society. On the contrary, you are pawns, used and exploited until your last breath, then discarded.
Today, the 19th, Sara was featured on the cover of a nationally circulated magazine as the leader of the "Right-Wing Terrorists." She is imprisoned and begging for help from her followers. They have all disappeared, and Sara is now in a prison cell.
Poor Sara!
* This is an opinion article, the responsibility of the author, and does not reflect the opinion of Brasil 247.
