Trump showed Bolsonaro what a "golden shower" is.
Trump gave Jair Bolsonaro a "golden shower," says Alex Solnik of Journalists for Democracy; "He got the Alcântara base; 750 tons of wheat with zero tariff per year; sold pork to buy beef; obtained visa exemption for tourists; aligned Brazil against China; put him in Ivan Duque's place in the attacks on Venezuela," he states; "And, in return, he offered two Trojan horses: the possibility of joining the OECD and NATO."
By Alex Solnik, columnist for 247 and member of Journalists for Democracy
According to a secret report published by the American website BuzzFeed, during a visit to Moscow Trump allegedly reserved the presidential suite at the Ritz Carlton Hotel, where he knew Barack Obama had stayed with his wife, Michelle Obama, and hired several prostitutes to perform a... golden shower.
The scene was allegedly recorded by Putin's spies, who are guarding the material as a kind of sword of Damocles that could be used if Trump tries to harm Russia.
During the last Carnival, the most scandalous scene was the one shared on the official Twitter account of the President of the Republic of Brazil, who admitted he didn't know the names of the two people involved.
And he even asked: "What is a golden shower?"
On the trip to the White House, he learned what it is.
Trump gave him a "golden shower."
He won the Alcântara base; 750 tons of wheat with zero tariff per year; sold pork to buy beef; obtained visa exemption for tourists; aligned Brazil against China; and placed him in Ivan Duque's position in the attacks on Venezuela.
And, in return, he offered two unwelcome gifts: the possibility of joining the OECD and NATO.
Trump will only lift the veto at the OECD if Brazil gives up the privileges of the WTO's group of emerging countries. We lose more in this trade-off than we gain.
And why join NATO if we're neither in the Northern Hemisphere nor do we have a military infrastructure of that caliber?
"Golden shower" in broad daylight, without clips.
(Learn about and support the project) Journalists for Democracy)
* This is an opinion article, the responsibility of the author, and does not reflect the opinion of Brasil 247.
