HOME > Media

Bricklayer: Veja became mud used by the Public Prosecutor's Office against the Supreme Court.

"No surprise to anyone who knows what Veja has become. Filth," says journalist Fernando Brito, regarding the cover that threatens Minister Dias Toffoli but does not accuse him of any crime; "What is surprising is that the Public Prosecutor's Office has reached the point of attacking the Supreme Federal Court with these means."

"No surprise to anyone who knows what Veja has become. Filth," says journalist Fernando Brito, regarding the cover that threatens Minister Dias Toffoli but does not accuse him of any crime; "What is surprising is that the Public Prosecutor's Office has reached the point of attacking the Supreme Federal Court with these means" (Photo: Leonardo Attuch)

By Fernando Brito, editor of brick

I could smell it last night when I wrote here about the cover of Veja, still without having access to the content of the magazine's "report".

The text, published today, confirms the nature of the substance excreted by the magazine.

In this, no surprise to anyone who knows what Veja It became.

Filth.

What is surprising is that the Public Prosecutor's Office has gone so far as to attack the Supreme Federal Court with these means.

I had already done it with mockery.

This is a clear retaliation for Toffoli's decisions – rare, in fact – to relax the arrest warrants orchestrated between the prosecutors and Judge Sérgio Moro.

And this is a more than evident warning to the other ministers of the Supreme Federal Court not to dare to criticize what is decided in Curitiba or the ambassador of this strange republic in Brasilia.

The Supreme Federal Court allowed a tumor to grow and cannot complain that it has been engulfed by it.

They want him to be a simple bailiff for the Curitiba court.

Each minister must now be careful about what they say, to whom they speak, and how they speak, since by allowing – and just reiterating – illegal wiretaps to reach the Presidency itself without any consequences for those responsible, they are making themselves "wiretapable."

Minister Luís Roberto Barroso was not being funny when he joked that nothing would be obtained from wiretapping his phone.

It was a disgrace, because what matters most is not what people hear or what is most important, but the preservation of privacy, a value that is not a personal good, but a social one.

Because breaking it is like unleashing a bunch of pigs to rummage through other people's lives, driven by their hatred and pettiness.

And for their contempt for law and justice.