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Xico Sá: those who took to the streets put the biggest corrupt figures from Odebrecht in power.

"You went to the streets against that 'cow' Dilma, with your fucking machismo, and now you know that all your idols are the biggest corrupt people at Odebrecht?", provokes journalist Xico Sá on Twitter, against those who protested for impeachment; he also says that what fueled the farce was class hatred: "It wasn't corruption that took these people to the streets, it was class hatred, domestic workers with signed contracts, etc."; "The honest thing to do in this war would be for the pot-bangers to join us for an honest Brazil, but it turns out that the pot-bangers were the corrupt Brazil," says Xico Sá; "You were in the streets protesting against yourselves," he concludes.

"You went to the streets against that 'cow' Dilma, with your fucking machismo, and now you know that all your idols are the biggest corrupt people at Odebrecht?", provokes journalist Xico Sá on Twitter, against those who protested for impeachment; he also says that what fueled the farce was class hatred: "It wasn't corruption that took these people to the streets, it was class hatred, maids with signed contracts, etc."; "The honest thing to do in this war would be for the pot-bangers to join us for an honest Brazil, but it turns out that the pot-bangers were the corrupt Brazil," says Xico Sá; "You were in the streets protesting against yourselves," he concludes (Photo: Gisele Federicce).

247 - The journalist Xico Sá has been provoking on Twitter The Brazilians who took to the streets to defend the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, thereby putting "the biggest corrupt figures from Odebrecht" in power.

The testimonies of 77 executives from the construction company directly implicate ministers of the current government and the president himself, Michel Temer, who is accused of receiving R$ 10 million that he requested from Marcelo Odebrecht in a meeting at the Jaburu Palace.

"You went to the streets to protest against that 'cow' Dilma, with your fucking machismo, and now you know that all your idols are the biggest corrupt people at Odebrecht?", Xico Sá quipped.

He also says that what fueled the farce to remove Dilma from power was class hatred: "It wasn't corruption that drove these people into the streets, it was class hatred, domestic workers with formal employment contracts, etc."

"All of Brazil's 'good people' are on Odebrecht's list, what despicable people. Their mission was just to overthrow Dilma, what cowardly coup plotters," the journalist exclaimed angrily.

"The great character of the year: the reactionary uncle in a sweatshirt from the São Paulo bakery who called Dilma a cow and thought paradise would come afterward. The honest thing about the war would be if the pot-bangers joined us for an honest Brazil, but it turns out that the pot-bangers were the corrupt Brazil," he says.

"There isn't a single 'panelaço' (a derogatory term for someone who engages in prostitution) who isn't on the Odebrecht list or other corruption scandals. You were in the streets protesting against yourselves. Not every 'panelaço' is corrupt, but every corrupt person is a 'panelaço'," he concludes.