The Eagle has landed. |
There are only two factors that unite Brazil – the Portuguese language and their pride in their 'national' football ("soccer") team. Almost everything else – regional rivalries, racial differences, economic inequalities, and diverse climate zones – drives the nation apart. Even Catholicism, since the inception of Liberation Theology, has become more of a divisive force. It is interesting, therefore, to consider what effect their drubbing at the hands of Germany in the World Cup semi-finals will have on the nation.
It is also interesting to ponder on the cultural semantics of an overtly German team – even one that isn't quite pure itself – crushing a team that is a kind of poster child for the great multiracial hybrid future that we are all supposed to stroll willingly towards. Alas the main talisman of this mongrelized team, Neymar, a mixed race player with naturally kinky hair who has straightened and dyed his hair blond, couldn't make the game due to his injury in Brazil's quarter-final victory over Colombia – a somewhat darker version of themselves.
Because of its role as the precursor of our supposed future, Brazil is an important country. This, incidentally, is why it has long received very positive coverage in the globalist Western media. Brazil is routinely presented as something we should aspire to, as a perfect post-racial society where everybody is supposedly "dancing to their rainbow rhythms." But, as Neymar's hair-related affectations reveal, there are certain tensions and complexes beneath the surface of this rather ugly pretty picture.
It is also interesting to ponder on the cultural semantics of an overtly German team – even one that isn't quite pure itself – crushing a team that is a kind of poster child for the great multiracial hybrid future that we are all supposed to stroll willingly towards. Alas the main talisman of this mongrelized team, Neymar, a mixed race player with naturally kinky hair who has straightened and dyed his hair blond, couldn't make the game due to his injury in Brazil's quarter-final victory over Colombia – a somewhat darker version of themselves.
Because of its role as the precursor of our supposed future, Brazil is an important country. This, incidentally, is why it has long received very positive coverage in the globalist Western media. Brazil is routinely presented as something we should aspire to, as a perfect post-racial society where everybody is supposedly "dancing to their rainbow rhythms." But, as Neymar's hair-related affectations reveal, there are certain tensions and complexes beneath the surface of this rather ugly pretty picture.
Brazilian wardrobe malfunction? |
The unity of Brazil is an interesting historical phenomenon. Unlike Spanish America, which broke up on independence from Spain, Portuguese America managed to remain united. This was partly due to geographical factors – its centres of population and power were grouped much closer together than those of Spanish America, and with less imposing physical obstacles between them. They also had an unusual route from colonial statue to independence, being for a short time, the seat of the Portuguese monarchy.
But perhaps the main reason that Brazil stayed united was not because of any element of inherent racial harmony but because of its opposite – blatant racial repression. By 1800 fully one half of the total Brazilian population of 3,200,000 were slaves, and by 1818, there were 1,930,000 slaves besides some 526,000 free Negroes and mulattoes, in all about sixty-three per cent of the total. In short, when Brazil became an independent nation, it was majority Black and becoming Blacker, with around four-fifths of that population being slaves.
For this reason, Brazil was much more inherently unstable than Spanish America, where the subject races were more passive and part of a feudal and localist system of peonage. The relative racial security of the Spanish American system actually facilitated the conflicts between members of the White elite that led to the splitting up of Spanish America into dozens of countries. In Portuguese America, by contrast, such conflicts would have raised the spectre of the kind of slave uprisings that has exterminated the White population on the French colony of Haiti only a few decades before. This alone, independent of other factors, would have been a sufficient reason for the White population of Portuguese America to stay united.
Over the course of the 19th and early 20th century, the demographics of Brazil improved from a White perspective, with mass immigration from Europe, including Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Germany, as well as significant influxes from Syria and Japan. But although it became a lot less Black, Brazil never successfully became a White country, although the White element was always and remains dominant.
The natural divisions inherent in Brazil were ironically the reason for its continuing unity, with democratic tendencies vying with dictatorial ones, resulting in the semi-fascist or authoritarian dictatorship of Getulio Vargas (1930-1945). Like other contemporary fascist or pseudo-fascist movements, Vargas's version of Authoritarian Developmentalism had strong populist elements to counteract the appeal of Socialism and Communism, with policies designed to appeal to the poor and overcome racial divisions.
In 1950, the first World Cup since WWII was held in Brazil. The European nations had been devastated by the war and this had weakened their teams in various ways. Also, Brazil, as the largest footballing nation, had a much larger talent pool than other nations. These factors meant that Brazilian football was in the ascendant and they expected to win. Even after they lost the 1950 World Cup to tiny Uruguay, the Brazilian ruling class continued to push football as a symbol of national pride and a unifying force. Through football, the cooperation of Black, White, and mixed-race players could be given a high profile. Also, football served as a convenient distraction in the sense of "bread and circuses," with football providing the "circuses" to the "bread" provided by Brazil's relative post-war economic success.
With the return of democracy in 1945, and with World cup victories in 1958 and 1962, sport and democracy had seemingly achieved a state of equilibrium with Brazil's uneven economic development, but, following the Cuban Revolution and the rise of Maoist guerrilla tactics that could exploit rural and urban pockets of poverty in Latin America, football was not quite enough and Brazil was forced to switch back to a form of "fascism." In 1964 a coup, supported by the USA, imposed a military junta. This lasted until 1985, when the partial economic successes of the junta's neoliberalist economic policies and the declining appeal of Guevarist revolutionarism allowed Brazil to once more experiment with democracy.
Later World Cup successes in 1994 and 2002, along with the economic boom of the 90s and Zeroes helped keep Brazilian democracy on an even keel, all the way up to the present, but the basic problems of Brazil – regional rivalries, racial differences, economic inequalities – have yet to be solved, and only a combination of relative economic success and absolute sporting success or dictatorship can alleviate these problems.
While Brazil’s economic performance in recent years has been impressive, economic success is seldom a constant in a country like Brazil, which suffers from a constantly growing underclass and various forms of corruption and criminality. Even more worrying is the relative decline of Brazilian football made apparent by Germany's crushing victory.
Between 1958 and 1970, Brazil won 3 out of 4 World Cups. With its massive population advantage and massive talent pool, it could count on finding players of great individual talent, like the world famous Pele and the great Garrincha.
But football in those days was a much more open, free-flowing, and intuitive sport that was better attuned to the Brazilian psyche. Now the sport, especially at the top level, is a much more technical and psychological endeavour. Zonal marking, well-drilled offside traps, one-touch pinpoint passing, mind-management techniques, and various forms of teamwork are in the ascendant, pushing the showy individual brilliance of Brazil's inherently disjointed teams into the shade.
Brazil still has some advantages – not least the growing racial diversity of its main European opponents – and in the future it may well win another World Cup, but unlike other countries, for Brazil winning at football is almost an existential issue, and certainly one intimately connected to its degree of political freedom.
Affirmative Right
9th July, 2014
But perhaps the main reason that Brazil stayed united was not because of any element of inherent racial harmony but because of its opposite – blatant racial repression. By 1800 fully one half of the total Brazilian population of 3,200,000 were slaves, and by 1818, there were 1,930,000 slaves besides some 526,000 free Negroes and mulattoes, in all about sixty-three per cent of the total. In short, when Brazil became an independent nation, it was majority Black and becoming Blacker, with around four-fifths of that population being slaves.
Kill Whitey, etc. |
Over the course of the 19th and early 20th century, the demographics of Brazil improved from a White perspective, with mass immigration from Europe, including Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Germany, as well as significant influxes from Syria and Japan. But although it became a lot less Black, Brazil never successfully became a White country, although the White element was always and remains dominant.
The natural divisions inherent in Brazil were ironically the reason for its continuing unity, with democratic tendencies vying with dictatorial ones, resulting in the semi-fascist or authoritarian dictatorship of Getulio Vargas (1930-1945). Like other contemporary fascist or pseudo-fascist movements, Vargas's version of Authoritarian Developmentalism had strong populist elements to counteract the appeal of Socialism and Communism, with policies designed to appeal to the poor and overcome racial divisions.
In 1950, the first World Cup since WWII was held in Brazil. The European nations had been devastated by the war and this had weakened their teams in various ways. Also, Brazil, as the largest footballing nation, had a much larger talent pool than other nations. These factors meant that Brazilian football was in the ascendant and they expected to win. Even after they lost the 1950 World Cup to tiny Uruguay, the Brazilian ruling class continued to push football as a symbol of national pride and a unifying force. Through football, the cooperation of Black, White, and mixed-race players could be given a high profile. Also, football served as a convenient distraction in the sense of "bread and circuses," with football providing the "circuses" to the "bread" provided by Brazil's relative post-war economic success.
Brazil 1962 |
With the return of democracy in 1945, and with World cup victories in 1958 and 1962, sport and democracy had seemingly achieved a state of equilibrium with Brazil's uneven economic development, but, following the Cuban Revolution and the rise of Maoist guerrilla tactics that could exploit rural and urban pockets of poverty in Latin America, football was not quite enough and Brazil was forced to switch back to a form of "fascism." In 1964 a coup, supported by the USA, imposed a military junta. This lasted until 1985, when the partial economic successes of the junta's neoliberalist economic policies and the declining appeal of Guevarist revolutionarism allowed Brazil to once more experiment with democracy.
Later World Cup successes in 1994 and 2002, along with the economic boom of the 90s and Zeroes helped keep Brazilian democracy on an even keel, all the way up to the present, but the basic problems of Brazil – regional rivalries, racial differences, economic inequalities – have yet to be solved, and only a combination of relative economic success and absolute sporting success or dictatorship can alleviate these problems.
While Brazil’s economic performance in recent years has been impressive, economic success is seldom a constant in a country like Brazil, which suffers from a constantly growing underclass and various forms of corruption and criminality. Even more worrying is the relative decline of Brazilian football made apparent by Germany's crushing victory.
Between 1958 and 1970, Brazil won 3 out of 4 World Cups. With its massive population advantage and massive talent pool, it could count on finding players of great individual talent, like the world famous Pele and the great Garrincha.
The crushing of the cocktail nation. |
Brazil still has some advantages – not least the growing racial diversity of its main European opponents – and in the future it may well win another World Cup, but unlike other countries, for Brazil winning at football is almost an existential issue, and certainly one intimately connected to its degree of political freedom.
Affirmative Right
9th July, 2014
England, by becoming diverse, is by no means pioneering some brave new multiracial world. Brazil has been multiracial for centuries, with Spanish and Portuguese, Africans and native Indians in the mix, and it makes sense to look at what conditions are presently like in Brazil to see where we in England will most likely end up.
ReplyDeleteBrazil has huge wealth inequalities. The Gini coefficient, a statistical index of wealth inequality, shows that Brazil is one of the most unequal societies in the world, and quite possibly the most unequal of all outside Africa.
Brazil has minimal welfare provision, the shantytowns or “favelas” testify to this.
Brazil has a phenomenally high crime rate. Here are some figures.
Brazil in 2016 registered a record 61,619 murders, an average of 168 per day! (The number of violent deaths last year in Brazil is approximately equal to the number of people killed by the atomic bomb the US dropped on Nagasaki.)
The number of civilians killed in police operations was 4,224 in 2016.
The number of police officers killed was 437..
The number of robberies in which the victim was killed was 2,514.
To provide some perspective, the UK has roughly one third of the population and has roughly 600 murders in total in a year.
Despite centuries with the different races living in the same country, Brazilians are not all one chocolate colour. And the Races are, to some extent, segregated, with blacks and multiracial individuals tending to live in the North and whites in the South. Brazil’s political and business elite appears to be almost all white. Brazilians celebrate the classical white Western standards of beauty, if their celebrities and beauty queens are anything to go by.
Political corruption is an issue in Brazil. Brazil lies in 76th place out of 168 countries on the “Transparency International” corruption index. For perspective, India and China rank one and two places below them.
Brazil has a strong patriarchal culture. There is pressure for men and women to behave according to (Catholic) societal norms. Men are expected to be strong and powerful. Women, in contrast, are considered weak, and are expected to defer to men. There are many articles on the Internet written by young white women who have visited Brazil and who describe the shock of being accosted and even physically assaulted by men who won’t take no for an answer. Brazil has the sixth highest rate of female murders in the world. In 2016, 4,657 females were murdered.
It seems at least to be a reasonable hypothesis that Brazil reveals to us how a multicultural society will evolve over a sufficiently long period of time. De facto racial segregation. High levels of corruption. Massive disparities in wealth, with the most affluent living in secure, gated communities, and very high rates of crime, especially violent crime, affecting the quality of life of everybody else. Brazil has not given much to the rest of the world in the way of technology or invention. They don't have any great universities, and have never won any Nobel prizes in the hard sciences. (They do have a successful football team , however.)
Good input, Thanks!
Delete