Eduardo Cutuca Tarcisio saying that he is disconnected
Federal Deputy Eduardo Bolsonaro, then, defended the proposal and criticized the Senate for filing it, saying that senators and governors contrary to it are “compliant servants of the tyrants.”
“You are who are disconnected with the people,” he said, using the same term of the governor.
It is worth remembering that the far right supported the shielding PEC in return that the centrão supported the Amnesty PL-a project defended by Eduardo and Tarcisio to keep the former president outside the Xilindró.
The duel between the governor and the deputy is a depressing spectacle that exposes the bowels of a right that, far from self -criticism, focuses on a war of egos and electoral calculations as disconnected as he is dangerous.
The governor’s speech is a monument to hypocrisy, because the same politician who identifies the “disconnection” of others is what defends, in the same event, the amnesty for those involved in the coup plot. For him, disconnection is a sin only when the privilege is very obvious and unpopular, even if most of the society is against forgiveness the scammer. When it serves the interests of his political godfather, Jair Bolsonaro, disconnect becomes the way to the dialogued peace. It is a rhetorical gymnastics that tries to please everyone and, in the end, convinces anyone.
On the other side of the ring, or rather, across the US border (from where he was denounced by the Attorney General’s Office for inciting Donald Trump against jobs and companies in Brazil to press his father’s freedom), Eduardo Bolsonaro produces grotesque irony. He, a parliamentarian who enjoys all the privileges of the position and today observes Brazil from a Safe Harbor American, accuses others of being disconnected. Its connection with the “people” is limited to social networks, where it defends a suicidal institutional war, solemnly ignoring that it was the will of people, on the polls, on the streets and in the networks, that overthrew the proposal.
