Why was Brazil’s conservative leader tweeting out kink?
By Cleuci de Oliveira

BRASÍLIA
 — Carnival is one of the most anticipated events on the Brazilian 
calendar. There’s of course the world-famous show put on by samba 
schools in Rio de Janeiro, which attracts tourists from around the 
world, but Brazilian revelers take to the streets in cities across the 
nation, big and small. And every year, the parties deliver highlights — 
whether goofy, profound or merely bewildering — that come to define each
 year’s celebrations.
This year, the 
most talked-about moment came at the tail end of the multiday 
festivities, on Tuesday night, and the man who delivered it was none 
other than President Jair Bolsonaro. Just after 6 p.m., Mr. Bolsonaro 
tweeted out a 40-second clip showing a sexual act between two men, 
taking place in the middle of the day before a large crowd. Short on 
specifics, the president’s missive suggested that the incident happened 
at some point during the long weekend and that it represented the moral 
rot at the heart of a beloved national holiday.
“I
 don’t feel comfortable showing this, but we have to expose the truth,” 
he wrote. “This is what has become of many block parties during the 
Brazilian Carnival. Comment and draw your own conclusions.”
The
 tweet ricocheted around Brazilian Twitter and sent the country’s 
newsrooms scrambling: How to report on the presidential, er, communiqué 
with accuracy while still maintaining decorum? “Bolsonaro shares video 
of man playing with his anus and suggests this is a typical scene during
 carnival,” was how one newspaper, Folha de S.Paulo, framed it. The 
headline opted not to mention the most explosive part of the clip, which
 Mr. Bolsonaro addressed the following morning, again on Twitter, in 
seemingly faux confusion: “What’s a golden shower?” he asked coyly.
Mr.
 Bolsonaro’s tweet may have rendered the entire country speechless, but 
his motives were clear enough. First, he was seeking to demonize 
Brazil’s L.G.B.T. community, a marginalized population that has occupied
 his thoughts and rhetoric since he first emerged as a firebrand of the 
ultraconservative right. (In 2011, he infamously told Playboy magazine 
he’d rather his son die in an accident than be gay.) Now that he is 
president, this same community has found itself in his administration’s 
cross hairs.
But second, Mr. 
Bolsonaro was clearly smarting at the way this year’s celebrations had 
morphed into protests against his presidency and what it stands for. 
Tweeting out the video, which was eventually sourced to a block party 
that took place in São Paulo on Monday, was, it seems, a mystifying form
 of retaliation.
Carnival
 in Brazil isn’t just about partying, though there’s certainly plenty of
 that (but it should be noted that even by the raucous standards of 
Carnival, the explicit scene captured on video, and now immortalized by 
Brazil’s head of state, was aberrant). It is also a time of immense 
political and civic expression. This year, an unmistakable theme emerged
 out of all the disparate Carnival celebrations across hundreds of 
cities: a forceful repudiation of the far-right ideology that Mr. 
Bolsonaro and his administration represent.
In
 Rio de Janeiro, the samba school Mangueira won this year’s parade 
competition by putting on a show that retold Brazilian history from the 
perspective of its black and indigenous heroes. It also paid tribute to 
Marielle Franco, a black, gay, progressive councilwoman who was 
assassinated last year. (While her murder remains unsolved, the police 
reportedly suspect the involvement of a paramilitary group; recently, 
links have emerged between the group and the Bolsonaro family, though 
the latter are not implicated in the murder.) In the historic city of 
Olinda, revelers threw beer cans on an effigy of the president. Outside 
Mr. Bolsonaro’s former home in Rio de Janeiro, partygoers dressed up as 
oranges — a reference to a money-laundering scandal currently plaguing 
his administration. And a now-ubiquitous chant, which can be most 
respectfully translated as “Hey! Bolsonaro! Get screwed!” dominated 
events from the north to the south of Brazil.
By
 all accounts, Mr. Bolsonaro did not have a great Carnival. He was 
recovering from major abdominal surgery — the latest phase in a long, 
delicate recovery from a stabbing last September. But he was able to 
follow the events from his smartphone. And it soon became clear that the
 anti-Bolsonaro demonstrations had gotten under his skin.
On
 Tuesday morning, he lashed out at a music video by two prominent 
musicians that poked fun at his restrictive views on gender and 
sexuality. His response was to tweet out a music video of his own, 
featuring an anonymous singer that called out the two famous artists by 
name and praised “the captain” Bolsonaro. In a follow-up tweet, the 
president fired off a warning: “Just as important as the economy is the 
rescue of our culture, which was destroyed over decades by governments 
with a socialist bent.”
But the 
now-infamous tweet from Tuesday evening proved a bridge too far even for
 many of the president’s conservative allies. “Bolsonaro’s tweet is 
incompatible with the posture of a president, let alone one on the 
right,” tweeted Congressman Kim Kataguiri, a leader of the national 
movement to impeach the former leftist President Dilma Rousseff. 
“Nothing justifies the president sharing pornography on Twitter.” Shows 
of support were few and far between, coming only in the president’s 
Twitter replies from a handful of followers. His allies and cabinet 
members squirmed to explain why a man who ran on a family values 
platform had just driven a daylong news cycle that saw red-faced TV 
presenters explaining the concept of a golden shower. Vice President 
Hamilton Mourão, currently at loggerheads with the Bolsonaro family, 
dodged reporters’ questions on Wednesday about what his boss was 
thinking. “I’m not a ventriloquist,” he said.
The
 presidential palace, for its part, issued a statement on Wednesday 
evening. The scene “scandalized not only the president himself, but a 
significant part of society.” The statement went on to describe the 
videotaped incident as “a crime” (it didn’t specify which) “violating 
family values and the cultural traditions of carnival.”
Mr.
 Bolsonaro is not the first politician in Brazil’s current conservative 
moment to chafe against the libertine spirit of Carnival. Mayor Marcelo 
Crivella of Rio de Janeiro, who is a Pentecostal Christian and a bishop 
(and a popular target of mockery at many a Carnival block party), in 
recent years slashed government funding for the city’s street parties. 
“Carnival is a portly baby that needs to be weaned,” he told the news 
site G1 ahead of this year’s celebrations, adding, for good measure, 
that women would understand the metaphor. 
But
 Mr. Bolsonaro should heed the lessons of history: Brazilian politicians
 who take on Carnival rarely triumph. As a journalist noted on Twitter,
 in 1961 President Janio Quadros “tried to regulate behavior” at 
Carnival, under the slogan “‘Janio is the certainty of a moralized 
Brazil.’” Mr. Quadros may have been morally certain; he also resigned 
after eight months.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment