Sao Paulo Riots - Marxist Tactics for the NWO
June 16, 2013

Riots to protest a tiny hike in bus and metro fares have terrorized this city
of 20 million. At least 235 people have been arrested and 55 injured,
Marcos dissects Marxist tactics used to undermine the opposition government in San Paulo State and pave the way for its take over in next year's election. The Marxist playbook is also used in the West.
Update from Marcos Feb 18: --
--When the government crashes, the social aids that supported Lula's popularity will be at risk. Without the booming exports, there will be fewer jobs, and it is possible that we will see riots and protests. Things have always been too easy in this country, where food grows even in a crack in the sidewalk. Perhaps it is time for Brazilians to mature from suffering. - https://www.savethemales.ca/
The original protest was small and totally organized by radical allies of the Workers Party. They are all allies in the Sao Paulo Forum and have the same goals. There will be a meeting of the Forum next month and they are really impatient that Brazil is lagging behind Argentina and Venezuela in the road for the Bolivarian Revolution.
What happened is that they didn't expect , first the huge booing Dilma took at the stadium and one day later thousands of people who hate the government joining the march.
I would say that yesterday 90% of the people were common folk with no party affiliation, but they protested about abstract things, such as corruption and the World Cup. No focus. Some pointed the finger at the government, but were mostly ignored by the press. Anyway, these were the largest protests in 20 years, in every major city of the country.
See how it works: we had 5 hours of peaceful march all over São Paulo, but in the end of the evening a group of Marxists went to Governor's Palace, attacked the police and brought a gate down. They also hijacked two buses in order to block the avenue. Remember it is the Workers Party mayor who raises the bus fares, not the governor.
We are at a crossroad. Two things may happen:
1) The Left, with their militants, money and decades of experience, create a fragmentation in the movement with dozens of small groups asking for special favors (like Occupy Wall Street) and end up bringing more Marxism to the country. (80% chance)
2) Conservatives benefit from the momentum and organize new protests with a focus. Against Lula, against the Workers Party. (20% chance) The problem is that there are no leaders. Next July 11th there will be a conservative protest. Let's see.
by Marcos
(henrymakow.com)
What is happening in Sao Paulo? Supposedly a spontaneous protest against a US$ 0.09 raise in bus fares (less than inflation) was fueled by young people in Facebook, generating riots in other cities in Brazil. The Brazilian "Arab Spring." Five thousand "free thinkers" on the streets. The truth, however, is different.
This is an artificial protest, organized by radical Marxists from several parties in Brazil, and supported by anarchists and punks. It is a demonstration of force by the Left, much like their invasions of farms in the country. They destroyed stores, set fires, threw Molotov cocktails at the police, almost lynched an officer and created havoc in the city for four days. The common folk, the workers, are all scared. The bus fare was only an excuse.
In Brazil, the Left has an amazing ability (and funds) to put 500, 1000 militants anywhere in a matter of days, sometimes hours. This is how it works: the government funds the Communist students association (UNE) to the tune of US$ 25 MM in the last few years. They also passed laws that force every worker to be unionized and pay union fees, and prevent the unions from ever being audited. Basically, they paid for an army of faithful militants, students, union people and party members who are on hire 24/7.
It is important to notice that most workers in Brazil have their bus fares paid by the employer, while students pay half fare. Much like Occupy Wall Street, most of the rioters were middle class. The whole "free ride movement" (they want all urban transportation to be free) has only forty members. One of them is a 19 year-old, fresh from a private high school where his dad used to pay a US$ 1000 monthly fee.
In Brazil, there is a new protest every week. All get huge coverage from the press. Things like "Marijuana March", "March of the Sluts", "Femen" bare breasted women, protests for Indians, for bicycle riders, for gays, for abortion. 99% of people who work for a living and can't claim any minority status feel that they have absolutely no voice. It doesn't matter that almost all of these causes are contrary to the desire of the vast majority of citizens.
NEW MARXIST TACTICS FOR THE INTERNET ERA
Classical Marxist tactics have worked like a charm for more than 100 years. These include of romanticizing leftism through movies, novels and plays, while at the same time recruiting minorities to create social turmoil. In underdeveloped countries and even in the countryside of Brazil they still work very well. The Brazilian Left is an expert in organizing, indoctrinating and arming groups of poor people so they can invade productive farms, kill land owners and destroy everything. After each invasion, journalists and university professors (the "experts") give all support to the guerrilla.
However, these tactics are not so effective when dealing with more educated people who have access to more information and sites like this one. The indoctrination and brain washing were becoming too obvious. That's why Marxists working for the new world order have perfected new strategies to control and manipulate people in the era of the internet.
The key to success is to make it look like a grassroots initiative. The process works in three areas:
1) NGOs. These are artificial, ad hoc organizations ironically funded by the government or by international foundations, such as Ford's and Rockefeller's. Usually protests start with these well paid activists, especially when there some kind of trigger, for example the murder of a gay person. These obscure people will be interviewed a dozen times a day by newspapers, radio stations and TV.
2) Internet fronts. The next step is a wide promotion in social media and use of controlled "petition sites" such as Avaaz. In Brazil and in Argentina, the government has a budget to pay for online terrorists who flood the comments area of newspapers sites and create slander and spread false rumours against opposition. Sometimes they just schedule a protest on facebook, you can bet it will be in the newspaper tomorrow. Meanwhile, professional militants have already been summoned to give the protests strength.
3) Press. Even in the internet age, the traditional press is a validation media for most people. Unfortunately, most news organizations depend on government and state companies advertising for survival. Most journalists are leftists and that the government sets up their own network of blogs, and what we see is newspapers validating everything that the NGOs and internet bullies say. On the other hand, a peaceful concentration of 70,000 evangelicals and Catholics against corruption held in Brasilia a week ago was completed neglected (boycotted) by the press. The press' function is not to inform anymore, it has just become a filter.
More than anything, this is a strategy of controlling a political space in a manner where real issues just can't compete for attention. Brazil has stratospheric levels of corruption, huge health and education problems and 50,000 people are murdered every year. These issues stay in the backstage and the government is never held responsible.
CONCLUSION
More than an ideology or an utopia, Marxism is the most efficient set of tools for social and political control ever created. That's why it is being used to get us into the new world order, and as any efficient weapon, it is evolving and changing with time. Things like Occupy Wall Street, online petitions and the March of the Sluts give the public the appearance that things are happening, that people are awake and doing something.
However, this kind of deception works best when things are fine and people become complacent. Brazil has entered a phase of economic stagnation, inflation is rising and even with media control, people know about the corruption. Like the old Romans used to say, "even if you try to expel Nature with a pitchfork, it will find its way back through the window". The strategy of manipulating protests may very well backfire, because people are fed up.

The evidence is here. In the first game of the Confederations Cup (a mini soccer world cup), in a new stadium in Brasilia, Dilma was booed by 70,000 people. #chupadilma (suckitdilma) became number one Twitter hashtag in the world. Totally unexpected and this time, really spontaneous. There is still hope.
Police intelligence also found out that the ultra-marxist PSOL party is paying and training punks as agents provocateurs, in order to radicalize the protests.
Unfortunately, many middle class people started to believe that this is a healthy development. people are easily manipulated.
Henrique said (June 17, 2013):
Well, the raise in public transportation fares might not be the SOLE reason for the protests, but could be seen as the spark for a broader set of claims. I somehow sympathize with the protests, even knowing that they WILL be hijacked by the far-left , if weren't started by them in the first place. Have in mind that either the Union and the City of São Paulo are governed by left-wing ( PT ) politicians, so there might be something different playing out here.
About the media, most TV coverage of it is absolutely negative, with commentators lambasting the whole thing, even one in the all-powerful Globo Network ( Brazil's Fox News, though proportionally much more powerful ) stating that the demonstrators themselves, a bunch of middle-class momma's boys according to him, weren't worth the fare raise ( $ 0.09 ).
These out of control protests are not a "Brazil" phenomenon, by the way, they're happening everywhere, it's the final push for total fragmentation and destruction of traditional culture.
About Marxism as form of control, it couldn't be without Religion, the other side of the dialectic - "a force without a counter-force cannot survive", wrote Albert Pike. And according with the brilliant book by I. Shafarevitch, " The Socialist Phenomenon", Marxism is just the newest face for something much older, like an underground stream, that emerges from time to time in history. The basis of control, usury, then the dialectic, Religion and Socialism, are basically everything there is to ruling the world, the rest is only strategy.