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Brazil's Rising Star
#1

Brazil's Rising Star

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7...contentAux
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#2

Brazil's Rising Star

The start of the 'Brazilian dream'?
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#3

Brazil's Rising Star

@11:45 "They're going to be planting the grass while the ball is already rolling" LOL!!!

Good news piece.
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#4

Brazil's Rising Star

I saw that...that was a great piece....Ed Bradley would turn over in his grave if he saw the girls..

as long as they keep the military out of state affairs and control the inflation, sky's the limit...and add english...they could replace india for call center destinations easy...
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#5

Brazil's Rising Star

They made Lula a pop star. tsc tsc tsc...
And No, the stadium will not be ready to the world cup. Maybe the stadium but the transportation and traffic will be a huge problem.

Deixa que essa fase é passageira, amanhã será melhor você vai ver a cidade inteira seu samba saber de cor!
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#6

Brazil's Rising Star

Quote: (12-21-2010 01:57 PM)Caramel Communist Wrote:  

.they could replace india for call center destinations easy...

Need tech support?

http://www.illwillpress.com/tech.html
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#7

Brazil's Rising Star

I saw this on 60 minutes
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#8

Brazil's Rising Star

Last week's Economist magazine had an article on the terrible state of education in Brazil. The numbers on reading comprehension, math and basic science are staggering and they fall way behind OECD nations. Education even in private schools is poor. They may be rising, but until they have major reforms in their education system and better teachers, I'm not sure they'll become a first tier nation anytime soon. The image portrayed in the 60 minutes clip might be a bit on the rosy side.
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#9

Brazil's Rising Star

Quote: (12-21-2010 08:09 PM)speakeasy Wrote:  

Last week's Economist magazine had an article on the terrible state of education in Brazil. The numbers on reading comprehension, math and basic science are staggering and they fall way behind OECD nations. Education even in private schools is poor. They may be rising, but until they have major reforms in their education system and better teachers, I'm not sure they'll become a first tier nation anytime soon. The image portrayed in the 60 minutes clip might be a bit on the rosy side.

Everyone who is middle or upper class goes to private schools. From what I'm told (By Brazilians) is the schools are good, but I have suspicion they fall bellow our standards in the US .I even remember a friend saying they are better than the US, even colleges, RIGHT! Same with some Argis, funny stuff, that's why people come from all over the world to go to our colleges. One of the Yuppies in that segments comments about how he has to hire American engineers. But at the same time almost all of my Brazilian friends, who are middle or upper class, seem to be fairly intellegiant. Probably no less intellegiant than most of my American friends.
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#10

Brazil's Rising Star

Interesting. I have a co-worker who used to live in Brazil and is married to a Brazilian. He still does some consulting work for the government there, but now lives in the USA. He told me he is considering a highly touted job offer in San Paulo, but only because one of the perks would be enrolling his kid in one of the most prestigious private schools in the country. i didn't think much of it when he told me about it, but reading these comments may explain why the private school is such a big deal for him.
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#11

Brazil's Rising Star

Here it is: http://www.economist.com/node/17679798
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#12

Brazil's Rising Star

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec...st-man-rio
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#13

Brazil's Rising Star

An American tourist, identified as Victor Vincent, 24, was found dead, already in an advanced state of decomposition, before dawn on Wednesday, a conjugate rented for the season on Avenida Minister Viveiros de Castro 15, Copacabana. The foreigner, who was from New York, was dead for about a week and showed no signs of violence. In the house there were two pipes used for consumption of crack, liquor bottles and tablets of sexual stimulants. Therefore, police work with the hypothesis that death was caused by an overdose.

Officers found the tourist dead after receiving complaints from residents of the building because of the stench coming from the apartment. According to the delegate Bruno Gilabert, the 12th Precinct (Copacabana), beside the body of the American Institute had a patch of vomit. Victor also had a sink in the head. The injury has been caused by a fall in death.

- The way the body was found, we can denote excessive use of drugs and alcohol. Not ruled out the possibility of natural death. And although there are no signs of violence, everything will be investigated - the delegate said.

The laptop was seized and the tourist will undergo forensic examination. It also remains to be investigated in the pipes were found in the apartment of some kind of drug. Vincent was in Rio since Oct. 20. He - that would be a small entrepreneur - was staying alone. The U.S. consulate was notified, try to locate the family of the young.

http://ultimosegundo.ig.com.br/brasil/rj...90246.html
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#14

Brazil's Rising Star

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=69qSWsqE39c
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#15

Brazil's Rising Star

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=...130&hl=en#
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#16

Brazil's Rising Star

Foreign Desk; SECTA
Brazil's New Leader Starts In Shadow of Predecessor
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO

1 January 2011
The New York Times
NYTF
Late Edition - Final
8
English
Copyright 2011 The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved.

SAO PAULO, Brazil -- When Dilma Rousseff assumes the presidency of Brazil on Saturday, she will do so at a time when her country is thriving economically and full of swagger, eager to flex more of its newfound wealth and influence at home and abroad.

But Ms. Rousseff, the first woman to be elected president of Latin America's biggest country, will have especially big shoes to fill, having to succeed the nation's most popular leader in history, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

While Ms. Rousseff has been eager to show that she is not a political puppet of Mr. da Silva, analysts say the challenge before her is one that her predecessor managed fairly well: balancing an ambitious domestic agenda with securing Brazil's global position.

Since being elected in October, Ms. Rousseff has mostly reassured investors that she is not looking to steer the country further to the left than under Mr. da Silva, who faced those same concerns when he was elected in 2002, before he adopted a pragmatic approach.

''As Lula's handpicked successor, Dilma will have to deal with high expectations for continued gains,'' said Michael Shifter, president of the policy research and advocacy group Inter-American Dialogue. ''Her appointments, decisions and comments to date have been reassuring for those who were nervous that she would be tempted to pursue a radically different course from Lula.''

While many expect her to mostly follow the economic course paved by Mr. da Silva, she has already signaled that she will adopt a tougher stance on some issues, including Iran, a subject that deeply divided Brazil and the United States last year.

On his final day in office, Mr. da Silva left his successor with a still brewing international dispute to grapple with. On Friday, Mr. da Silva decided not to extradite a former Italian guerrilla, Cesare Battisti, despite a decision by Brazil's Supreme Court in 2009 that he should be extradited to Italy on murder convictions in Italy from the 1970s.

''I consider this situation is anything but closed,'' Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of Italy said in a statement on Friday.

Strong-willed and short-tempered, Ms. Rousseff, 63, is viewed as more of an ideologue than Mr. da Silva, for whom she worked as chief of staff. She favors more state control over industries, including Brazil's rapidly expanding oil sector. But she also has a reputation as a pragmatic deal maker.

She will have the support of two-thirds of Congress, and analysts see Mr. da Silva working behind the scenes with the leaders of the 10 parties that form her presidential coalition.

Ms. Rousseff filled about half of her 37-member cabinet with ministers already serving under Mr. da Silva, including Finance Minister Guido Mantega. She appointed some well-respected professionals for other key posts.

Ms. Rousseff takes over at a time when Brazil is still in the midst of a domestic consumption boom and has record-low unemployment of 5.7 percent. The economy is projected to grow by 4.5 percent in 2011.

She inherits a country that is in significantly better economic shape than the one Mr. da Silva took over in 2003. By expanding cash-transfer programs for the poor, subsidizing housing loans and raising the minimum wage, his government pulled more than 20 million people out of poverty. The middle class has grown by 29 million people since 2002.

The country, which received a record $30 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund when it was close to economic collapse in 2002, now lends money to the I.M.F.

''When President Lula came to office, Brazil was a regional power with global ambitions,'' said Thomas A. Shannon Jr., the American ambassador to Brazil. ''Today, Brazil is an aspiring global power with regional interests and international responsibilities. That is a significant change from eight years ago.''

Global ambitions led Mr. da Silva and the departing foreign minister, Celso Amorim, to try to broker a compromise on Iran's nuclear program. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton discounted the deal that Brazil and Turkey had brokered as a ''ploy'' by Iran to delay sanctions, and friction worsened when Brazil voted against the sanctions sought by the United States at the United Nations Security Council.

Antoniode Aguiar Patriota, who served as ambassador to Washington under Mr. da Silva, will be charged as Ms. Rousseff's new foreign minister with rebuilding mutual trust between the countries, ''which was badly damaged by the Iranian episode,'' said Paulo Sotero, director of the Brazil Institute at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

Mr. Shannon said the countries had put the issue behind them. ''We got the resolution we wanted, and the Brazilians have committed themselves to implementing that resolution, so that's it,'' he said.

Still, Ms. Rousseff declined an invitation by President Obama to visit the White House before her inauguration, saying she was too occupied with forming her new government, but hoped to visit soon. Mrs. Clinton is scheduled to attend Saturday's inauguration in Brasilia.

Mr. Shannon said Ms. Rousseff's recent comments in The Washington Post were reassuring on the question of human rights, an area where the da Silva government drew criticism from Washington and which Ms. Rousseff feels deeply about, having been brutally tortured during Brazil's dictatorship.

She said in the Washington Post interview that Brazil's abstention in a recent United Nations vote condemning stoning as a method of execution was ''an error,'' and she signaled her misgivings, shared by many Brazilians, about Mr. da Silva's failed Iran mediation effort.

''She differentiated herself rapidly with respect to Iran,'' said Julia Sweig, director of the Global Brazil Initiative at the Council on Foreign Relations.

On the domestic front, Brazil faces significant challenges in infrastructure development, education and health, as well as with regulatory and tax barriers that are limiting high-end economic growth, analysts said. Ms. Rousseff has said her principal goal is to fight poverty, and she also will oversee the preparations for the 2014 World Cup and for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janiero.

Mr. da Silva, the 65-year-old former metalworker with a fourth-grade education, leaves office with an approval rating of more than an 80 percent.

In his final days, Mr. da Silva sent some parting shots to the United States, saying American policies toward Latin America had changed ''little or not at all'' since Mr. Obama took office. And he seemed to express personal satisfaction about the American economic crisis. Mr. Shannon declined to comment on the statements.

Still, in his waning hours in office Mr. da Silva was able to inspire Brazilians in a way that Ms. Rousseff will be hard-pressed to duplicate. In his final nationally televised address last week, he underscored what many analysts see as his singular accomplishment.

''Today, all Brazilian men and women believe more in their country and themselves,'' he said. ''This is a shared victory for all of us.''
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