nbcnews.com
Who is in the wrong here?
Who is in the wrong here?
FUCK FRANCE!
FUCK EUROPE!
FUCK YOU!
>I don't want your money. Also your wife is old and ugly kkkkkk
>Uhm actually I'll take the money. Also you should apologize to me
Uhm I don't know
Brazilians are literally subhumans
Thank you Italy, my greatest ally.
But the hitch as I understand it is that Macron called Bolserano a liar for not keeping his promises on the Amazon, and now Bolserano is butt-bothered and wants to keep face but have his money.
The Chad Macron vs the Virgin Bolsonaro
>But the hitch as I understand it is that Macron called Bolserano a liar for not keeping his promises on the Amazon
Brazil doesn't understand that the EU deal includes a clause that Mercosur must respect the Paris agreement on the environment
Cut down trees = deal is over automatically
fpbp
amazonwatch.org
>The following are among the findings that trace the link between deforestation in Brazil and consumers, companies and financiers in the EU and the US:
>A company that supplies Germany's high-end organic supermarkets with purees, smoothies and powders imported 9.1 tons of acai pulp from Argus Comercio e Exportação de Alimentos. The owner, Arnaldo Andrade Betzel, is a partner in several companies in the state of Pará and has longtime operations in timber as well as in fruit pulp sectors. Between 2017 and 2018 Mr. Betzel was fined US$ 570,000 for illegal deforestation in Pará.*
>Brighton Collectibles, an accessories store found in malls and main streets across the United States, received twenty-eight shipments of bovine leather totaling 4.4 tons from Italian tannery Faeda, which received leather imports from Frigorífico Redentor, a subsidiary of the family-owned the Grupo BIHL, fined $1 million for illegal deforestation. The Bihl family was the target of Brazil's 2009 Federal Police investigation, known as "Operation Abate," which ultimately put four of the Bihl brothers in jail for giving bribes to public servants and inspectors in the company's ranching operations.
>The UK company Nordisk Timber Eireli, which extracts and commercializes native wood from the Amazon and supplies a range of leading hardwood companies in Belgium, the UK, the Netherlands and the U.S. Between 2017 and 2018, Nordisk was fined US$ 3.9 million for lack of environmental oversight over traded wood.
>Dozens of name brand investors, including Credit Suisse (Switzerland), Commerzbank (Germany), BNP Paribas (France), Barclays (UK), JPMorgan Chase (US), and leading U.S. asset managers such as BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street bankroll the bad-acting Brazilian companies and the global soy trading companies profiled in the report.
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