*dabs*

All I want is to be a Germanic-tier blonde white southern Brazilian living in a lavish gated community in Sao Paulo and buying caixas misteriosas for thousands of dollars every week just to show off on YT.

Christ, that guy is literally god, his life is wonderful.

>Germanic-tier blonde
He doesn't even look very germanic or is a natural blonde. He's probably some italian or has generic portuguese descent and is from São Paulo, not the south, considering his accent and looks.

>He doesn't even look very germanic or is a natural blonde.

looks pretty germanic imo

still white and rich as fuck

I wish I were him

Does it really matter who Brazilians will vote for though? Seems like Latin American countries are unchangeable. Look at Argentina, Macri and Kirchner are like fire and water yet Argentina was and still is in a crisis and on the verge of bankrupcy.

Brazil will always be a violent, poor 3rd world country with isles of wealth here and there. No one will change that.

Uh, ok. The state of Paraná has a lot of people of polish descent. A lot of rich white farmers and industrialists too.

Not really, his choice of a successor is a joke (Fernando Haddad) who lost his reelection for mayor in 2016, in fact his party went into freefall in the 2016 elections, the only thing they have is Lula, without him they are Zergs with no cerebrate.

>Look at Argentina, Macri and Kirchner are like fire and water
Congress is fucking Macri over, plus just because he says things in opposition to Kirchner doesn't actually mean he'll do them, he may well simply be too incompetent.

>Brazil will always be a violent
This country was actually fairly peaceful up until the 70s when crime rates started increasing, and even just ~15 years ago a lot of states still had low crime rates.

The thing about presidential republics is that even if the president changes they're still limited by congress. It's an even bigger problem if there are a million parties and everyone wants a slice of the pie to support the government.
This keeps the status quo.

Just look at Latin American politics, it's pretty much all like that. Presidential systems with many parties.

>Does it really matter who Brazilians will vote for though?
Not particularly in the long run, I don't believe in this continent's future either. Short run though, a Lula presidency would be a disaster. The market would crash immediately, and our currency would become less valuable.

I think a lot of middle-class people like Bolsonaro simply because he promises more police and guns, not so much about conservative values or anything else. A increasingly humiliated and victimized tax-paying voting base just want a way of protecting themselves in this shithole, and don't really care about grand political ambitions or some socialist or ultranationalist nutjob's pipe dream.

It's a lot less about nationalism, and more about having some modicum of security against the favelado horde.

Do you think he's a farmer? He doesn't look like one.

>I think a lot of middle-class people like Bolsonaro simply because he promises more police and guns
It's also a vapid promise since the president can do next to nothing on those issues. State governments are the ones responsible for policing, but for the most part the states are so fucking broke they can't afford shit due to our completely insane model of revenue redistribution that screws over local governments, especially in small towns and poorer states. Literally the only reason SP is the closest thing to a safe state right now is because there's police crammed everywhere since it has by far the strongest economy.