Peguei o trecho de uma entrevista do ex-ministro da saúde José Gomes Temporão falando que atacar o piso constitucional da saúde vai matar o SUS. Já já chega e divulgo nas minhas redes.
Talvez com um ex-ministro falando todo mundo entenda a gravidade da questão.
ATENÇÃO, ARTISTAS!
Já leram os novos 𝗧𝗲𝗿𝗺𝗼𝘀 𝗱𝗲 𝗦𝗲𝗿𝘃𝗶𝗰̧𝗼 (ToS) do Twitter?
A partir do dia 15 de Novembro, postar qualquer "Conteúdo" na rede significa consentir em ceder direito para treinar a IA deles.
Privatiza que piora! 👎🏽
Durante o debate, o prefeito Sebastião Melo confirmou sua vontade de privatizar o Departamento Municipal de Água e Esgotos (DMAE). É assim que ele governa: terceirizando responsabilidades.
📹 @BrasildeFatoRS
Breno Altman: Por que os EUA apostam nas armas?
Artigo de minha autoria, publicado na Folha de S.Paulo desta terça, 10/10, sobre a adoção de uma política belicista de amplo espectro, pela Casa Branca, como freio à decadência da hegemonia norte-americana.
https://t.co/zpf0of8XBh
🏆📈UFRGS segue na terceira posição entre as universidades brasileiras no Times Higher Education
Edição 2025 da classificação coloca a Instituição em posição empatada com a UFRJ e PUCRJ. USP e Unicamp são apontadas como as melhores nacionalmente: https://t.co/FclPxdPzBK
When I was in my last years of school, my mother, Soni Prashad (1929-2020), took me to have tea with Mulk Raj Anand (1905-2004) at his home in Bombay. It was a monumental meeting for me, since I had just finished reading 'Untouchable' (1935). He enjoyed chatting with my mother, who had a disarming quality about her - equal parts curious and playful about what she did not know.
'Untouchable' occasioned my father telling me for the first time that his father, a scientist and translator from Arabic, Persian, and other languages (mainly Central Asian), Baini Prashad (1894-1969), had been part of the campaign against the caste system as a young man in Lahore (and had abandoned his last name as a sign of the rejection of the system in total). All this was the prehistory of the Ad Dharm movement in Punjab, led by Mangu Ram Muggowalia when he returned to India in 1925 after being inspired by the Ghadar Party in California. Our family had since then moved to radical atheism and a militant anti-caste sentiment (my father in particular, who abhorred inheritances of all kinds).
When I told Mulk Raj Anand (who is always referred to by his entire name) about what my grandfather had done, he said that had he been there then as a student he too would have abandoned Anand. His contemporary, Yashpal (1903-1976), only went by his own name and had rejected his caste name (his first novel, Dada Komred, from 1941 was more openly communist than anything Mulk Raj Anand wrote).
I am thinking of all this because I am re-reading 'Untouchable' in order to write a long essay about Mulk Raj Anand, in particular his sojourn as a journalist in Spain during the defence of the Republic against the imperialist-fascists. It is a joy to read the words of a man who wanted very much to be a human being. That is a quality, that search, which is very much needed in this world today.
(pic: my mother, before I was born, around the time when she first met Mulk Raj Anand with her sister, Tara).
"La humanidad debe tomar conciencia de lo que hemos sido y de lo que no podemos seguir siendo. Hoy nuestra especie ha adquirido conocimientos, valores éticos y recursos científicos suficientes para marchar hacia una nueva etapa histórica de verdadera justicia y humanismo."