Highlights of the Brazilian week
Sunday (15), Brazilian society was marked by massive protests against Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, demonstrating against corruption and calling for her impeachment.
Even though the Rousseff administration has a prominent Socialist history of pro-abortion and pro-sodomy activism since 2011, the protests focused, according to Reuters, on “a sluggish economy, rising prices and corruption.”
The sizable demonstrations included no protests against abortion and the homosexual agenda. Pro-abortion and pro-sodomy socialists also protested against Rousseff.
Monday (16), the Brazilian media ran headlines about former Brazilian presidential candidate Levy Fidelix, condemned to pay a fine of R $1 million (over US $300,000) in a public civil action filed by the LGBT movement, because he had made statements in defense of family and children against the homosexual agenda. There was no massive, or even small demonstration in his support. Representative Marco Feliciano, an evangelical minister, was the only prominent Brazilian figure to support the Catholic Fidelix.
Thursday (19), Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Cármen Lúcia rejected an appeal from prosecutors who wanted to protect children from adoption by homosexual couples in the state of Paraná.
In her ruling, Justice Lúcia argued that the concept of family cannot be restricted in light of homosexual couples, according to Exame magazine.
In her view, the concept of family, with norms of visibility, continuity and stability, can also be applied to same-sex individuals.
As this ruling comes from the highest Brazilian court, it is a major defeat for efforts to protect children from ideological, moral, spiritual and even physical abuse.
Friday (20), Rep. Marco Feliciano decried a decision by Prosecutor Promotor Thiago, who wants shopping mall bathrooms in the Federal District, where Brasilia is located, to be available to people not according to their biological sex, but according to their “gender identity.” His decision follows a new resolution from the Human Rights National Council of the Rousseff administration.
Feliciano asked, “What will people, who use bathrooms and dressing-rooms, feel when they see there an individual from the opposite sex? Are not they going to be embarrassed? What about the risk of molestation?”
He also asked, “Where are feminists? This resolution exposes women to embarrassment and dangers. What about malicious men and boys choosing to frequent ladies’ rooms?”
Last week, Feliciano introduced two bills addressing these issues. If passed, they will suspend the federal resolution.