This post will be short. I am a bit stressed right now, having a computer programming assignment and a couple of reports I have to finish for school. I am a lousy programmer.
But I recently checked my blog, and found that I had gotten a lot of traffic from Brazil. To those of my readers who live there, I extend a hearty welcome. Your country seems to be going through interesting times just now. I know that Brazil, in collaboration with other countries, has been seeking to move away from the use of the American dollar in international trade. (See this also.) And I know that Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is under intense political attack just now. A coincidence? (Hardly, I think.) I wonder who is funding and orchestrating the attacks. I also think that it would be premature to write Ms. Rousseff off as a casualty.
The nasty thing about an empire trying to overthrow foreign governments in order to protect its hegemony is that every time the empire tries such tricks, the foreign governments learn lessons from the experience, which they apply in defending themselves from being eaten by the empire. Learning and applying those lessons to future overthrow attempts makes it harder for the empire to prevail in future attempts. It's like going into the ring against a bully who knows only a few tricks and who repeats them over and over. If the bully targets you, and if you have learned lessons from studying his past fights, you can befuddle him by thinking outside his box. (One application of lessons learned is that American NGO's - including religious and missionary organizations - are being kicked out of an increasing number of countries.)
So stand strong, Brazil! Don't let the United States eat you for lunch. One thing the U.S. cannot do this time around is foment a "democratic resistance" in Brazil in an attempt to legitimize a government that is the thuggish tool of rich people, as they tried to do in Syria and the Ukraine. Most Brazilians simply won't tolerate that sort of thing.