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https://perezfecto.tumblr.com/post/819636247599382528

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iaravps
9 days ago
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Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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Vorcaro pagou viagens de Ciro Nogueira a Paris, Lisboa e Nova York, diz PF

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O banqueiro Daniel Vorcaro e o senador Ciro Nogueira. Foto: Divulgação

A Polícia Federal apontou que o banqueiro Daniel Vorcaro mantinha uma relação considerada estratégica com o senador Ciro Nogueira (PP-PI), supostamente voltada ao atendimento de interesses do Banco Master junto ao Congresso Nacional.

A conclusão consta de relatório incorporado ao inquérito que apura suspeitas de corrupção e lavagem de dinheiro envolvendo os dois no Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF). O sigilo do processo foi retirado nesta terça-feira (16) pelo ministro André Mendonça, permitindo o acesso a detalhes das investigações.

Entre os documentos reunidos pela PF estão fotografias de viagens internacionais em que Vorcaro e Ciro aparecem juntos. As imagens foram incluídas pelos investigadores como parte do conjunto de elementos analisados no caso. No relatório, a Polícia Federal sustenta que a proximidade entre o banqueiro e o senador ultrapassava os limites de uma amizade comum.

“Tal vínculo de amizade transcende a mera relação pessoal, revelando-se, na verdade, uma relação funcional e instrumental, estruturada a partir da convergência de interesses ilícitos e orientada pelo benefício mútuo extraído por cada um dos envolvidos”, escreveu a Polícia Federal.

Segundo os investigadores, o parlamentar teria recebido diferentes benefícios financeiros atribuídos ao empresário. Entre eles estão a aquisição de participação societária por valor considerado inferior ao de mercado, repasses mensais de R$ 300 mil, utilização de um imóvel pertencente a Vorcaro e o custeio de despesas em viagens ao exterior.

Daniel Vorcaro aparece em nova foto com Ciro Nogueira. Foto: Reprodução

A PF afirma que essas viagens incluíam gastos com hospedagem, alimentação em restaurantes de alto padrão e deslocamentos em voos privados. Fotografias anexadas ao inquérito mostram Vorcaro e Ciro Nogueira em encontros, jantares e viagens internacionais realizadas ao longo do período investigado.

De acordo com o relatório, uma das despesas atribuídas ao banqueiro envolve a estadia de Ciro no Park Hyatt New York, hotel de luxo localizado em Nova York, além de pagamentos relacionados a restaurantes e outros gastos vinculados ao senador e à sua acompanhante.

Os investigadores também registraram a suposta disponibilização de um cartão destinado à cobertura de despesas pessoais. A investigação identificou ainda mensagens trocadas entre Daniel Vorcaro e uma pessoa responsável por intermediar pagamentos.

O diálogo foi incluído pela Polícia Federal como um dos indícios analisados no inquérito em tramitação no STF. Em uma das conversas, o interlocutor questiona se os pagamentos referentes às despesas do senadir deveriam continuar sendo realizados.

“Só uma pergunta rápida… eh pros meninos continuarem pagando conta dos restaurantes do Ciro/Flávia até sábado?”, diz o interlocutor. Vorcaro, então, responde: “Sim. Depois leva meu cartão para St. Barths”.

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iaravps
10 days ago
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Repensando minhas amizades
Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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No stress

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It is Sunday, October 12, 2025, in Sucupira Market.

Sitting in the shadow of the Estádio da Várzea and the plateau of Praia, temporary stalls are encroaching onto the street, full of merchants selling everything from fruit to electronics.

Eventually, two nondescript minibuses pull up to the market, and the Cabo Verde national team disembarks. They will be playing the most important match of their lives in 24 hours, for a chance to play at the World Cup.

But at the moment, they are relaxed and enjoying themselves. Some greet a number of the women at the stalls and take photos with some youngsters. Others chat with the passersby who join them as they walk down the street over the next hour.

Hours earlier in the Hotel Perola, the players spent their morning with family. Nuno da Costa could be spotted speaking with an elderly relative in the lobby. Vice-captain Vozinha was giving tickets to a kid who had made him a poster.

There is an air of some friends at a spa on holiday rather than a group of athletes on the verge of the biggest moment of their career. But this is Cabo Verde, the national slogan “No Stress” is ubiquitous and inescapable.

From the murals of the nation’s great poets on the Rampa dos Poetas, to the football shirts donned by every other person emblazoned with the number 10 and the name “No Stress,” Cabo Verde is a nation that takes relaxation seriously.

For Roberto “Pico” Lopes, that philosophy carries onto the football pitch.

“We have a saying, ‘No Stress.’ That’s actually the national motto, morabeza. It’s the national sort of slogan,” the Irish-born defender told Africa Is a Country ahead of the crunch match against Eswatini.

“It’s probably something I had to adapt to because obviously back home I’m the sort that on the day before a game, just need me alone, I just want to be in my own headspace,” he said.

“Here it’s almost the opposite. They just need people’s energy around. They need to be sort of occupied. They need to be relaxed. That’s what helps, being around the family and friends.”

Morabeza, the Cabo Verdean concept of hospitality, warmth, and “no stress,” pervades every aspect of culture, including football. You might even say it’s the secret to their success.

But morabeza is more than a quaint island lifestyle, devoid of problems. It is quite the opposite. It is a sense of hospitality and obligation forged across centuries of enslavement followed by the famines of the early 1900s caused by the Portuguese abandonment of the islands once slavery was abolished.

“Growing up I saw morabeza as something that was in-house, how we treated each other,” explains Cabo Verdean academic Terza Lima-Neves. “If your neighbor came by and it’s lunchtime, you have an obligation to invite your neighbor in for lunch. Whether it be lunch, or tea time, you have that obligation, even if they don’t stay, even if you don’t have food.”

Morabeza is not a passive concept. It demands action and is reciprocal. That reciprocity is writ large in the Blue Sharks.

In the aftermath of their 3–0 victory over Eswatini at the national stadium, the team immediately traveled to the Estádio da Várzea, the spiritual home of Cabo Verde where the first flag of an independent nation was raised in 1975. There the team was met by thousands of fans and a stage erected for the nation’s biggest party.

There was a spiritual communion on the pitch as players intermingled with fans. Vozinha spent much of the evening greeting anyone and everyone, thanking them for their support, while Livramento’s brother Jerr and his Dutch hip-hop group Broederliefde performed on stage for free.

That obligation to Cabo Verde is what also drove the team to go to the busiest market in the country the day before a match, just to greet the community. With no players in the team based on the islands, international breaks are dominated by meetings with families, friends, and the Cabo Verdean community.

The World Cup is no exception. Instead of making camp somewhere in Europe or the US, the Blue Sharks have been on a tour of Cabo Verde. Over four days, the team visited the islands of São Vicente, Sal, Fogo, and Santiago, while Federation President Mario Semedo had to apologize for the team’s inability to visit the five other inhabited islands.

The team traveled to Portugal before going to Boston, where the largest community of Cabo Verdeans outside the islands live. But even Boston was not enough. The team visited various towns in New England, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, where they played their final pre-tournament friendly in East Hartford in front of a raucous “home” crowd.

Where other national teams would consider these journeys an unnecessary hassle, for the Blue Sharks they are an essential part of the preparations.

“There’s a responsibility [to the diaspora],” says Terza. “It would be strange if the team did not land in New England first to greet the diaspora’s biggest population. We’ve acted inherently Cabo Verdean and put morabeza 100 percent on display, when you see the number of people who showed up everywhere.”

But what the team reaps, it sows. The coherent identity reinforced by these rituals is what makes Cabo Verde so successful. Despite being one of the most diverse squads at the World Cup — with players born in Ireland, the Netherlands, France, Portugal, and the US — it is arguably one of the most cohesive sides at the tournament. While other teams are in a constant state of flux, the Cabo Verdean team is completely settled, with every player understanding their role and the starting XI almost writing itself.

From the beaches of Brazil to the tactical structure of Portugal, through to the total football of the Netherlands, football is just another area of culture in Cabo Verde where disparate ideas are mixed to create something unique. This team is defensively structured, playing a 4–3–3 in a near carbon copy of something you would expect from José Mourinho. But unlike Portuguese football, there is an emphasis on expression and Jogo Bonito from Brazil, the country that until this year every Cabo Verdean supported at the World Cup.

In the last few years, the influx of Dutch-born players — all coming from the same community of Cabo Verdeans in Rotterdam — has brought with them a desire to play a more possession-based type of football. While Cabo Verde will play defensively and reactively, do not expect them to just park the bus. This team wants to play out from the back before finding one of their many talented wide forwards.

That cohesive footballing identity is holistic and enforced by social practices like head coach Bubista’s insistence that the only language spoken in training and team meetings is Kriolu. Players who previously never spoke Kriolu are forced to learn it and connect with being Cabo Verdean.

“I think it’s important,” Pico explained. “I’m here not to just play football, but be part of something bigger, to try and unite players and people together. I think we do that really well.”

That identity centered around relaxation and connection has left its mark on the pitch and in some way explains the Blue Sharks’ remarkable ability to deal with pressure. Every major tournament that Cabo Verde has competed in, they have exceeded expectations. In the four previous Africa Cup of Nations tournaments they have qualified for, they have only lost one group game and gone toe-to-toe with Morocco, South Africa, Egypt, and Cameroon without losing.

If there is any nation that can cope with the pressure of playing at the World Cup for the first time in their history, it’s Cabo Verde.

Now, for the first time in history, the whole world will be exposed to the morabeza at the heart of Cabo Verde. And thanks to the large diaspora in the US, despite Trump’s best efforts, Cabo Verdeans will bring the color to the World Cup.

“We are proud in this moment, and we’re going to show that pride unapologetically, in our way,” says Terza, who will be at the Blue Sharks’ opening game against Spain. “Let us show you what it looks to be in the World Cup as Cabo Verdeans.”

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iaravps
10 days ago
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“We are proud in this moment, and we’re going to show that pride unapologetically, in our way. Let us show you what it looks to be in the World Cup as Cabo Verdeans.”
Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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Peak masculinity. Photo from my collection, no date/info.

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Black white photo of a light skinned man wearing just white shorts reclining on blankets on a grassy hill. He is leaning towards a shorthaired black cat that is laying in the grass nearby. He is looking at it and petting it.ALT

Peak masculinity. Photo from my collection, no date/info.

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iaravps
10 days ago
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Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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04-06-2026

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iaravps
12 days ago
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Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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My latest cartoon for New Scientist

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  Title:  “A pie chart of what the Mars Rover can see”  Image:  A pie chart. The lower half is orangy red. The upper half is divided into three, with a small browny red area and a small darker browny red area on each side with a larger cream section in the middle   Key:  Orangy red area: Surface of Mars   Cream : Sky   Browny red: Mountain   Dark browny red: Another mountainALT

My latest cartoon for New Scientist

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iaravps
12 days ago
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Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
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