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Episode: 4347
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Title: HPR4347: "Of my country!" Brazil - in a Southern city viewing
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4347/hpr4347.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 23:26:33
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4347 for Tuesday 1 April 2025.
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Today's show is entitled of my country, Brazil in a southern city viewing.
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It is hosted by Semlas and St. Louis and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, I tell you my sincere impressions about topics of my country from my limited
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experience and studies.
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Today's show is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License.
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Hello my friends, I'm here to talk with you about my country, that is Brazil.
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I will talk under the premises of my limited experience of living, my limited study of
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life and of the topics specifically, and I hope you like the information.
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Number one, I'll talk about our national health system, SUS, the system I only could
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study, would be translated as unifying health system.
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It is something that works, any citizen, any person here, that is here in the pendant
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of nationality, of anything, has free access to health treatment.
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No payment, no check, and if the person has paid the taxes, anything.
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Of course, the waiting time may be a problem, if it's not a emergency or emergency.
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I had a case where I had to go to a public hospital, at the moment I was already better
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of the stomach pain I had.
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My neighbors had to call the ambulance, all from SUS, and I was stuck to the public hospital.
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Very clean, structured, but it was full.
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I would have to wait because on the screening, the triage, I was without bigger problems
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for ready service, I didn't need anymore, so I would have to wait three hours for medical
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care.
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I chose to get home and God bless the pain had not returned.
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But of course, many people depend and can rely on it.
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Quality of a rise, has any service paid or not, has quality of a rise.
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According to the city, if it's a capital or a country town, a more structured or smaller
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city, depends on the hospital, the specific doctor and the support team, etc.
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It all depends, but we have the national health system for free.
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Where to step water, the water that we have in our taps is safe, it's recognized as
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drinking water.
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At least in my city, I live in a southern city, capital city, and even the water treatment
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company that is Sanepar sells their water bottled in drug stores, for example, and sponsors
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events like running or other sports that distribute water to show the quality of it, to generate
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trust.
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Anyway, people don't use to drink from the tap directly, are they use a filter or come
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on also to buy water in carbois, that is 20 liters, big plastic bottles, we buy 20 liter
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carbois, that is a little more than 5 gallons, the capacity, and drink from it the mineral
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water.
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I use this option, but I also drink water under the shower or from the tap also, of course,
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if mineral water is lacking.
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Most people that I know simply don't drink water, I don't know, I don't understand how
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it is, but they don't drink water, not even a liter per day.
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The most common substitutes, quote-unquote substitutes, are coffee and soda, topic tree in the
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half forward program, religion numbers.
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Statistics about religion are very misleading, you can find different numbers in different
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researches, but more than half identify as catholics, more than 20% evangelical, maybe
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30%, and 10% without religion, and another religions with fewer numbers.
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But all deeds says nothing about reality, of what you find in the streets and the families.
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Only because in some areas it's a shame or embarrassing to identify as 80s, as if you
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were immoral and cannot be trusted.
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So people without religion, simply say the religion of the family or the generic expression,
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Catholic, non-practicing, I said that, and they thought, okay, it's what I am, but what
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is a religion that you don't practice, it's no religion at all, but the numbers don't
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say that, number four, our law, I am very proud of it, I like that we have what technically
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we say positive law, our law is written, do it again, our fourth topic, our law, Brazilian
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law is written and detailed, sometimes the law doesn't change, but the cuts decide
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in a different manner according to the some years in time, so there is this variation,
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but in general, a written law by the legislative power, the parliament, the congress, makes the
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mess, the gross, the main thing we need in our daily lives.
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If you want to know about our judicial system, for example, or rights, et cetera, it's
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everything in the constitution, more than 200 articles, it's very analytical guiding everything
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above all the norms, and under it, the laws, and under it, the decrease.
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Most of the norms are federal and encompass the entire nation, and it's a reason for
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we are being so equal, we may say, in many senses, while living in a country with 212 million
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people living, official estimation, from the government, and that represents this country,
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48% of the South America continent, one last line about this subject, I hope you're
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not finding it so boring, is that the union has the exclusive, the private power to rule
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about civil law, a criminal law, work law, and other, and other ones, and other ones that
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are limited in the article 22 of our constitution, that gives the power to union, states, and
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municipalities.
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So the main themes of our lives, the minimum wage, how our relations privately are regulated
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in civil law, what are the crimes, and the sanctions for the crimes, everything is unique,
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is one, and only the union has the power to determine in national uniformity, so there
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is a big area of life that only the union has the power to do, which is good in that sense
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that if you want to know something about our country, in terms of regulations, you can
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see it written, not that everything is very organized, sometimes there are many laws you
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have to search, but it's our form of law.
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Now something very specific to my city, a capital city on the south of the country, as
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I have said, here you are not expected to say good morning when you cross with a stranger
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on an empty street, no hello or good morning to the bus driver when you enter the bus, it's
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normal to not do so, in many other parts of the country, country wise, it's different.
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For example, I live in a capital city on the north of the country, and everybody expected
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you to say good morning when entering an elevator at the morning, what generally makes
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people think, you are strange hearing my southern city if you do that, but there when
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I didn't say anything, they would call me, oh, he's in polite, oh, he's arrogant.
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So you have differences, regional differences.
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If I ask for the name of a seller on a store here in Kudiciba in the south, to be more
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polite, saying his or her name occasionally like, thank you Hadova for this explanation
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or for getting this book for me from the shelf, if I do that, when I am demanding more
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attention time to be more polite, saying his name or her name, they ask, you are not
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from here, are you?
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And I am, thank you for being here in HPR Hacker Public Radio with me and one, may your
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heart be filled with love every time.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work, today's
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show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording
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broadcast, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and R-Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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