There is a French urban legend according to which authorities in 1986 told the general public that the radioactive cloud created by the Chernobyl disaster had stopped dead at the French border, thus posing no risks for the country. While that story has long been debunked, it is being recreated today during the coronavirus pandemic by Romeu Zema, the governor of Minas Gerais, Brazil’s second-most populated and second-richest state. Minas Gerais borders São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, the states with the highest absolute numbers of Covid-19 infections and deaths in the country. And yet, if we take the Zema administration’s word at face value, it is as if the virus has simply refused to cross state lines.
According to data from the Health Ministry, Minas Gerais has confirmed...
In 2000, Formula 1 great Michael Schumacher had just racked up his 41st race win,…
Overall, the worldwide economic outlook has improved according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and…
“This is f***ing corruption, it has to change,” protested an irate John Textor, owner of…
Eduardo Leite, governor of the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, on Wednesday…
Moody’s is the latest rating agency to improve its assessment of Brazil, bumping up the…
Other finalists include the Harvard Business Review, Fortune, Condé Nast, and the NFL