Post 9hkYnHGfxMrCLuGrDc by Vincentius@liberdon.com
(DIR) More posts by Vincentius@liberdon.com
(DIR) Post #9hkHuHMCKEVlR1bfVI by orekix@pl.smuglo.li
2019-04-12T22:50:13.303306Z
3 likes, 3 repeats
aren't there any hues in the fedi?1507002563757.png
(DIR) Post #9hkW4Jc4BvJOgZi17w by Vincentius@liberdon.com
2019-04-13T01:28:53Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@orekix While I am technically "hue", I would be better described as a curitiban.
(DIR) Post #9hkWJuIK5n5qnMuP6e by orekix@pl.smuglo.li
2019-04-13T01:31:43.476448Z
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@Vincentius oh cool, how's Brazil?
(DIR) Post #9hkYnHGfxMrCLuGrDc by Vincentius@liberdon.com
2019-04-13T01:59:25Z
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@orekix Many places in Brazil are marked by natural tragedies or outright negligence.Curitiba, though, has been better than other northern or rural places.Keep in mind that it is like USA: big and diverse, where you you can find diverging cultures. However, unlike USA, neither wealthy nor poor.What I really like here is the popular notion that politicians tend to be corrupt(polĂtico corrupto!), but people still insist in trusting their lives to leaders(mito!).
(DIR) Post #9hkZFJS7QahREgzXLk by orekix@pl.smuglo.li
2019-04-13T02:04:30.367724Z
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@Vincentius That tends to be the case in most of latin america, all of us are aware of how corrupt our governments are but continue to be cautiously optimistic that maybe, just maybe the next politician will manage to do something meaningful (if they even let him).