Informative morning of TSF This Monday was marked by the aftermath of the elections in Brazil. Brazilians face another three weeks of impasse: the result of the first round of the presidential elections gave a very brief victory to Lula da Silva, who will have to face Jair Bolsonaro again on October 30. Although Lula won, Bolsonaro’s party managed to elect eight senators from the 27 seats that were up for grabs.
With a heavy face and dressed in a black T-shirt, Jair Bolsonaro justified his defeat in the first round of the Brazilian presidential elections with many votes associated with the “will to change” associated with the escalation of inflation and other problems unrelated to internal politics. . “There are many changes that can get worse,” warned the Brazilian president at a press conference outside the Palácio da Alvorada.
Former president and candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, for his part, expressed confidence in a victory in the Brazilian elections and said that the second round will only be an “extension”.
In an interview with TSF, Lula’s number two considers that winning in the first round of the elections “is not easy.” However, Geraldo Alckmin says that Lula “should win the second round,” since he has “less rejection than the current president.”
Also on the agenda is the current bird flu epidemic, which is one of the largest in history. This is revealed by the joint report published this Monday by the European Food Safety Authority and the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control. In Portugal, the authorities detected 27 outbreaks of the disease in one year.
A student costs, in Portugal, 100 thousand euros from the time he enters school until the 9th grade. According to a study, our country spends €10,854 per year on each student, a figure that is below the OECD average.
Svante Pääbo received the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his discoveries on human evolution. The Swedish scientist works at the Institute of Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and was noted for sequencing the Neanderthal genome and discovering a previously unknown hominid called Denisova.
Ultimately, Native American actress and activist Sacheen Littlefeather died at the age of 75, booed by some and cheered by others in 1973, when she turned down an Oscar on behalf of actor Marlon Brando.
Source: TSF