Please /his/, no memes or derailing. But what have Brazilians and Brazil achieved throughout their existence, technologically and culturally?
They managed to make "The Purge" real in Espirito Santo.
They got into the base game of Civilization VI after only first being introduced as DLC in Civ V.
reminder
>>2502025
Pele.
>>2502025
Posting frogfu on /pol/ all day.
Genetic engineering.
O UNIVERSSO E A FRONTEIRA AHUEHUEHUEHEUHEHEUHEUEHUEHUE
>>2502025
We do have some minor achievements in technology, but they're so sparse I can't really remember any, and they'e mostly made by braszillians sponsored by external patrons. Our culture sufered from cultural marxism even before it was a thing mostly because, not unlike in shitposting about australians, our population consisted mostly of the scum of each country they came from.
I guess you could say there were relevant composers like Villa-Lobos, writers like Machado de Assis(which I despise, but heard people call the Brazillian Dickens), painters like Portinari, but too many countries have their pearls, brazil's don't shine any brighter.
We're mostly just a big farm for the world, that may produce one or two intellectual sons, but is mostly filled with inbred rednecks.
Serve as a example that race mixing and multiculturalism are disastrous.
>>2502437
No, it's just never been really tried desu
>>2502441
>country supports most known cultures, religions, ethnicities and people
>government endorses the media caracterization of any non-whie culture as being superior
>race mixing is second to no country, and is seen by the public as something good
>it results in an extremely bland and unimaginative culture with a weak and immoral population
>"it's never been tried, your example doesn't fit"
keep movin the goalposts, that will work.
>>2502441
Real multiculturalism has never been tried huehuehue.
>technologically
Santos-Dumont invented the airship and advanced aviation, Carlos Chagas single-handedly discovered and described in detail the disease that receives his name, César Lattes was one of the discoverers of the pion.
More recenty, Brazilian agricultural scientists have been developing ways to adapt crops like soybean and wheat to tropical soils, which is very important for food security in the coming decades.
>culturally
Brazilian guitarists are god-tier. Not only Villa-Lobos, but also Raphael Rabello, Dino 7 Cordas, Yamandu Costa etc. Choro is one of the most challenging genres of popular music. Other influential genres have been Bossa nova and tropicália of the 50s and 60s, and Brazilian thrash metal from the 1980s.
In literature and cinema we have been less influential, though Machado de Assis is gaining popularity in some Western literature courses, this is mostly as a fact that he was a "black" writer, even though his work transcends this. Oh, and there is Paulo Coelho, but fuck that.
We have also won five football world cups and revolutionized football which was before the 50s and the appearance of Brazilian Golden Generation of Pelé, Garrincha and Didi, an ugly physical game more akin to rugby than to the "beautiful game" it became (more or less) afterwards.
Overall it's too little for such a big country, but Brazil is too poor, unequal and isolated to be relevant.
>>2502489
We have embraced "diversity" (in our own way, more focused on assimilation than in multiculturalism) since 1930.
>>2502489
>The elites don't want to become more like this.
They're really good at beating the shit out of people in cages.
>>2502522
>>2502527
Oh yeah sure