Ocaso Mediadoresç ((full))
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Historically, the "mediator" in Brazil was a fundamental figure. In a colonial and imperial society marked by vast distances and a weak state presence, authority was often exercised through personal potentates—landowners, local chiefs, and patriarchs. These figures were the bridge between the isolated individual and the wider social order. To exist socially was to be connected to a mediator. This dynamic created a society where personal loyalty superseded abstract laws. The mediator acted as a protective barrier, a "cushion" that absorbed the harshness of the legal system, often allowing for exceptions and privileges based on friendship and kinship. In this context, the "twilight" of these figures suggests the slow death of this patrimonialist logic. ocaso mediadoresç
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Furthermore, the twilight of the mediator exposes the isolation of the modern individual. Without the protective shield of the patriarch or the local chief, the individual is left naked before the market and the state. This vulnerability helps explain the current political polarization in Brazil. The longing for a "strong leader" or a messianic figure can be interpreted as a desire to resurrect the mediator—a figure who can "fix" things personally, bypassing the slow and complex democratic processes. It is a nostalgic desire for a time when social navigation was personal rather than institutional. To exist socially was to be connected to a mediator