From Incivility
and
https://downandoutdistro.noblogs.org/files/2019/02/third-thing-1.pdf

The Following text which is an interview with the alleged leader of Brazil’s largest Criminal Organization (Primeiro Comando da Capital [PCC]), is taken from the Hostis Journal Volume 1 (complete PDF available at incivility.org). To add some context, this text is also presented with a brief history of the PCC organization and its activities in the recent years. This zine is part of ‘Bootlegs’ by Down & Out Distro, a project which aims to reproduce texts from books, journals, blogs, newspapers etc and turn them into condensed and easily accessible zines (without ever editing the texts themselves).
Texts have been chosen which carry themes of insurrectional transfeminisms, queer nihilism, cruelty, amoralism, insurrectional praxis, and revenge. and are presented as a ‘collection’ which we offer in an effort towards building intimacies/familiarities with certain emergent trajectories in insurrectional theory – in particular with regard to queer and transfeminist developments in insurrectionalism.
A Brief History of the PCC
+ The Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC, First Command of the
Capital) was born in October 1993. The organisation which would later become Brazils “largest criminal empire” was created in a prison in Tabute, by eight inmates whose goal was to denounce oppression in the prison system; and with a desire to avenge the slaughter of 111 inmates at Carandiru prison who were executed by the police.
+ The ‘Organisation’ is based mostly in Brazil’s capital São Paulo
(hence the name) but is said to be active across Brazil and also conducts operations in Paraguay, Bolivia, and internationally.
+ In 1999 the group carried out the biggest bank robbery in São
Paulo’s history, stealing some $32 million.
+ In 2001, PCC coordinated an enormous prison rebellion with
simultaneous shutdowns in 29 facilities across São Paulo state.
+ In 2006, the PCC launched an even more significant rebellion.
Imprisoned members took over more than 70 prisons across the
country, holding visitors hostage. Simultaneously, the group
launched coordinated attacks against police and key infrastructure
on the outside, especially in São Paulo.
+ In 2012 it launched a diffuse campaign of assassinations against
police officers in São Paulo, in response to the murder of some
of its members. The police responded by going into neighbourhoods where PCC was active and randomly shooting ‘suspicious persons’.
+ In 2017 30 members of the group conducted the biggest robbery in Paruguain history, using anti aircraft guns and bullet proof cars during the getaway.
+ Today, the PCC is suspected to operate one of the largest drug
and arms trafficking operations in South America.
Taken from O Globo
Translated by Pepe Rojo
Brazilian capo speaks like a prophet; everything he said is both actual and unsettling.
Marcos Camacho, better known by his nickname Marcola, is the leader of a criminal organization in São Paulo, Brazil, called Primer Comando de la Capital (PCC, Capital’s First Commando).
Marcola’s answers allow us to get a glimpse at what could be the future of common delinquency in Latin America.
O Globo: Are you part of PRIMER COMANDO DE LA CAPITAL (PCC)?
Marcola: Even more than that, I am a sign of these times. I was poor and invisible. You never glanced at me during decades, while it seemed easy to solve the problem of misery. The diagnosis was obvious: rural migration, rent disparity, few slums, discreet peripheries; but the solution never appeared… What did you do? Nothing. Did the federal government ever made a budget reserve for us? We were just news when a slum in the mountain caved in, or romantic music along the “beauty of the dawn at the mountains” line…
Now we are rich with the drugs multinationals. And you are agonizing with fear. We are the late beginning of your social conscience.
O Globo: But the solution would be…
Marcola: Solution? There’s no solution, brother. The mere idea of a “solution” is already a mistake.
Have you seen the size of the 560 villas miseria (slums) in Río? Have you overseen São Paulo’s periphery on an helicopter? Solution? How? It could only be through millions of dollars spent in an organized manner, with a high level government, an immense political will, economic growth, a revolution on education, general urbanization, and it would have to happen under the leadership of an ‘clear-minded tyranny’ that could jump over our secular bureaucratic paralysis, that could pass over the Legislative accomplice, and the penalty-avoiding Judicials. There would have to be a radical reform of the penitentiary system of the country, there would have to be intelligence communication between provincial, state and federal police forces (we even have ‘conference calls’ between jail inmates…)
And that would cost billions of dollars and would entail a deep psychosocial change in the political structure of the country. What I mean is: it’s impossible. There is no solution.
O Globo: Aren’t you afraid of dying?
Marcola: You are the ones afraid of dying, not me. Better said: here in jail, you can’t come over and kill me, but I can easily have you killed outside. We are human bombs. In the slums, there are a hundred thousand human bombs. We are right in the middle of the unsolvable. You are between evil and good, and in the middle, there’s the frontier of death, the only frontier. We are already a new species, different bugs, different from you. For you, death is this Christian drama lying in a bed, with a heart attack. Death for us is daily bread, thrown over a mass grave.
Weren’t you intellectuals talking about class struggle? About being a martyr? A hero? And then, we arrived! Ha, ha… I read a lot; I’ve read 3,000 books, and I read Dante, but my soldiers are strange anomalies of the twisted development of this country.
No more proletariat, or unhappy people, or oppressed. There is a third thing growing out there, raised in the mud, educated through sheer illiteracy, getting their own diplomas on the street, like a monstrous Alien hidden under the crevasses of the city. A new language has already sprung. That’s it. A different language.
You’re standing right before post-poverty.
Post-poverty generates a new murderous culture, helped by technology, satellites, cellular phones, internet, modern weaponry. It’s all that shit with chips, megabytes.
O Globo: What changed in the outskirts?
Marcola: Mangoes. Now we have them. Do you think someone like Beria Mar, who has 40 million dollars, isn’t in charge? With 40 millions jail becomes a hotel, a desk… Which police force is going to burn down that gold mine? You get me, right? We are a wealthy corporation. If a functionary hesitates he is “placed on the microwave”.
You are the broken state, dominated by the incompetent. We have nimble ways of dealing. You are low, bureaucratic. We fight on our own terrain. You do so in a strange land. We are not afraid of death. You are dying of fear. We are well armed. You only have .38’s. We are attacking. You are on defense. You have the mania of humanism. We are cruel, merciless. You transformed us into crime superstars. We regard you as clowns. We are helped by the population of the villas miseria, either out of fear or love. You are hated. You are regional, provincial. Our weapons and products come from outside, we are “global”. We never forget you, you are our “clients”. You quickly forget us, as soon as the scares we provoke pass away.
O Globo: But, what should we do?
Marcola: I´ll give you a hint. Get the “dust barons” (coke lords)! There´s congressmen, senators, businessmen, there’s ex-presidents in the midst of the coke and the weapons. But, who is going to do that? The army? With what money? They don´t even have enough money for recruits. I am reading “On war” by Clausewitz. There’s no perspective for success. We are devouring ants, hidden in the corners. We even have anti-tank missiles. If you do something wrong, some Stingers will drop by. To end us… only an atomic bomb in the villas. Have you thought about Radioactive Ipanema?
O Globo: But, couldn’t there be a solution?
Marcola: You will only get somewhere if you stop defending “normalcy.” There won´t be any more normalcy. You need to auto criticize your own incompetence. And, to be quite frank, your morality. We are at the center of the unsolvable. The difference is we live here, and you have no way out. Just shit. And we already work in it. Understand me, brother, there’s no solution. And you know why? Because you can’t even understand how widespread the problem is.
As the divine Dante wrote: “Abandon all hope. We are all in hell”