I'm really sorry about the off-topic contents, but I had to post this article 
to a high-level groups of people. 
Since I use to participate in this list...
So, please, any comments, send it direct to me, so we won't pollute the list 
again (I really HAD to deliver this).

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During a recent debate, in the United States, I was questioned about what I 
thought of the internationalization of Amazonia (the Rain Forest).
    The young man asked me, saying that he was looking for the answer of a 
humanist, not a Brazilian.
It was the first time anybody had ever asked for a humanist view as a starting 
point for me. In fact, as a Brazilian, I would simply speak against the 
internationalization of Amazonia. As far as our government doesn't have the 
necessary care for this patrimony, it is ours.
    I answered that, as humanist, who fears the risk of degradation of the 
environment, which the Rain Forest is suffering, I could imagine its 
internationalization, as well as every other thing that is important to 
humankind.
    If Amazonia, under the humanist point of view, should be internationalized, 
the oil reserves around the world should be as well. The oil is as important to 
the welfare of humankind as Amazonia is for our future. Besides that, the 
reserves owners got themselves the right to increase or decrease the oil 
extraction, by lowering or raising its price. The rich of the world feel within 
their own rights burning this huge humankind patrimony.
    In similar fashion, the finances of rich countries should be 
internationalized. If Amazonia is a reserve to all human beings, it can not be 
burned by the free will of such owner, nor of such country.
Burning Amazonia is as serious as the unemployment caused by arbitrary 
decisions of the global speculators. We can't permit the financial reserves to 
be used to burn whole countries led by the delights of speculation.
    Even before Amazonia, I’d like to see the internationalization of the 
world's greatest museums. The Louvre shouldn't belong only to France. Each 
museum around the world is a guardian of the most beautiful pieces of art made 
by human talent. We cannot leave this cultural patrimony, nor  the natural 
patrimony of Amazonia to be handled and destroyed by the free will of such 
owner or such country.
    Not long ago, a Japanese milionaire decided to be buried with a work done 
by a grand master. That picture should have been internationalized before that 
happened.
    At the same meeting they asked me this question, the United Nations was in 
the meeting for the Millenium Forum. But presidents of a few contries had 
difficulties to arrive, because they had been constrained at the U.S. border. 
Because of that, I say that N.Y., as the United Nations Headquarters, should be 
internationalized.
    At least Manhatann should belong the whole humankind. As well as Paris, 
Venice, Rome, London, Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia (Brazil’s capital - no, it’s not 
Buenos Aires), Recife (another beautiful Brazilian city), each city, with it’s 
own beauty, with it’s own history, should belong to the whole world.
    If the USA wants to internationalize Amazonia, fearing the risk of leaving 
it at Brazilian hands, we should internationalize the US nukes. Moreso because 
they’ve  already shown that they’re capable of using such weapons, causing 
destruction thousands of times more than the lamentable burns at the Brazilian 
forests.
    In the debates for the US presidency, the candidates have (had) been 
defending the idea of internationalizing the world forest reserves in exchange 
for the debt of poor countries. Let’s  start using this debt to assure that 
each child in the world may go to school. We’ll internationalize the children, 
treating them, all of them, regardless of what country they were born, as 
patrimony that deserves the care of the entire world - even more than Amazonia 
does.
    When the world leaders treat the poor kids of the world as a humankind 
patrimony, they won’t let them work while they should be studying; die when 
they should been living.
    As humanist, I accept the mission of defending internationalization of the 
world .
But, while the world treats me as a Brazilian, I’ll fight for the Rain Forest 
to be ours. ONLY OURS.

Cristovam Buarque is professor at University of Brasilia, where he was rector 
from 1985 to 1989. He was governor of Brazil’s Federal District from 1995 to 
1999. He worked six years at the BID, in Latin America and Washington, DC. He’s 
author of 17 books.
translation to English: Romeu de Freitas Flores Jr.

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