Did new Brazilian president Bolsonaro say he'd rather have a dead son than a gay one?












63















There has been a lot in the global news media recently about the new President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, and the highly controversial things he is alleged to have said in the past.



Some quotes are attributed to him in a 2018 New York Times article. For example:




In June 2011, he said he would “rather his son die in a car accident than be gay,”




However, in discussions about this on social media, I've seen several Brazilians claim that it's "fake news", that he isn't really homophobic or racist, and that these news articles are just a "globalist scam" to discredit him.



Portuguese isn't a language I speak, so I'm having trouble verifying the original sources and context of this quote.



Can anyone point to the original source of this quote?










share|improve this question





























    63















    There has been a lot in the global news media recently about the new President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, and the highly controversial things he is alleged to have said in the past.



    Some quotes are attributed to him in a 2018 New York Times article. For example:




    In June 2011, he said he would “rather his son die in a car accident than be gay,”




    However, in discussions about this on social media, I've seen several Brazilians claim that it's "fake news", that he isn't really homophobic or racist, and that these news articles are just a "globalist scam" to discredit him.



    Portuguese isn't a language I speak, so I'm having trouble verifying the original sources and context of this quote.



    Can anyone point to the original source of this quote?










    share|improve this question



























      63












      63








      63


      2






      There has been a lot in the global news media recently about the new President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, and the highly controversial things he is alleged to have said in the past.



      Some quotes are attributed to him in a 2018 New York Times article. For example:




      In June 2011, he said he would “rather his son die in a car accident than be gay,”




      However, in discussions about this on social media, I've seen several Brazilians claim that it's "fake news", that he isn't really homophobic or racist, and that these news articles are just a "globalist scam" to discredit him.



      Portuguese isn't a language I speak, so I'm having trouble verifying the original sources and context of this quote.



      Can anyone point to the original source of this quote?










      share|improve this question
















      There has been a lot in the global news media recently about the new President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, and the highly controversial things he is alleged to have said in the past.



      Some quotes are attributed to him in a 2018 New York Times article. For example:




      In June 2011, he said he would “rather his son die in a car accident than be gay,”




      However, in discussions about this on social media, I've seen several Brazilians claim that it's "fake news", that he isn't really homophobic or racist, and that these news articles are just a "globalist scam" to discredit him.



      Portuguese isn't a language I speak, so I'm having trouble verifying the original sources and context of this quote.



      Can anyone point to the original source of this quote?







      quotes brazil






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 7 at 8:38









      Oddthinking

      102k31426531




      102k31426531










      asked Jan 3 at 13:47









      VictoriaVictoria

      424136




      424136






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

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          94














          Yes.



          In an interview with the Brazilian version of the Playboy magazine (in Portuguese, published June 2011, available on Archive.org), when asked what he would do if his son "turned homosexual", he said:




          Tem certas coisas que digo que é como a morte. Me daria desgosto, me deixaria triste, e acho até que ele mesmo me abandonaria num caso desses. Para mim é a morte. Digo mais: prefiro que morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo.




          This roughly translates to:




          There are certain things that I say are as death. It would bring me disgust, would make me sad, and I even think that he, himself, would abandon me in that case. To me, it is death. And more: I'd rather he died in an accident than show up with some guy. To me, he really would have died.




          In the same interview, when asked about whether he could love a homosexual son, he replied negatively - "Seria incapaz", Portuguese for "I would be unable [to do so]".






          share|improve this answer





















          • 4





            @William probably because they're translations

            – Brian Leishman
            Jan 4 at 14:27






          • 15





            @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 15:21






          • 3





            @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 20:08






          • 2





            @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

            – William
            Jan 4 at 23:41






          • 1





            @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 23:44



















          74














          The English Wikipedia page on Bolsonaro mentions: "[...] Bolsonaro said that "I would be incapable of loving a gay son", and added that he would prefer any gay son of his "to die in an accident". This was apparently said in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 2011, and is mentioned here as well (linked to Wikipedia).



          The headline is "Bolsonaro: "prefiro filho morto em acidente a um homossexual". While I also do not spek Portuguese, in this case it's quite similar to Spanish, which I understand a little.



          Prefiro filho morto em acidente is "I prefer (a) son that dies in an accident", a um homosexual is a comparative roughly translated as "over a homosexual (one)"



          Terra is a news aggregation website like Yahoo!, MSN, and such (see here). Unfortunately, I'm on a work computer right now and would rather not Google for Playboy, even though this time it's really for the articles ;)






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3





            Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

            – Michael Seifert
            Jan 3 at 15:50






          • 9





            There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:10






          • 23





            In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:20








          • 3





            As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

            – Jan Doggen
            Jan 3 at 20:41





















          13














          As it is clear by now, thanks to the other answers, Bolsonaro actually said that. My intention in this answer is just to provide a video evidence of it.



          This is the Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIvzTJJmRQw



          The title says: Jair Bolsonaro talks about the controversial phrase "I'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one".



          The interviewer asks: You gave an interview to Playboy where you said that you'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one. Would you say that again, today?



          Bolsonaro eventually admits at 1:15:




          No, I wouldn't say that again today.




          This, obviously, proves that he indeed said that.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 2





            Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

            – Oddthinking
            Jan 5 at 14:20











          protected by Oddthinking Jan 6 at 7:08



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          94














          Yes.



          In an interview with the Brazilian version of the Playboy magazine (in Portuguese, published June 2011, available on Archive.org), when asked what he would do if his son "turned homosexual", he said:




          Tem certas coisas que digo que é como a morte. Me daria desgosto, me deixaria triste, e acho até que ele mesmo me abandonaria num caso desses. Para mim é a morte. Digo mais: prefiro que morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo.




          This roughly translates to:




          There are certain things that I say are as death. It would bring me disgust, would make me sad, and I even think that he, himself, would abandon me in that case. To me, it is death. And more: I'd rather he died in an accident than show up with some guy. To me, he really would have died.




          In the same interview, when asked about whether he could love a homosexual son, he replied negatively - "Seria incapaz", Portuguese for "I would be unable [to do so]".






          share|improve this answer





















          • 4





            @William probably because they're translations

            – Brian Leishman
            Jan 4 at 14:27






          • 15





            @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 15:21






          • 3





            @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 20:08






          • 2





            @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

            – William
            Jan 4 at 23:41






          • 1





            @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 23:44
















          94














          Yes.



          In an interview with the Brazilian version of the Playboy magazine (in Portuguese, published June 2011, available on Archive.org), when asked what he would do if his son "turned homosexual", he said:




          Tem certas coisas que digo que é como a morte. Me daria desgosto, me deixaria triste, e acho até que ele mesmo me abandonaria num caso desses. Para mim é a morte. Digo mais: prefiro que morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo.




          This roughly translates to:




          There are certain things that I say are as death. It would bring me disgust, would make me sad, and I even think that he, himself, would abandon me in that case. To me, it is death. And more: I'd rather he died in an accident than show up with some guy. To me, he really would have died.




          In the same interview, when asked about whether he could love a homosexual son, he replied negatively - "Seria incapaz", Portuguese for "I would be unable [to do so]".






          share|improve this answer





















          • 4





            @William probably because they're translations

            – Brian Leishman
            Jan 4 at 14:27






          • 15





            @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 15:21






          • 3





            @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 20:08






          • 2





            @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

            – William
            Jan 4 at 23:41






          • 1





            @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 23:44














          94












          94








          94







          Yes.



          In an interview with the Brazilian version of the Playboy magazine (in Portuguese, published June 2011, available on Archive.org), when asked what he would do if his son "turned homosexual", he said:




          Tem certas coisas que digo que é como a morte. Me daria desgosto, me deixaria triste, e acho até que ele mesmo me abandonaria num caso desses. Para mim é a morte. Digo mais: prefiro que morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo.




          This roughly translates to:




          There are certain things that I say are as death. It would bring me disgust, would make me sad, and I even think that he, himself, would abandon me in that case. To me, it is death. And more: I'd rather he died in an accident than show up with some guy. To me, he really would have died.




          In the same interview, when asked about whether he could love a homosexual son, he replied negatively - "Seria incapaz", Portuguese for "I would be unable [to do so]".






          share|improve this answer















          Yes.



          In an interview with the Brazilian version of the Playboy magazine (in Portuguese, published June 2011, available on Archive.org), when asked what he would do if his son "turned homosexual", he said:




          Tem certas coisas que digo que é como a morte. Me daria desgosto, me deixaria triste, e acho até que ele mesmo me abandonaria num caso desses. Para mim é a morte. Digo mais: prefiro que morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo.




          This roughly translates to:




          There are certain things that I say are as death. It would bring me disgust, would make me sad, and I even think that he, himself, would abandon me in that case. To me, it is death. And more: I'd rather he died in an accident than show up with some guy. To me, he really would have died.




          In the same interview, when asked about whether he could love a homosexual son, he replied negatively - "Seria incapaz", Portuguese for "I would be unable [to do so]".







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 5 at 2:29

























          answered Jan 3 at 18:02









          osuka_osuka_

          91527




          91527








          • 4





            @William probably because they're translations

            – Brian Leishman
            Jan 4 at 14:27






          • 15





            @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 15:21






          • 3





            @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 20:08






          • 2





            @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

            – William
            Jan 4 at 23:41






          • 1





            @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 23:44














          • 4





            @William probably because they're translations

            – Brian Leishman
            Jan 4 at 14:27






          • 15





            @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 15:21






          • 3





            @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 20:08






          • 2





            @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

            – William
            Jan 4 at 23:41






          • 1





            @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

            – osuka_
            Jan 4 at 23:44








          4




          4





          @William probably because they're translations

          – Brian Leishman
          Jan 4 at 14:27





          @William probably because they're translations

          – Brian Leishman
          Jan 4 at 14:27




          15




          15





          @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 15:21





          @kiltek I’ve never seen this particular quote be manipulated (i.e., misquoted or misrepresented) - every article linked here seems honest and shows the quote, albeit sometimes not verbatim, meaning exactly what was meant in the original source. Don’t be so quick to pull out your tinfoil hat

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 15:21




          3




          3





          @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 20:08





          @kiltek three (now, four) comments does not a conversation make; what wasn't fitting was the original comment baselessly accusing the media of having an agenda

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 20:08




          2




          2





          @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

          – William
          Jan 4 at 23:41





          @BrianLeishman They’re no translations. All of them are native Brazilian news sources, and the quotes diverge between them for some reason. Osuka, though, almost every media outlet nowadays has an agenda, unfortunately; just look at CNN and Fox News.

          – William
          Jan 4 at 23:41




          1




          1





          @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 23:44





          @William I understand that, but that doesn’t mean every story fox and CNN put out are manipulated or otherwise biased (even in the way it is written). Sometimes, information is actually just reported as it really is - and so far, I’ve found that this was the case here.

          – osuka_
          Jan 4 at 23:44











          74














          The English Wikipedia page on Bolsonaro mentions: "[...] Bolsonaro said that "I would be incapable of loving a gay son", and added that he would prefer any gay son of his "to die in an accident". This was apparently said in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 2011, and is mentioned here as well (linked to Wikipedia).



          The headline is "Bolsonaro: "prefiro filho morto em acidente a um homossexual". While I also do not spek Portuguese, in this case it's quite similar to Spanish, which I understand a little.



          Prefiro filho morto em acidente is "I prefer (a) son that dies in an accident", a um homosexual is a comparative roughly translated as "over a homosexual (one)"



          Terra is a news aggregation website like Yahoo!, MSN, and such (see here). Unfortunately, I'm on a work computer right now and would rather not Google for Playboy, even though this time it's really for the articles ;)






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3





            Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

            – Michael Seifert
            Jan 3 at 15:50






          • 9





            There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:10






          • 23





            In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:20








          • 3





            As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

            – Jan Doggen
            Jan 3 at 20:41


















          74














          The English Wikipedia page on Bolsonaro mentions: "[...] Bolsonaro said that "I would be incapable of loving a gay son", and added that he would prefer any gay son of his "to die in an accident". This was apparently said in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 2011, and is mentioned here as well (linked to Wikipedia).



          The headline is "Bolsonaro: "prefiro filho morto em acidente a um homossexual". While I also do not spek Portuguese, in this case it's quite similar to Spanish, which I understand a little.



          Prefiro filho morto em acidente is "I prefer (a) son that dies in an accident", a um homosexual is a comparative roughly translated as "over a homosexual (one)"



          Terra is a news aggregation website like Yahoo!, MSN, and such (see here). Unfortunately, I'm on a work computer right now and would rather not Google for Playboy, even though this time it's really for the articles ;)






          share|improve this answer



















          • 3





            Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

            – Michael Seifert
            Jan 3 at 15:50






          • 9





            There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:10






          • 23





            In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:20








          • 3





            As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

            – Jan Doggen
            Jan 3 at 20:41
















          74












          74








          74







          The English Wikipedia page on Bolsonaro mentions: "[...] Bolsonaro said that "I would be incapable of loving a gay son", and added that he would prefer any gay son of his "to die in an accident". This was apparently said in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 2011, and is mentioned here as well (linked to Wikipedia).



          The headline is "Bolsonaro: "prefiro filho morto em acidente a um homossexual". While I also do not spek Portuguese, in this case it's quite similar to Spanish, which I understand a little.



          Prefiro filho morto em acidente is "I prefer (a) son that dies in an accident", a um homosexual is a comparative roughly translated as "over a homosexual (one)"



          Terra is a news aggregation website like Yahoo!, MSN, and such (see here). Unfortunately, I'm on a work computer right now and would rather not Google for Playboy, even though this time it's really for the articles ;)






          share|improve this answer













          The English Wikipedia page on Bolsonaro mentions: "[...] Bolsonaro said that "I would be incapable of loving a gay son", and added that he would prefer any gay son of his "to die in an accident". This was apparently said in an interview with Playboy Magazine in 2011, and is mentioned here as well (linked to Wikipedia).



          The headline is "Bolsonaro: "prefiro filho morto em acidente a um homossexual". While I also do not spek Portuguese, in this case it's quite similar to Spanish, which I understand a little.



          Prefiro filho morto em acidente is "I prefer (a) son that dies in an accident", a um homosexual is a comparative roughly translated as "over a homosexual (one)"



          Terra is a news aggregation website like Yahoo!, MSN, and such (see here). Unfortunately, I'm on a work computer right now and would rather not Google for Playboy, even though this time it's really for the articles ;)







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 3 at 14:33









          John W.John W.

          66935




          66935








          • 3





            Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

            – Michael Seifert
            Jan 3 at 15:50






          • 9





            There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:10






          • 23





            In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:20








          • 3





            As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

            – Jan Doggen
            Jan 3 at 20:41
















          • 3





            Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

            – Michael Seifert
            Jan 3 at 15:50






          • 9





            There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:10






          • 23





            In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

            – William
            Jan 3 at 16:20








          • 3





            As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

            – Jan Doggen
            Jan 3 at 20:41










          3




          3





          Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

          – Michael Seifert
          Jan 3 at 15:50





          Here's what appears to be the full text of the Playboy interview. I also don't know Portuguese well enough to offer a better translation, though.

          – Michael Seifert
          Jan 3 at 15:50




          9




          9





          There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

          – William
          Jan 3 at 16:10





          There is no factual recording of this statement, but his seemly confirms it at an interview to Veja (youtu.be/LIvzTJJmRQw) where he justifies it by saying it was in a context about the ‘kit gay’, which isn’t much coherent. Furthermore, in the full quote, he actually says that if a son of his show ups with a bearded man, this son is ‘dead’ to him, not that he would like a gay man to indeed die.

          – William
          Jan 3 at 16:10




          23




          23





          In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

          – William
          Jan 3 at 16:20







          In a news story by Terra (bit.ly/2ODDEpz), it is quoted: “Seria incapaz de amar um filho homossexual. Não vou dar uma de hipócrita aqui: prefiro que um filho meu morra num acidente do que apareça com um bigodudo por aí. Para mim ele vai ter morrido mesmo” Which literally translates to: I would be unable to love a gay son. I’ll not be a hypocrite here: I’d rather have a son die in an accident than to show up around with a bearded man [bigodudo would translate to moustached/cheful, which is often used in pt-br to mean a masculine man]. To me it would be like he is dead either way.

          – William
          Jan 3 at 16:20






          3




          3





          As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

          – Jan Doggen
          Jan 3 at 20:41







          As you yourself described, this answer needs to be rewritten to point to the original (Playboy) source - Wikipedia does not count as a sufficiently reliable source. But then, such an answer is already present.

          – Jan Doggen
          Jan 3 at 20:41













          13














          As it is clear by now, thanks to the other answers, Bolsonaro actually said that. My intention in this answer is just to provide a video evidence of it.



          This is the Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIvzTJJmRQw



          The title says: Jair Bolsonaro talks about the controversial phrase "I'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one".



          The interviewer asks: You gave an interview to Playboy where you said that you'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one. Would you say that again, today?



          Bolsonaro eventually admits at 1:15:




          No, I wouldn't say that again today.




          This, obviously, proves that he indeed said that.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 2





            Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

            – Oddthinking
            Jan 5 at 14:20
















          13














          As it is clear by now, thanks to the other answers, Bolsonaro actually said that. My intention in this answer is just to provide a video evidence of it.



          This is the Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIvzTJJmRQw



          The title says: Jair Bolsonaro talks about the controversial phrase "I'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one".



          The interviewer asks: You gave an interview to Playboy where you said that you'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one. Would you say that again, today?



          Bolsonaro eventually admits at 1:15:




          No, I wouldn't say that again today.




          This, obviously, proves that he indeed said that.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 2





            Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

            – Oddthinking
            Jan 5 at 14:20














          13












          13








          13







          As it is clear by now, thanks to the other answers, Bolsonaro actually said that. My intention in this answer is just to provide a video evidence of it.



          This is the Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIvzTJJmRQw



          The title says: Jair Bolsonaro talks about the controversial phrase "I'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one".



          The interviewer asks: You gave an interview to Playboy where you said that you'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one. Would you say that again, today?



          Bolsonaro eventually admits at 1:15:




          No, I wouldn't say that again today.




          This, obviously, proves that he indeed said that.






          share|improve this answer















          As it is clear by now, thanks to the other answers, Bolsonaro actually said that. My intention in this answer is just to provide a video evidence of it.



          This is the Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIvzTJJmRQw



          The title says: Jair Bolsonaro talks about the controversial phrase "I'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one".



          The interviewer asks: You gave an interview to Playboy where you said that you'd rather have a dead son than a homossexual one. Would you say that again, today?



          Bolsonaro eventually admits at 1:15:




          No, I wouldn't say that again today.




          This, obviously, proves that he indeed said that.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jan 5 at 14:20









          Oddthinking

          102k31426531




          102k31426531










          answered Jan 5 at 9:18







          user47584















          • 2





            Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

            – Oddthinking
            Jan 5 at 14:20














          • 2





            Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

            – Oddthinking
            Jan 5 at 14:20








          2




          2





          Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

          – Oddthinking
          Jan 5 at 14:20





          Welcome to Skeptics! I don't want to get into an edit war with you but you don't get to say claims are false without giving references (and at least saying what was said!) In any case, other statements are irrelevant to the question, and your personal political opinion is off-topic here, so please leave it out of the answer.

          – Oddthinking
          Jan 5 at 14:20





          protected by Oddthinking Jan 6 at 7:08



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
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