Brazil has the largest Black population outside of Africa, so when one biracial woman thought she could get away with continuous racism, the federal government made an example out of her.
Day McCarthy has a history of making hateful comments. And she told the Washington Post, thatβs how she grew up. βThis is what people told me when I was a kid,β she said in the interview. βI was bullied because I was overweight, because I was the daughter of a Black man, because I didnβt have any money, because I came from a poor neighborhood.β
Suggested Reading
Despite being biracial, McCarthy continued spewing racist language mostly targeted at children, but the consequences of her actions caught up to her when she called the Black daughter of two white celebrities a βmonkey,β according to the Post. Seven years after her comments, a Brazilian judge found her guilty of racismβ an offense the diverse country takes very seriouslyβ in August 2024.
Brazil has a more narrow definition of freedom of speech than the U.S. Threats against the Brazilian government are considered illegal and so are personal attacks that offend someoneβs honor, including racist speech, according to the Library of Congress.
βThe gravity of the crime of racism in Brazil is so great that people can be arrested on the spot,β said LΓvia Vaz, the director of a racism prosecutorial team in the country, told the Post. βWhen I started, it wasnβt that way. The police would go to the scene, and no one was arrested. Now they are.β
Unlike in the United States, racism in Brazil can cost an offender, like McCarthy, years behind bars, according to the UN Refugee Agency. The 35-year-old Brazilian was sentenced to eight years and nine months in prison. Her sentence is the longest ever given out for racism in the country, reports the Post.
McCarthyβs sentence serves as an example of the countryβs efforts to right the wrongs of itβs racist past. The heat of the 2020 George Floyd protests prompted Brazil to take responsibility for itβs role in the transatlantic slave trade. Even public prosecutors have began formal investigations into slavery, which many Black Brazilians hope will result in reparations, according to AP News.Β
Even though the country has taken a stand against her, McCarthy, who lives in Paris currently, told the Post she has no plans to turn herself in to Brazilian authorities. Instead, she hopes to continue living in Europe.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.