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Brazil contends with more gun ownership – and a rising gun culture

Not long ago, few Brazilians could lay their hands on semi-automatic weapons. But following dozens of legal changes under the government of former President Jair Bolsonaro, it’s become far easier for civilians to legally buy powerful weapons once reserved for the army or police.

“Before Bolsonaro, people thought anyone with a gun was bad. Things are different now,” says Brenda Provesi, a gun enthusiast.  

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Gun ownership – and culture – expanded in Brazil under former President Jair Bolsonaro. The new administration is finding that’s not so easy to backtrack.

Private gun ownership in Brazil has tripled to nearly 3 million over the past four years, and about 2,000 new clubs for recreational shooting – with names like “The Bullets” and “American Shooting Club” – have opened across the country.

But Brazil’s new president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, is trying to unwind his predecessor’s gun policies, based on his belief that more guns will only worsen an already high homicide rate in Brazil. Changing course could prove challenging for Lula, though, as Brazil’s nascent gun culture flourishes and a political movement takes root around gun rights.

The Bolsonaro government “armed our society from an ideological point of view too,” says Ivan Marques, a specialist from the nonprofit Brazilian Public Security Forum. “It’s hard to backtrack from that.”

Clad in protective goggles and pink earmuffs, Brenda Provesi looks straight into the camera and gushes about the semi-automatic, .40-caliber rifle she’s cradling in her arms.

“The trigger on this one is really nice,” says Ms. Provesi, who lives in the southern Brazilian city of Navegantes and runs Gunpowder and Blush, a YouTube channel for gun enthusiasts.

She pulls the trigger with a manicured finger, pumping bullets into a pink paper target a few meters away. “It’s a great weapon to start out with – for your wife, your daughter, your girlfriend,” she says.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Gun ownership – and culture – expanded in Brazil under former President Jair Bolsonaro. The new administration is finding that’s not so easy to backtrack.

Not long ago, few Brazilians could lay their hands on firearms like the one Ms. Provesi reviewed. But thanks to dozens of legal changes under the government of former President Jair Bolsonaro, it’s become far easier for civilians to legally buy powerful weapons once reserved for the army or police.

“Before Bolsonaro, people thought anyone with a gun was bad. Things are different now,” says Ms. Provesi.

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