In an op-ed published Wednesday by the Guardian, American journalist Glenn Greenwald and Brazilian Congressman David Miranda—who are married and live with their two children in Rio de Janeiro—vowed to continue fighting against the movement behind Brazil’s far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, despite attacks that have included detailed death threats targeting their family.

The “must-read” piece, which elicited expressions of solidarity from around the world, came after Brazilian authorities charged Greenwald with cybercrime last week, a move broadly condemned as an intimidation effort in retaliation for The Intercept‘s co-founder reporting on corruption involving key figures in the Bolsonaro government.

Sharing the new op-ed on Twitter Wednesday, Greenwald wrote that “it’s always more comfortable to speak about external politics than your family. But many others are enduring the same; it’s a vista for understanding Brazil.”

“Substantial media coverage over the last year, within Brazil and internationally, has been devoted to threats and attacks we each received, separately and together, due to our work,” the op-ed begins. “These incidents have been depicted, rightfully so, as reflective of the increasingly violent and anti-democratic climate prevailing in Brazil as a result of the far-right, authoritarian, dictatorship-supporting movement of President Jair Bolsonaro, which consolidated substantial power in the election held at the end of 2018.”

The piece offers a lengthy account of their year, starting with “when David entered congress in early 2019 after the only other openly LGBTQ+ congress member, Jean Wyllys, fled his seat and the country in fear of his life.” Miranda is now the only LGBTQ+ member in the lower house of the federal congress, which has “provoked countless and highly detailed death threats” toward their family from “the vitriolic anti-LGBTQ+ Bolsonaro movement.”

“That primal animus was enhanced by the fact that our public 15-year marriage and our two children serve as a living refutation of the false and toxic depiction of LGBTQ+ life as barren, unhappy, sickly and solitary, an anti-LGBTQ+ demonization campaign that is central to the Bolsonaro movement’s political identity,” the op-ed continues. The attacks on their family ramped up when Greenwald and The Intercept began reporting on the “Secret Brazil Archive” in June 2019, building up to the charges brought against the journalist last week.

However, the op-ed notes, their safety concerns preceded Bolsonaro’s 2018 election:

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