Expat Deported At Ezeiza

inherited allegiance to the father in laws football team.... nice one

My good lady has 14 male cousins , and between them they follow seven different teams .

I have avoided all subtle pressure and even bribes to choose one of them

Its been a tough few years but I am still a neutral!
 
inherited allegiance to the father in laws football team.... nice one

My good lady has 14 male cousins , and between them they follow seven different teams .

I have avoided all subtle pressure and even bribes to choose one of them

Its been a tough few years but I am still a neutral!

You should answer you vouch for a team like Atletico Tucuman
 
If you marry you don't need to renounce your citizenship, you become a permanent resident with a DNI and an inherited allegiance to your father in laws football team. You don't become a citizen, unless you want to.

Married to an Argentine, I could easily get residence, but have never bothered - though we own property, our legal residence remains in California and my wife is now a US citizen as well. My nephews have threatened to take me to a soccer game but, fortunately, I have successfully resisted to this point.
 
You should answer you vouch for a team like Atletico Tucuman

Once Grondona's super league is inaugurated you would in all likelihood have a place in the top division supporting Atl Tucuman.

Unless, they decide that now he's dead they dont want his pet project implemented. Nothing would surprise in the farce that the AFA have made of local football.
 
Once Grondona's super league is inaugurated you would in all likelihood have a place in the top division supporting Atl Tucuman.

Unless, they decide that now he's dead they dont want his pet project implemented. Nothing would surprise in the farce that the AFA have made of local football.

Mentioning farce and soccer in the same sentence is redundant.
 
Pretty much all the "permatourists" I knew back in the day were here for a year, two at most. They generally put far more into the economy whether actively by patronizing bars/restaurants/clubs or passively (IVA) then they would have taken out (thinking of the fact none used the public system that I knew, rarely rode the trains, etc). Residency would neither have been an option nor of interest to them.

Anecdotally speaking, do people know a lot of permatourists these days? 2012, I feel like there was a pretty big decrease in US/British/etc and they started heading elsewhere and I started hearing a lot more portuguese spoken on the streets of Palermo, etc with all the Brasilians coming but they generally seemed to be short-term tourists, not long term. Now with the blue rate, it's cheaper than it was a few years ago, wondering if Europeans and people from the US are coming back down or it is still cost-prohibitive with flights, etc to be a perma-tourist.
 
Off the topic maybe? You may be here illegally, however, you may get to vote. Do not know what to believe anymore.

http://www.lapoliticaonline.com/nota/82479-la-campora-quiere-que-los-turistas-extranjeros-puedan-votar-en-las-elecciones-a-jefe-de-gobierno/
 
Pretty much all the "permatourists" I knew back in the day were here for a year, two at most. They generally put far more into the economy whether actively by patronizing bars/restaurants/clubs or passively (IVA) then they would have taken out (thinking of the fact none used the public system that I knew, rarely rode the trains, etc). Residency would neither have been an option nor of interest to them.

Anecdotally speaking, do people know a lot of permatourists these days? 2012, I feel like there was a pretty big decrease in US/British/etc and they started heading elsewhere and I started hearing a lot more portuguese spoken on the streets of Palermo, etc with all the Brasilians coming but they generally seemed to be short-term tourists, not long term. Now with the blue rate, it's cheaper than it was a few years ago, wondering if Europeans and people from the US are coming back down or it is still cost-prohibitive with flights, etc to be a perma-tourist.

Anecdotally speaking? The numbers I know personally have dwindled because people either simply left, started studying something, finally found someone who would sponsor a work visa or got married/had a kid, but yes, I still know permatourists here. Some are even business owners. But generally, from what I hear, English teachers (probably the largest category of permatourists) don't stick around nearly as long as they used to because it's just too expensive here and their savings run out quickly, despite the blue rate. I think people still come down, but flee more quickly than they used to once reality hits. I always hear British and Americans in Palermo, but sometimes they're young enough that they could easily be study abroad students, not permatourists. Lord knows Buenos Aires has gotten a ton of publicity in travel mags and the like over the past few years, so I don't think people have stopped coming. They just might not be staying as long.
 
Most of the ones I knew left already as well.
Only the brave expats, like us, stay! :p (anyone was asked "why did you choose Argentina over Brazil?". Lol, would choose Argentina again 100 times despite all the problems here)
 
Most of the ones I knew left already as well.
Only the brave expats, like us, stay! :p (anyone was asked "why did you choose Argentina over Brazil?". Lol, would choose Argentina again 100 times despite all the problems here)

Nobody can doubt Clouseau's bravery (?).
 
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