Rickyj said:I don't live in Arg yet -planning a move... But I did have a meeting with reps from the Argentine embassy on Friday regarding our plans and I found it very strange, almost surreal. There I was, trying to convince them what a wonderful country I think they have, and they were trying to convince me what a wonderful place South Africa is! Weird! I guess the grass is greener... At least I wouldn't be moving from a first world country to a third world one - for us it would be "even stevens".
brocolliandtea said:This topic has taken a turn to the status of Argentina. Most of Latin America since independence has been run by a handful of families with the majority oppressed. Its been a sad failure.
But I think the OP wanted to talk about dealing with the Argentines. The are afraid all day long, frightened and fearful and paranoid and on their guard even to the point of walking in the street because they are afraid of the sidewalk. I see many people who actually get pleasure from being cruel. I see incredible lack of honesty to the point of being amoral about it. I think many never learned the difference between right and wrong. To them its the same.
I see the sad unhappy faces. I see fury just below the surface. I see a lack of manners. I find them very unfriendly and cold, but mostly unhappy and sad.
Diskosis said:I saw a hilarious situation the other night when an Irishman who was just off the plane was telling a couple of Argentinian guys that his top footballers of all time were 1. Pele 2. George Best 3. Maradona. The guy was just expressing his opinion, but I thought the Argentinians were going to punch him. They didn't really know how to argue with the George Best thing either - I think they'd never actually heard of him.