GS_Dirtboy
Registered
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2012
- Messages
- 2,495
- Likes
- 4,316
Bajo, I love your double-standard! You admonished expats before for buying Dollars on the black market because it was illegal. Then you boasted about travelling to Miami (?) and put everything on your Arg credit card because you got a really good price on exchanging your Dollars.
Then we find out that you charge your expat clients in Dollars! The quote that we heard from a person who actually used you was U$3.000 and with no promises to actually get them their Arg citizenship. So we are to believe that you take those Dollars that you make from your law practice and change them at the official rate in the bank? Hahahahahahaha! No, you didn't do that.
Vende patria, no?
Here is the double-standard in the airline ticket case: Argentine govt officials (and you, of course) tell everyone that they should stop thinking in Dollars and only think in Pesos. This is Argentina. The official currency is Pesos. Then they themselves do something completely different. I earned Dollars in my job in the US. That money is in my US account. I pay for my airfare on a US airline that originates in Buenos Aires with my US credit card that is paid with my US Dollars. What right does the Arg government have to that money? It wasn't earned in Arg. You can't have it both ways - unless of course you are a government official or the elite who earn in Dollars.
Thievery. 100%
Then we find out that you charge your expat clients in Dollars! The quote that we heard from a person who actually used you was U$3.000 and with no promises to actually get them their Arg citizenship. So we are to believe that you take those Dollars that you make from your law practice and change them at the official rate in the bank? Hahahahahahaha! No, you didn't do that.
Vende patria, no?
Here is the double-standard in the airline ticket case: Argentine govt officials (and you, of course) tell everyone that they should stop thinking in Dollars and only think in Pesos. This is Argentina. The official currency is Pesos. Then they themselves do something completely different. I earned Dollars in my job in the US. That money is in my US account. I pay for my airfare on a US airline that originates in Buenos Aires with my US credit card that is paid with my US Dollars. What right does the Arg government have to that money? It wasn't earned in Arg. You can't have it both ways - unless of course you are a government official or the elite who earn in Dollars.
Thievery. 100%