interesting...
It's funny how defense of suspicions about one's position tends to reaffirm the suspicion.
I'm going to leave the "Obama" and "Sharpton" references alone. They speak for themselves. The "slavery" reference also doesn't apply but it led to an interesting point. Many expatriots in the Dominican Republic do appear to become hardened against their hosts and tend to regard the general populace with the same affectionate superiority with which landowners in the States regard sharecroppers. That's not a race thing. It's an indicator of a personal need to be surrounded by those who are regarded as "inferior" in order to somehow become "superior". I have a very good friend (who is Caucasian) who primarily dates Asians and Latinas from El Salvador, explaining "because they're my height" (he's 5'4").
This observation is not specific to or limited to you and I'm not trying to s#!t in your mess gear but I have heard many similar comments to yours which place the blame for Dominican poverty suarely on the shoulders of those poor Dominicans who never had an equal footing or a fighting chance thanks to the selfishness of their more blessed fellow Dominicans.
6% of the population controls 1/3 of the nations wealth. They deny the 57% of impoverished Dominicans a chance for a quality education so that they can keep them underfoot and have them do their bidding. I'd like to see the statistics of how much of the assets of that well educated and well fed 6% are inherited vs. how much is earned.
Nope, I hope more and more of that 57% escape to Miami, Altanta, Boston and Nueva Yol and get their children the educational benefits that they'd never have in their homeland so that they can return to the DR in a generation with the grandchildren to claim what should have been theirs all along...an equal stake in their country's wealth, present and future.
Can't guess anything right, can you? It sure sounds funny when you hear the defense from the point of view of a person who doesn't live here full time or only lives in resort area. Absolutely no idea.
lets see how I compare to a full time chiropractor in usa (forget part time) oh and feel free to compare me to yourself also.
With the pesos I make in DR, I have traveled so much in the world that I needed new pages on my passport because there was no more space to stamp my passport. My passport is only 3 yrs old. I go to usa every month and spend money in dollars. I will be in NY tomorrow. next month, I will be in frankfurt germany and then to swiss alps and then to milan, italy (all in one trip, by car). later this year I will be in far east. My full time chiro friends in USA who make thousands of dollars can't even afford to take a week's vacation and come to visit me. let me remind you, the dominicans who work in respectable places in capital, make more money than you and the people you are impressed with. You are confusing me for your local colmado owner on the corner of your street.
please, stop playing the race card and forget the slavery BS, obama is the president now so your slavery BS doesn't hold water. Al sharpton is out of work so your argument has zero value.
The people who are always struggling are most probably lazy and lack ideas to better their lives. I try to help people in my clinic in how to do promotions (free) they just won't get up and do it. They are quite happy with what they make and struggle to make ends meet. This is their lifestyle. How many times I have told people that they can't talk like ghetto with elegant clients; no "L' pronunciation but they forget all this in 1 minute. "senol", peldon, coltar, palquear etc". they just don't have it in them. But of course you will argue that I am being racist and being arrogant. The point is, you just hate the messenger (AZB) , you refuse to hear what I have to say. unlike you, I live here 24/7 and have been dealing with all classes of dominicans since 1998.
AZB
It's funny how defense of suspicions about one's position tends to reaffirm the suspicion.
I'm going to leave the "Obama" and "Sharpton" references alone. They speak for themselves. The "slavery" reference also doesn't apply but it led to an interesting point. Many expatriots in the Dominican Republic do appear to become hardened against their hosts and tend to regard the general populace with the same affectionate superiority with which landowners in the States regard sharecroppers. That's not a race thing. It's an indicator of a personal need to be surrounded by those who are regarded as "inferior" in order to somehow become "superior". I have a very good friend (who is Caucasian) who primarily dates Asians and Latinas from El Salvador, explaining "because they're my height" (he's 5'4").
This observation is not specific to or limited to you and I'm not trying to s#!t in your mess gear but I have heard many similar comments to yours which place the blame for Dominican poverty suarely on the shoulders of those poor Dominicans who never had an equal footing or a fighting chance thanks to the selfishness of their more blessed fellow Dominicans.
6% of the population controls 1/3 of the nations wealth. They deny the 57% of impoverished Dominicans a chance for a quality education so that they can keep them underfoot and have them do their bidding. I'd like to see the statistics of how much of the assets of that well educated and well fed 6% are inherited vs. how much is earned.
Nope, I hope more and more of that 57% escape to Miami, Altanta, Boston and Nueva Yol and get their children the educational benefits that they'd never have in their homeland so that they can return to the DR in a generation with the grandchildren to claim what should have been theirs all along...an equal stake in their country's wealth, present and future.
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