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	<title>Quotations &#187; Finance</title>
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	<pubDate>Sun, 20 May 2012 05:27:41 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>A young retirement conundrum</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/a-young-retirement-conundrum.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/a-young-retirement-conundrum.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2012 07:06:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[cracked-bone]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[enough-savings]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[exit-the-labor]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[latin-america]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[peace]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[recently-came]]></category>

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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.e-cytaty.com/diffrent/a-young-retirement-conundrum.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I'm in my twenties. I anticipate that I will have enough savings to exit the labor market in something like two years. I will have under two-hundred thousand dollars but significantly more than one-hundred thousand. From that I can generate enough investing to comfortably finance myself abroad on a permanent basis. I prefer to remain in one place and establish myself rather than shuttle across the earth every ninety or hundred and eighty days as is necessary without a residence visa. This is my problem. I like larger (four-hundred thousand and up), pedestrian-friendly cities. I'm interested in the United Kingdom and most of conteniental Europe west of Poland. I also would consider Croatia, Azerbaijan or some heavily trafficked summer destination in Greece. I understand it is possible to remain in Argentina indefinitely by renewing one's visa, but Latin America never moved me like Europe. I'm not really looking at Oz; the resource boom is driving up the cost of living to an unacceptable level. Again, my commitment to the place would be long term. Where can I STAY?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m in my twenties. I anticipate that I will have enough savings to exit the labor market in something like two years. I will have under two-hundred thousand dollars but significantly more than one-hundred thousand. From that I can generate enough investing to comfortably finance myself abroad on a permanent basis. I prefer to remain in one place and establish myself rather than shuttle across the earth every ninety or hundred and eighty days as is necessary without a residence visa. This is my problem. I like larger (four-hundred thousand and up), pedestrian-friendly cities. I&#8217;m interested in the United Kingdom and most of conteniental Europe west of Poland. I also would consider Croatia, Azerbaijan or some heavily trafficked summer destination in Greece. I understand it is possible to remain in Argentina indefinitely by renewing one&#8217;s visa, but Latin America never moved me like Europe. I&#8217;m not really looking at Oz; the resource boom is driving up the cost of living to an unacceptable level. Again, my commitment to the place would be long term. Where can I STAY?</p>
<p>See the rest here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-12866.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
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		<title>Is Brazil Swimming Naked?</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/is-brazil-swimming-naked.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/is-brazil-swimming-naked.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Apr 2012 21:14:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[are-crazy]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[bangkok]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[brazilian]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[currency-going]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[davy]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[eduardo]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[getulio-vargas]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[last-info]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[last-minute]]></category>

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		<category><![CDATA[typical-housing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.e-cytaty.com/diffrent/is-brazil-swimming-naked.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An interesting article on Brazil's boom. Are the resources and property prices and over valued currency going to POP anytime soon? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comme...aters.html Excerpt: "Prices are crazy," said Eduardo Paes, Rio’s mayor. Even 'favelas' are frothy as developers close in. A good slum is worth a four-bedroom house in Arizona - if you can prove ownership. "Brazil is experiencing a typical housing bubble," said Samy Davy from the Getulio Vargas Foundation. "It risks widespread damage to the Brazilian financial system and economy as occurred in the US."]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An interesting article on Brazil&#8217;s boom. Are the resources and property prices and over valued currency going to POP anytime soon? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comme&#8230;aters.html Excerpt: &#8220;Prices are crazy,&#8221; said Eduardo Paes, Rio’s mayor. Even &#8216;favelas&#8217; are frothy as developers close in. A good slum is worth a four-bedroom house in Arizona - if you can prove ownership. &#8220;Brazil is experiencing a typical housing bubble,&#8221; said Samy Davy from the Getulio Vargas Foundation. &#8220;It risks widespread damage to the Brazilian financial system and economy as occurred in the US.&#8221;</p>
<p>The rest is here: <br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-12223.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>World&#8217;s Longest Flights</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/worlds-longest-flights.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/worlds-longest-flights.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Mar 2012 17:39:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
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		<category><![CDATA[article]]></category>

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		<category><![CDATA[flies-these]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[longest]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[much-time]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Here's an interesting article on the longest flights worldwide. I was curious if anyone here flies these, or similar routes, and how you cope with that much time in the air. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/worlds-lon...55905.html P.S. Someone feel free to copy and paste the article correctly to thread. Thanks.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s an interesting article on the longest flights worldwide. I was curious if anyone here flies these, or similar routes, and how you cope with that much time in the air. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/worlds-lon&#8230;55905.html P.S. Someone feel free to copy and paste the article correctly to thread. Thanks.</p>
<p>Original post:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-11630.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Value of the Middle East</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-value-of-the-middle-east.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-value-of-the-middle-east.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Mar 2012 16:35:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Job]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Money]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[egypt]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[ethiopia]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[forum]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[greece]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[middle]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[middle-east]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[nubian]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[region]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.e-cytaty.com/diffrent/the-value-of-the-middle-east.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The region doesn't get a lot of attention on the forum, so I wanted to bring up a couple of points as to why the Middle East shouldn't be discarded for a long term destination. Firstly, it's all about location. It's well, in the middle. A 7 hour flight will land you either in Central Europe or SE Asia. That's an easy flight to 2 totally different worlds, both being fertile hunting grounds. Head north and you have EE, including Georgia, which is an untapped resource, with the flight costing less than $300. Even closer is Egypt and Greece/Crete/Cyprus, which have top resorts which provide places to swoop for 4 day weekend getaways. And don't forget E. Africa. No one on the forum has ever complained about Ethiopia of the Nubian beauties it breeds. Again, a short and cheap flight away. On top of that, some of the world's best rated airlines are out of the region, like Etihad and Qatar Airways. Secondly, the diversity. The region is a melting pot. Women from all over come here for work. Indian, Filipino, Sri Lankan, EE, British, ect. You don't have to leave your backyard to score something off the buffet. Because of this, the food selection is phenomenal. The only place you'll find this level of Lebanese food is Michigan, and who the fuck wants to go there, period? It's nice to be in a place where so many cultures are living together, with minimum drama. Thirdly, money. As long as oil is pumping, jobs will be bountiful. And westerners are sought out. Marketing, finance, trades, selling ass...it's all here. If you have your shit together, you'll make it here, no worries. There's more, I'm just tired of typing. I'll add more later. Bottom line though, don't discard the region, especially in your career path. There's a lot going on over here, especially for the success driven players.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The region doesn&#8217;t get a lot of attention on the forum, so I wanted to bring up a couple of points as to why the Middle East shouldn&#8217;t be discarded for a long term destination. Firstly, it&#8217;s all about location. It&#8217;s well, in the middle. A 7 hour flight will land you either in Central Europe or SE Asia. That&#8217;s an easy flight to 2 totally different worlds, both being fertile hunting grounds. Head north and you have EE, including Georgia, which is an untapped resource, with the flight costing less than $300. Even closer is Egypt and Greece/Crete/Cyprus, which have top resorts which provide places to swoop for 4 day weekend getaways. And don&#8217;t forget E. Africa. No one on the forum has ever complained about Ethiopia of the Nubian beauties it breeds. Again, a short and cheap flight away. On top of that, some of the world&#8217;s best rated airlines are out of the region, like Etihad and Qatar Airways. Secondly, the diversity. The region is a melting pot. Women from all over come here for work. Indian, Filipino, Sri Lankan, EE, British, ect. You don&#8217;t have to leave your backyard to score something off the buffet. Because of this, the food selection is phenomenal. The only place you&#8217;ll find this level of Lebanese food is Michigan, and who the fuck wants to go there, period? It&#8217;s nice to be in a place where so many cultures are living together, with minimum drama. Thirdly, money. As long as oil is pumping, jobs will be bountiful. And westerners are sought out. Marketing, finance, trades, selling ass&#8230;it&#8217;s all here. If you have your shit together, you&#8217;ll make it here, no worries. There&#8217;s more, I&#8217;m just tired of typing. I&#8217;ll add more later. Bottom line though, don&#8217;t discard the region, especially in your career path. There&#8217;s a lot going on over here, especially for the success driven players.</p>
<p>Read more from the original source:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-11584.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>The 18 Best Places to Retire Overseas</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Mar 2012 18:02:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Finance]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[cost]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[enjoy-the-tip]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[existing-decks]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[location]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[philippines]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[physical-flash]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[retirement]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[super-low-cost]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[the-quality]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[very-modest]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.e-cytaty.com/diffrent/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When choosing a place to spend your retirement years, the cost of living is important. But it is only one consideration. The ideal retirement spot is a place where you can live a rich life filled with friends, travel, discovery, physical and intellectual distractions, and opportunities for growth. A super-low cost of living is great, but more important is the quality of life your retirement budget is buying you. Many of the best options for enjoying an enormously enriched retirement lifestyle on even a very modest budget can be found overseas. Here are the world's 18 top retirement havens, where an interesting, adventure-filled lifestyle is available for a better-than-reasonable cost. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/18-best-pl...12124.html ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When choosing a place to spend your retirement years, the cost of living is important. But it is only one consideration. The ideal retirement spot is a place where you can live a rich life filled with friends, travel, discovery, physical and intellectual distractions, and opportunities for growth. A super-low cost of living is great, but more important is the quality of life your retirement budget is buying you. Many of the best options for enjoying an enormously enriched retirement lifestyle on even a very modest budget can be found overseas. Here are the world&#8217;s 18 top retirement havens, where an interesting, adventure-filled lifestyle is available for a better-than-reasonable cost. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/18-best-pl&#8230;12124.html </p>
<p>Read more from the original source:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-11498.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>The 18 Best Places to Retire Overseas</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas-2.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas-2.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Mar 2012 18:02:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
		
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.e-cytaty.com/diffrent/the-18-best-places-to-retire-overseas-2.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When choosing a place to spend your retirement years, the cost of living is important. But it is only one consideration. The ideal retirement spot is a place where you can live a rich life filled with friends, travel, discovery, physical and intellectual distractions, and opportunities for growth. A super-low cost of living is great, but more important is the quality of life your retirement budget is buying you. Many of the best options for enjoying an enormously enriched retirement lifestyle on even a very modest budget can be found overseas. Here are the world's 18 top retirement havens, where an interesting, adventure-filled lifestyle is available for a better-than-reasonable cost. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/18-best-pl...12124.html ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When choosing a place to spend your retirement years, the cost of living is important. But it is only one consideration. The ideal retirement spot is a place where you can live a rich life filled with friends, travel, discovery, physical and intellectual distractions, and opportunities for growth. A super-low cost of living is great, but more important is the quality of life your retirement budget is buying you. Many of the best options for enjoying an enormously enriched retirement lifestyle on even a very modest budget can be found overseas. Here are the world&#8217;s 18 top retirement havens, where an interesting, adventure-filled lifestyle is available for a better-than-reasonable cost. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/18-best-pl&#8230;12124.html </p>
<p>The rest is here: <br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-11498.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Toronto Vs. NYC</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/toronto-vs-nyc.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/toronto-vs-nyc.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2012 22:29:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I follow the below blog and today there was a post comparing NYC and Toronto. The verdict? There are better quality women in NYC, it's far easier to meet women in NYC, women in NYC are friendlier and actually -- gasp! -- go out with the intention of meeting men, among other things. Does this sound right to those who have been to both cities (never been to NYC)? NYC is one of the places I'd like to move to when I move out of here, though I'll ultimately go where I find a job. Quote: New York City is often described as a place where people rarely give you the time of day. Yours truly put it to the test. On a solo mission, comparing T-Dot and NYC scene with regards to dating, texting, calling, fucking, hooking up. The results are in. Note, this will not necessarily work for everyone. But, if you have medium to solid game, decent looks and a bubbly personality (lookup: you like to have a good time), this is what you'll experience. 1 - The quality in looks is far better in Manhattan as the center for Fashion of North america is home to lots of models. 2 - The Quantity is also much better. There are literally tons of way hotter women patrolling the streets, restaurants, coffee shops, park, night venues 3 - Eye contact is slightly better during daytime in NYC, much better at night venues. Women go out with the specific task of hooking up 4 - If you ask a question during the day at a cafe, the girl will not only turn towards you, draw you a map of where you want to go but also give you her favorite places and where you could "bump into her" in case you wanted to. Asking the same at Chapters in Toronto, will get you an "i don't know!" 5 - Getting a number is much quicker and expect to hear back in the next few minutes from her. You go out, you get numbers, they text, you say where you will be, they follow. Whoever complains about the Meat Packing district scene as pretentious has clearly never lived in TO partying on King West! 6 - Guy to girl ratio is a sausage Fest in T-Dot, whereas in NYC you are constantly surrounded by women. Everywhere. 7 - The cliquey culture that stands out at Toronto clubs is unseen in Manhattan. Girls are always on the lookout for a guy. They are secure in their pursuit and make an attempt to stay closer to you so you can isolate easier. 8 - The ERA of "openings" is OVER! That's right. No indirect/direct etc. Simply say "Hello!" this will generate a response. Toronto based players are so accustomed to getting shut down here, that they have to write a book (literally) in order to go out on a Saturday night and spit their best game. Well boys, all you need to do there to "open" someone is say your name. She will give you the time of day/night and up to you where you take it from there. 9 - More professional bouncers. Less of a drug scene. Bouncers in T-Dot are in constant need of picking up themselves and tolerate whales to get in ahead of the testicle festival that is the Toronto nightclub lineup. In NYC, very hot girls are seen waiting in line. 10 - Hot Toronto girls in their 20's work as waitresses, models, bartender, hookers. NYC girls in their 20's who actually model part time and live in SOHO district, have a degree in finance from an Ivy League school, are lawyers, studying medicine or are pursuing another professional designation. The women are far more intelligent and you can actually have a conversation about more than breast size. (Not that I would disagree with the latter) 11 - Making out, having sex, fondling body parts, sex-dancing is far easier in NYC. No jealousy from her friend will drive you to stop what you are doing. If a girl senses you are into her friend she will leave and let you get down to business. In T-Dot the chubby friend third wheel has become a guys nightmare! 12 - No sexual tension between the sexes. Regardless of how many hot girls enter a bar, most guys don't give them a lot of attention in NYC. The local players are all immune to models. In T-Dot venues, you see a spark in the faces of men and a change in their body language as soon as a "higher" being strolls in after her hard shift at the Keg as a hostess! 13 - Older women are nowhere to be seen! Whereas in Toronto, hordes of "cougars" are prancing around to be wined and dined way past their expiration date, NYC older women (true MILFS, hot as hell) had trouble getting in nightclubs and had to be content with a bar scene which more often than not left them the option of dating down. 14 - Lower prices. Most places have a happy hour that gets you buzzed on two shots of whiskey [$3 each] (one shot here equals two there, so you're getting 4 shots for $6). The bartenders at classy places don't short change you on the vodka. The most expensive place (we are talking $5k bottle service/booth) has $15 gin tonics. A lot of clubs are free to get into before a certain hour. 15 - the party keeps going till 5am. The official last call in TO is 2am, in NYC 4:30am with many places opened till morning time. If you get numbers during dinner (9pm) you have 8 hours of fun, meetups, hookups and dancing ahead of you 16 - Ethnicity/background etc is not a big deal in NYC. Manhattan is a melting pot of cool interesting people. By comparison T-Dot is a salad of cliquish 1st and 2nd generation immigrants that stick together like dog shit on a shoe! 17 - Not hitting on women at nightclubs in NYC makes others think you are GAY. You might be even be approached by a gay guy. In stark contrast to T-Dot where men band together like a sad "band of brothers" in arms drinking as much as possible to fill the void that a clear lack of beautiful female companionship has left. 18 - Sad Part for Toronto Based players. NYC is actually looked down by Americans in southern states as an unfriendly place! That's right. After all the points you read, the complaining about how NYC is unfriendly by locals and new arrivals is abysmal. One wonders just what they would dub the society we live in..... http://livinginthedeadcity.weebly.com/1/...scene.html ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I follow the below blog and today there was a post comparing NYC and Toronto. The verdict? There are better quality women in NYC, it&#8217;s far easier to meet women in NYC, women in NYC are friendlier and actually &#8212; gasp! &#8212; go out with the intention of meeting men, among other things. Does this sound right to those who have been to both cities (never been to NYC)? NYC is one of the places I&#8217;d like to move to when I move out of here, though I&#8217;ll ultimately go where I find a job. Quote: New York City is often described as a place where people rarely give you the time of day. Yours truly put it to the test. On a solo mission, comparing T-Dot and NYC scene with regards to dating, texting, calling, fucking, hooking up. The results are in. Note, this will not necessarily work for everyone. But, if you have medium to solid game, decent looks and a bubbly personality (lookup: you like to have a good time), this is what you&#8217;ll experience. 1 - The quality in looks is far better in Manhattan as the center for Fashion of North america is home to lots of models. 2 - The Quantity is also much better. There are literally tons of way hotter women patrolling the streets, restaurants, coffee shops, park, night venues 3 - Eye contact is slightly better during daytime in NYC, much better at night venues. Women go out with the specific task of hooking up 4 - If you ask a question during the day at a cafe, the girl will not only turn towards you, draw you a map of where you want to go but also give you her favorite places and where you could &#8220;bump into her&#8221; in case you wanted to. Asking the same at Chapters in Toronto, will get you an &#8220;i don&#8217;t know!&#8221; 5 - Getting a number is much quicker and expect to hear back in the next few minutes from her. You go out, you get numbers, they text, you say where you will be, they follow. Whoever complains about the Meat Packing district scene as pretentious has clearly never lived in TO partying on King West! 6 - Guy to girl ratio is a sausage Fest in T-Dot, whereas in NYC you are constantly surrounded by women. Everywhere. 7 - The cliquey culture that stands out at Toronto clubs is unseen in Manhattan. Girls are always on the lookout for a guy. They are secure in their pursuit and make an attempt to stay closer to you so you can isolate easier. 8 - The ERA of &#8220;openings&#8221; is OVER! That&#8217;s right. No indirect/direct etc. Simply say &#8220;Hello!&#8221; this will generate a response. Toronto based players are so accustomed to getting shut down here, that they have to write a book (literally) in order to go out on a Saturday night and spit their best game. Well boys, all you need to do there to &#8220;open&#8221; someone is say your name. She will give you the time of day/night and up to you where you take it from there. 9 - More professional bouncers. Less of a drug scene. Bouncers in T-Dot are in constant need of picking up themselves and tolerate whales to get in ahead of the testicle festival that is the Toronto nightclub lineup. In NYC, very hot girls are seen waiting in line. 10 - Hot Toronto girls in their 20&#8217;s work as waitresses, models, bartender, hookers. NYC girls in their 20&#8217;s who actually model part time and live in SOHO district, have a degree in finance from an Ivy League school, are lawyers, studying medicine or are pursuing another professional designation. The women are far more intelligent and you can actually have a conversation about more than breast size. (Not that I would disagree with the latter) 11 - Making out, having sex, fondling body parts, sex-dancing is far easier in NYC. No jealousy from her friend will drive you to stop what you are doing. If a girl senses you are into her friend she will leave and let you get down to business. In T-Dot the chubby friend third wheel has become a guys nightmare! 12 - No sexual tension between the sexes. Regardless of how many hot girls enter a bar, most guys don&#8217;t give them a lot of attention in NYC. The local players are all immune to models. In T-Dot venues, you see a spark in the faces of men and a change in their body language as soon as a &#8220;higher&#8221; being strolls in after her hard shift at the Keg as a hostess! 13 - Older women are nowhere to be seen! Whereas in Toronto, hordes of &#8220;cougars&#8221; are prancing around to be wined and dined way past their expiration date, NYC older women (true MILFS, hot as hell) had trouble getting in nightclubs and had to be content with a bar scene which more often than not left them the option of dating down. 14 - Lower prices. Most places have a happy hour that gets you buzzed on two shots of whiskey [$3 each] (one shot here equals two there, so you&#8217;re getting 4 shots for $6). The bartenders at classy places don&#8217;t short change you on the vodka. The most expensive place (we are talking $5k bottle service/booth) has $15 gin tonics. A lot of clubs are free to get into before a certain hour. 15 - the party keeps going till 5am. The official last call in TO is 2am, in NYC 4:30am with many places opened till morning time. If you get numbers during dinner (9pm) you have 8 hours of fun, meetups, hookups and dancing ahead of you 16 - Ethnicity/background etc is not a big deal in NYC. Manhattan is a melting pot of cool interesting people. By comparison T-Dot is a salad of cliquish 1st and 2nd generation immigrants that stick together like dog shit on a shoe! 17 - Not hitting on women at nightclubs in NYC makes others think you are GAY. You might be even be approached by a gay guy. In stark contrast to T-Dot where men band together like a sad &#8220;band of brothers&#8221; in arms drinking as much as possible to fill the void that a clear lack of beautiful female companionship has left. 18 - Sad Part for Toronto Based players. NYC is actually looked down by Americans in southern states as an unfriendly place! That&#8217;s right. After all the points you read, the complaining about how NYC is unfriendly by locals and new arrivals is abysmal. One wonders just what they would dub the society we live in&#8230;.. http://livinginthedeadcity.weebly.com/1/&#8230;scene.html </p>
<p><img src="http://www.rooshvforum.com/images/smilies/wink.gif" /></p>
<p>Continued here:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-10269.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
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		<title>The 10 Most Educated Countries in the World</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-10-most-educated-countries-in-the-world.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/the-10-most-educated-countries-in-the-world.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 2012 03:10:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[In the past 50 years, college graduation rates in developed countries have increased nearly 200%, according to Education at a Glance 2011, a recently published report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The report shows that while education has improved across the board, it has not improved evenly, with some countries enjoying much greater rates of educational attainment than others. Based on the report, 24/7 Wall St. identified the 10 developed countries with the most educated populations. The countries with the most highly educated citizens are also some of the wealthiest in the world. The United States, Japan and Canada are on our list and also have among the largest GDPs. Norway and Australia, also featured, have the second and sixth-highest GDPs per capita, respectively. All these countries aggressively invest in education. The countries that invest the most in education have the most-educated people. All of the best-educated countries, except for the UK, fall within the top 15 OECD countries for greatest spending on tertiary — that is, college or college-equivalent — spending as a percentage of GDP. The U.S. spends the second most and Canada spends the fourth most. Interestingly, public expenditure on educational institutions relative to private spending by these countries is small compared with other countries in the OECD. While the majority of education is still funded with public money, eight of the countries on our list rely the least on public funding as a percentage of total education spending. The countries included here have had educated populations for a long time. While they have steadily increased the percentages of their populations with postsecondary educations, the increases are modest compared to developing countries. The U.S., Canada and Japan have had tertiary educational attainment above 30% since at least 1997. Poland, a recently developed country that is not on our list, had a tertiary educational rate of 10% in 1997. As of 2009, that rate had grown to 21%. These are the 10 most educated countries in the world. 10. Finland > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 1.8% (3rd lowest) > GDP per capita: $36,585 (14th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.15% (10th lowest) Finland is a small country relative to the other OECD members. The share of its adult population with some sort of postsecondary education, however, is rather large. This select group is reaching the end of its expansion. From 1999 to 2009, the number of college-educated adults increased only 1.8% annually — the third-smallest amount among all OECD countries. Finland is also one of only two countries, the other being Korea, in which the fields of social sciences, business and law are not the most popular among students. In Finland, new entrants are most likely to study engineering, manufacturing and construction. 9. Australia > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.3% (11th lowest) > GDP per capita: $40,719 (6th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 14.63% (3rd highest) Australia’s population grew 14.63% between 2000 and 2009. This is the third-largest increase among OECD countries. Its tertiary-educated adult population is increasing at the much less impressive annual rate of 3.3%. Australia also spends the sixth-least amount in public funds on education as a percentage of all expenditures. The country also draws large numbers of international students. [More from 24/7 Wall St.: Ten Cities Crushed by the Global Recession] 8. United Kingdom > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 4.0% (9th highest) > GDP per capita: $35,504 (16th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.47% (13th lowest) Unlike most of the countries with the highest percentage of educated adults, the UK’s educated group increased measurably — more than 4% between 1999 and 2009. Its entire population only grew 3.5% between 2000 and 2009. One aspect that the UK does share with a number of other countries on this list is relatively low public expenditure on education institutions as a percentage of all educational spending. As of 2008, 69.5% of spending came from public sources — the fourth-smallest amount among OECD countries. 7. Norway > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): N/A > GDP per capita: $56,617 (2nd highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 7.52% (14th highest) Norway has the third-greatest expenditure on educational institutions as a percentage of GDP, at 7.3%. Roughly 23% of that is spent on tertiary education. In Norway, more than 60% of all tertiary graduates were in a bachelor’s program, well more than the U.S., which is close to the OECD average of 45%. The country is one of the wealthiest in the world. GDP per capita is $56,617, second only to Luxembourg in the OECD. 6. South Korea > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 39% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 5.3% (5th highest) > GDP per capita: $29,101 (13th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.70% (14th lowest) Korea is another standout country for its recent increase in the percentage of its population that has a tertiary education. Graduates increased 5.3% between 1999 and 2009, the fifth-highest among OECD countries. Like the UK, this rate is greater than the country’s recent population growth. Korea is also one of only two countries — the other being Finland — in which the most popular fields of study are not social sciences, business and law. In Korea, new students choose to study education, humanities and arts at the greatest rates. Only 59.6% of expenditures on educational institutions come from public funds — the second-lowest rate. 5. New Zealand > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 40% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.5% (14th lowest) > GDP per capita: $29,871 (14th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 11.88% (8th largest) New Zealand is not a particularly wealthy country. GDP per capita is less than $30,000, and is the 14th lowest in the OECD. However, 40% of the population engages in tertiary education, the fifth-highest rate in the world. The country actually has a rapidly growing population, increasing 11.88% between 2000 and 2009. This was the eighth-largest increase in the OECD. Part of the reason for the high rate of tertiary graduates is the high output from secondary schools. More than 90% of residents graduate from secondary school. 4. United States > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 41% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 1.4% (the lowest) > GDP per capita: $46,588 (4th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 8.68% (12th highest) The U.S. experienced a fairly large growth in population from 2000 to 2009. During the period, the population increased 8.68% — the 12th highest among OECD countries. Meanwhile, the rate at which the share of the population with a tertiary education is growing has slowed to an annual rate of 1.4% — the lowest among the 34 OECD countries. Just 71% of funding for educational institutions in the country comes from public funds, placing the U.S. sixth-lowest in this measure. Among OECD countries, the largest share of adults with a tertiary education live in the United States — 25.8%. 3. Japan > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 44% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.2% (10th lowest) > GDP per capita: $33,751 (17th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 0.46% (6th lowest) In Japan, 44% of the adult population has some form of tertiary education. The U.S. by comparison has a rate of 41%. Japan’s population increased just 0.46% between 2000 and 2009, the sixth-slowest growth rate in the OECD, and the slowest among our list of 10. Japan is tied with Finland for the third-highest upper-secondary graduation rate in the world, at 95%. It has the third-highest tertiary graduation rate in the world, but only spends the equivalent of 1.5% of GDP on tertiary education — the 17th lowest rate in the OECD. [Also see: College Majors that are Popular] 2. Israel > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 45% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): N/A > GDP per capita: $28,596 (12th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 19.02% (the highest) Although there is no data on the percentage of Israeli citizens with postsecondary education dating back to 1999, the numbers going back to 2002 show that growth is slowing dramatically compared to other countries. In fact, in 2006, 46% of adults ages 25 to 64 had a tertiary education. In 2007 this number fell to 44%. Only 78% of funds spent on educational institutions in Israel are public funds. The country is also only one of three — the other two being Ireland and Sweden — where expenditure on educational institutions as a proportion of GDP decreased from 2000 to 2008. Israel also had the largest increase in overall population, approximately 19% from 2000 to 2009. 1. Canada > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 50% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 2.3% (5th lowest) > GDP per capita: $39,070 (10th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 9.89% (10th highest) In Canada, 50% of the adult population has completed tertiary education, easily the highest rate in the OECD. Each year, public and private expenditure on education amount to 2.5% of GDP, the fourth-highest rate in the world. Tertiary education spending accounts for 41% of total education spending in the country. In the U.S., the proportion is closer to 37%. In Israel, the rate is 22%. In Canada, nearly 25% of students have an immigrant background. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-10-mos...world.html ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the past 50 years, college graduation rates in developed countries have increased nearly 200%, according to Education at a Glance 2011, a recently published report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The report shows that while education has improved across the board, it has not improved evenly, with some countries enjoying much greater rates of educational attainment than others. Based on the report, 24/7 Wall St. identified the 10 developed countries with the most educated populations. The countries with the most highly educated citizens are also some of the wealthiest in the world. The United States, Japan and Canada are on our list and also have among the largest GDPs. Norway and Australia, also featured, have the second and sixth-highest GDPs per capita, respectively. All these countries aggressively invest in education. The countries that invest the most in education have the most-educated people. All of the best-educated countries, except for the UK, fall within the top 15 OECD countries for greatest spending on tertiary — that is, college or college-equivalent — spending as a percentage of GDP. The U.S. spends the second most and Canada spends the fourth most. Interestingly, public expenditure on educational institutions relative to private spending by these countries is small compared with other countries in the OECD. While the majority of education is still funded with public money, eight of the countries on our list rely the least on public funding as a percentage of total education spending. The countries included here have had educated populations for a long time. While they have steadily increased the percentages of their populations with postsecondary educations, the increases are modest compared to developing countries. The U.S., Canada and Japan have had tertiary educational attainment above 30% since at least 1997. Poland, a recently developed country that is not on our list, had a tertiary educational rate of 10% in 1997. As of 2009, that rate had grown to 21%. These are the 10 most educated countries in the world. 10. Finland > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 1.8% (3rd lowest) > GDP per capita: $36,585 (14th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.15% (10th lowest) Finland is a small country relative to the other OECD members. The share of its adult population with some sort of postsecondary education, however, is rather large. This select group is reaching the end of its expansion. From 1999 to 2009, the number of college-educated adults increased only 1.8% annually — the third-smallest amount among all OECD countries. Finland is also one of only two countries, the other being Korea, in which the fields of social sciences, business and law are not the most popular among students. In Finland, new entrants are most likely to study engineering, manufacturing and construction. 9. Australia > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.3% (11th lowest) > GDP per capita: $40,719 (6th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 14.63% (3rd highest) Australia’s population grew 14.63% between 2000 and 2009. This is the third-largest increase among OECD countries. Its tertiary-educated adult population is increasing at the much less impressive annual rate of 3.3%. Australia also spends the sixth-least amount in public funds on education as a percentage of all expenditures. The country also draws large numbers of international students. [More from 24/7 Wall St.: Ten Cities Crushed by the Global Recession] 8. United Kingdom > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 4.0% (9th highest) > GDP per capita: $35,504 (16th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.47% (13th lowest) Unlike most of the countries with the highest percentage of educated adults, the UK’s educated group increased measurably — more than 4% between 1999 and 2009. Its entire population only grew 3.5% between 2000 and 2009. One aspect that the UK does share with a number of other countries on this list is relatively low public expenditure on education institutions as a percentage of all educational spending. As of 2008, 69.5% of spending came from public sources — the fourth-smallest amount among OECD countries. 7. Norway > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 37% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): N/A > GDP per capita: $56,617 (2nd highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 7.52% (14th highest) Norway has the third-greatest expenditure on educational institutions as a percentage of GDP, at 7.3%. Roughly 23% of that is spent on tertiary education. In Norway, more than 60% of all tertiary graduates were in a bachelor’s program, well more than the U.S., which is close to the OECD average of 45%. The country is one of the wealthiest in the world. GDP per capita is $56,617, second only to Luxembourg in the OECD. 6. South Korea > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 39% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 5.3% (5th highest) > GDP per capita: $29,101 (13th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 3.70% (14th lowest) Korea is another standout country for its recent increase in the percentage of its population that has a tertiary education. Graduates increased 5.3% between 1999 and 2009, the fifth-highest among OECD countries. Like the UK, this rate is greater than the country’s recent population growth. Korea is also one of only two countries — the other being Finland — in which the most popular fields of study are not social sciences, business and law. In Korea, new students choose to study education, humanities and arts at the greatest rates. Only 59.6% of expenditures on educational institutions come from public funds — the second-lowest rate. 5. New Zealand > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 40% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.5% (14th lowest) > GDP per capita: $29,871 (14th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 11.88% (8th largest) New Zealand is not a particularly wealthy country. GDP per capita is less than $30,000, and is the 14th lowest in the OECD. However, 40% of the population engages in tertiary education, the fifth-highest rate in the world. The country actually has a rapidly growing population, increasing 11.88% between 2000 and 2009. This was the eighth-largest increase in the OECD. Part of the reason for the high rate of tertiary graduates is the high output from secondary schools. More than 90% of residents graduate from secondary school. 4. United States > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 41% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 1.4% (the lowest) > GDP per capita: $46,588 (4th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 8.68% (12th highest) The U.S. experienced a fairly large growth in population from 2000 to 2009. During the period, the population increased 8.68% — the 12th highest among OECD countries. Meanwhile, the rate at which the share of the population with a tertiary education is growing has slowed to an annual rate of 1.4% — the lowest among the 34 OECD countries. Just 71% of funding for educational institutions in the country comes from public funds, placing the U.S. sixth-lowest in this measure. Among OECD countries, the largest share of adults with a tertiary education live in the United States — 25.8%. 3. Japan > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 44% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 3.2% (10th lowest) > GDP per capita: $33,751 (17th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 0.46% (6th lowest) In Japan, 44% of the adult population has some form of tertiary education. The U.S. by comparison has a rate of 41%. Japan’s population increased just 0.46% between 2000 and 2009, the sixth-slowest growth rate in the OECD, and the slowest among our list of 10. Japan is tied with Finland for the third-highest upper-secondary graduation rate in the world, at 95%. It has the third-highest tertiary graduation rate in the world, but only spends the equivalent of 1.5% of GDP on tertiary education — the 17th lowest rate in the OECD. [Also see: College Majors that are Popular] 2. Israel > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 45% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): N/A > GDP per capita: $28,596 (12th lowest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 19.02% (the highest) Although there is no data on the percentage of Israeli citizens with postsecondary education dating back to 1999, the numbers going back to 2002 show that growth is slowing dramatically compared to other countries. In fact, in 2006, 46% of adults ages 25 to 64 had a tertiary education. In 2007 this number fell to 44%. Only 78% of funds spent on educational institutions in Israel are public funds. The country is also only one of three — the other two being Ireland and Sweden — where expenditure on educational institutions as a proportion of GDP decreased from 2000 to 2008. Israel also had the largest increase in overall population, approximately 19% from 2000 to 2009. 1. Canada > Pct. population with postsecondary education: 50% > Avg. annual growth rate (1999 – 2009): 2.3% (5th lowest) > GDP per capita: $39,070 (10th highest) > Pop. change (2000 – 2009): 9.89% (10th highest) In Canada, 50% of the adult population has completed tertiary education, easily the highest rate in the OECD. Each year, public and private expenditure on education amount to 2.5% of GDP, the fourth-highest rate in the world. Tertiary education spending accounts for 41% of total education spending in the country. In the U.S., the proportion is closer to 37%. In Israel, the rate is 22%. In Canada, nearly 25% of students have an immigrant background. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-10-mos&#8230;world.html </p>
<p>Original post:<br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-10059.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
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		<title>Advice For American men dating Brazilian/Latin women</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/movies/advice-for-american-men-dating-brazilianlatin-women.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/movies/advice-for-american-men-dating-brazilianlatin-women.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 Jan 2012 20:44:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I read this on FB (a girl picked it from a blog), and thought that it could be interesting to share it here ,since I've received PMs asking about the cultural particularities of Brazil and SA. It was written by a woman , so there is definitely some crap advice in the middle but most of it is spot on : It's about Brazilians but the writer claims that most can be applied to Latins as a whole. Thoughts? "Here are some general pointers (which I repeat may not apply to all Brazilian and Latin women): 1)There is a strong sense of family in Brazil. The extended family is also important. People tend to live close to Mom and Dad, aunts and uncles. It is also a matriarchal society (although men had the power for generations, when it comes to raising kids, mothers are considered more important than fathers). There are not many people living alone in Brazil. Almost everyone has a partner. Divorce rates unfortunately are growing, so this may change. Still, it is not a very individualistic society. Children live with their parents until they get married. That of course makes kids closer to their parents, and affects how they see their future family as well. 2)There are also different rules of conduct for couples. Married people or people in committed relationships do not go out on “Boys Night Out” or “Girls Night Out” where they can flirt with other people. Men might play soccer with their buddies in the afternoon, women might have a coffee and go shoppping with their female friends but they do not go out at night and leave their partner alone at home. No strip clubs for men in committed relationships either. If your GF finds out you go to these places you can expect a very strong reaction. 3) When it comes to engagement and weddings, Brazilian women are used to do things differently. We do not require you to spend thousands on a diamond ring. We do not have that tradition (see my post about engagement rings). We are happy with a simpler ring or just the wedding band. Some of us though, after living in America and seeing so many De Beers ads, may want a diamond ring after all. We also do not have to wait for a man to propose. These things are decided jointly by the couple. The old fashioned on your knees proposal is not heard off in real life. Americans love the whole creative proposal thing; Brazilians don’t. They decide to get married and communicate it to their families, period. 4) Do not even think of having a dalliance with hookers and strippers just because it is your bachelor’s party. We consider that cheating and don’t be surprised if your fiancé cancels the wedding if she finds out. We do not even have the bachelor party tradition. Very few men celebrate that, while the bride’s friends do get together to get her presents for her new home. Sometimes men participate as well (a tradition that is also starting here). 5) Latin people in general are more emotional and more possessive, keep that in mind when you fight with her. Tears, jealous fits, strong reactions to something you did wrong are all typical of our emotional nature. 6) Women are raised to be feminine, to do girly things (they may have piano and ballet lessons, not play baseball or rough sports, for example). Many are still raised to get married and have children as their first focus and have a career as a secondary pursuit-a necessary evil. However, that pattern is changing with the younger generations, who are now investing more in their careers. 7) Women are encouraged to spend a lot of their time on their looks-body, clothes and hair. Staying attractive is sine qua non in a culture that judges people by how they look. 8) Even though racism is not as pervasive and divisionary as in the U.S.A., lighter skinned Brazilians look down on darker skinned Brazilians. They see darker Brazilians as belonging to the lower social classes. That is typical of countries that were afflicted by the horrible thing that slavery was. Brazil had slavery just like the American South, and one of the consequences of slavery is that it can take several generations for their descendants to reach the same level of success in life that their former owners have. Therefore, Brazilians from African descent became part of the struggling poor in Brazil-they have had a harder time getting education and good jobs. Fortunately, this situation has improved, and Brazilians aren realizing how nefarious racism is. 9) BBrazil still has a subtle-or not so subtle-class system. There isn’t much social interaction between classes (unless the “lower classes” are working for the “higher” ones). Sad but still true. Fortunately, Brazil has made some steps in improving wealth distribution in the last decades. 10) Many middle class Brazilian girls from the middle to upper classes were often raised with maids. Therefore, they are not used to doing housework, which is seen as something beneath them. Working with your hands in Brazil is also associated with the lower economic classes. 11) Brazilian men and women oftentimes do not know how to fix things or are impractical due to cheap labor and being catered to all their lives. Many Brazilians when coming to the US for the first time do not even know how to pump gas-having had gas station servers all their lives. Women particularly, are sometimes not very practical when it comes to daily life and expect you to do all the dirty work for her 12) Brazilian women expect the man to be a gentleman. They like a man who opens doors, drives them places, changes their oil, etc. They are not very good when it comes to practical things (they eventually learn after a few years living here), but when it comes to decision making, Brazilian women are opinionated and not shrinking violets. They expect you to respect them and share your decisions with them if part of a couple. 13) Never, under any circumstances, call your GF or wife the B word. Name calling in Brazil is considered extremely offensive, and a man should never call his wife names no matter how terrible the argument is. A wife, like a mother or a daughter, is sacred. American movies show a lot of cursing (the F word seems to be the most popular). Brazilians associate cursing with gangsters and lowlifes. 14) The mother in law thing. Many older women in Brazil are in dire economical situation due to widowhood, divorce, lack of opportunities or low paid jobs. The older generation of women did not usually work outside the home. Therefore, they expect their children to take care of them. Many of these mothers interfere in their childrens’ relationships and try to control their daughters or sons. They are also often lonely and live vicariously through their offspring. They use guilt tactics to keep the children catering to their needs and see the children-in-law as the devil themselves. They take their kids’ side if they have arguments with their spouses and sometimes destroy marriages with their interference. Not every mother in law is like that: the ones with careers, the ones in happy relationships and the ones with a life of their own. So beware of the dependant MIL! Anyhow, don’t be surprised if your GF/wife tells you that her mother is coming to spend one month with her-and you. Some Brazilian women never grow up and are very dependant on their mothers. Conversely, Brazilian relatives from the upper middle class will stay in hotels-they want privacy and comfort. 15) You and her (or him, in case of an American woman with a Brazilian man) might have differences when it comes to how to use your time. Brazilians consider Sunday sacred. It is not a day to work, but a day to lounge around, go to the beach, have a barbecue by the pool, go to church (for those still brainwashed by religion or just traditional), watch soccer or Formula One races, visit with friends, go sightseeing, nap or watch movies and other leisure actitivities. Saturday is a day to run errands, but not Sundays! It is not only the Catholic influence but also the fact that in their minds, the work week is for work, while the weekend is for pleasure and rest. So if you like to tinker with your car, wash it, rebuild the roof of your house, clean the garage or mow the lawn on a Sunday you will find resistance. She will feel abandoned. In her mind, you should be with her and not ignoring her with “chores”. Not only that, she was raised seeing her Dad pay someone to do those things. The help works, the middle class and the upper middle class rests and plays. 16) Once you marry and have children with a Brazilian, you have to understand some cultural differences when it comes to being a couple. In Brazil, the focus is on the COUPLE. The children come second. You and your wife are the main unit, not you and your kids. Many American men and women turn their focus to the children after they are born, spending little alone time with their spouse. Not spending enough alone time with your spouse, not romancing them and spending too much time on the kids can create resentment. Brazil does not have the “Daddy and Daughter” culture. Children spend time with their parents together, not with only one parent. Telling your kids how much you love them, hugging and kissing them all the time and not doing the same with your spouse can create resentment. Brazilians want the romance to continue, no matter how long you have been married. They want to walk hand in hand, they want some PDA and they want to know they come first. 17) If you have a more logical and scientific mind and do not tolerate religious myths or fundamentalism, be aware that most Brazilian women are still brainwashed by a Catholic upbringing, Spiritism (a new fad that believes in reincarnation) and the new Evangelical churches that have taken hold of the less educated and fortunate. She will want to attend Church on Sundays, pray to god to make things happen and invoke the Daddy in the sky all the time. She may think your disdain for religion makes you a “bad” person. Either you get into the religion bandwagon with her, ignore her delusional religiosity or try to make her see the light. It’s your call 18) Hitting a woman in Brazil is seen with even more disgust than in America. There is a famous saying in Brazil: “You don’t hit a woman even with a flower”. Men who hit their wives are seen as total cowards, since normally men are stronger than women. Hitting someone who’s physically weaker than you is cowardice. 19) In the Brazilian culture, saying you love someone is mostly reserved for romantic love. Men and women in relationships say that to each other. Understand that if your Brazilian girlfriend or wife hears you say “I love you” to random friends it will sound strange. Just the other day I heard a married “Dancing with the stars” contestant telling her dance partner “I love you”. Love in America is basically anyone you like. Parents tell their kids “I love you” automatically, just like saying “bye bye”. In Brazil, one can say “I love my mother”, or “I love soccer”, but “I love you” is reserved for romantic love, straight or gay. 20) Because of the strong sense of family in Brazil, Brazilian women do not like marriages with separate finances. She expects both of you to pull your resources together and save, invest and build for the future. Brazilians are big believers in saving money every month. They do not like to have huge debts and bank owned assets. They have the “casa propria” dream, that is, they like want to own the house they live in. Brazilian women do have the bag lady syndrome, and want to feel financally secure for the future. Your American prenup mentality is not going to go down well with her. She considers marriage a partnership, and as such, whether she works or not, she will contribute by taking care of the household and the children. She likes to make financial decisions as a couple. Again, Brazilian women really see marriage is a team effort and partnership. If that’s not your idea of marriage, she will resent it forever. 21) Finally the good stuff: because of the strong sense of family and their natural warmth, Brazilian women are very loyal, family oriented, feminine looking and affectionate companions! "]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I read this on FB (a girl picked it from a blog), and thought that it could be interesting to share it here ,since I&#8217;ve received PMs asking about the cultural particularities of Brazil and SA. It was written by a woman , so there is definitely some crap advice in the middle but most of it is spot on : It&#8217;s about Brazilians but the writer claims that most can be applied to Latins as a whole. Thoughts? &#8220;Here are some general pointers (which I repeat may not apply to all Brazilian and Latin women): 1)There is a strong sense of family in Brazil. The extended family is also important. People tend to live close to Mom and Dad, aunts and uncles. It is also a matriarchal society (although men had the power for generations, when it comes to raising kids, mothers are considered more important than fathers). There are not many people living alone in Brazil. Almost everyone has a partner. Divorce rates unfortunately are growing, so this may change. Still, it is not a very individualistic society. Children live with their parents until they get married. That of course makes kids closer to their parents, and affects how they see their future family as well. 2)There are also different rules of conduct for couples. Married people or people in committed relationships do not go out on “Boys Night Out” or “Girls Night Out” where they can flirt with other people. Men might play soccer with their buddies in the afternoon, women might have a coffee and go shoppping with their female friends but they do not go out at night and leave their partner alone at home. No strip clubs for men in committed relationships either. If your GF finds out you go to these places you can expect a very strong reaction. 3) When it comes to engagement and weddings, Brazilian women are used to do things differently. We do not require you to spend thousands on a diamond ring. We do not have that tradition (see my post about engagement rings). We are happy with a simpler ring or just the wedding band. Some of us though, after living in America and seeing so many De Beers ads, may want a diamond ring after all. We also do not have to wait for a man to propose. These things are decided jointly by the couple. The old fashioned on your knees proposal is not heard off in real life. Americans love the whole creative proposal thing; Brazilians don’t. They decide to get married and communicate it to their families, period. 4) Do not even think of having a dalliance with hookers and strippers just because it is your bachelor’s party. We consider that cheating and don’t be surprised if your fiancé cancels the wedding if she finds out. We do not even have the bachelor party tradition. Very few men celebrate that, while the bride’s friends do get together to get her presents for her new home. Sometimes men participate as well (a tradition that is also starting here). 5) Latin people in general are more emotional and more possessive, keep that in mind when you fight with her. Tears, jealous fits, strong reactions to something you did wrong are all typical of our emotional nature. 6) Women are raised to be feminine, to do girly things (they may have piano and ballet lessons, not play baseball or rough sports, for example). Many are still raised to get married and have children as their first focus and have a career as a secondary pursuit-a necessary evil. However, that pattern is changing with the younger generations, who are now investing more in their careers. 7) Women are encouraged to spend a lot of their time on their looks-body, clothes and hair. Staying attractive is sine qua non in a culture that judges people by how they look. <img src='http://www.e-cytaty.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_cool.gif' alt='8)' class='wp-smiley' /> Even though racism is not as pervasive and divisionary as in the U.S.A., lighter skinned Brazilians look down on darker skinned Brazilians. They see darker Brazilians as belonging to the lower social classes. That is typical of countries that were afflicted by the horrible thing that slavery was. Brazil had slavery just like the American South, and one of the consequences of slavery is that it can take several generations for their descendants to reach the same level of success in life that their former owners have. Therefore, Brazilians from African descent became part of the struggling poor in Brazil-they have had a harder time getting education and good jobs. Fortunately, this situation has improved, and Brazilians aren realizing how nefarious racism is. 9) BBrazil still has a subtle-or not so subtle-class system. There isn’t much social interaction between classes (unless the “lower classes” are working for the “higher” ones). Sad but still true. Fortunately, Brazil has made some steps in improving wealth distribution in the last decades. 10) Many middle class Brazilian girls from the middle to upper classes were often raised with maids. Therefore, they are not used to doing housework, which is seen as something beneath them. Working with your hands in Brazil is also associated with the lower economic classes. 11) Brazilian men and women oftentimes do not know how to fix things or are impractical due to cheap labor and being catered to all their lives. Many Brazilians when coming to the US for the first time do not even know how to pump gas-having had gas station servers all their lives. Women particularly, are sometimes not very practical when it comes to daily life and expect you to do all the dirty work for her 12) Brazilian women expect the man to be a gentleman. They like a man who opens doors, drives them places, changes their oil, etc. They are not very good when it comes to practical things (they eventually learn after a few years living here), but when it comes to decision making, Brazilian women are opinionated and not shrinking violets. They expect you to respect them and share your decisions with them if part of a couple. 13) Never, under any circumstances, call your GF or wife the B word. Name calling in Brazil is considered extremely offensive, and a man should never call his wife names no matter how terrible the argument is. A wife, like a mother or a daughter, is sacred. American movies show a lot of cursing (the F word seems to be the most popular). Brazilians associate cursing with gangsters and lowlifes. 14) The mother in law thing. Many older women in Brazil are in dire economical situation due to widowhood, divorce, lack of opportunities or low paid jobs. The older generation of women did not usually work outside the home. Therefore, they expect their children to take care of them. Many of these mothers interfere in their childrens’ relationships and try to control their daughters or sons. They are also often lonely and live vicariously through their offspring. They use guilt tactics to keep the children catering to their needs and see the children-in-law as the devil themselves. They take their kids’ side if they have arguments with their spouses and sometimes destroy marriages with their interference. Not every mother in law is like that: the ones with careers, the ones in happy relationships and the ones with a life of their own. So beware of the dependant MIL! Anyhow, don’t be surprised if your GF/wife tells you that her mother is coming to spend one month with her-and you. Some Brazilian women never grow up and are very dependant on their mothers. Conversely, Brazilian relatives from the upper middle class will stay in hotels-they want privacy and comfort. 15) You and her (or him, in case of an American woman with a Brazilian man) might have differences when it comes to how to use your time. Brazilians consider Sunday sacred. It is not a day to work, but a day to lounge around, go to the beach, have a barbecue by the pool, go to church (for those still brainwashed by religion or just traditional), watch soccer or Formula One races, visit with friends, go sightseeing, nap or watch movies and other leisure actitivities. Saturday is a day to run errands, but not Sundays! It is not only the Catholic influence but also the fact that in their minds, the work week is for work, while the weekend is for pleasure and rest. So if you like to tinker with your car, wash it, rebuild the roof of your house, clean the garage or mow the lawn on a Sunday you will find resistance. She will feel abandoned. In her mind, you should be with her and not ignoring her with “chores”. Not only that, she was raised seeing her Dad pay someone to do those things. The help works, the middle class and the upper middle class rests and plays. 16) Once you marry and have children with a Brazilian, you have to understand some cultural differences when it comes to being a couple. In Brazil, the focus is on the COUPLE. The children come second. You and your wife are the main unit, not you and your kids. Many American men and women turn their focus to the children after they are born, spending little alone time with their spouse. Not spending enough alone time with your spouse, not romancing them and spending too much time on the kids can create resentment. Brazil does not have the “Daddy and Daughter” culture. Children spend time with their parents together, not with only one parent. Telling your kids how much you love them, hugging and kissing them all the time and not doing the same with your spouse can create resentment. Brazilians want the romance to continue, no matter how long you have been married. They want to walk hand in hand, they want some PDA and they want to know they come first. 17) If you have a more logical and scientific mind and do not tolerate religious myths or fundamentalism, be aware that most Brazilian women are still brainwashed by a Catholic upbringing, Spiritism (a new fad that believes in reincarnation) and the new Evangelical churches that have taken hold of the less educated and fortunate. She will want to attend Church on Sundays, pray to god to make things happen and invoke the Daddy in the sky all the time. She may think your disdain for religion makes you a “bad” person. Either you get into the religion bandwagon with her, ignore her delusional religiosity or try to make her see the light. It’s your call 18) Hitting a woman in Brazil is seen with even more disgust than in America. There is a famous saying in Brazil: “You don’t hit a woman even with a flower”. Men who hit their wives are seen as total cowards, since normally men are stronger than women. Hitting someone who’s physically weaker than you is cowardice. 19) In the Brazilian culture, saying you love someone is mostly reserved for romantic love. Men and women in relationships say that to each other. Understand that if your Brazilian girlfriend or wife hears you say “I love you” to random friends it will sound strange. Just the other day I heard a married “Dancing with the stars” contestant telling her dance partner “I love you”. Love in America is basically anyone you like. Parents tell their kids “I love you” automatically, just like saying “bye bye”. In Brazil, one can say “I love my mother”, or “I love soccer”, but “I love you” is reserved for romantic love, straight or gay. 20) Because of the strong sense of family in Brazil, Brazilian women do not like marriages with separate finances. She expects both of you to pull your resources together and save, invest and build for the future. Brazilians are big believers in saving money every month. They do not like to have huge debts and bank owned assets. They have the “casa propria” dream, that is, they like want to own the house they live in. Brazilian women do have the bag lady syndrome, and want to feel financally secure for the future. Your American prenup mentality is not going to go down well with her. She considers marriage a partnership, and as such, whether she works or not, she will contribute by taking care of the household and the children. She likes to make financial decisions as a couple. Again, Brazilian women really see marriage is a team effort and partnership. If that’s not your idea of marriage, she will resent it forever. 21) Finally the good stuff: because of the strong sense of family and their natural warmth, Brazilian women are very loyal, family oriented, feminine looking and affectionate companions! &#8220;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.rooshvforum.com/images/smilies/smile.gif" /></p>
<p>Continued here: <br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.rooshvforum.com/thread-10043.html" rel="nofollow">Link here/a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nigeria</title>
		<link>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/nigeria.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.e-cytaty.com/finance/nigeria.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2012 13:52:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[My name is Moma. I am a lizard hunter. Mid December last year (a month ago), I took my first trip across the pond in practically a decade. I went to what is considered the America of Africa, the country known as Nigeria. It served as a reality check for me and accomplished some of my needs which was to stop associating myself with a new favourite term 'white problems'. I felt that I was surrounded by opportunities and chances but just due to a clouded perspective I was unable to cash in on them. I have always been a person influenced by my environment and I always strive to travel as much as I can to make sure I have a varied source of experiences to draw from in how I think and how I act. I also felt that I needed to be in touch with my people and that I needed some inherited love instead of having to seek it from sometime lesser people. Before my trip, I got appropriate intel from family members in the states who travel annually there and gave me the lowdown on how to go, the sort of gifts to take and the general dos and donts of this country. I have never been to any other African country but from the reports of some of my friends who are of Nigerian parentage and those who are of other African countries, there is a unified consensus that Nigeria just does things differently from other countries. HOW TO GET TO NIGERIA FROM NORTH AMERICA One will need to buy their ticket. Mine went for roughly a stack and a half (1500 dollars). Again the Americans are fortunate as one can get a direct flight from NYC or Atlanta right to Lagos airport. I believe the journey is about 11 hours in total (including the 6 hour time difference between Nigeria and EST - Nigeria is 6 hours ahead of EST). From Canada, one has to go to either Paris first (a 7 hour flight courtesy of Air France) and then change for the 5.5 hour flight down. There is also the option of going via KLM which will mean stopping off in Amsterdam for the change. Again, this is a 7 hour flight from Toronto. France is 6 hours ahead of EST so on a parallel time frame with Nigeria. After the ticket is purchased, a Nigerian visa is needed for non Nigerian passport holders to travel to Nigeria. This surprised me since as it is a former British colony, I imagined that one could just flow into there either on a British passport (which I own) or just on a general Canadian passport (which I also possess). But I had to go through a confusing process to obtain the visa from Ottawa since there is no Nigerian embassy in Toronto which I think is a sin since Toronto is like a capital of Nigeria. The online process was a drawn out, tedious process and everytime I called the embassy, no one ever answered the phone or returned the voicemail messages I left. Preparation for my trip. I couldn't create an account for the online visa application process swglobal. Finally after a month of digging, I finally was able to get to the receptionist at the Nigerian embassy who was a Canadian born and raised woman of Nigerian and Jamaican parentage. She sympathised with my frustration and gave me clear instructions on how to complete the application process. I needed to enclose a copy of my yellow fever form (a visa will not be issued unless one shows that they have been vaccinated against yellow fever), I needed to show proof that I had enough funds to live there and not sponge off of the country (???) and I needed an invitation letter, a printout to show that I payed the online visa application (a confirmation number is generated with a successful payment) and 20 dollar money order for processing fee (for them to write up the visa and staple it to your passport). I also had to send my passport so that they could glue the visa into it for travel. This was to be sent in a return addressed envelope and the process would take about two weeks. It actually took only a week, kudos to the Ottawa Naija movement. I took shots for hep A, hep B (I planned on doing some kissing and fcuking) took some maladrone for malaria and some other vaccines covered by work insurance and that was that in terms of protection. I also went to the Condom shack and got some large Kimono condoms extra thin plus some Magnums. So on the 14th of December, I began my journey. My trip was an Air France affair with a stopover in Paris. I felt excited. I haven't crossed the pond in practically a decade and it was exciting to be temporarily re-acquainted with my ex-wife, Europa. Paris, Charles de Gaulle airport was a huge and rather complicated affair. Once you get into France, you are reminded that English is not this global language that must be spoken in all major airports. The French don't really care to speak English and have this condescending look on their face when they hear one bleat English. However, from my last trip to Paris, I was now prepared and I have been working my French on a major level so I was ready as could be for one studying French on his own. On the flight over (I had to go to Montreal to connect to Air France, I quickly picked out a black couple complete with child sporting a bad mohawk (no fade) and from some swift eavesdropping plus facial analysis, I made an educated guess that they were Nigerian. When we got to Paris, I asked them if they were Nigerian and they told me they were. Good. That means we are going on the same flight to Lagos, Murtala Mohammed Airport. In Paris, the Nigerian couple and I joined forces to try and locate the terminal plus gate for our flight. The Paris flight was delayed which meant that there was hardly any stayover before Air France. As I entered Europe, I was reminded how fat North Americans are. The amount of 200 pounders began to significantly drop and as I finally procured an airport employee who had some minimal English I was able to determine the terminal and made moves accordingly. Next stop: Lagos. For those lurking Nigerians on the forum, you know that Britain has a large amount of Nigerians. As I lined up to get on the flight and I looked around, I could hear British accents emanating from the black women in queue. I tried to request an emergency exit seat from the cat who checks your passport and boarding pass. He said the flight was fully booked and this wasn't possible but I did have an aisle seat. I was excited and scared. As I sat down, I looked around on the flight. There were a few white people going to Nigeria. Sitting next to me was a sullen male probably in his late twenties from the Ukraine (I know this because I asked him where he was from). He was going to Port Harcourt for work (there is a fair amount of oil companies there). To my left, was a group of British women, blondes. I know they were British because I could see their passports and I could hear their accents. They were not Londoners. My question was, why were they going to Nigeria? They didn't look like they worked in oil companies. I just didn't get that vibe off of them. And if they were going for some rough dyck, was it that sweet to do Nigeria? For those who know, Nigeria is not exactly a tourist destination. Here comes the passengers. The Air France flight crew seemed strangely subdued. Usually French people have attitude, I was met with terse statements from my flight from Montreal to Paris by various crew members including being eyeballed by the black female flight attendant. But on this flight, the crew seemed defeated and somewhat deflated. I briefly befriended a male flight attendant to query about an emergency exit seat for my long legs. He said the flight was fully booked but he had a friendly demeanour. He spoke perfect French (to my Anglophone ears) but his English didn't carry the usual Francophone strains that I hear from my other French friends. I finally asked him if he was a Brit and he said no, he is half German and half French but considered being mistaken as a Brit as a compliment. I looked around the flight at the people coming on. Here comes the Nigerians! Normally, French people, especially those emanating from Paris have a bit of an attitude and can come off as a standoffish to non French people. However, on this flight, the air crew were notably subdued. Nigerians are a resilient bunch of people who are seeminly unaffected by insinuations and other stuff. One of the air crew, a smiling female greeted each passenger as they walked by. Her pleasantries were totally ignored. Two surly males walked right by her point bank "Bonjour, good morning" and I made eye contact with her to express sympathy at the total ignorance of her cordial greeting by the two males. I saw another sullen stocky guy sit down with a piercing in one ear, short sleeved shirt with the name 'Chukwu' tattooed on his right arm. Chukwu means God in Igbo. The reason this drew my attention is because Nigerians are generally conservative by nature and you don't see them tatted up or overly pierced. I usually use this as a gauge so when I see a Nigerian lizard with tats, it means she is more likely to be DTF than others. The German French flight attendant came over and informed me that a shorter cat had offered to swop his emergency row seat with mine. Very nice of him. So I went to the new location and got the window seat emergency exit row, hemmed in beside a Naija cat from the Ijaw tribe who was going to Port Harcourt for Christmas and an Italian cat who was going to Port Harcourt to work on the oil plants. I had to go to the toilet and while I was doing my thing, I heard banging on the door. What the fcuk? I came out after completion, irritated and saw that it was a Nigerian guy who was hammering on the door. "Oga, you know other people have to use it!" he said impatiently. "What are you on, man?"I said irritably. "Can't you use the other ones?", "Noo, man", drawled the cat doing a mocking impression of an American accent heavily inflected by his Nigerian one. People always think I am American. The Italian remained buried in his Jack Reacher novel (printed in Italian of course) and the Ijaw male watched my response with a neutral expression on his face. Nigerians are very religious and with good reason too (you need oodles of hope and stacks of perserverance to survive in that country). There are three main tribes in Nigeria with about 230 other ethnic groups within the country. These main tribes are Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo. You can find one of the three if not all three all over Nigeria. The Hausa spawn from the Northern part of Nigeria which you can call Hausa land i.e Kaduna, Abuja (the capital of Nigeria from the former capital of Lagos), Kano to name a few and are predominantly Muslim. Yoruba spawn from Yoruba land Lagos, Ibadan the West of Nigeria. Yorubas can be either Muslim or Christian. Then you have the South Easterners, the Igbos who are spawn from Igbo land, Enugu, Owerri and Ebonyi for instance. Igbos are predominantly Christian. Now this past year, I had trained myself up for harsh environments by first visiting St Vincent in which the family that I stayed with had zero AC and the one fan that they did own offered minimal respite from the tropical heat. CUSTOMS This was a good thing in hindsight as Murtala Mohammed Airport (Lagos) was hot. They had no AC there but some ramshack ventilation unit that was doing it's best to cool down the heated and impatient passengers. There were two lines one for Nigerian passport holders and one for those without (myself). I stood there with a variety of folk such as a few Scots who were there for work, an Irish guy who was there to see his lizard, a gaggle of British blondes, two black American lizards and a Meditterean reptile holding a German passport. The line up moved at a gastropoda like crawl and I could only feel for the parents that had to wield and soothe their enfant children against the unforgiving tedious pace of the processing line. You constantly had Nigerians trying to push in and ease in towards the line which seemed to be a common Naija practice. I looked at a white lizard with North American like proportions (bloated) ushering along a gang of mixed race kids. Her baby father/husband was a darker skinned Naija guy with a hoop earring. The two Scots stood beside me with the older one holding more disbelief in his eyes as he ogled this woman. I, being desensitised accordingly by living in North America, barely noticed her. "Fark me", said the older Scot scathingly as he took in her girth. "How many fooking kids has she got then?" I chuckled softly. It was refreshing to hear the raw deal instead of having everything tailored by the North American PC machine. I enjoyed listening to the Scot's criticism of Lagos airport. I drank in his comments like a thirsty dog at a pond. "Call this a fooking international airport?", he continued to scathe, regarding a dilapidated advertising board that was peeling with parts of it coming off. "Where's the AC?", complained the Italian German lizard. "I can't stand waiting!" she complained. "There is a fan here," I said indicating at the ratty ventilation blowing in the corner. "But you need to stand real close to feel the breeze". "Fook me", scathed the Scot. "I'm sweating like a rapist". He pronounced the word like this - reeyeaapist. I chuckled again at his politically incorrect choice of words. In less than 10 mins, I'd heard more genuine nastiness spout from his mouth than I have in the years living in Canada. I saw the gaggle of blondles try to cut in towards the checkpoint. A number of various passengers including Nigerians looked on in annoyance. "Why are they cutting in line?" mentioned a woman in annoyance. "They do not have any children!" A sharply dressed immigration officer stepped in. "You cannot cut in line.", he said firmly. "Please go to the back." What were those lizards doing in Nigeria? Boyfriends? Why, Nigeria? Well, to be perfectly honest, in the UK, for those who love their dark meat, Nigeria and Jamaica has the market cornered. With 180 million blacks spilling out from Nigeria and bolstered by Jamaicans, most British lizards who have stepped outside of their comfort zone have been pounded by either a Nigerian, Jamaican or both. As we got closer to the line, I noticed that the officer was asking people where their address in Nigeria would be. Fcuk! I couldn't remember my contact's address off the top. All I could remember was his phone number. I hope this wouldn't be a problem. I tried asking the two Scots what hotel they were staying at. I just needed an address to satisfy the immigration officers. They didn't know and neither seemed all that chuffed to be working in Nigeria. The money must be smackingly delicious to bring them over. I tried shoulder surfing the irish man. "You got a hotel name, mate?", I asked. "I didn't know they'd be asking me this shyte". "Don't know," conceded the Irish man. I decided I would write the address of my work place in Toronto. I came up to the counter. Two males were going through the immigration forms that had been handed out on the plane. What I can say is that, these Nigerian uniforms are rather sharp. The guy, who had a few tribal slices on his face looked over my paper. "Where is this?", he questioned to the address I put on the form. I mumbled like I had a mouthful of sandwiches. "What?" asked the man in a stentorian fashion. "Wheeeyaah is it?!" P.S. Nigeria is the leading world supplier on noise. They export it in huge volumes and use it on a daily basis for all forms of transactions. Whispering is a cultural offense and use of this form of communication will result in social blighting. "It's in Canada", I finally admitted. "Who are you staying with?", roared the officer. "I can't remember", I said. "He should be just outside". "Put his number down!", said the officer handing me a pencil and turning to the next person in line. I scribbled my contact's number down on the immigration paper and handed it back to the man. He grunted and motioned me over to the second line of customs. This time, it was a male/female duo. Beyond them I could see a final line of officers and a conveyer belt with suitcases in motion. I was still concerned over all the phobia about Nigeria. Would someone grab my suitcase and make off with it? Would the baggage handlers slash the material looking for foreign gifts (Oga, do me Christmas?) Would I be denied exit from the airport until I bribed the officials? I primed myself as best as I can but compared to the third world, no matter how much of a bad ass we think we are in the Western hemisphere, Nigerian midgets will eat the lunch of a giant raised in the First World all day, every day. The man looked at my Canadian passport and passed it onto the woman. She sounded my surname out slowly and deliberately. I thought this was the premise of a shakedown and I tried to hold a stoneface as best as I could. "I said Mr ", said the woman looking at me. "Oh, yea that's me", I replied, my voice as rough and chalky as a Equadorian primary school classroom. She motioned me onwards and I passed through. That was it! No super wicked shakedown. My luggage came quickly and I dragged it outside of Murtala Mohammed looking for my contact. now outside of the airport. The hecklers. HECKLERS A rotund man wearing an African fez materialised out of the throng of busy people and asked if I need a taxi. I turned down this request with a sullen shake of my head. Another guy appeared a minute later asking if I wanted to change US for Naira. I declined. I scanned the mess of people frantically. This airport was insane. In the distance, following the road that lead up to the airport was some sort of bridge. Near that bridge, was a raging autonomy of noise and dusty vehicles. The traffic looked insane to a mutant level. WHERE THE FCUK WAS MY CONTACT? Suddenly a short guy appeared. "You need help with your luggage?", he asked. I remembered the advice of one of my Nigerian friends. The short ones are the most dangerous. FCUK! Nah, I slurred, trying to bring out my South London credentials street chats. In Nigeria, any accent that isn't laced with pidgin has the same impact of the voice of a college chick in an alleyway thriving with sex crazed convicts. Food. "Is somebody collecting you?", asked the short man. He had a shaven scalp and yellowing eyes. "Yea", I slurred again, scanning the sea of black for my contact. I wasn't even sure I would recognise him, I hadn't seen him since the late 90's. I had forgotten to leave my I-phone at home but I blocked all international calls when I got to Montreal so even if I wanted to bring out my phone in the midst of these predators, I couldn't send or make any form of communication on African soil. "Do you want to call him?", asked Yellow Eyes, producing a battered Nokia which is the cell phone technology of choice in Nigeria. It along with the Blackberry, monopolises the general Nigerian market. Fcuuuuuk! To reach for this phone, to accept his gift, was signing myself up for a whole heap of bullshyt. But I had no choice. I didn't know where to wait. The terminals in MM1 (Mohammed Murtala Airport 1 is for international flights) was a hodgepotch of confusing nonsense. Reluctantly I reached for the Nokia and dialed my guy's number (which I had fortunately commited to memory during the flight). "The number you have called is not available at the moment" was the friendly British female voice I heard. Not the type of accent I needed at this point in time. I needed to hear a strong accent of a Nigerian consistency coming from that phone. Fcuuuk! "Let me try it", asked the Yellow eyed one angling for huge tips. Deeeper....in..debt.... "It's not working", he said after punching in the number. "Let me try it again", I said and seized the phone from this cat. This time, I heard the reassuring voice of my guy. " ", he said. "I'm almost there! Traffic is crazy! I left 3 hours ago! Just stay where you are!" This obviously threw a spanner in the works of Yellow Eyes as he wished to steer me deeper into his gratitude for a larger tip. "Let me direct him to where you are", he said and took his phone back. As he began speaking to my guy, he discerned that he was Igbo and went into a swift torrent of Igbo with my guy giving instructions. Was this guy a genuine Igbo guy or just one of these Wayo guys skilled at using any language to sweeten their prey? It is not uncommon to have guys in Nigeria skilled at speaking at least two of the three main tribal languages there which as mentioned before, Igbo, Hausa and Yoruba. Even just like the Wayo (con men) of Montreal, speaking multiple languages is an essential staple to remain competitive in the dupe game. When he completed the call, he said to me: "Let's go over to the bridge. Caars cannot come hiiyah, it is easier there." I began to walk, eyeing this cat as he dragged one of my suitcases. Logic quickly kicked in. "Nah, I'm good", I said. Underneath that bridge at this time (it was beginning to get dark) looked like a tourist deathtrap. "You don't have to worry, we cannot do anything hiiiyah" assured Yellow Eyes. "Look at that, they have cameras everywhere" and he indicated towards some glass orb structure hanging from the ceiling structure. Fcuk dat. This is Nigeria. Does that shyt even work? Your only security is your wits and your DNA. We staying fcuking put. Yellow Eyes started hitting me off with some fast Igbo. I was too tired and not fluent in that shyt so I wasn't even hearing what he was saying. What I do know is that he was trying to sweeten the pot. The entire country is about transactions. Simple and put. "Oga, you know Nigeria is tough", said Yellow Eyes. "Please give me 20 Euros before your guy gets here" "Nah, I'll sort you out when he gets here", I said. This muthafcuka must think I don't know the conversion rate. 20 Euros will do you nice in Nigeria for a bit. "When he comes here, he won't give any money", insisted Yellow Eyes. "Do it now, biko" He burst off into more Igbo. I knew his ploy. My guy is born and bred in Nigeria and has been living in Lagos for over 20 something years. He'd chew right through that Wayo move like it were gourmet steak. No way would he break off any big Naira for the Yellow Eyes. "Nah, he'll do you, don't worry", I slurred still scanning. Finally, my guy appeared with another dude who looked remotely familiar. Thank Chukwu! I embraced both of them and they moved in, looking at Yellow Eyes with a casual Nigerian distrust. Each of my guys seized my suitcases and ripped off my Air France tags and hurled them to the ground. Now we went off to the bridge, with Yellow Eyes still trailing. Another guy appeared who apparently had a ride. Yellow Eyes said something quick in Igbo to my guy who looked at him once and reached out and broke him off with 1000 naira. Yellow Eyes disappeared. Under the bridge we got to this other cat's car (unregistered taxi). We began to load my suitcases into the trunk. "How much?" said my guy as we did so. "4000 naira" said the car owner. My guy began to take my suitcases out with the same pace as he loaded them. "Oya, now! 3000 naira", said the car owner and we loaded them back in. I sat in the back with my guy and the other cat sat in the front and we drove off. There was supposed to be a fee paid for all vehicles parked under the bridge as they left the hotel facility. The driver drove right by the woman collecting the money almost running her over. "I dodge am", said the driver, implying that he avoided paying the fee. Naijalicious! Finally I got to the place where I would be staying. I was greeted by my contact's wife and immediately hooked up with some garri and orah soup for dinner. I had to share the room that night with one cat from Enugu that was flying out the next morning. All my spending money was stored safely in my punani pouch which I had tucked below my waistline on the inside of my trousers. After ensuring the coast was clear, I tucked the wallet into my pillow and took it to sleep. That night I woke up to see a lizard darting across the room quickly. Garrrh! I woke up that morning and felt under my pillow. My punani pouch was adiosa! Shiiiit!!!! My fcuking 3 thousand American dollars...gone!!! So enough of this novel shyt...what about the fcuking lizards?? REPTILES If you are NOT into black lizards, then Nigeria isn't the place for you. The country is about 180 million deep and the most white lizards (7 in total) I saw was at the airport. As soon as I left MM1 (Murtala Mohammed 1 is the departure for international flights), I didn't even see anything mulatto. The further I went in, i.e as I spent two weeks in Igboland, i saw nothing white. I didn't even see mulatta. In the village during a masquerade session, I was actually saw one white lizard which was quite surprising to me. If you are into black lizards, then you will definitely find your pickings in Nigeria. A range of different looks from jet black to quite fair in complexion. Some got asses and some aren't so blessed. You will hardly see any of the ridiculous bumpas that you see in the U.S (and if you do, she is probably on vacation from the states). The black lizards range in complexion and size. Nigerian lizards can be quite a hefty bunch but they are still nowhere as big as the North American blacks even though the Nigerian diet consists of a whole heap of starch. Even the bigger lizards are still reasonable in size and are of course very strong. The dressing from what I saw was tasteful. Sluts are still condemned here and openly sexual acts are shunned. Even the ashawo that I tried to snap were more tastefully dressed than an average Toronto lizard on a random Saturday night on Spadina and King etc. I tried to snap (take some pictures of) some ashawo on our way to one of the Lagos islands (I think it was Ikoyi island) and they ran from the flash like a vampire runs from sunlight. Ladies are still ladies in this country and still appreciate and uphold their role. Nigerians seem to like big women. Every time I asked someone to show me what was up i.e where the lizards were at, they pointed me in the direction of a thick woman. I had to remind them that I was there on vacation and not for work. Big women require work and with all that hot ass sun, I wasn't in the mood to be pounding away at some hefty lizard. Too much sweat definitely spoils the broth. I think there is something in the DNA that signifies that a woman with size can be associated with wealth and will most likely give birth to healthy children. Remember that from a biological standpoint, which is what we humans operate from, the whole basis behind attraction is to find the partner that would give one an offspring with the best chance of perpetuating one's genes. Remember as a human being our two strongest urges in terms of ranking are immediate survival and then procreation is after that. From nature's perspective, no matter how much money you got or how strong/fast/intelligent you are, you have an expiration date (you won't live forever) so the best way to perpetuate your genes is to impregnate lizards so they can give birth to your child which continue to forward your genetic footprint. Remember that nature has certain hardwired programming in us. Fcuk an Iphone and a blackberry. Fcuk a degree. Nature doesn't know about societies and technology. In the past, we had so much predators (wild animals, other jealous ass humans, illness) that we needed to get our seed out there as soon as and give it a fighting chance. That was our only way to guarantee immortality from a human perspective. Based on that breakdown, I've always liked lizards with a generous helping of ass and bress and even some of the women that some Rooshians deem as disgusting (too much ass, too much belly roll hanging out), I would gladly fcuk and actually cum the hardest inside of. But I'll be dammned if I'll fcuk a lizard that I can easily access in Toronto (a fat lizard). LIZARD QUEST I guess due to it being the festive period and everyone returning back to their respective villages, I was finding it very difficult to find someone who was up for going to a club. I needed to hit some lizards and fast! I actually began to secretly scheme on my connect's house girls as I got more and more aroused. The house girl was a raggedy long limbed chick from his home village with short natty hair. She looked young but I reckon her Naija upbringing meant she could take the pipe. She helped with the domestic duties in the house with her younger sister. Younger sister was out of the question, of course. But this gangly one was fair game for a beggar. Problem was, I was never alone in that house. Being the variety wolf that I am, I was hoping to hit a reptile from each major tribe plus a bonus edo state lizard. That means I wanted to smash a hausa, yoruba and an igbo lizard. It was clear that I didn't have the time nor logistics to go through things the traditional route. He say/she say is big in Nigeria and the SNL thing didn't seem to be a free flowing convo over there. Sadly, it looked like I would have to get something arranged . Finally, push came to shove and I insisted to all peeps hosting me that I needed to make a lizard suffer. One of the guys I was rolling with who owned a distributor outlet in one of the markets in Lagos set me up with a friend of his, a River State lizard who was in university.I Obviously, she needed someone to help her "do Christmas" and I needed someone to put a first world ass whupping on. UNIVERSITY LIZARDS The gig out there is that you have lizards that are in university (education is HUGE amongst Nigerians) and it's up to you whether or not you choose to "help" them out with their studies. Her name was Princess and she schooled in Ibadan. I didn't care to ask her Naija name. Names like Princess, Queen, Majesty and Empress fly out of my head quicker than trashy soap operas. I only stored the name 'Princess' quickly in my shytty unlocked Nokia phone because I knew a datasheet was expected on my return. She was a nice looking lizard around 5'6, with a nice ass, and a scar near her gut and some kind of burn on her right arm. I bought her a large stout (Guiness) for about 300 Naira and we went into a motel room. When we went in the room, I began to undress, self conscious of my gut that was growing exponentially from all the huge Nigerian Guilders that people were obliging me to drink. But lizards in Nigeria don't show that they give a shyt. Most cats that I saw in Nigeria were sporting guts. With all the garri and stew, abs take a second set to abdominal fat. But these cats are strong as fcuk and could crunch the fcuk out of an elephant, don't get it twisted. I had all my Naira stuffed into my black dress socks along with several condoms. The only thing I had of value was my 200 dollar Canon that I bought at Futureshop before departure. That, I watched like a thirsty hawk. When Princess undressed, I was pleased at her body. I haven't pounded out a decent black lizard in a while who hasn't come along with a full package of attitude and this lizard was going to get it! I slapped her fatty with a smile. "You've got a nice azz", I said. "It's okay", she admitted. I guess men in Nigeria really go for the super duper excessive rear baggage holders. But to me, in comparison with the time constraints and lack of playas, this was more than enough. A fleeting thought crossed my mind about Naughty Nomad's tale of barebacking in Africa. I know the fact that I am from foreign and in Africa, everything foreign is good, I could probably speech her into letting me hit that raw. The ultimate experience..going raw into a queen from the motherland...FCUK NO! To my recollection, Naughty has irish blood which I don't possess. I'd expire like perishable goods if my naked glans even touched that gooch. Batting that foolish notion to the back of my head, I retrieved a Kimono from my socks, strapped up and aimed at her snatch. Miss, miss, miss, she reached back and pow, I'm in! Welcome to MTN! Bienvenue a Nigeria! I began to stroke her looking at her well defined upper back and her cute little onion quivering from my backstroke. I love backstroke..especially if the lizard has a small waist and an azz that fans out like a cobra's hood. I wasn't that comfortable though. I like to kiss while I am stroking from time to time. If the lizard has bad lips (thin) or throws too much teeth into the act, it detracts from the experience. I could hear noise in the corridor. I was also concerned about her pulling a wayo move so i wasn't relaxed. It was akin to taking a shyt at a nightclub, one can never feel relaxed when there's all sorts of noise going on. And as mentioned before, Nigeria has the cornerstone in the global market of noise. I could hear shouting and arguments in the corridor outside. I switched positions to missionary. This motel was hotter than a muthafcuka. There was some fan blowing somewhere, I imagine and the window was open. I just prayed that a REAL lizard wouldn't hop through the window. I can't stand those scaly muthafcukas. As I pumped up her pum pum, I rained sweat on her like Patrick Ewing in the playoffs. "Agh", she said. "My eye! Your sweat is burning my eye!" "Sorry", I said dispassionately and rolled onto my back. She straddled me and began to ride me after wiping her eye with the bedsheet. "AH, AH! wHAT IS THE MATTER WITH YOU?" yelled someone from the passage outside to somebody else. I could feel myself fading. "Hey, I'll need you to blow me", I told her. "will you finish that way?", she asked, grudginly. Obviously shining mans (giving blowjobs) was not her favourite. "No", I lied. She took a sip of the large stout and began to administer fellatio. It was standard which indicated she was no pro and I knew that I would not be spurting from this. She had essentially turned my lie into a truth. Every now and then she broke the act to spit down at the side of the bed, obviously she didn't like my Canadian 'taste'. In my arrogance, I imagined my meat would taste sweetest to any lizard out there fortunate enough to snack on my snout. A nice experience in humility. My phone rang. I knew it was my guy checking on me. He wanted to make sure all was well. I picked up the phone. "Chairman!", he said. "Make you dey hurry up, we have to go soon, o!". Basically, we needed to be back because the dude I was staying with, was concerned at me being out till the wee hours of the night. I was getting bored of this. She lay on top of me rubbing her crotch on my naked tings. "Always use condoms, yes?", she said. I could feel from her tone that I could convince her to push it in raw. But Africa would beat my ass 8 ways from Sunday. "Always", I said. I strapped up again (she looked in amazement at the stash I had in my sock) and I allowed her to ride. I got up to leave and dropped her 2,000 naira. "Make sure you use am for book, o!", I informed her. She laughed at my weak ass pidgin and took another sip of the stout. FOOD My meals consisted of garri (eba/cassava), with ora, bitterleaf, egusi or okra soup. Some days I was hit with endomie (which are the kind of noodles that has been introduced by the incoming Chinese market). My varieties would be yam, African salad with fish or white rice with red stew. Nigerians like to chew their meat and when you are served meat in Nigeria, if it is easily chewed and digested, you have essentially insulted your patron. He/She needs that shyt to be rubber tough where you can chew it for 30 mins and when you swallow it, it goes down the same way it was when it entered your mouth...tough! Street delicacies can include suya (which is a beef on a stick type of treat usually done by the Hausa tribe). With all food in Nigeria, especially street meat, you have to be careful with where you purchase it. If a mofo prepares it wrongly (doesn't wash it properly or cook it long enough to kill the bacteria), you will be doing P4P...with the toilet. Due to the fact that running water is not a guarantee here, you may have to practice your shaolin squat in certain places or at the very worst, have to stop off in the bush somewhere to shit. If you didn't carry toilet roll with you, then you will have to locate a dulcet leaf somewhere or walk with a shytty ass until you can hook up a clothes change. The good thing is, if u shyt by the roadside, cats in Nigeria don't really give a fcuk. Peeps are on their hustle there. Watching you doesn't cut the generator on at night nor does it help put the kobo in a perp's pocket. I am good with Nigerian food and although I hesitated slightly when facing the grasscutter (bushmeat), I gobbled that mofo down with some African salad (pronounced sah-laaahd), singing an African ballad. I ate a banana there and it was much smaller than the ones I buy here but it tastes much better. Not so chalky as the ones they import here. Also due to the fact that the food there is natural, the further off the beating track you go, the more difficult it is to access food that is bad for you. As a result you will be stronger, leaner and sharper. I saw lizards there that couldn't spell gym if you spotted them the G and the Y, who ate heavy carbs all fcuking day and yet none of them reached the cottage cheese proportion of some of the hot yoga salamanders I encounter in Toronto on a daily basis. With the carrying of child in wrapper around back, balancing water on head, balancing on the back of Okada while wearing traditional attire, even the hefty lizards there were acceptable (in my eyes). NEPA Nepa is the power holding company of Nigeria. NEPA literally stands for National Electric Power Authority but it should really be Never Expect Power Always. Electricity has a very annoying going in Nigeria and one doesn't know when it will be returned. Due to this, you cannot have anything that is relies on a dependent and constant source of electricity unless you can bolster the outage with your generator. You can be having a party, watching a favourite movie or carrying some delicate goods up some stairs when all of a sudden, boom, lights out and you will be placed in pitch darkness scrabbling about looking for a kerosene lamp to light. You can't do shyt about this. You can't complain. All you can do is roll with the punches. Think you gangsta? You better be for real in Nigeria. JUSTICE There is no 911 or 999 in Nigeria (just 419 lol). Calling the cops is a fcuking waste of time. You better sort your shyt out yourself. If you are waiting for the law to show up, you better wait some more. Get your social connects right. That's the only way there. For instance, i was reading an article about a lizard that had stolen a guy's blackberry. His friends caught her, naked her (stripped her naked) and took pictures of them sucking her tits. Being the sick fcuk I am, I envied this act of justice and was tempted to bring out my Iphone as bait so I could naked a lizard and also suck her tits. Market thieves when caught will be stripped naked and beaten publicly. One jolly fellow relayed a tale of a woman who was caught stealing about 10,000 naira from one of the merchants a few days prior to my arrival. "They naked haar!", he said in excitement. "Then they flogged haar!". Translation: They stripped her ass butt nekid and then they beat her in front of the market people. Cats there have sharp eyes and reactions. I hardly saw tall people like I would in the Netherlands or Denmark for instance but believe me, these cats are athletes. Blackberries and Nokias are definitely the phones of choice in Nigeria. Every last person and their uncle owns one or the other. You have 180 million blacks in this country. How strong or bad ass you think you are, I bet you I could find a 16 year old that could tan your ass. Armed robbers there are treated with death. A guy I used to roll with got into armed robbery and smoking Indian hemp (elders frown upon those who smoke 'Indian hemp'). The cops cornered him in a shootout, wasted him and tossed the body. There are no dental records and plenty of creatures in that country. Believe me, there is plenty of vultures, bush meat and other various animals manning the day and night shift that will quickly dispose of a corpse. With all the wildlife there, I saw the roads barren of any roadkill. Criminal executions are shown on regular tv (not pay-per-view). One can see a group of armed robbers tied to the stake and being gunned down by a firing squad. No halfway crooks in Nigeria. They even have some armed robber executions outside some of the secondary schools. I saw a guy getting a group beatdown in the city (Enugu) for trying to steal fares by offering a lower rate than the consensus rate agreed by the other cabbies. My shrugged at that and said "Jungle justice" I saw more arguments and quarreling in the three weeks I stayed there than in all my years in Canada. Arguments and acts of aggression is a birth right of the Nigerian. Despite this, there is a lot of love there. A Nigerian will get upset in about 3 seconds argue with you furiously and then kiss you in another 3 seconds. It's a race track for public display of emotions and there are no speed constrictions. FINANCE Some say that money doesn't matter. Maybe if one resides in Canada, Denmark or the UK where you have all sorts of subsidies and programs that can be obtained to help one enjoy a reasonable living standard. In Nigeria, MONEY MATTERS. Everything costs money there. Water to bathe. Water to flush your toilet. Water to cook. Electricity. Money for Okada (motorbike taxi). Money for petrol (gas). Money for moto (car). Money for bread. School fees. Bribes (tax). Electricity Nice house, nice cars, respect (people calling you chairman). If you have money, you can get ANYTHING there. You can be the ogre that time forgot and you will pound the shyt out of your pretty model wife. It's a very paternal society. Can't get it up? That's your wife's fault. She can't bear any children because of your zero sperm count? Her ovaries are not attractive enough. Marry a newer younger lizard with wider hips and more magnetic eggs. You can enjoy your life well with money in Nigeria. My procured a visa to send his wife and kids to Europe first. They weren't feeling Europe so he hooked them up with a U.S connect. Laws are lax. They will never breathalyse you (such a notion was foreign when I explained it to my drivers), peeps don't pay car insurance, traffic lights are optional. You can drive as fast as you want and in whatever direction you want. If you encounter police, do them Christmas/New Year/]]></description>
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