This is the best post I've ever read in this forum.
Thanks Stive for such kind words. I appreciate those words.
I just hope my post comes across the right way. I've read a few posts by what seems like spiteful foreigners that come here, get beaten down by the mess that can be Argentina and they lash out. I'm not one of those people.
I'm one of the fortunate ones that was successful in Argentina. But I know I'm not in the majority. Argentina is a brutally tough place to do business. You can read that over and over and not think that can be true. But the facts are coming here on vacation and living here day in and day out are two different things.
You'd think I'd get use to the inefficiencies, red tape, hassles, horrible banking system, non-functional judicial system. But the facts are that not a day goes by that I think to myself this is a bit maddening how the locals can be and how the system is broken.
I never once got used to it even after living here all these years. And the sad part is that this craziness is "normal" to a Porteno. Most don't realize that it's NOT normal until they move out of Argentina and see how the first world works and how efficient other countries are.
If you do something or get conned or get robbed and you might tell a story to a local, they will tell you how it was your fault for not being more careful. That is THEIR "normal".
I have hundreds of examples, especially with the company. I've seen cases and where friends that own companies, have workers that get caught drinking on the job and fire them. The worker gets some scumbag lawyer and still ends up winning.
The labor laws need to be changed as well. It's totally broken.
I'm not saying that you can't have a good quality of life here. Because you most certainly can. In fact, maybe when I'm older and fully retired, and my kids are out of the house I'll move back to Buenos Aires. For those that don't work, have plenty of income, etc. it can be nice.
I mean you have some luxuries like having a full time maid for less than $500 US a month..... a chef for $500 a month. Heck, even if you have tons of money, most people in other parts of the world can't get those things.... Things like that are nice.
But with the runaway inflation, I have a feeling there is going to be a domino effect of problems here and crime will continue to go up. I'm not saying I think Buenos Aires is a dangerous place. Because I certainly don't. But when you have insane inflation like this it causes another set of problems.