god you're a moron. and such a hateful piece of sh*t ... i was just about to comment that this is
the most wholesome and helpful and positive thread i've seen on this forum so far, then i realized i hadn't clicked "Show Ignored Content" - and boom, like clockwork, the cancer that is
@Avocado's negativity-riddled comments appears!
for me, Argentina beckoned because Milei had a fighting chance, and i had the opportunity to live as an Expat again after 5 years of not traveling (didn't want to risk being force to get the COVID 'vaccine' if i was crossing borders). i did 2 months in Mexico in 2018, 10 days in Costa Rica, and 3 weeks in Guatemala, then got stuck in the USA, so i made the most of it. but then, late 2023, it was looking like i could travel again! i was following various Libertarian pages and saw the
La Libertad Avanza "ticket" - and i was sold on free markets and liberating the oppressed from tyrannical central planning.
i wanted to see this huge country; so much of it seems untouched. and when overlaid on a map of North America - Argentina is huge!! i've driven across a lot of the USA but damn, Argentina looks like its own planet. i decided to see the Inauguration in-person, and see what BsAs was like. 6 weeks in, i've ran just over 55 miles while exploring Villa Crespo, Palermo, Monserrat, San Telmo, Puerto Madero, Recoleta, and now Palermo Chico. primarily, i wanted to see if this place was livable, if i needed to live here for 7 months, 3 years in a row, to get citizenship. and aside from the food quality and a little bit of arrogance from a small (loud) minority of Peronist portenos, this place is huge and safe and dog-friendly and so much to do!
i would disagree with it being my first choice if i had to live in a city for the rest of my life, because for me that city is Prague, but it's definitely a place i would bring my family and friends to visit. that being said, the government has sapped all the economic options, so i'm literally stuck in CABA because only small dogs can ride on
Remis/buses/trains, and flying is a bit hard, and rental cars at 1000-3000 USD per month and no way jose i'm paying that...but it's been fun to travel again. i like the challenge of overcoming obstacles as an Expat. one of my biggest complaints about some areas of Mexico, and Guatemala/Costa Rica/Peru/Chile was that it was hard to blend-in. Buenos Aires has that cosmopolitan feel like the USA, where you see every single ethnicity, religion (i walk by Orthodox Jews every Saturday with their little hats on!), skin color, and you heard English and Russian and Italian etc. spoken.