As I leave the city of Buenos Aires one thing stands out more than the Parisian buildings, the steaks, the soccer, the climate, or anything else.
That one thing is the people.
Simple as that.
Argentinians are incredible. Proud. Caring. Funny. Hospitable. And energetic. Didn’t meet a single one who gave off a bad vibe, even the suspect looking ones. Lol.
They got that European lifestyle and vibe, with the Latin American strength and grittiness.
They are now only behind Irish people for me (Irish people are one of a kind).
The city itself and what I saw of the country was a second world country that clearly used to be in a better state.
From talking to the locals it seems they had the same fate that the US is now dealing with.
Huge welfare state. Over regulation. Corruption. Spending more than you make. Huge wealth gap. Inflation. Bad financial decisions, one after the other.
You can tell the infrastructure is still there in the main parts of the cities from the 1900s, but outside it’s not the same.
As I drove and walked around I drew a lot of similarities between the cities in the states and the one I saw in front of my eyes.
Overall, human nature is undefeated and the patterns always remain the same. The big difference we have going for us in America is the checks and balances that the founding fathers created, for now.
That’s all for now for my quick BA take.
Up tomorrow morning for our flight to Chile and to keep the adventure going.
All the while I answer emails, Slacks, and texts about the bag back home.
Life, work.
Work, life.
It’s all the same.
Just blessed to be able to have the health and wealth to travel the world one country at a time.
This morning I cancelled our family holiday to America. I cannot in good conscience take my wife and children there and tell them they will be safe. The United States is no longer a place for decent people.
thetimes.com/article/78f404…
@rushforth_lisa@gilescoren No they're not.
There is only one American nation, which is United States of America.
You're confusing "America" with "South America", which is not the same thing.
@rushforth_lisa@gilescoren As a Canadian when “America” is used it’s the USA. When “the Americas” is used, it is North, Central and South America. We use the proper country names for all countries.
@gilescoren Fair enough, and yes I got the gist too. It’s just that living in Argentina and married to a Colombian, you become more sensitive to people always saying ‘America’ when they mean the USA, often somewhat ignorant of the rest of the continent (I don’t mean you!). Thanks
@rushforth_lisa I used “United States” elsewhere in the tweet and don’t like repetition. ‘America’ remained geographically true if politically a bit less specific. As a journalist, I’m more interested in nice paragraphs and impact than precision - and people do seem to have got the gist.
@TennisTV Do you ever respond to your help@ emails?? I sent a message about an issue literally 10 days ago and STILL haven’t had a reply! Customer service?
Ken Murphy is Tesco’s UK CEO and the highest paid supermarket boss.
He gets £9,930,000 a year, but is registered to pay tax in the Republic of Ireland.
Not a penny of his outrageous salary is collected in tax, despite almost all Tesco’s earnings coming from the UK.
It’s theft.
@TennisTV Why are your live streams failing so frequently lately? I’ve had several issues on my laptop recently, so finally downloaded the app, and now I’m getting this message trying to watch Zverev V Shelton. Help??
Australian Open 𝙍𝙀𝘼𝘿𝙔 👊
First round draws for British men's singles stars:
@cam_norrie 🆚 Juan Pablo Varillas
Dan Evans 🆚 Lorenzo Sonego
@andy_murray 🆚 Tomas Martin Etcheverry
@jackdraper0 🆚 Marcos Giron
#BackTheBrits 🇬🇧 | #AusOpen
Doing a Monty Python silly walk for only eleven minutes a day is as beneficial for your health as the recommended 75 minutes of vigorous physical activity a week. (Study: bit.ly/3jutecL; 📷: Jazeen Hollings.)
Hawa Mahal (Palace of the Winds) in Jaipur, India, built with red/pink sandstone in 1799. Its 953 latticework windows enabled women of the royal household to see outside without being seen, and allow breezes to flow through