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neilsingh100 wrote:Our foreign reserves avoided us from have a similar fate to Venezuela but at the current rate that will be depleted in 5-7years. I wonder how much people in this country understand this and are willing to make some painful adjustment now before it is too late.
Miktay wrote:Socialism exacerbated by pissing off the wrong people.
Pablo660 wrote:Ok edited lol
Trinidad should keep an eye Incase we reach that situation
RedVEVO wrote:Miktay wrote:Socialism exacerbated by pissing off the wrong people.
Not really
The problem is the "boliburgues" ..
screwbash wrote:it aint go be long before all the spanish that come here do the same to trinidad that they did to their own country and the guyaneese, chineese, indian indians, africans from all over africa, jamaicians and all other small islanders go help dem. trinidad doctors cant get jobs in the public health institutions and when you go to the health center is afrian doctors from Zimbabwe or somting, or indians from calcutta. yuh go to buy a roti and the cooks talking spanish, yuh pull up in a mall and the security is jamaician or some small island accent. but doh worry once trinidadians get they rum or feel dat all these people will save the country so they dont have to wuk we go make it.
RedVEVO wrote:screwbash wrote:it aint go be long before all the spanish that come here do the same to trinidad that they did to their own country and the guyaneese, chineese, indian indians, africans from all over africa, jamaicians and all other small islanders go help dem. trinidad doctors cant get jobs in the public health institutions and when you go to the health center is afrian doctors from Zimbabwe or somting, or indians from calcutta. yuh go to buy a roti and the cooks talking spanish, yuh pull up in a mall and the security is jamaician or some small island accent. but doh worry once trinidadians get they rum or feel dat all these people will save the country so they dont have to wuk we go make it.
Trinidad need the best workers and business men.
Look @ what the 1% has done to develop Trinidad and the Caribbean .
It's the wave of the future
screwbash wrote:RedVEVO wrote:screwbash wrote:it aint go be long before all the spanish that come here do the same to trinidad that they did to their own country and the guyaneese, chineese, indian indians, africans from all over africa, jamaicians and all other small islanders go help dem. trinidad doctors cant get jobs in the public health institutions and when you go to the health center is afrian doctors from Zimbabwe or somting, or indians from calcutta. yuh go to buy a roti and the cooks talking spanish, yuh pull up in a mall and the security is jamaician or some small island accent. but doh worry once trinidadians get they rum or feel dat all these people will save the country so they dont have to wuk we go make it.
Trinidad need the best workers and business men.
Look @ what the 1% has done to develop Trinidad and the Caribbean .
It's the wave of the future
yea a certain chine business man get 22 acres ah prime waterfront land to build a theme park to make more money and I cyah even get ah lil lot ah land next to the river in the bush tuh plant some peas an tomatoes but guyaneese planting one set ah land in aranguez an now building apartments.
Phone Surgeon wrote:screwbash wrote:RedVEVO wrote:screwbash wrote:it aint go be long before all the spanish that come here do the same to trinidad that they did to their own country and the guyaneese, chineese, indian indians, africans from all over africa, jamaicians and all other small islanders go help dem. trinidad doctors cant get jobs in the public health institutions and when you go to the health center is afrian doctors from Zimbabwe or somting, or indians from calcutta. yuh go to buy a roti and the cooks talking spanish, yuh pull up in a mall and the security is jamaician or some small island accent. but doh worry once trinidadians get they rum or feel dat all these people will save the country so they dont have to wuk we go make it.
Trinidad need the best workers and business men.
Look @ what the 1% has done to develop Trinidad and the Caribbean .
It's the wave of the future
yea a certain chine business man get 22 acres ah prime waterfront land to build a theme park to make more money and I cyah even get ah lil lot ah land next to the river in the bush tuh plant some peas an tomatoes but guyaneese planting one set ah land in aranguez an now building apartments.
so why you didnt plant land in aranguez and get money and build apartments?
work harder.
FROM RICHES TO RAGS
Venezuelans become Latin America’s new underclass.
Free-spending Venezuelans once crammed store aisles in foreign countries famously uttering “dame dos” — “I’ll take two.” But the citizens of what was once South America’s richest nation per capita are now confronting a devastating reversal of fortune, emerging as the region’s new underclass.
As their oil-rich country buckles under the weight of a failed socialist experiment, an estimated 5,000 people a day are departing the country in Latin America’s largest migrant outflow in decades.
Venezuelan professionals are abandoning hospitals and universities to scrounge livings as street vendors in Peru and janitors in Ecuador. Here in Trinidad and Tobago — a petroleum-producing Caribbean nation off Venezuela’s northern coast — Venezuelan lawyers are working as day laborers and sex workers. A former well-to-do bureaucrat who once spent a summer eating traditional shark sandwiches and drinking whisky on Trinidad’s Maracas Bay is now working as a maid.
The U.N. refugee agency has called on nations to offer protection to the Venezuelans, as they did for millions of Syrians fleeing civil war. But in a part of the world with massive gaps in protection for refugees, Venezuelans fleeing starvation at home are often trading one harrowing plight for another. Trinidad, for instance, has no asylum laws for refugees, leaving thousands of desperate Venezuelans here at risk of detention, deportation, police abuse and worse....
....Up to 45,000 Venezuelans, aid groups say, have crossed the narrow straits in recent years to Trinidad and Tobago, a country of 1.4 million. As many as 160 a week are still making the trip.
Up to 45,000 Venezuelans, aid groups say, have crossed the narrow straits in recent years to Trinidad and Tobago, a country of 1.4 million. As many as 160 a week are still making the trip.
“We cannot and will not allow U.N. spokespersons to convert us into a refugee camp,” Prime Minister Keith Rowley said after the incident.
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