I notice your artful dodge of how many times you've visited the USA (your shopping paradise so it seems)
I'm sure being army and a paratrooper your familiar with "feet on the ground" which there is no substitute for......
Brisbane? Tourist town? Doug MacArthur musta thought it had charm as he had his headquarters there in WWII. Yes I know...The second world war another shocking example of the USA as the worlds policemen.
Cept that time I don't recall ever hearing an Ozzie complain about
Come at least have a look before you critique. My Home is always open to ya.
Ha ha, well, whatever Tim, remember mate, considering that you're about as American as me, and you were actually born and bred in a country that supported Nazi Germany in WW2, what America did or didn't do for Oz in WW2 has got buggerr-all to do with you anyway?
I can understand how after being born and bred in third world shiite-hole like Argentina, a place under the control of a military junta reportedly full of dickheads and nazi war criminals, (no I've never been there either Tim, nor do I want to......) Texas must seem like heaven on earth, and good on you for adopting Texas as your new home mate, (so many immigrants seem to bring their craappy cultures with them, to the eternal annoyance of their host country) but to reconfirm my previous point, a two week holiday in the Gold Coast during the "off season" is no qualification for your previous boasting post.
If you've read some of my earlier posts from this week, I do indeed intend to visit the US, hopefully as early as your next summer or fall, but I don't know whether or not I'll get down your way, Bobby R, who's opinion I do actually value quite highly, is that Texas is very much like Oz, and REAL Texans (as opposed to Argentinians in cowboy hats) are great people, but it'll only be a two week flying visit, and I have a lot of friends in the US that I'll be catching up with, so I may have to pass on your invitation. Cheers, Terry.
My mothers uncle was killed flying Halifax bombers with the RCAF durring WWII
My fathers uncle was killed in action June 6, 1944 in Normany.
My wifes grandfather made 2 out of three parachute assaults in WWII. Normany and Holland. Managed to survive the Battle of the Bulge (ardennes) too. Still carries the shrapnel.
DO YOU THINK THAT QUALIFIES TERRY?
Its a rather simple thing to sit across 7000+ miles of ocean and critique the system of someplace you have never been.
Here is a handy thought for anyone who is not an american when they wish to comment.
Don't be like the french. Remember the good things that have been done with you and for you.
Terry your quite right. I was born and raised in a country with a long history of tinpot despots. Kinda like Iraq.
I very well remember...A local judge was blown up by what is now called an IED (improvised explosive device we just called them bombs). We lived two doors down and it blew all the windows out of our house.
I can sure remember Small minded men with big guns. I can very easily remember laying awake at night listening to running gun battles.
Thousands of people disappeared in Argentina. Picked up off the street and out of their homes for dissent (real or imagined) never to be seen again.
Family members of those people are still trying to find out what happened to their loved ones. Kinda like Iraq.
Its my sincere hope that no one here ever has those kinds of experiences. If your going thru them you sure wish someone, anyone would intervene.
The great thing about America is that while many immigrants do bring their "crappy culture" with them, they soon adapt to the American way of life. Why? Because its better and has alot more to offer. America has a history of taking the best of "crappy crappy" cultures and integrating it into its society. Everyone here (unless they are Native American Indians) came from somewhere else.
P.S.
Terry I didn't make a boast.
I suggested you come see someplace before you comment. By the way I stayed in Crestmead a suburb of Brisbane. With friends. Kinda the same as you intend to do. Only made it to the gold coast one day.
Don't bother visiting Argentina it looks alot like New Zealand.
Argentine cowboys are called gaucho's and I own neither a cowboy hat nor a pair of boots.