I am not looking to live there. The Jamaica of Ian Fleming and Noel Coward are a thing of the past though.
King, being from PR my impression of Jamaica was never that of Fleming of Noel Coward, but that of schoolmates whose parents had moved from Jamaica to Puerto Rico in search of better opportunities.
As for your visiting Cuba realizing it's not a place to live in yet declaring superior to other places you have not even seen, well, that speaks for itself. A true intellectual who prizes ideas over facts. I can respect that.
King, that is because of the simple fact that having lived there (Puerto Rico) myself and having relatives and friends who have lived there (Cuba, Jamaica), I do know a lot of it therefore feel quite free in sharing my knowledge confident of its veracity, whereas you, who knows nothing of it persists in giving reasons based in opinions of how you wish the world would be rather than on fact or knowledge.
So my know-it-all dismissiveness hews very close to reality, however offensive to you, whereas your intellectual reasons don't. But I understand you fancy yourself an intellectual and in your world crafting a well worded argument about a subject counts for more than a dismissive attitude reflecting direct experience with the subject.
Last edited by Chévere (2014-10-20 11:10:36)
^ Yes indeed NJS, maybe I should have said "from Greece to Rome hence to UK then USA"
BTW, my Dad was a lawyer too (in Puerto Rico), and my daughter was born at UCL London (1986). Life paths...
Lived there for a year (July '85-June '86), working as a Senior Registrar at the Royal Marsden Hospital on Fulham Road.
My wife was doing a stint at the LSE and we lived at York Terrace East, just south of Regent's park.
The Royal Academy of music was right behind us so every night we heard studio practice, mainly piano or violin- it was heavenly.
York Terrace is a very nice place indeed to live!
You'll be saddened to hear that those London educational establishments are degenerating into Qatari controlled bastions of Islamic supremacism.
The romanticizing of Cuba by progressives is worthy of study, it appears the decay, cronyism, lack of progress, "standing-up to US Imperialism", poverty, lack of freedom, secret police, quaint archaic musical forms that hasn't developed for 60 years, makes the Guardianista reader feel all gooey and squelchy inside.
All this talk of the Caribbean remind me that I must stock up on my plantation rum supplies for the winter.
They won't like that then!
The other night I was watching the BBC 4 documentary about Britain's finest contribution to military aviation during the jet age immediately after WWII and I was struck yet again at what a splendid dresser Norman Tebbit is. He is his own man, I think Farrage has deliberately tried to emulate Tebbit's look, but on the cheap.
To reiterate, I am not sure where you get the idea I am a leftist
Minor spelling correction from an Hispanic does not bother me either.
Apparently the contraction of Hispanic is now verboten on this site.
So much for Clint Eastwood or "West Side Story".
Last edited by Chévere (2014-10-22 11:03:18)
Howon earth can 'Hispanic comprise a racial slur?'