Saturday, February 28, 2009

Slats only off by 7 years ...maybe less

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Goodbye to all that...

"Hey, whadda I know. But I'll tell you somethin', I bet he went broke 20 years ago."

Una yanquilada...

...y una vergüenza. Folks from Buenos Aires and everywhere else in Argentina have a hard time believing this kind of thing ...but it's for all to see in today's NYT:

"Under Cobra, most workers laid off from a company that has more than 20 employees and provides health benefits are allowed to keep those benefits for up to 18 months. But until recently, doing so was forbiddingly expensive. The out-of-work employee had to pay 102 percent of the premiums — or more than $12,900 a year on average for families and nearly $4,800 for individuals, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health research organization.

The new stimulus package at least temporarily changes the rules. If you lost your job after last Sept. 1 and your family income is less than $250,000 a year ($125,000 for individuals), you will have to pay only 35 percent of the premium for the first nine months. The government picks up the rest."
Very few other countries on earth ...and none in the so-called "1st world" ...do not regard health care as a human right.

Everyone in the US suffers. Even those well-off suffer from either providing health-care for their employees or suffer competion from those that do. Those fewer and fewer companies that do provide some sort of health care for their employees, are under increasing pressure from competitors in countries that provide national health care.

Canadians y canadiennes be proud. Be proud that your own Tommy Douglas struck while the iron was hot ...and kept striking ...before the American Medical Association could smother his efforts in the crib ...as was done in my old country. And be proud, as well, that your national government recognised that his model should be the Canadian model.

People outside the US and Canada often have difficulty discerning between people from those two north american countries. Pardon my lifelong career in logistics but I find the following old saying worth considering ...while considering the distinct difference:

"The United States is a nation that built a railroad;
Canada is a railroad that built a nation."

We yanquis, however, tend to think of "nation building" as something that we impose upon other peoples of the planet.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Another Splendid Evening at...

...Drinking Liberally Buenos Aires! Lots of new faces (as is usually the case) and great old friends, too!

Sooner or later, every liberal in Argentina will pass through our doors.

If you haven't been, you should think about it. Lots of networking being done tonight for some reason, as well. Good place for it... but we've never gathered for any other purpose than just good fellowship and drinks while we suffered through the Bush Administration.

Maybe now, with a new US president, we're starting to talk about something other than REGIME CHANGE! Or, maybe not. Maybe we're just more comfortable.

In about 90 days, we'll be celebrating our 1st anniversary ...at the same time, same day, same place ...wow. That'll be something to celebrate. Who woulda thunk it!

We're becoming one of the more stable expat institutions in town! Lots of fun. See you next time.

EVERY Thursday, every week, always at 7:00pm, always at Sir Will's Pub, San Martín 678, in convenient microcentro. Go here for a map.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

BBC - a whole section?

I don't frequent the BBC like I used to... but I was really surprised to click a link to a business story today and get a huge page on the "Global recession"!

And this strikes me as a weird article.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Obama on the Economy

Tonight at midnight, BsAs time, before a joint session of the US congress.

Update: ...from Atrios:

"Really Weird

Watching the speech on MSNBC at the bar I was joking all night about how the Republican viewer response graph red line was usually above the Democratic one and frequently literally off the chart. Very strange times. From email, CNN/ORC poll of people who watched speech.
1. What was your overall reaction to President Obama’s speech tonight – very positive, somewhat positive, somewhat negative or very negative?
Feb. 24 2009
Very positive 68%
Somewhat positive 24%
Somewhat negative 6%
Very negative 2%
Both/mixed *
No opinion *
-Atrios 23:31"

Friday, February 20, 2009

Facebook: Buenos Aires Book Swap

If you haven't received the invite yet... get yourself to here and think about two English language books you'd like to exchange with like minded expats here in town!

I'm looking forward to it ...I got at least a couple of goodies ...and I'm looking for some more.

Annie & Jimmy are hosting the swap at their place on the 14th of March from 4 to 6pm. Once you RSVP to the Facebook page ...they'll let you know exactly where.

See you there!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Pepe & Pablo Motta...

...along with vocalist Jesús Hidalgo, will be appearing at La Casa de Tití Rossi on Friday the 27th.

Pepe is a two-time emmy award winner and tango treasure. His performance will be part of the "Tangos con el Alma 2009" series and in the heart of the great tango barrio Boedo! See you there.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Tartagal - how you can help

The non-partisan website: http://www.tartagal.org is coordinating places and efforts to help the victims of the mudslides in Tartagal. Red Solidaria (www.redsolidaria.org.ar) is listing their efforts on their home page too.

They are concentrating on collecting the following donated items for transport to the area: liquids of all kinds, tetrabricks of milk, drinking water, food, clothing for children and adults (bagged separately if possible to facilitate distribution), rubber boots, blankets, mattresses, big trash bags and packing tape.

Tartagal.org suggests the following collection points:

Capital. Federal:

La Casa de Salta en Buenos Aires
Av. Roque Sáenz Peña 933 – Capital Federal.
Telefonos: (011) 4326-2456 al 59
Fax: (011) 4326-0110
Conmutador: (011) 4326-2456 Int. 106– 206
Email: casasaltabaires@salta.gov.ar

Alsina 1786– Capital Federal
teléfono 011-451-990-600

Club Atlético River Plate
Departamento de Filiales
(011) 4789 – 1366
Avenida Figueroa Alcorta y Udaondo

Parroquia San Pedro y San Pablo
(011) 4513- 9968
Quintana y Entre Ríos (Olivos)

Centro Franciscano de Buenos Aires
Alsina y Defensa (Capital Federal)

Colegio Santísimo Sacramento
Bacacay 4882
Villa Luro (Capital Federal)
(011) 4671 –1277

Javier Ramos Villaverde of the Unión Cívica Radical has a facebook event up as well:
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=124675600454

He lists another place in Capital where you can bring items to aid Tartagal:
UCR Comité Nacional, Alsina 1786
and
UCR de Buenos Aires, Tucumán 1660

This is my favorite interactive map for finding addresses in Buenos Aires:
http://mapa.buenosaires.gov.ar/sig/index.phtml

...and please don't hesitate to contact me personally for whatever reason:
4322-0968 or 312-224-8490
letters@yanquimike.com.ar

Digs.

From a Reader:
Hola Mike

Been much enjoying your blog and the spirit of this immigrant mutual aid idea. I've not been here 3 weeks but already have a good deal of hard earned bsas-quirk wisdom. One thing I have not figured out though - and I wonder if you can offer a tip - is how one gets a decent apartment in this city without getting crushed by the expat tax. Do you have any go-to websites for this sort of thing? My needs aren't complicated: Just need a single bedroom, furnished, with Internet, and would pay a little extra to pay by credit card or paypal (to avoid dealing in large sums of cash, which I learned the hard way on day one is dangerous business). Much obliged if you can suggest a website. Either way keep up the good work.
Dear Digs Seeker,

Good news and bad news:

The expat tax is coming down ...but large wads of cash are still the order of the day.

Buenos Aires rents really went up last year and the year before but the city has overbuilt and the extranjeros aren't renting and buying like they used to. I think that March will be a good time for apartment hunting. If you can hold out until chillier weather ...even better.

A two year lease is what every landlord wants to do here. You might be able to squeeze a 1 year out of somebody ...but it's hard to negotiate a good rate and get that at the same time. Furnished? Well, that's always been at a premium and from what I've seen those rents haven't gone down quite the way others have and probably won't follow unfurnished apartments in the exact same downward trend this year.

Rents are down a little in the expat bubble barrios ...but getting out to some traditional neighborhoods away from the N.E. of town will save you money and still keep you on a major public transit artery. I dearly love Almagro, por ejemplo ...but there are lots of others.

I've been lucky with paying multiple months in advance ...in cash, of course. I've even negotiated some pretty good discounts that way.

The really bad news is: landlords are the worst businessmen in the world. Doesn't matter what country you're talking about. They are just a step and a half above people that think they can make a fortune in the restaurant business. Therefore, they're hard to do business with.

You need to explain to them, and/or get somebody to explain to him, that the whole concept of la guarantía doesn't really apply to extranjeros.

La guarantía is the landlord's insurance policy against your "squatting" in his dpto for the two years that it's gonna take to evict you. You as an expat actually are more of a risk for running out on your lease than becoming a squatter. If you can get that through his thick landlord skull ...and pay 6 months in advance ...you might get him to overlook the guarantee and even drop the rent to porteño prices.

Paying 6 or more month's rent in one fell swoop may sound pretty extreme ...but if you're not getting any heavy interest on your savings account anyway ... it can actually be convenient for you as well as being a negotiating tool: you only have to pay your rent twice a year! (And remember, you gotta pay your rent every month anyway.) And since almost nobody mails in their rent check, like in the states, paying every month means arranging some face time to hand over the cash, which could conflict with some of your plans.

The best part of the relatively unheard-of "cash in advance" thing is that it surprises the hell out of your landlord (money talks...) and it might get him to start thinking outside the box.

For shorter terms than 2 years, we're gonna have to talk to somebody that's done it or is doing it. Trouble is... most of them, by definition, are gone by now! I still have lots of readers in the US, tho. Maybe some of them were short-termers and can chime in on the subject!

Yours in art and labor,
Mike

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Tartagal ...and you

The ExecComm of Democrats Abroad Argentina is presently reconstituting our Standing Committees ...one of which is our Issues Committee.

The very word "Issues" is nebulous and, I think, purposely so. If you are hesitant in volunteering because you can't imagine the breadth and scope of the "issues" our committee will consider ...allow me to suggest one: this from our host country, the town of Tartagal in the Province of Salta.

It is a Greenpeace issue. It is a humanitarian issue. Should you decide to lend your time to our Issues Committee, it could be an issue that you might vote to take up as our own among the many other US and Democratic Party issues the committee will address.

Consider volunteering to serve the DAA Issues Committee today.

In the meantime...

...as the BBC has reported (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7880959.stm) the deforestation in Salta has left the town of Tartagal submerged in mudslides up to 5ft in depth.

The situation is dire and relief is needed.

Tomorrow, I'll be coordinating information as to how you can help with supplies, elbow grease, and money to the Casa de La Provincia de Salta in Buenos Aires near the Oblisco ...and how you in the suburbs and provinces can help through Red Solidaria on http://www.yanquimike.com.ar

Once again, consider volunteering to serve the DAA Issues Committee today.

Yours in art and labor,
Yanqui Mike
letters@yanquimike.com.ar

Friday, February 06, 2009

Immigrant Mutual Aid Society

You'll notice, to the very right of this page, the beginnings of something very near and dear to my heart: an effort to help those among us ...far, far from home ...to cope with coming to, establishing in, coping with, and fruitfully living here in Argentina.

The idea of such a "society" might have been laughable only a few short months ago.

However, now, with so many changes here and abroad, we might want correct our course of Yankee Individualism ...and take a page from our great-grandparents book and the books of other immigrants to the new world ...and pool our resourcefulness toward helping ourselves like every other to this side of the pond has done before.

We can laugh. Most of us are in tremendous good shape. We are still in an enviable position as regards our fellow residents of Argentina ...in fact, some of us are in better shape than our compatriots we left behind in the good ol' USofA.

However, I have met several expats that have been wiped-out by the recent "crisis financiero" ...and some of the others I have met can no longer depend on the remittances like they used to.

Some of us are working here ...but some of us are working illegally. The idea of US citizens depending on dwindling investments, smaller remittances, being employed without benefit of "papers", making the "Montevideo Two-Step" to keep our residency somewhat legal ...is alien to our self-image and our concept of ourselves and our people.

Toward that, I propose that we not re-invent the wheel. I could be wrong but the but the model of the old Immigrant Mutual Aid Societies of the 19th century could assist us all in building a 21st century Expat/Immigrant community that we could all be proud of.

Some of us could end up in more trouble than others. Some others of us will need the sort of help and services that many of us could provide without any bother at all. Some of us will need the kind of help that will require us to put our heads together to find a way to help ...if not a solution.

I don't see this as a yanqui-centric effort ...although our assistance will be limited to the English language at first. Maybe later, we can develop a core that can assist in situations that can encompass languages other than ingles and castellano. There is no reason, however, to limit our efforts to any particular nationality nor to our debt to the nation that has been our gracious host.

We US citizen could leave behind a trace of good works like so many other nationalities have done here in the Argentine. It could make us very proud.

"Immigrant Mutual Aid Societies" do not qualify for non-profit status under Argentine law ...thereby making the creation of an NGO difficult if not impossible.

However, I'm of a mind that, in this period that we are experiencing globally, to look for status and funding ...in advance of good works ...is fighting "the last war." Today, I think we should prove ourselves capable of rendering service ...then, perhaps, seek official status. It's an upside-down world today. The lack of available funding now shouldn't prevent us from "helping a fellow American down on his luck" anymore than it did our forbearers.

"Society" may be a bad term for this. However, if we never develop a societal leadership ...that won't be so bad. Amish barn-raisings and Syndico-Anarchists never looked to build institutions ...they simply came together for a purpose and lended any effort they could. When the job was done, they went home happy and waited for the next call to help another.

Each one of us has so very much to give. The assistance from one of our own that "has been there, done that" can be so valuable to someone in the kind of need that we all found ourselves in... once upon a time.

The graphic to the right is merely brainstorming on my part as to the needs of people that I see coming to Argentina still to this day ...and the sort of things that I'm certain that short and long time residents still need help with. A laundry list, nothing more.

Buenos Aires life has a component of leisure that we all love. If we have learned anything from our Argentine hosts, it is that helping a fellow compatriot does not need to interrupt that. A moment here, a moment there ...with the things that we have become "expert" in, could make all the difference in the world to a fellow extranjero in need.

As we all begin to digest this proposal, I hope that you will all ponder the things you have learned to do and accomplish, through the school of hard knocks, and share them and teach them to others that might not pass through certain crucibles as well as we have.

I offer this site as a clearing house for both the need and the abilities that we as a community have.

It's a 19th century model, to be sure. However, it may be the moment to re-learn some of the lessons of that time ...with a decidedly 21st century twist!

Think about it ...and give me your thoughts as you are thinking.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Joe Green leaves Argentina

...in a short while, our Vice-Chair for the Americas will be winging his way back home from the Paris of the Palmtrees.

We will miss him and his service to us during our crisis.

The newly elected executive committee met with Joe privately in the café of his hotel, the worker occupied and owned, Hotel Bauer ...a choice that I feel befits his beliefs in rights of workers. I was so pleased when I learned of his choice (a hotel that our own Beatrice Murch apparently steered him toward!)

Please believe me that Joe made good use of his stay. He met with Democrats everywhere in Buenos Aires and made special efforts to engage us all above and beyond his duties this trip.

Of all the delegates that I met during the Democratic National Committee Convention, this last August in Denver, Mr. Green was the one with whom I spent the most of all those pleasant moments. I returned to Buenos Aires with the feeling that I had made a friend. Something that continued long past the convention.

Please join me in wishing him a buen viaje, a bon voyage, a good and safe trip, back to the ice and snow of his Canada.

All Democrats in Argentina were served well by his receivership and his commeraderie.

Yours in art and labor,

Yanqui Mike

Chairman, Democrats Abroad Argentina

Buenos Aires: 4322 0968

VoIP: 312-224-8490