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05-08-26 05:25 #17256Senior Member

Posts: 7923For the fellas who like a nice smile. . .
Jarango: the Philippines could go tits up very easily if the remittances dry up..
Originally Posted by ChochaMonger
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So, its possible that this little hottie will drop both her panty and her price point? I might have to start showering several times daily just to wash her hoo-hah off of me?
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05-08-26 01:53 #17255Senior Member

Posts: 107Deadbeat dad?
Expats relocate to the Philippines to enjoy an enhanced quality of life. I'm here for the tropical weather, low cost of living, and the easy poon harpooning.
But I'm sure there are more than a few here to escape nefarious aspects of their past lives.
If you know of an American who is in arrears in unpaid court-ordered child support payments, they soon could be in for a rude surprise, courtesy of the passport division of the USA State Department.
Old overdue threshold was $100,000. Looks like it's soon being dropped to a mere $2,500. The article says if the holder is outside the USA, they will have to apply for an emergency travel document to return to the States and face the music.
I've seen more than my share of foreign beggars on the streets here. I wonder how many of them have decided that living like a bum in paradise is preferable to returning home to face legal justice.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/...192857639.html
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05-08-26 00:42 #17254Senior Member

Posts: 824That's more like it. I see these posts every day asking if $1,000 per month is enough to live comfortably in the PH. Of course it is always followed by replies like "That's plenty" or "we have a family of 4 and eat out several times per month on less than that. " Maybe if buying 2 - 10 peso lumpia from street vendors is their idea of eating out. The market is considerably cheaper for fresh meat and produce and labor is still cheap but to have a quality of life you need around $1,000 per week.
Originally Posted by ThreeInches
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05-08-26 00:01 #17253Senior Member

Posts: 326Your last paragraph is spot on, couldn't have said it better. I've tried to explain this to the local's but those type of women they have no idea what I'm talking about.
Originally Posted by ThreeInches
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05-07-26 22:05 #17252Senior Member

Posts: 2794The Philippines is tooling up against China, but it is too little, too late. They did little to stop the early stages of the Chinese incursion, and now they are entrenched. Chinese fishing fleets are rapidly depleting Philippine fishing grounds, while their navy is driving off Filipino fishing boats from their traditional fisheries. The Chinese navy is also preventing the Philippines from exploring oil and gas resources within its own Exclusive Economic Zone, leaving it heavily dependent on energy imports for the foreseeable future.
Originally Posted by Jarango
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The Philippines faces the challenge of ramping up defense spending during a period of high inflation, weakened growth, and slowing investment. At the same time, it must contend with energy shocks and natural disasters. With high odds of a global recession, remittances are likely to dry up further pressuring Filipino consumers.
Historically, economic downturns in the Philippines often lead to an increase in "acquisitive" crimes like theft and robbery. So, a breakdown of law and order will certainly send even the horniest of expats scampering back to the relative safety of their homelands across the waters. However, many will run into the economic repatriation barrier, unable to return home and restart life at current Western costs. Their options will be remaining in the Philippines as economic exiles or fleeing to a neighboring Southeast Asian country with better conditions.
There are numerous expats in the Philippines who live in remote provincial areas. Some live in nipa huts with a native Pinay to suck their marshmallow, and a few mangy mongrels to drive off thieves. Sometimes, they appear in YouTube videos boasting about living like kings. To them, living like a coconut farmer and rooting their country bumpkin beats jerking off in their condo in Miami or bumping raw raisins with the lovely old hens at their Florida nursing home.
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05-07-26 03:39 #17251Senior Member

Posts: 1724Yeah despite the hate, Indian BPO operators are the biggest spenders in ph.
Originally Posted by Jarango
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And Chinese host a lot of Pinoys and import PH banana and fruits.
BTW unrelated, does anybody know the cheapest dating site?
I used Facebook, loaded with Freelancers and scammers.
Looking for some casual connections if ever.
Got my plate Half full in Baguio though.
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05-02-26 11:36 #17250Senior Member

Posts: 603Tsunami 3.0
You forgot the Philippines is tooling up against China at a rate of knots and that costs big bucks Marcos does not have. The big one is the OFWs getting booted out, and the race to the bottom with call centres. I had sex with some of them for $$, as their salaries are not great, too many Indians running them.
Originally Posted by ChochaMonger
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Although some of the more pathetic expats are fixated on their dicks, the Philippines could go tits up very easily if the remittances dry up. Remove the semblance of law and order and these guys will be back jerking off in Florida if they can still get it up.
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05-02-26 01:08 #17249Senior Member

Posts: 1377Learning the language
It will not help you in any way, unless you're planning on spending your life in the same spot. They speak a myriad of totally different languages, not variations of a common one. You will not understand another if you have command of one of them.
Learn Tagalo if you want to watch the news, but not to understand conversations, because everybody speaks their local dialect, not Tagalo. On my island just few k of the Cebu mainland they speak Visaya, and on mainland they speak Cebuano, everybody speaks both, because cannot understand eachother. Some tribes speak in broken English to other filipinos when they go to the city for the same reason.
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05-02-26 00:40 #17248Senior Member

Posts: 2794They are about to be hit by a tsunami of cheap puss. Some may not survive, even with the little blue pill. Artificial intelligence is about to decimate the call center and BPO industries. This is happening at the same time the Iran-US / Israel War is pushing Filipino OFWs out of the Middle East, while driving energy and food costs higher. That means a flood of desperate women into sex work at the same time that mongers balk at expensive flights and fuel surcharges.
Originally Posted by Jarango
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05-01-26 10:28 #17247Senior Member

Posts: 110Bisiyan can be difficult but now with current level of AI you can combine your immersion with understanding asking clarification on why they use the words what they mean and the derivation of the words which helps to clarify what usage the words carry. The reason why local say "Open the fan" in English because the word for Turn On being Bukas is polysemous something a local with very limited and with a lexicon filled colloquialisms even if they do attend college rarely understand the derivation of words especially their local dialect. So in Tagalog they would incorrectly translate Bukas to mean open in English and in Tagalog turning on a fan as bukas, opening as door as bukas, tomorrow and bukas. They will in turn tell you it means open which in those examples may be confusing. In Bisaya the words differ and don't carry such polysemy for this particular word to turn something electrical on would be suga, turning or opening something manually would be Ablihi and tomorrow would be Bukas in Bisaya. When learning a language knowing the correct derivation for a word you will be well equipped and sound as intelligent as you want to be the languages usage this is not always explained by local dialects and sometimes they are just using words their own language incorrectly or filling their local dialect they don't know the words for with Tagalog or taglish being that you are diving into the derivation of the word instead of the purely relying on usage in the laymen lexicon as that tends to be wrought with offences to the language itself you will beable to clear up misunderstandings much quicker, the girls will often even about their own language be unable to tell you why in Bisaya one word is used instead of another they will just say they don't know. AI solves this barrier to entry and allows you to use her as a resource for learning conversational Bisaya and still be able to understand it. Just keep your phone handy and Load Gemini or ChatGPT and load the live conversation app and ask it to explain the usage and pronunciation and if the usage is correct and when to use it if you don't fully understand.
Originally Posted by Goferring
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05-01-26 10:13 #17246Senior Member

Posts: 603The language of love
The best way to learn any language is to use it, work in a store or charity where you have to use it with the pressure on to use it and you'll pick it up easy as pie.
Speaking of pie, three inches sure likes his grub. Jack Ruby's, Kennedy's killer. That costs plenty and, outside of the cost, gorging is not my thing. Now a good dog steak OTOH.
There was a good story about the British Ambassador to China who took his two little daughters to a meat market where there were dogs for sale and the two little girls demanded, as little girls do, two cute little puppies in the window. The vendor picked them out, smiled and chopped their heads off before giving them to the Ambassador, whose tots were less than happy.
I've had stuff with the locals which made me sick for a week. And without going all John Rambo on it, what the Korean Special Forces eat would make a billy goat puke.
Threeinches turns his nose up at prime dog steak but has no problem bonking skeletons. To each their own.
At least he is honest and I have met many like him, who are here to bonk their lives away. Many cut a pathetic scene going up Walking St on their canes and frames, like the human cows staring into space from Kokos and Phillies. Lost lives but perhaps no more lost than anyone else.
I guess one of the attractions of places like Angeles and Pattaya is old farts casn go along half cut and not get mugged, as would definitely happen in the West. Not so much a second chiuldhood as a second blue pill fueled frat house.
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05-01-26 09:43 #17245Senior Member

Posts: 196I found an app called Ling that was (is) very good for cebuano.
Originally Posted by Flyboy2000
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05-01-26 05:58 #17244Senior Member

Posts: 471Thanks Phil, good advice. I was thinking of learning Tagalog, which she also speaks fluently (along with English), but figured Cebuano might be more appropriate and more personal. There's no way I could manage both though, LOL, I am in my 50's and my brain is far less 'plastic' than in youth, plus both languages are such tongue-twisters that one will be enough of a challenge. It astounds me that a sentence in English can be so much shorter, both in total length plus individual words, than the seemingly convoluted multi-syllable Tagalog or Cebuano equivalents!
Originally Posted by PhilJoy
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05-01-26 03:41 #17243Senior Member

Posts: 1377Same thinking here, so far, so good!
Originally Posted by ThreeInches
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05-01-26 01:50 #17242Senior Member

Posts: 1724That's a very specific way to describe it. Haha.
Originally Posted by ThreeInches
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Yeah, the whole 40,000 tonnes he was supposed to have discovered.
Originally Posted by Dg8787
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