Salm says “Chilean women are near the bottom of the South Am totem pole. Save yourself the trip.”
Similarly,
262 writes unenthusiastically: The women in Santiago itself? Meh.”
Have either of you spent time in the richer neighborhoods of Las Condes or Providencia? The richest ones of Santiago?
I ask not because I’ve been there yet - I haven’t. I ask because we all know that not even Roosh has “Bang[ed] Paraguay” - not literally! I ask because we know that the richest people everywhere tend to attract and represent the 'beautiful people' among large populations.
And therefore, for any longer-term visiter or potential single and thirsty resident, this is the informational data set that matters to us here.
As Roosh knows, beauty and attraction is a combination of fortunate genetic endowment, combined with the patterned preferences of social mating processes, ie, how and where excess incomes are consumed? Thus, while nobody “bangs Paraguay,” we will see segments of tens of thousands, and find meeting opportunities at cafes, malls, theaters and clubs composed of a few hundreds of females.
Conociendo el Mall alto las condes, Aug 2016
The quest here, then, is define those places! Seek them out, test and discover how to seduce the talent therein.
Thus, the simplest approach is to know where the richest people of Chile live and play, and then discover the best places to meet them and enjoy their company - RIGHT?
Chile is in the New World, and as such it is composed of peoples descended among the indigenous, voluntarily immigrated, and those once traded to work there as slaves. Furthermore, almost all of us have some ranking bias for (or against) the physical desirability of different races.
By properly understanding these demographic data, together with social factors involving the higher consumption goods (eg, homes, shopping, and entertainment), one can put oneself in the places to meet the targeted streams. And while ‘on the ground’ information is golden and rare - and hence, most prized here in the form of “Data Sheets” - one can know more about a nation by eliminating the least desired from the 'flock' of potential targets...until somebody cracks Chile!
The most basic Racial and ethnic breakdown of Chile: 55% caucasian, 42% mestizo or Amerindian. The best evidence is probably from genetic studies. (Self-reporting rates of 'whites' - probably because seen as more desirable - run about 5 to 10% higher than these.)
Interestingly, these same studies report that up to 1 out of 2 Chileans also have sub-Saharan African (ie, black) genes. (Now, I don’t know Chile’s pre-20th century history, but this datum may suggest Chile as functioning as some sort of refuge from black slavery on the Eastern side of the Andes.)
Among immigrant European peoples, we can surmise that Chilean height is probably a useful proxy for European ancestry.
The largest single groups winding up there are Basque or Navarre (10 to 20%), German (500,000), and Croatian (2.5 to 4.5%). Both of these latter peoples are known to be significantly taller than average.
The earliest large group of Europeans spoke German - they came from Germany and Switzerland, mostly, in the mid-nineteenth century. And they settled in southern or "Magellan" Chile.
To target this group, one might find out which universities people from Southern Chile favor attending. Then you can cross-check surnames of people in the nearby neighborhood's - are there a lot of German names there? If so, then BINGO! You've found them.
But the single largest European immigrant to Chile comes from the Basque region of Spain, ie, the Western Pyrenees, as well as SE France or Navarre. These people make up from 10 (1,600,000) to 20% (3,200,000) of Chile's population, based upon surnames.
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The largest contingent of people to have arrived in post-independence Chile came from Spain and the Basque country, a region divided between northern Spain and southern France. Estimates of the number Chileans who have one or two surnames from Basque origin ranges from 10% (1,600,000) to as high as 20% (3,200,000).
Note that this phenomenon occurs not only in Chile, but also in every Autonomous Community of Spain, as well as in other Latin American countries one can see that a substantial portion of their populations have one or two surnames of Basque or Navarre origin, tending to be more common in the upper classes, and hence becoming more unusual in lower classes.
How to identify these females in public? Basques are more averagely tall. But this may well also be relatively "tall" for Chile (given the large Mestizo population, just like in Mexico).
Another public way to identify these Basque-euro descendants is lighter eyes, green and blue - the Basque have lighter eyes than most of the Spanish. If a movie theater or mall or grocery has more people with lighter eyes, then they are more likely to be among your European targets.
Of course, one could do more surname research and get more definite...and if one has time, interest or need - SURE!
Another 5% of Chileans have French ancestry; maybe a bit more from Italy (600,000); and somewhat less (4.5%) claim the British Isles as their background.
Another possibly useful proxy to find desirable descendants of Europeans is Protestant religion. Some 16% belong to "Evangelical religions" in Chile, according to Wikipedia. Find those churches in Santiago. Do these neighborhoods reflect Northern European surnames? Then hang out in their shopping spaces for day game and find out!
Wikipedia suggests that Chile is like Europe - English is being taught widely in schools, and youngest are likeliest to have the skills and interest in using the newest one, English:
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Through initiatives such as the English Opens Doors program, the government made English mandatory for students in fifth-grade and above in public schools. Most private schools in Chile start teaching English from kindergarten [hence, the children of richer parents, who likely live in the best-off neighborhoods will be of interest]. Common English words have been absorbed and appropriated into everyday Spanish speech.
But perhaps I'm being too analytical. Maybe the best way to get Chile's panties off is to aggressively use all of the proxies of wealth.
What are the universities close to or within Las Condes and Providencia? How about the 16 movie complexes in Santiago? Which are closest to those richer neighborhoods? And their malls?
Target them for day game and find out. (Don't forget to report back here!)
Black Day Alto Las Condes, July, 2013
Not every nation is going to have a high-level concentration of genetic endowments (ie, beauty) like Ukraine or the Baltics; or like Thailand or Southern Vietnam; or Ethiopia and East Africa in general! Sometimes one has to, or wants to, work with the resources available.
But there is genuine talent there. With cleverness, the prospects to bang Chile improves - and the creative and persistent will be rewarded.
SOURCE:
Demographics of Chile at Wikipedia.