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Venezuela Datasheet
#26

Venezuela Datasheet

[quote] (11-30-2017 02:13 AM)LatinoHeat Wrote:  

[quote='natas305' pid='1691370' dateline='1511987432']
Any update, LatinoViking? You still alive over there in Venezuela?[/quote]

[quote]Quote:

OP is sugarcoating a very dangerous place. Caracas being a clean "world class city" ??? [Image: tard.gif] Place looks like a communist dystopia.[/quote]

I`ve never claimed that Caracas is being a clean world class city what I remenber was saying that Caracas is clean by SA standards. I wrote this on my first days and this opnion changed a little bit but Caracas has many good looking areas and yes certain parts of the city, speacially those from Chacao to Downtown has this kind of ugly vibe.


I went there in 2015 and people were trying to rob us both as a group and individually NON STOP. (and by the way I look latino)

[quote]Quote:

I was also detained in the airport by the secret service for 6 hours accused of being a spy because I entered on my argentine passport and after having my bags torn apart for no reason (welcome to venezuela) they found my American passport.[/quote]

Agree with you. Welcome to Venezuela, basically they wanted money as they always do, as I see you`re from latino and you should know that

The same happened with me, 5 hours in Maracaibo. They claimed my passport was fake and later told me that I was registered as an older venezuelan and for this reason I was gonna be deported. I always knew that was all about money but I had plenty of time and I`m this kind of guy who likes to push the limits. I always answered their stupid questions with arguments and told them I was gonna call the embassy in Caracas ( little I and them knew that the my nearest ambassy is in Bogota).

They asked for my phone I said no. I was in a car with 3 cops, 5 hours driving around Maracaibo, always answering them with argumentation, keeping myself calm and not talking more than what was needed.

5 hours later one of them said: " This guy is too hard to kill, let us drive him back"
-I started laughting and they also laughted.
-One of them than told me :" You need to be our homie and talk to us, we have the solution for your problems but you just stay there, dont say nothing, treat us like criminals and want to get us in a diplomatic trouble.. you know we venezuelan cops have a very hard life ... " and ended up asking for food

-I said that I dindt have money and that I didnt eat anything in the last 8 hours
-One of the guys said joking " lets drive this guy back before he starves and we get problems".

Then they started asking me to teach them norwegian as they drived me back to the place I was initially. We drove all the way back with me teaching them a foreign languages and they having a lot of fun learning something new. hahaha

a good tip: if you go to Venezuela with your national ID(MERCOSUL Countries) cut your hair short and fill on your occupation that you`re from the army. I saw a brazilian guy doing this and nobody never annoyed him and bring your passport with you on your pockets where its supposed to be when you travel



[quote]Quote:

From everything i've heard from people on the ground (I have friends in Vzla) its gotten infinitely WAYYY worse since 2015, which I can't even imagine because when I went 2 years ago it was the most fucked up place I had ever seen (and i've been to 60 countries)[/quote]

60 countries ? and you bring your passport on your luggage and your not able to recognize when cops are trying to get money from you and how to solve this ?
I dont know how many countries I`ve been too but I can tell you its not that many maybe around 20 and still I don`t do these kind of amator mistakes


If you go there by yourself I guarantee you you will be immediately detained, robbed or maybe killed before you even make it from the airport to your hotel. A guide is a must and even then there are no guarantees.

If you do make it out people are going to be fucking with you and eyeing you nonstop trying to figure out how to rob you.

[quote]Quote:

I was also in the "middle class" Chacao neighborhood and I remember just going from the hotel to a fast food restaurant by myself in BROAD DAYLIGHT was terrifying and I don't get scared that easily. I could just feel the insecurity and vulnerability oozing everywhere. Don't know how to explain it but its that feeling in your gut that you just know you're unsafe based on your surroundings. I felt it a lot in Brazil too, particularly in Salvador, but Caracas was way worse.[/quote]

The place you stayed Chacao looks way worse than Altamira. Chacao has more of an unsecurity vibe anyway I went on my own many times from San Ignacio or Sambil to Altamira walking or with the metro at night without any problems. Ive also stayed in front of a closed supermarket talking and smoking cigarettes with a venezuelan nerd guy I befriend many times to late night with no problems.
I also went many time at night to Francisco de Miranda avenue for buying cigarettes at the kiosko with no problems.

Now that`s me I`ve never been physically robbed my whole life ( I`m pretty scared this gonna happen soon) anyway I also saw car robbery once, cops catching a kid who tried to steal a phone, locals holding a thief twice. I never said its safe its just not this IS zone that ppl imagine it to be. I`ve seen these kind of stuff in Rio too specially many argentineans getting in trouble there. Caracas for my personal experience is just on the same level as Rio.


[quote]Quote:

Its not worth it to go just to bang a $10 escort. Seriously just go to Colombia instead.[/quote]

Even thou that wasnt my porpose here I totally agree with you. VE is cheap but sometimes its not worth the hassle specially if you come from far.

[quote]Quote:

If you must visit Venezuela try to skip Caracas and head straight to the amazon or margarita island instead, or wherever you're going. Outside of Caracas there are some safe places but even then you have to go on the highways to get there which is super dangerous.[/quote]

The Amazon ? You tell me how dangerous CCS is and then tell me ppl to go to the amazon ? seriously ?

[quote]Quote:

Tinder is sad, I wish I still had my screenshots from when I was there, girls literally begging you almost immediately to help them get out of the country. I guess sure you could bang hot girls that are in that desperate of a situation but would you want to? I don't mean Thailand poor, I mean the average person there is making like $3US per month right now, maybe $20US if they are professionals. They might bang you for a loaf of bread.[/quote]

I used Tinder and Badoo a lot. And some ( not all) ask you for stuff, for gifts, if they`re sick for medicine. They are just nonsense people now if you only connected with these kind of girls its another story I`ve been with girls who could afford for their own and even a girl who paid for her stay at my hotel but as you know on this part of earth its a mans responsability to pay for a girl if he wants something now girls wanting stuff from you are just nonsense girls.
There are still a lot of people who can get by in Venezuela. They either have their conections with the gov, do freelance job on internet, have some kind of interest or parents abroad who send them money.

Ive dated venezuelan chicks who could afford a date for themselves. One of them wasnt specially rich neither. If you go to clubs in VE you`ll see lots of people, many venezuelans have acess to their dollars or have another source of income. My cab driver told me he does 4 dollars a day, thats 80 dollars a month. It doesnt sound much but 80 USD in Venezuela is a good amount of money specially if you dont have to pay for your home ( as that was his case). Utilities and gas are pretty cheap even for venezuelans. Remenber that Venezuela is also a country with a devalued currency, I`m spending 200-300 usd a month staying in hotels, eating out every time, driking, partying, taking cabs everywhere. This months I`m gonna reach 450 but that`s because I`m really overspending.


[quote]Quote:

How can OP honestly claim a place where average wage is 1% of what it is in Colombia right now (yes you read that right) is just a normal happy go lucky where people are just going about their lives like Rio or Sao Paulo any other latin city. With people that desperate nothing is normal and having a few hundred bucks in your pocket makes you a billionaire compared to the unfortunate people stuck there.[/quote]


I never said that VE is a happy place I just tried to say that people are living their lifes. YES IT`S HARD you see people searching for food in trash cans, small kids (4-6 yo) selling candies at night, people staying in huge lines to get subsidized food or spending eternity at ATMs to withdrawal the equivalent of 30 cents but there are also people who have groceries stores, restaurants, fast foods, sell stuff on the street, buy and sell stuff from one side of venezuela to another or go to Colombia or Brazil to sell stuff that are cheaper in Venezuela, freelancers, people who get interests abroad and those with gov ties.


OP is playing Russian roulette, pulling the trigger, and then writing a post about how the game is totally safe because his head didn't get blown off.

[quote]Quote:

I still give kudos to LatinViking for having balls of industrial grade steel, but it would have been nice if he had a more realistic perspective on whats going on.[/quote]

[b]Thanks but what I really tried to show is that there is another VE where people are still managing to at least try to have a normal life and well, at least those venezuelans I befriended.

OBS. None of VE ppl I befriended had anything to do with the gov in fact some of them were active in opostion parties

I`ve befriended lower class venezuelans and I do follow them on their social medias and guess what ? they do post pictures of themselves drinking and enjoying with their family and friends on weekends just like everybody else.

Im having a realistic perspective, I`m just trying to show that theres a good side of VE too. The situation is hard for the majority yes, I`not a sentimental guy but I see daily sad stuffs here in VE but this country aint just a bunch of zombies desesperate to get food or rob people as you`re describing and thats what I really hate, ppl like you make this country look like ppl have no values and are desesperate to do anything for money. Majority of venezuelans are hard working, honesty ppl, I was really surprised the amount of times ppl charged me right even thou they heard my accent ( exception of Margarita as most tourist places, ppl trying to take advantage of you).
Venezuela like everywhere else this country has its bad and good ppl but the majority of ppl even poor ones still keep some basic values and morals diffenrently than their gov.

if you or anybody think that im not being realistic well, just search for random chicks and guys 18-35 from VE on IG. They post pics of parties, clubs, bars, they going to gym, beach, driving their SUVs just like everybody else.
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#27

Venezuela Datasheet

How good is your Spanish LatinoViking?
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#28

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-18-2017 10:23 PM)Heart Break Kid Wrote:  

How good is your Spanish LatinoViking?

not perfect but I can understand almost everything, maybe I dont understand a few words or expresions and even thou I dont speak perfect and have a foreign accent ppl normally understand me with no problems most of times.

sometimes it takes some few minutes or just a spanish R before im spotted in a conversation, online ppl normally think that Im a native. Many Tinder/Badoo girls was surprised once I told them I wasnt native speaker.
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#29

Venezuela Datasheet

Very interesting post LatinoViking........ I would love to see Venezuela but I am a euro-gringo and I only have a handful of Spanish words remembered from my Spanish classes at school decades ago!

I'm also too nice to people and grew up in a very civilized society so I can see it would turn into a problem for me very often lol........ And I'm really getting tired of living in shithole places, and I find partying boring these days so..... maybe it's not the best destination for me [Image: smile.gif]

L:219  F:29  V:9  A:6  3S:1

"Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink"
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#30

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-18-2017 10:42 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (12-18-2017 10:23 PM)Heart Break Kid Wrote:  

How good is your Spanish LatinoViking?

not perfect but I can understand almost everything, maybe I dont understand a few words or expresions and even thou I dont speak perfect and have a foreign accent ppl normally understand me with no problems most of times.

sometimes it takes some few minutes or just a spanish R before im spotted in a conversation, online ppl normally think that Im a native. Many Tinder/Badoo girls was surprised once I told them I wasnt native speaker.


How long did it take you to get to that level of Spanish? Im assuming you lived in Latin America before Venezuela?
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#31

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-19-2017 12:30 AM)Heart Break Kid Wrote:  

Quote: (12-18-2017 10:42 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (12-18-2017 10:23 PM)Heart Break Kid Wrote:  

How good is your Spanish LatinoViking?

not perfect but I can understand almost everything, maybe I dont understand a few words or expresions and even thou I dont speak perfect and have a foreign accent ppl normally understand me with no problems most of times.

sometimes it takes some few minutes or just a spanish R before im spotted in a conversation, online ppl normally think that Im a native. Many Tinder/Badoo girls was surprised once I told them I wasnt native speaker.


How long did it take you to get to that level of Spanish? Im assuming you lived in Latin America before Venezuela?

Never lived in any spanish speaking country. Besides of doing spanish classes when I was younger and having a peruvian math teacher who taught me math in spanish I just learned by myself hearing latinos friends speaking, travelling, listening to music and banging some girls.
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#32

Venezuela Datasheet

I'm going to Venezuela next week. Just booked my flight. I'll let you guys know how it goes. (This is my first post on this community by the way..)
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#33

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-20-2017 05:10 AM)romain Wrote:  

I'm going to Venezuela next week. Just booked my flight. I'll let you guys know how it goes. (This is my first post on this community by the way..)

Im still in Venezuela, wich cities are you going to ? I just sent you a PM
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#34

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-20-2017 05:10 AM)romain Wrote:  

I'm going to Venezuela next week. Just booked my flight. I'll let you guys know how it goes. (This is my first post on this community by the way..)

This will be interesting. Looking forward. Do you happen to be latino, btw?
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#35

Venezuela Datasheet

I stopped reading when you said venezuelan chicks are tougher than colombian chicks, your other points were very accurate so I believe when you say this. Next.
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#36

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-20-2017 03:35 PM)pitt Wrote:  

I stopped reading when you said venezuelan chicks are tougher than colombian chicks, your other points were very accurate so I believe when you say this. Next.

Yes VE chicks are easier than colombians. I wrote this after my first 2 weeks in Venezuela and some opnions changed [Image: wink.gif]
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#37

Venezuela Datasheet

I also think they are easier to be honest, fucked nearly every Venezuelan girl that came on my path so far. They do have demands tho afterwards, like they get angry if you just fuck em, Colombians don't care too much about that.
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#38

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (12-20-2017 08:57 AM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (12-20-2017 05:10 AM)romain Wrote:  

I'm going to Venezuela next week. Just booked my flight. I'll let you guys know how it goes. (This is my first post on this community by the way..)

Im still in Venezuela, wich cities are you going to ? I just sent you a PM

Going to Maracaibo and the smaller cities around there. I will reply to your PM tomorrow!
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#39

Venezuela Datasheet

Great datasheet, a few questions...
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

1. If you come to Venezuela bring some dollar bills for exchanging
Are there any denominations that are difficult to exchange? What denominations work best? Some countries won't accept $1 or $5 bills for example, others will only take the new $100 bills.
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

3. Use both dolartoday.com and bolivarcucuta.com for knowing the exchange rate, you`ll hardly get what you see there if you want cash, expect to pay a differance of up to 20% less everything else is just bullshit
Does this mean you will get more Bolivars or less Bolivars if you exchange dollars?
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

4. For money transger you can expect to get almost the same rate you see on these page, bolviarcucuta is more realible than dolartoday( yes its DOLAR NOT DOLLAR)
By money transfer do you mean western union or Bank to Bank transfer? See 3 above, in other words, does wiring yourself money get you 20% more in Bolivars.
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

14. You`ll need a local in order to move around in Venezuela, they can also get you a venezuelan sim card wich is a must ( less than 1 usd for 1gb of internet) and a debt card, once you get a venezuelan debt card you can find somebody that exchanges money and they can exchange from your homecountry bank account to this venezuelan account, make sure you have numero de cedula, the password and the internet acess. A venezuelan guy that lended me his card stole me
I take it that a foreign visitor cannot get a sim card or the debt card on their own?
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

16. If you want to really cheap prices, 20-40 USD for a private room in a good location and safer location you``ll have to look for local webpages for a hole apartament Its gonna be complicated as they may want a contract and stuff I`m talking with a guy and asking to rent both of his rooms in an apartament in a good neighborhood in Caracas for 40 usd. Private message me or I`ll try to type the pages later
Will PM you but such info is good to share on here if you choose to
Quote: (10-11-2017 09:32 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

17. For good exchange rates
Not sure if you were going to say something more here
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#40

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (10-14-2017 06:24 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (10-13-2017 11:43 PM)natas305 Wrote:  

Well fuck, now I'm just jealous that you're in Caracas. Props for having the balls to go there. Would love to see some more data specifically on Caracas.


Im in Caracas right now and I dont feel unsafe ( I`m actually afraid that I feel like this). Im staying in Chacao, Altamira square and this region of the city reminds me Sao Paulo. For girls I`ve seen some talents around the streets nearby and also a lot of uggly girls. I can imagine I could see a lot of hot girls in clubs but I still didnt go to any club here, only been to some bars and honestely I saw nothing special in the bars I`ve been to.


Yeah bro why don't you try staying in the west part of the city? You are staying in an area like El Poblado in Medellin or like Damascus in Syria which means that you see very little of the country crisis in general.

I mean you say you stay in "Lecherias" has anyone google this by any chance? Yeah I have been to Jurere International and I can tell when I am there that Brasil is a rich country with no poor people at all.
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#41

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (01-02-2018 12:04 AM)Cessna_00 Wrote:  

Quote: (10-14-2017 06:24 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (10-13-2017 11:43 PM)natas305 Wrote:  

Well fuck, now I'm just jealous that you're in Caracas. Props for having the balls to go there. Would love to see some more data specifically on Caracas.


Im in Caracas right now and I dont feel unsafe ( I`m actually afraid that I feel like this). Im staying in Chacao, Altamira square and this region of the city reminds me Sao Paulo. For girls I`ve seen some talents around the streets nearby and also a lot of uggly girls. I can imagine I could see a lot of hot girls in clubs but I still didnt go to any club here, only been to some bars and honestely I saw nothing special in the bars I`ve been to.


Yeah bro why don't you try staying in the west part of the city? You are staying in an area like El Poblado in Medellin or like Damascus in Syria which means that you see very little of the country crisis in general.

I mean you say you stay in "Lecherias" has anyone google this by any chance? Yeah I have been to Jurere International and I can tell when I am there that Brasil is a rich country with no poor people at all.

Calm down, the guy doesn't seem to be trying to prove he's untouchable or anything. Regardless of the neighborhood, he's still in literally the world's most dangerous city, so it's good he's posting where he is staying there and reporting about it.
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#42

Venezuela Datasheet

LatinoViking, are you still in Venezuela? Did the recent tension between Venezuela and Brazil affect you? Do you think it will affect future travellers?

This was a very inspiring datasheet, thank you. If I improve my Spanish a bit and prepare for a couple of months, I think could pull this off as well. I can probably pass for an upper class Venezuelan if I keep my mouth shut.
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#43

Venezuela Datasheet

Another question, can you please elaborate on this?

Quote:Quote:

14. You`ll need a local in order to move around in Venezuela, they can also get you a venezuelan sim card wich is a must ( less than 1 usd for 1gb of internet) and a debt card, once you get a venezuelan debt card you can find somebody that exchanges money and they can exchange from your homecountry bank account to this venezuelan account, make sure you have numero de cedula, the password and the internet acess. A venezuelan guy that lended me his card stole me

Did you open an account in a Venezuelan bank or did you pay someone to borrow their account? What's the role of the "money exchange guy"? Is it taking care of the bureaucratic aspect of transferring money from your country's account to the Venezuelan account? Or is the money exchange guy simply the owner of the Venezuelan bank account? Do most places take debit?
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#44

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (01-02-2018 08:25 AM)lazy Wrote:  

Another question, can you please elaborate on this?

Quote:Quote:

14. You`ll need a local in order to move around in Venezuela, they can also get you a venezuelan sim card wich is a must ( less than 1 usd for 1gb of internet) and a debt card, once you get a venezuelan debt card you can find somebody that exchanges money and they can exchange from your homecountry bank account to this venezuelan account, make sure you have numero de cedula, the password and the internet acess. A venezuelan guy that lended me his card stole me

Did you open an account in a Venezuelan bank or did you pay someone to borrow their account? What's the role of the "money exchange guy"? Is it taking care of the bureaucratic aspect of transferring money from your country's account to the Venezuelan account? Or is the money exchange guy simply the owner of the Venezuelan bank account? Do most places take debit?


Dude, lots of brazilians here with zero language skills, (Im talking about single guys hunting girls and being sucessfull to a certain degree) I know about a brazilian guy banging a gourgeous milf and driving around her Cherokee, you can do pretty well too. In Margarita, Pt la Cruz and Pt Ordaz you meet brazilians almost everywhere, the probability that 80 percent of the guests in your hotel in these cities for this season will be pretty high. Most of them have very limited language skills, they all get by with portunhol and body language. Just came back to Brazil to stample my passport and on the road you see lots of brazilian cars coming and going.

For the bank account at the beggining a friend lended me his bank card and I had to pay nothing for this still I always transfered him some money (10-20 USD a month at maximum) normally the guys who exchanges money for you can offer you a card.

Just bring some dollars and when they finish it you can simply transfer from BR bank account to BR bank account and get your money on a VE bank account

For the Maduro vs Temer biff, it`s more political you`ll get no problems as long as you`re not doing anything wrong, talking bad about the gov or working for NGO and for the problems some newspapers are bringing about brazilians in Venezuela its true that some have been robbed but for those not getting out of Margarita is because they didnt book their ferry tickets in advance, actually many brazilian just go to Venezuela with no hotels booked in advance and complain that they have to stay in shitty places.

Even thou exchanging money on the black market or lending a bank card to someone else is illegal nobody even the cops really care, another day an army official asked me to exchange him some dollars. It`s Venezuela, as long as you dont kill anybody or get in trouble with the governement you can do whatever you want to.
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#45

Venezuela Datasheet

I wonder if East Asian men can do well in Latin America. Given the casual racism against East Asians rampant there and the heavy gringo colonial worship, is it that difficult ?
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#46

Venezuela Datasheet

Here is something fresh for those wishing to visit Margarita Island and its tourist spots. a Group of 60 Brasilians were robbed at gun point by local gang members.

http://www.elsoldemargarita.com.ve/posts...r-de-Coche
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#47

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (01-08-2018 02:07 PM)Cessna_00 Wrote:  

Here is something fresh for those wishing to visit Margarita Island and its tourist spots. a Group of 60 Brasilians were robbed at gun point by local gang members.

http://www.elsoldemargarita.com.ve/posts...r-de-Coche

being brazilian in Margarita is like being gringo and not knowing the language in certain latam countries + they forget the fact that they are in Venezuela, you see groups of brazilians eating in restaurants in Upata, having a coffe break in Las Claritas or in KM88 (just google it! this is the gold rich region of venezuela, illegal gold mining and sindicatos everywhere). Then these peope drive around in a covoy of 5 cars with brazilian plates, 20+ foreigns speaking loud a foreign language, taking out their phones on the streets in what is maybe the most dangerous region of VE.
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#48

Venezuela Datasheet

Any update on Venezuela, @LatinoViking?
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#49

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (01-23-2018 01:30 AM)natas305 Wrote:  

Any update on Venezuela, @LatinoViking?

Yes ! Im just too lazy and too bad to write a new datasheet
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#50

Venezuela Datasheet

Quote: (01-02-2018 12:04 AM)Cessna_00 Wrote:  

Quote: (10-14-2017 06:24 PM)LatinoViking Wrote:  

Quote: (10-13-2017 11:43 PM)natas305 Wrote:  

Well fuck, now I'm just jealous that you're in Caracas. Props for having the balls to go there. Would love to see some more data specifically on Caracas.


Im in Caracas right now and I dont feel unsafe ( I`m actually afraid that I feel like this). Im staying in Chacao, Altamira square and this region of the city reminds me Sao Paulo. For girls I`ve seen some talents around the streets nearby and also a lot of uggly girls. I can imagine I could see a lot of hot girls in clubs but I still didnt go to any club here, only been to some bars and honestely I saw nothing special in the bars I`ve been to.


Yeah bro why don't you try staying in the west part of the city? You are staying in an area like El Poblado in Medellin or like Damascus in Syria which means that you see very little of the country crisis in general.

I mean you say you stay in "Lecherias" has anyone google this by any chance? Yeah I have been to Jurere International and I can tell when I am there that Brasil is a rich country with no poor people at all.

So your point is ? as much as Jurere Internacional isn`t the really of most brazilians the favelas are also far away from the reallity of most people in Brazil, the same aplies to Venezuela not all venezuelans live in the slums and in order to see the reality of the country you dont need to go to the slums even as a tourist you`ll face a lot of the problems venezuelans face everyday like spending hours to buy toothpaste or even headache medicine, needing to call some ``contacts`` and doing a real hollywood like opration in order to receive physical cash meanwhile in everywhere in the world you just go to a ATM and withdrawal your money in minutes, going to a bakery and not being able to buy bread or going to a steakhouse and not being able to eat meat and the list goes on.

Now this forum is about game and travel and Im giving on ground informations where are safer places and the reallity of these places in a country that is little explored here in this forum. Capicce ?
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