12-06-2005, 10:12 PM | #76 |
LONG LIVE KING ZIPPY! per Feetz
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 7,661
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I can't speak for The Slangster , but from My experences in the early 80's as a stupid young drunk Marine .
The exchange rate when i was there ( early 80's ) was 18pesos to $1 on the street , but we had just gotten paid as we pulled into port in Singapore , so i walked in to a bank , the exchange rate was 30Pesos to $1 , I droped a $100 on the counter , 2 weeks of liberety !!!!!!! I don't rember much of it !!! you could get a COLD beer for 7 pesos in a high class rock and roll bar with live bands , clean girls , etc,,, if you went to the dives I went to you could get a beer for 3-5 pesos , and if you were feeling REALLY adventures you could go to the corner stores and get a beer for 2-3 pesos , give Momason the bottle back and she woulg give you a peso back . You could make a $20 LAST that way !!!!! Girls were cheap ( sorry ) $9 for the night( but they could be had for cheaper , actualy once for a cheap Timex watch ) , hotel rooms were cheap $5 for the nite ( no fan , no radio , community bathroom down the hall ) up to about $20 a night ( AC , TV , pool , room service , full bath room with a NICE shower and tub , etc,,,,,) As I said i was doing the stupid young drunk Marine thing around So East Asia , I wish I had kept my self togather better and seen some sights , gone to some intresting places . Oh well ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, the follies of Youth !!!!!!
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"Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get. " Brother Dave Gardner |
12-06-2005, 10:20 PM | #77 |
LONG LIVE KING ZIPPY! per Feetz
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 7,661
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Oh and the drink of choice when you got tired of beer was mini pitchers of mixed drinks , CHEAP , i don't rember the prices , but i do rember my fave , it was called a bull frog , rum , vodka , black berry brandy , and hell i don't rember what all else , they were GOOOOOOD !!!!!!!
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"Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get. " Brother Dave Gardner |
12-07-2005, 07:48 AM | #78 | |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Quote:
The beer that I drink most often is San Miguel. It's not a great beer (not German) but it's common and cheap. It would be compared to a Budwieser here, the most popular but not the favorite. The bottles are small and I've been too drunk/distracted to compare volumes, sorry. The SM is not very strong but after about ......a few, life is good. I've had some Red Horse beers a few days ago and I like them much better. More bang for the buck, if you know what I mean. The RH is more like dark beer that I'm used to. Powerful. The brandy is also ok but a very good deal here. I had some "15 year old" brandy yesterday that I bought at the drug store (!!). The cost was about a buck and a half for a flask which in comparison is about 8 bucks back home. The beers from the first day that made me sick were not from the beer. I've had two or three ( ) here after that and all is fine with no praying over the throne. The water dispensed as "mineral water" from the coin op is also fine. The video card to both home computers went out today but we took a ride on the rail and got some good photos even though they cannot yet be posted. We're going into Makati city tomorrow to buy another video card and should have some more photos soon. They are piling up in the time the computer is down. |
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12-07-2005, 08:07 AM | #79 | |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Quote:
There are somewhere around 1500 photos of various places of interest (or non-interest) on her home machine now. About half are not clear or not centered etc and arent much to look at. The remaining, along with the MPEGs of street scenes and the TV programs here are cool to see and will be available somewhere when I get back. It has been my goal to capture as much of the Philippine people doing all those same things we see and do at home. These activities range from going into market for food to seeing what the hospitals here look like. I'm doing a study of how things are different and the same here in all aspects of life for a variety of people. A large part of the exercise is to show people in the US how things work here now and to show our common ground. Once they are all catagorized as needed cellarites will have full access to the collection. The official exchange rate is 54.something to one dollar. In Pembo just yesterday I changed some dollars into pesos and got the rate of 53/$1. Now that I'm out of the city there are no prostitutes around. I dont have any idea how much they cost but could find out. If I can find a rate without getting into a hassle, I will. They are drop dead gorgeous but I'm not here for that sort of fun. Many that I have seen would easily fit into a men's mag. Some of them are aggressive and I've had to forcefully remove them from my path/ romove their hands from me. A few have been polite at my reply of "you're very nice looking but no thank you, I'm not here for that" and quietly disappeared. This is the first of my net pals that I have met face to face. This is the only woman that I've sent a camera out to and would expect to meet more in the future as the rest are western wise young men looking for honest friendship/opportunity. I will return to the US and start working again once the military budget for fighter jet development rolls into the next fiscal year. |
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12-07-2005, 08:14 AM | #80 | |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Quote:
In the city a white guy is a target for all sorts of scams. Out of the city I'm very well received and friendly with all of the Phl nationals. I dont drink without having a "babysitter" here. It's not that it's very dangerous here from the people but as I have said before, the everyday hazards are often deadly. Big holes in the street with no warning, rebar hangind or falling out of buildings. That sort of thing. Things that could easily kill you without malice but that you're still just as dead. Though the locals dont consider me one of them they have all been very fair and courtious. As the US retirement system creeps deeper and deeper into uncertainty, yes, retirement here would be a viable option. I'm looking at real estate here now but not the fancy tourist sort. There is a Frenchman here that I (argue about Bush and ) talk with that has built several homes here. He has gone through all the problems and I hope to learn something from the things that he has to suggest. |
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12-07-2005, 08:21 AM | #81 | |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Quote:
SM beer15 peso hotel room with private shower/bath (no hot water), no TV, ceiling fan that rotates like a Huey with a fire escape that doubles as a terrace - $6.36 night I bought a half gal of ice cream today for 99 pesos ($1.80) Tricycle ride from her place to the hotel - 20 pesos $.37 (it's about 3/4 mile) sorry man, got to split...more later. |
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12-07-2005, 12:57 PM | #82 |
Radical Centrist
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
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1. Have you heard the President Arroyo corruption proof tape?
1a. If yes, have you heard it as a ring tone? |
12-07-2005, 02:14 PM | #83 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Another great topic of discussion here.
Many of the locals are critical and or suspicious of president Arroyo. These people tend to be older working class people that see her as a corrupt elitest. This older group has heard all the hype from Arroyo about moving forward as a country and seen this society stagnate or regress. Foreign investment is increasing sharply. More filipinos have jobs. My guess is (that means I havent seen any numbers or paid close enough attention to say with confidence ) that the fast food jobs and the imported (junk) shops are giving people here the most jobs. The more people that have jobs, the less critical they are of what the president does. This seems to be a universal human truth. Back to your original question, no I havent heard the tape. There have been a few Filipino news programs that have talked about it though. Most of these news shows are in Tagolog so clearly most of the footage is lost on me. If I talk politics with someone here I ask about where they stand on Arroyo and the corruption case. The educated young working people could care no less about it and see it as total folly. These people are building condos, selling computers to a growing market or own some type of money making business. They're too busy to care. Those not directly involved with the "new economy" or the increase in the standard of living are most critical. I'm not in a position to be critical of the president here or even have any desire to dig into the details of the "proof" tape but the case seems weak, irrelevant and only an issue with people that need to crucify someone for their lack of progress here. Sounds much like another little situation that we're all a bit more familiar with. As for the ringtones....... Have not heard the proof tape ringtone but the cell phones are so common here that it's beyond annoying. The younger people dont talk on their phones as much as they text message one another. Now the new thing is sending photos over the phone. There's something that can keep my attention for more than 20 seconds. You see people holding cell phones in front of them with both hands, playing games and texting at every turn here. Slang: Hey! it's a cell phone...talk on the God damned thing already! Kids today. I butchered that reply but hope you got something out of it. My back and ass are killing me from this kindergarden chair. |
12-08-2005, 10:08 PM | #84 | |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Quote:
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12-08-2005, 10:09 PM | #85 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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These are two examples of the many choppers and commercial planes flying all around here. If you sit on the roof of the hotel and watch, you can clearly see the planes taking off and landing.
The frequency of big commercial planes coming and going is about one every hour or so and I always wonder what the natives here really think about all these foreign people coming and going. My guess is that only a very small amount of Filipinos are in these planes going to far off places. Is there attitude one of hope that all this development here will lead to better things for most Filipinos or just seen as a bunch of people that dont belong here and dont really care about anything or anyone in the Philippines, just taking advantage of the strong exchange rates and warm weather? |
12-08-2005, 10:11 PM | #86 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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This is my funny tricycle ride. It's only a 100 cc motor trying to cart me and a sidecar, a driver and 3 passengers up a hill.
"tell him to give it HELL or we arent going to make it" Must be something was lost in the translation because he just wouldnt rev it up enough to get us all up the hill. |
12-08-2005, 10:13 PM | #87 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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two more from the same event
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12-08-2005, 10:15 PM | #88 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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These are from a butcher shop right next to some friends of ours. We were both talking with them when a refridge truck stopped in next door and we all saw a small Filipino man carrying a large pig on his shoulders.
Notice if you can how clean this place is. It's got all stainless countertops and they clean the floor for real every night. It's the only place that I'd even consider buying meat. |
12-08-2005, 10:17 PM | #89 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Here is the American Manila cemetery. It's a very somber place and despite many requests to get specific photos of the cemetery we took a walk around and just left.
The rows of markers are unnerving. I snapped a few photos of names on the walls and quietly left. The whole facility is very well cared for and those that come to visit are very respectful. |
12-08-2005, 10:19 PM | #90 |
St Petersburg, Florida
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,423
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Looking for the cheapest ride in town? This would seem to be the one. There are many busses that travel to the hotspots around town but for just getting to the local market and such, this is the most economical.
And you wonder why the Asians are all so thin? |
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