Tico lifestyles lack challenges Underdevelopment and the origins of Pura Vida

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LMAO Gotta admit most of this article is Spot on, at least most Gringos will agree anyway

http://www.amcostarica.com/monday.htm


<table style="width: 605px;" border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="text-align: center;" colspan="2" rowspan="1" valign="top">[SIZE=+3]<small>Tico lifestyles lack challenges</small>
Underdevelopment and the origins of Pura Vida[/SIZE]
</td> </tr> <tr> <td style="width: 300px; vertical-align: top;">
By Garland M. Baker
Special to A.M. Costa Rica

There is a Chinese proverb that says, “If you are thinking one year ahead, sow seeds. If you are thinking 10 years ahead, plant a tree. If you are thinking 100 years ahead, educate your children.”

This proverb gives light into how much planning goes into Chinese culture. Therefore, if the Chinese think 100 years in advance – reflected in their progressive and hard-working culture – could it be assumed that Europeans think 70 years in advance and Americans 50, according to their progressive history?

And what could be said about our fellow Costa Ricans? An observer of the culture might conclude that Costa Ricans think no farther than their noses. Does that have something to do with why many Hispanic nations keep falling behind global progress? Yes, in fact, it has everything to do with it, and Ticos are definitely not the exception.

From their education or personal expenses to huge white-collar fraud in high governmental positions – including the presidency – Ticos are a vivid example of the Latin short-sight attitude towards life, and who better than President Óscar Arias Sánchez to confirm it?

As he said in his speech for the 5th Summit of the Americas, held this April in Trinidad and Tobago, <table style="width: 298px; text-align: left;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="width: 127px; vertical-align: top;">[SIZE=-2] [/SIZE]
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Correo Nacional
</td> <td style="width: 170px; vertical-align: top;"> “No one is to blame except for us.”

So, what exactly is this short-sight attitude? What are its cultural ramifications that extend to this and other Latin American countries?

Unfortunately, the lack of identity or real political struggle for Costa Ricans has
</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> made them believe that life is just a comfortable couch where they tune in to passively admire the successes of other countries through their imported TV sets.

According to history books, Costa Rica picked up the pieces after Colonial times and built what they
<table style="width: 299px; text-align: left;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td style="width: 170px; vertical-align: top;">could to show the world they were a dignified country. The only way they thought possible to achieve a decent country status was by importing arts and embellishing San José with the latest architectural and
</td> <td style="width: 127px; vertical-align: top;">[SIZE=-2] [/SIZE]
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Teatro Nacional
</td> </tr> </tbody> </table> artistic trends, condensed in the buildings of the Teatro Nacional and the Correo Nacional. They thought that those foreign helpers were going to jumpstart the country into building its own identity. They never imagined that instead, they stripped the country from ever having a true solid identity for exactly that: for expecting everything to come from the outside instead of building from the inside.

They thought that with what was left after colonialism, the country could not build itself: It had to be built and defined by the developed nations of the time. Sadly, that way of thinking still shapes Costa Rica’s reality. The country was first rescued by Europe, then the United States (who continues to do it), then by Taiwan, and now by China. Who’s next? Saudi Arabia?

Costa Rican leaders have hidden behind the sad Third World Face for decades to happily receive billions of dollars and distribute them among top government officials. No wonder there have been at least three presidents linked to major fraud. One is on trial for fraud right now, and another stayed in Switzerland.

Despite major fraud and corruption, Costa Rica’s political climate has enjoyed stability since it was established, and its monopoly system has created a seemingly comfortable bubble for the population, instituting soccer and alcohol as the official pacifiers that keep citizens in their seats at work and at home, thinking what the government tells them to, and feeling content with what they do not have.

Ironically, that complacent attitude has shaped Costa Ricans into mediocre achievers. Ticos are accustomed to have foreign nations think for them, invent for them, sweat for everything while they wait until it is available in stores. That is where the Pura Vida concept comes to verbalize Costa Rican identity.

Ticos have a Pura Vida mentality: Do the least and expect the most, take the shortest shortcut and feel proud, think of the most comfortable decision for the time being.

The average Costa Rican male grows up sheltered in their household, where his mom serves as maid, janitor, assistant and what not, and she pampers him until he get off the couch and gets married. The average Costa Rican female grows up to take care of a family that perpetuates the vicious cycle of contentment. Very few Ticos learn the concept of independence, resilience and persevering. They are used to running to Mommy crying and have her put out their fires.

Very few Ticos learn the value of labor because their over-protective mothers convince them they do
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Somewhat short-sighted

not need it until they grow up. Naturally, they do
not learn to secure their future since they have always had someone taking care of them.

Ticos are never taught the value of schooling either. Culturally, school is seen as an obligatory burden,
not as a privilege, and cheating on tests is something to feel proud of. Some college students barely pass subjects because they are just following a life recipe, not their own passion. In fact, very few Costa Ricans are passionately devoted to their profession. Most are only passionate at the soccer stadium.

Therefore, what can you expect from a society that produces and pampers underachievers? You expect people who cannot manage time, money or energy, people who are always waiting for the perfect shortcut to present itself and people who justify everything to keep denying and enjoying their incompetence.

For example, mechanics who overcharge for taking good parts from cars instead of fixing them think they are doing good business for themselves because of how that particular situation helped them financially. The same goes for lawyers who only take lucrative cases, never return phone calls and treat clients condescendingly, and for dentists who do not upgrade their equipment because they think clients will never demand it. These professionals do not think of themselves as thieves or bad service providers, nor do they think of their clients as apple trees. They only think of clients as apples.

Ticos have no worries in their minds other than what is going on at the moment: who they like or not, what handy distractions can serve as excuses to not work, study or worry about their lives, what they want or need to buy for their current needs or trends, or what they want for their next meal. Many quit jobs impulsively the minute they dislike them without having something better lined up, even when having a family to support. Why? Because they know they can always go back to mommy’s house and she will help them. Most of them do not think of how striving through difficult liaisons can serve as bridges to improve their future, how managing money wisely can get them out of debt, or how staying in a job that they may not like until they find something better can strengthen their resume and keep them afloat financially.

Costa Ricans are not usually concerned with planning for when they are up in age either, and very few of them purchase graves or worry about making wills and having things in order if they suddenly pass away.

Therefore, why has this short-sight attitude spread through Latin America? Is it a legacy of colonialism? Not only have Hispanic nations been responsible for falling off the progress wagon, they have prostituted themselves to powerful countries while blaming them for their own lack of development.

Arias lists several reasons for Latin America’s permanent Third-World status.

<cite>“Firstly, we only have seven years of schooling, …[we] don’t [raise taxes for] the richest people in our countries, … we don’t spend enough to keep our people healthy, … we don’t build the necessary infrastructure, the roads, the ports, the airports; … we don’t devote the necessary resources to stop the degradation of the environment … it is inequality [what] really shames us, is the product, among other things, of course, [of] not educating our sons and daughters.”</cite>


Arias could not have said it better: “the 21st century is the Asian century, not the Latin American century,… [and] we should not wait [too long] to make the changes that we have to make.”


<small style="font-weight: bold;">Garland M. Baker is a 36-year resident and naturalized citizen of Costa Rica who provides multidisciplinary professional services to the international community. Reach him at info@crexpertise.com. Baker has undertaken the research leading to these series of articles in conjunction with A.M. Costa Rica. Find the collection at http://crexpertise.info, a complimentary reprint is available at the end of each article. Copyright 2009, use without permission prohibited.</small>
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Country just sets itself up for one crisis after another
By Garland M. Baker
Special to A.M. Costa Rica

The rule of thumb in Costa Rica is when you cannot plan — or do not plan — panic.

This malady is part of the culture. People in the campo, the rural areas, learn this from childhood. Parents instruct kids sent to the pulperia, the corner mom and pop grocery, to buy one egg for breakfast. Not two, one for breakfast and one for lunch, or three, one for breakfast, one for lunch and one for dinner. Just one. One for breakfast.

Why, because the parents were not taught to plan and organize by their parents, so they do not teach their kids to do so.

What happens? The kids grow up into adults and this happens:

The country gets a Registro Nacional that has collapsed for the past month. It has been literally impossible to use online. This is an entity, that is in theory, the cornerstone of public records in Costa Rica.

Very poor, if any, planning went into designing the system in the first place. The day it came online — some years back — the organization’s computers could not handle the daily traffic. Today it is a disaster. Crooks use this fact to their advantage everyday. Fraud is rampant. Good people just twiddle their thumbs.

Now in a panic Registro workers are trying to fix the ills of years applying band aid solutions to the problems, and nothing works.

Speaking of band aid solutions to real problems: Now there is insufficient electricity. There is no money to harness the power of Costa Rica’s rich thermal power resources, at least according to the local news reports.

It appears no one has converted plans to action. No one in power has interpreted correctly usage requirements or population growth. A union for the professionals at the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad said in a full page ad Sunday that the power shortage was not its fault. The Sindicato de Ingenieros y Professionales said they have been warning of shortages for two years.

Now the country is in a panic, rationing electric power. Some people have it, and some people do not. Everyday it is a roulette wheel decision as to who gets it and who does not.

President Óscar Arias Sánchez is going to save the day with an executive decree to buy new oil burning electric plants for $150 million dollars. This sure reeks of a panic solution to a panic problem.

Ops, forgot to mention cellular phones. When Millicom International Cellular S.A. set up an adequate cell phone system in Costa Rica in 1989 and people started to use it widely, panic mode struck fast. Costa Rica worked quickly to quash the license and take over the system with predictable results.

These are only three of a multitude of examples.
panic button graphic


Everyone has his or her own list, most starting right a home. How many times does one hear living in Costa Rica, the last of this or the last of that was used until the moment it is all gone.

Add a little graft to the no-planning, no-organization recipe, and what does one get?

A great way to make money. The reason, because there is never anyone to blame, nothing worked anyway.

A company in México sold the Registro its computer system by winning a bid during the presidency of one of those presidents currently on the hot seat facing a corruption investigation.

The U.S.-based Millicom set up the first cellular telephone system in Central America in Costa Rica, and without even a “thanks” was booted out of the country in May 1995. The company had to stop its operations because the Sala IV found that its activities with cell telephones was contrary to the Costa Rican Constitution that gives the Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad a telephone monopoly.

This which made room for one of the biggest frauds to the public involving almost every level of government. Former president Miguel Ángel Rodríguez is still under investigation for his role, if any, in a kicback on a contract to a French telephone company. Agents of the French firm have been indicted in the United States.

Of course, a lot of people say that when things go wrong and panic sets in, its just part of living in Costa Rica.

Garland M. Baker is a 35-year resident and naturalized citizen of Costa Rica who provides multidisciplinary professional services to the international community. Reach him at info@crexpertise.com. Baker has undertaken the research leading to these series of articles in conjunction with A.M. Costa Rica. Find the collection at http://crexpertise.info. Copyright 2004-2007, use wit
 

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Pura vida "Whiny Americans". The real question for you after reading all that shit is... Are you still in C.R? What the fuck, Do we need to continue repeating the " If you don't like it leave, c'mon stop the articles pack your shit, say good bye to all the hookers you met and head back to US. Over there you got enough shit to write articles about for the rest of your life.
There you don't have to worry about a kid buying a friggin egg in "La pulperia" for breakfast, but the one kid who wont live one more day because he got blown up or shot in your stupid wars, don't worry for a Tico kid who goes to school, thinking is a good idea to buy supplies only for one day ( if no one teach him better, he'll learn the hard way), worry about the kid back in US who goes to school with a 9mm in his backpack, thinking is fine to shoot and killed. Don't mind our corrupt and incompetent presidents and their stupid decisions that leave part of our country with blackouts. Instead pay more attention to your presidents whose ideas and decisions have caused this world millions of innocent lives.
Don't worry about the Companies that we let in our country or the one we kick out, worry about the corporations and bankers who run your country, hell, it'll be nice to write an article about that.
I was reading about FEMA and its "importance" as an "entity" for your country, I also read they got thousands and thousand of plastic coffins all piled up in different areas in US, you guys should write an article about that, more interesting than the potholes in C.R.
Don't worry about our economy, and head back to your country and help those who are struggling to audit the federal reserve and stop them from creating trillions of dollars out of thin air, that is really destroying the world economy.


Like I said you motherfuckers got more serious things to write about than the fucking tico who only bought one fucking egg for breakfast.


Now that's Harsh
 

Confucious say Man traped in brothel get jerked ar
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Pura vida "Whiny Americans". The real question for you after reading all that shit is... Are you still in C.R? What the fuck, Do we need to continue repeating the " If you don't like it leave, c'mon stop the articles pack your shit, say good bye to all the hookers you met and head back to US. Over there you got enough shit to write articles about for the rest of your life.
There you don't have to worry about a kid buying a friggin egg in "La pulperia" for breakfast, but the one kid who wont live one more day because he got blown up or shot in your stupid wars, don't worry for a Tico kid who goes to school, thinking is a good idea to buy supplies only for one day ( if no one teach him better, he'll learn the hard way), worry about the kid back in US who goes to school with a 9mm in his backpack, thinking is fine to shoot and killed. Don't mind our corrupt and incompetent presidents and their stupid decisions that leave part of our country with blackouts. Instead pay more attention to your presidents whose ideas and decisions have caused this world millions of innocent lives.
Don't worry about the Companies that we let in our country or the one we kick out, worry about the corporations and bankers who run your country, hell, it'll be nice to write an article about that.
I was reading about FEMA and its "importance" as an "entity" for your country, I also read they got thousands and thousand of plastic coffins all piled up in different areas in US, you guys should write an article about that, more interesting than the potholes in C.R.
Don't worry about our economy, and head back to your country and help those who are struggling to audit the federal reserve and stop them from creating trillions of dollars out of thin air, that is really destroying the world economy.


Like I said you motherfuckers got more serious things to write about than the fucking tico who only bought one fucking egg for breakfast.


Now that's Harsh

Easy buddy, I don't think that was the message the writer was intending to get across. Everyone knows that there are problems everywhere in the world and it's only by acknowledging them, that we are we able to fix them. I'm half Costa Rican myself and I believe that this article touches on many problems that our country faces, which we must work at inorder to improve as a whole. As i stated in a prior post, i believe that this article was very well written, providing an unbias opinion and giving us some constructive criticism. I love costa rica and one of the things I wish we could change is learning to be more structured and orderly. I love the fact that everything here in Costa Rica isn't so damn anal like it is in the states, but sometimes I just wish we were more organized...
Anyways, no worries we just got to work at it ... :103631605
 

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Easy buddy, I don't think that was the message the writer was intending to get across. Everyone knows that there are problems everywhere in the world and it's only by acknowledging them, that we are we able to fix them. I'm half Costa Rican myself and I believe that this article touches on many problems that our country faces, which we must work at inorder to improve as a whole. As i stated in a prior post, i believe that this article was very well written, providing an unbias opinion and giving us some constructive criticism. I love costa rica and one of the things I wish we could change is learning to be more structured and orderly. I love the fact that everything here in Costa Rica isn't so damn anal like it is in the states, but sometimes I just wish we were more organized...
Anyways, no worries we just got to work at it ... :103631605


I agreed with you in almost everything you say, but not this " this article was very well written, providing an unbias opinion and giving us some constructive criticism"
Constructive my ass the guy is insulting all ticos ( in general, making it even worse )with some of the "facts" that he represents in the article. So I just did the same with my post. I know there is a lot of work to do in this country, I know this; but its not gonna get done by insulting us through some cheap internet journalism especially coming from a foreigner whose country has more shit than any other in the world. Como decimos aca tiene mucha cola para que le pisen... o algo asi jajaja.
 

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Pura vida "Whiny Americans". The real question for you after reading all that shit is... Are you still in C.R? What the fuck, Do we need to continue repeating the " If you don't like it leave, c'mon stop the articles pack your shit, say good bye to all the hookers you met and head back to US. Over there you got enough shit to write articles about for the rest of your life.
There you don't have to worry about a kid buying a friggin egg in "La pulperia" for breakfast, but the one kid who wont live one more day because he got blown up or shot in your stupid wars, don't worry for a Tico kid who goes to school, thinking is a good idea to buy supplies only for one day ( if no one teach him better, he'll learn the hard way), worry about the kid back in US who goes to school with a 9mm in his backpack, thinking is fine to shoot and killed. Don't mind our corrupt and incompetent presidents and their stupid decisions that leave part of our country with blackouts. Instead pay more attention to your presidents whose ideas and decisions have caused this world millions of innocent lives.
Don't worry about the Companies that we let in our country or the one we kick out, worry about the corporations and bankers who run your country, hell, it'll be nice to write an article about that.
I was reading about FEMA and its "importance" as an "entity" for your country, I also read they got thousands and thousand of plastic coffins all piled up in different areas in US, you guys should write an article about that, more interesting than the potholes in C.R.
Don't worry about our economy, and head back to your country and help those who are struggling to audit the federal reserve and stop them from creating trillions of dollars out of thin air, that is really destroying the world economy.


Like I said you motherfuckers got more serious things to write about than the fucking tico who only bought one fucking egg for breakfast.


Now that's Harsh

LMAO Spoken like a TRUE TICO
 

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Hey MODS ya wanna delete this its fine, I just noticed there was another thread on saem subject

Thanks
 

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What's up homie? I see you're still always trying to be the Tico Superman huh?:toast:


I dont know what you mean by superman, but if you mean that I won't shut up and that I will always speak my mind when feeling disrespected, then the answer is yes.

:toast:
 

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I meant you always stand up for the ticos hence tico superman.
 

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That's all you have to say? Pathetic

What is it your looking for? I mean the guy nailed most of it in the article. Hey dont shoot the messenger I didnt right it. But will add I agree with most of it.......And hell the guy who wrote it is TICO, did ya notice that?
 

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What is it your looking for? I mean the guy nailed most of it in the article. Hey dont shoot the messenger I didnt right it. But will add I agree with most of it.......And hell the guy who wrote it is TICO, did ya notice that?


write it , not right it
 

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