In A World More Concrete: Real Estate and the Remaking of Jim Crow South Florida Connolly describes Miami as a Caribbean city in the American South that was financed with northern money.
Trinidad and Tobago https://www.speedtest.net/global-index#fixed
Flow and Digicel stopped offering their gigabit packages about a year ago. However, I do expect it to make a return as Amplia has a reasonably priced packaged at 1G/500Mbps.
I appreciate the reply. Have you ever tried using a VPN like NordVPN to connect to those same servers? I might give it a shot. But I also wonder if diff settings on exit lag would help but there’s so much diff stuff and I don’t understand what any of it means lol
I would say Barbados' Indian population is significant, maybe not in terms of numbers but in visibility and influence on culture. Bengal to Barbados was written about the local community.
Here, this is a really cool little piece of history and I can’t believe someone had the foresight to record this stuff.
This is a good book; https://www.amazon.com/COCAINE-HEROIN-TRAFFICKING-CARIBBEAN-TRINIDAD/dp/0595336329
If you can't get a copy, I could send you pictures of pages but it might take a while.
Hello. This book is very renowned and recommended here for learning about the Caribbean history. It's by a Dominican author: a very prestigious intellectual. I have not read the book yet but I have heard about it... This is the link: https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Juan-Bosch/dp/6074011389
You can also read some Cuban writers like José Martí, who wrote many works in the US, where he lived for years. Among his titles are "La Edad de Oro" (The Golden Age), "Nuestra América" (Our America), and "Escenas norteamericanas" (American Scenes). This last one is a compiling of articles written by him for American Journals and about different events that took place in the US at that time...
There is also a famous Cuban poet called Nicolas Guillén who wrote poems on Cuba and its culture, but I recommend to read him in Spanish. Thank you
Thank you so much for writing all of this out! I have some of these items like bok choy and vegetables already, so it’s just the sauce. Question though, I found this online. Have you heard of it, would it have the same effect?
https://www.amazon.com/Conimex-Ketjap-Manis-Sauce-1000/dp/B009R6ZZBM
Not very difficult if you're constantly exposed to it or actively learning I guess. The only difficulty I would say is that it isn't standardized.
I would recommend getting a copy of 'Kwéyòl Donmnik: Dominican Kwéyòl for Beginners' by Sylvia Henderson Mitchell and making connections with those who speak it to help with pronounciation. Like with any other language, you could also listen to songs in creole or news, y'know things like that. Ophelia Marie and Michele Henderson both have songs in creole, as well as old school WCK, Chubby and the Midnight Groovers etc. Even folk songs can help as you develop and understanding of creole.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1291577181/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_FxDmFb60H6GND