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I have been in Prague last september, what I watched was exactly the Spain of the 90´s: growing prosperity, a still pseudo-traditionalist society, but the poison of the progressism and the third world inmigration is yet there, and will grow in the next years surely. (Yes, in Prague there are many inmigrants, not as in the Western, but there are many)
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maybe gdp ppp pc. doubt this has occured wrt real gdppc (nominal).
AphroditeWorshiperWorshiper
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There are also abundant gypsies or pseudo-gypsies in Czech Republic, it´s not an epidemic as Romania or Andalusia, but they exist.
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I don't think Czechs are traditionalist. For EE standard they are certanly not, especially in comparison with Poles. They have always been known as liberal, rational, individualist and secular. Though this is more of a Bohemian stereotype. But not liberal in a western way. They are not overly nationalist, but they are quite xenophobic, not open to foreigners. And Czech Republic doesn't have any colonial history.
Really I don't think Spanish and Czech situation has much similarities. Being richer won't make them change their mind on immigration and you can see that based on who wins elections.
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Good for the Czechs. Hoping to see some Latin American countries surpass Spain and Portugal as well. I believe Chile and Panama are already higher than Portugal. Not sure how they compare to Spain.
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They will equal with Spain and Portugal because Spain and Portugal will be plenty of thirdworlders (most of them from ex-colonies in Latin America and Africa) and will become in a Latin America 2.0, with a majority of illiterate and poor brown population, and a minority of wealthy iberians.
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