Have a superiority complex about how better "your" country is when your parents abandoned it to live among a group you deem inferior, DominiCAC brehs
those emotions got ya reading skills all twisted up into knots
Have a superiority complex about how better "your" country is when your parents abandoned it to live among a group you deem inferior, DominiCAC brehs
Like Mexicans, who HATE YOUR ASS!
OR PUERTO RICANS, WHO WANT TO CUT YAS ASS!
YALL ARE LIVING IN A FANTASY WORLD. A wise person would link up with the closest to them, and blacks had no problem with Dominicans, and y'all still fukking your shyt up.
those emotions got ya reading skills all twisted up into knots
That's not what @Arianne Martell wrote.Mexicans or bytch ass puerto Ricans don't have to like us. We don't care about making other groups our friends, we just want that business.
I went to Haiti in July 2012 and helped in establishing a clean water system/indoor plumbing in Miragoane and got to see the rebuilding efforts on Port Au Prince
Yeah, you are lost. If you are really asking me that, I'm never gonna get you to see how things really are.who said you have to like each other to do business ???
That's good, and I commend them, but...shipping companies, car dealership, RADIO STATION,
Dominican Entrepreneur Launches “SheTaxis” and SheRides”
From the Dominican Republic, Stella Mateo launched SheTaxis in New York. “SheTaxis” is by women for women, and will respond only to requests made via a smartphone application. Mateo, founder of the service “SheTaxis” or “SheRides,” says that “It’s about safety, employment for women, equally with men and have alternatives.”
Stella Mateo, Founder and CEO of SheTaxis/SheRides
Born in the Dominican Republic, Stella Mateo came to the United States when she was 14 years old. Although Stella only spoke Spanish when she arrived in the States, she graduated from Monroe High School in the Bronx, fluent in English and determined to continue her path to success.
After earning her Associates Degree in Accounting from Bronx Community College, Stella went on to work in her family’s business as a seamstress. At the same time, she began working for a real estate company, eventually becoming head of the accounting department.
Passionate about being a business owner, Stella started San Mateo Construction in 1993 with her husband Fernando Mateo. In 1999, Stella became Fernando’s right hand supporter when he founded the New York State Federation of Taxi Drivers. Working as a volunteer for more than a decade, Stella conducted pro bono research for the organization, learning the ins-and-outs of the taxi industry.
Quickly realizing that women’s voices were severely underrepresented in the industry, Stella founded SheTaxis/SheRides in 2014 to address the issue. With SheTaxis/SheRides, Stella is using her expertise and experience to create new, unprecedented opportunities for women on the road.
Stella has always been a vocal advocate for women’s empowerment and equal opportunity employment. As an entrepreneur herself, she knows that owning a business provides the flexibility and self-sufficiency often missing for women in the workforce.
Breaking the male dominated taxi and livery industry wide open, Stella and SheTaxis/SheRides are bringing bold new voices into the business on both sides of the partition.
For more information, see http://shetaxis.com/home.html
Also see http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/08/nyregion/new-service-offers-taxis-exclusively-for-women.html?_r=0 and http://www.latinpost.com/articles/2...axi-service-meets-greater-demand-expected.htm
That's not what @Arianne Martell wrote.
And you are showing you have no business sense, how are you going to come up whena huge amount of the population of Dominicans in NYC are living in poverty? By the time you add in rent for your business, rent for where you live, taxes, and everyday purchases, they will never get a profit if they only served Dominicans. One or two will but that is it. This simt the 90's when your family sold theor business, and went back to the D.R.
Forget it because I see you have no idea how the business works in NYC, and trying to make a profit.
so if what you saying are true.,,,other foreigners would have the same problem as Haitians right?
why other foreigners when their child is born in DR they go to THEIR EMBASSY to get a birth certificate.
Why don't you demand the Haitian government to provide these basic administration?
help yall been luring haitians to dr with pipe dreams to work in the sugar cane plantations,deduc social security from they paycheck and dont even give them pensionand you went back to US to the comfort of your home and surroundings...you didnt have to help them for centuries like DR has...we have over extended ourselves
Each year, as the sugar harvest approaches, as many as 20,000 Haitian workers are recruited with the promise of steady work at higher pay than they can earn in Haiti, the poorer of the two countries. With the complicity of military and immigration authorities, the movie says, these destitute immigrants are loaded onto trucks, stripped of their identification papers and transported in the middle of the night to the bateyes, where many are housed in concentration-camp-like barracks. Estimates of the population of undocumented Haitians living in the camps range from 650,000 to one million.
Why would Haiti provide birth certificates for people who weren't born within its borders?
You can't be serious?
You guys are one of the poorest uneducated groups in AmericaDon't preach to me about business sense fam, teach it to your own.
"When at least one of you bums urge the U.S. to give Haitians Amnesty or you marry Haitian so you can give them your U.S. citizenship or go to Haiti to vacation...I swear I'll take everything I said"-youand you went back to US to the comfort of your home and surroundings...you didnt have to help them for centuries like DR has...we have over extended ourselves
help yall been luring haitians to dr with pipe dreams to work in the sugar cane plantations,deduc social security from they paycheck and dont even give them pension
nikka, my mother owned her own hair business for over 15 years in NYC, when the average business only last 5 years. My family in the south owned a construction company. My great grandfather did his thing with mechanics. I do my own thing in numerous areas, and when I was younger illegal love was one. It's in my blood to be my own man.Don't preach to me about business sense fam, teach it to your own.