Home Real Estate 🔴JetLive Sundays, ep.19: Let’s hang out in Peru!🇵🇪

🔴JetLive Sundays, ep.19: Let’s hang out in Peru!🇵🇪

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🔴JetLive Sundays, ep.19: Let’s hang out in Peru!🇵🇪

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JetLagWarriors is a Canadian couple — Steve and Ivana. After travelling here and there for a few years, mostly during Canadian winter, we fully caught the travel bug and decided to travel INDEFINITELY! Subscribe to keep up with our journey. Thanks!

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24 COMMENTS

  1. PERU TIENE COSTA SIERRA Y SELVA LA COMIDA DE LA SELVA DELICIOSA IQUITOS ES LA CIUDAD HABITADA MAS REMOTA DEL MUNDO ES UNA ISLA RODEADA DE RIOS Y UNO DE ELLOS ES ELRIO.MAS CAUDALOSO Y LARGO DEL MUNDO EL AMAZONAS

  2. Machu Picchu is the emblematic place of South America and the most searched in google, it also came out that it is the most visited place in South America and Cusco that is the most photographed city in South America.

    The Asian population in Peru is the largest in Latin America, the Asians in Peru had to change their surnames to Spanish in order not to be discriminated against during the Second World War. The United States forced the Peruvian government to hand over Japanese in times of war. Asians were very harassed in Lima and many changed their names in order not to be "identified"; today you can have a Peruvian friend of Chinese descent and have completely Spanish surnames! That is why the figures of Chinese Peruvians are never exact, they can be more than 20% of the population according to the Chinese government, 20% of Peruvians have some Chinese relative in the past.

  3. Hi guys 👋 sorry I couldn’t join the Jetlive chat , nice to know that you’re planning to come back to Malaysia 🇲🇾. Ivana looks so sweet with the traditional baju Kedah I still remember that was a gift from a Kedah tourism 👍🏻 Finally you’re going back to your hometown , your family must be so excited for your return. Love your hotel looks luxurious. Anyway , safe trip to Cuzco and keep us posted 😘🥰👍🏻

  4. 20% of Peru Is NOT Chinese. The Chinese arrived in Peru as indentured servants, so 3% of the population is of Chinese decent or Chinese. That 3% does not include the Japanese community, which is a whole different demographic. Your lady does pass as an Amazonian indigenous woman because of her tan and her features slightly resemble many indigenous races from Latin America. To me she looks like some of my Filipino (because of the tan) and Russian friends, but i'm from the US. She wouldn't pass as a Argentine or Uruguayan because that's really Euro America, not so much Latin America. Ivana is very likable, she seems very warm. Enjoy your trip.

  5. I think you are really confused about that wall in Lima. The fact is that there are wealthy neighborhoods on the hills and the owners of those lands just built a wall because poor people built their houses next to theirs. They had to bulild that wall otherwise the people who hadn't paíd for the lands would expand to theirs. The poor people can go everywhere they want.

  6. I'd really like to explain about that so called "wall of shame", it might be a bit hard but I'll try: Lima is surrounded by sand hills and a few rocky hills, but most of Lima's surroundings is desert. Decades ago, the desert areas were sold to poorer people illegally to build their houses. Those areas were not apt for being occupied by any type of human settlement, but still so people started to live there and eventually built something similar to favelas. This happened 50 or 60 years ago. In the border of these areas there were some lands that had belonged to some associations and private owners (for example the Jesuit order among others) long before. They were afraid of the possibility of these "illegal real estate people" to occupy their lands and eventually sell them to other people illegally. In fact quite a few incidents had already taken place but in that area there were no police or anyone to help put some order. That's the reason why the legal owners decided to put a fence to stop this threat from happening. That's the origin of that wall. Decades have passed and it is still there. I know this because my brother studied in a school run by the Jesuits not too far from that spot.

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