DT – 008 – Cumparsita in Plaza Dorrego

This is an older video posted in February, 2010; though the video itself may be a bit older. While there was tango posted on YouTube today, it was not really that great, so I went back to a classic video.

The song is the world famous Cumparsita (the little parade), the most famous tango ever written. The Uruguayans like to take credits, but a good portion of the composition was by an Argentine, Roberto Firpo.

The male dancer is a local legend called “EL INDIO” (the Indian) Pedro Benavente. The lady is Virgina Uva.

There is a massive subculture to tango in Argentina (and Uruguay). Its allure is crosses generational lines. Notice the children, youth, adults and elders in the crowd. Mothers have their infants with them, starting them off at an early age.

In Metro Buenos Aires – where one third of Argentina lives – they dance on the streets, the parks, the cafés, the schools, and pretty much everywhere. Any Palestinian immigrants will quick abandon any pretense of Sharia when confronted with the ubiquity of the tango.

If you think the Palestinian Muslims will be unassimilable, you have got to be kidding.

The Tango will shatter Sharia to shreds.

The Palestinians will assimilate.

DT – 005 – Tango on Florida Street


They are in the Southern Hemisphere, so it is their winter.
But it rarely freezes or snows in Buenos Aires. The climate is similar to the Carolinas.

Calle Florida [Florida Street] is a pedestrian mall in downtown Buenos Aires.

It has been closed to traffic for about 60 years. Musicians and Tango Dancers perform there regularly for tips. The Palestinians, if they were brought to South America, would quickly assimilate over time. There is nothing like this in Araby. They would not know how to deal with it; and their façade of pious Arabic Islamism would eventually crumble.

DT – 004 – Amazing Duo in Buenos Aires

Nothing Arab-Latin here, just my favorite tango – Libertango.

Performed in Buenos Aires’ pedestrian mall, Calle Florida

The poster says he taped the video in February, 2013, though he did not post it until Jun 12, 2013.

Libertango was written by Astor Piazzola, an Argentine composer. He published it in Milan in 1974, and revolutionized Tango.

Astor Piazolla blended classic music, jazz, and tango.

This video below is what Libertango sounds like when it is given the full treatment that Piazolla intended.

It is considered a classical masterpiece; but I thought that duo in the first video did good job of it in Buenos Aires.

Just a break from the politics. Enjoy!

PS: Islamic Sharia cannot compete with this.
I could not avoid politics altogether.

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