Angola

What do Portuguese people think of decolonization now? Do you think it was a failure and a treason of post-Salazar politicians? Do you think the war should be continued?

youtube.com/watch?v=EZN2y-bJ-kQ

Just imagine that according to the multiracial policy of the Portuguese state this man was considered an ethnic Portuguese.

youtube.com/watch?v=1mnIRdk0HNM

No one thinks this way pretty much. Everybody acknowledges angolans, mozambicans and etc right to self-determination. Portuguese gov was dumb dragging that all up.

Ethnic Portuguese no. But he would be considered Portuguese yes. It's just how the Portuguese Empire worked, if you spoke Portuguese (and were Christian), you're "Portuguese".

isn't that a severely overpriced city and most of the country is shit?

>It's just how the Portuguese Empire worked, if you spoke Portuguese (and were Christian), you're "Portuguese".

Stupid Brazilians, they lost a chance to be Portuguese.

I think it's more or less the same as back then: a bunch of thieves stole the coffers in broad daylight, while mocking the onlookers for being stupid.
Mario Soares pillaged our own coffers, Agostinho Neto took care of angola, etc..

As for the people, nowadays we recognize their diferent identity while back then it was far more spiteful (retornados, which came in all colours of skin were very much mistreated). Since we went jus sangui after getting rid of the colonies, things became far more defined and relations normalized (but some retornados still lived up to 20 years without being citizens of any country)

ups and downs, Luanda is cheap for property and labor, but expensive for everything else (foreign imports are very expensive, and almost everything is imported). But, since the kwanza is on the shitter, things are solid for foreigners (so long you know how to circumvent some rules).

Based, just like ancient rome

They are in denial.

What's your policy towards immigrants from your former colonies? Can Angolans or Brazilians move and settle down in Portugal?