I've been Rico since 10th grade.

Puerto Rico is a powerful island.

In Puerto Rico we dance to everything.

The name Rico Nasty came from Instagram.

I'll live in Puerto Rico until the day I die.

As U.S. citizens, Puerto Rico has paid their part.

A song is a song and a hit record can change a life.

I represent the streets of Puerto Rico around the world.

We must all work together to bring the best to Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico had a number of problems before Maria even hit.

I'm proud of who I am, and I'm proud I grew up in Puerto Rico.

The majority of the people of Puerto Rico support commonwealth.

I'm not going to impose my vision on the people of Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico still has the wherewithal to be a tourist destination.

I was very surprised to see people who recognize me in Puerto Rico.

I am second-generation American, and my grandparents are from Puerto Rico.

Some people wanted me deported - as if you can be deported to Puerto Rico.

Yet, individuals and corporations in Puerto Rico pay no federal income tax.

Culturally, the arts of Puerto Rico is really unmatched by any other island.

I have a home in Puerto Rico, and I see what is happening on the islands there.

I had such a great upbringing in Puerto Rico, and it was just a very normal life.

I was dancing for my grandpa from the time I was 4 or 5 years old in Puerto Rico.

Even though Puerto Rico will always be my hometown, I feel Miami is my second home.

I have the Puerto Rico power and the Philadelphia toughness and Philadelphia skills.

Culturally, musically, historically Cuba and Puerto Rico are like two wings of one bird.

Federal program and services outlay in Puerto Rico is approximately $10 billion per year.

You know, you may not be born in Puerto Rico, but Puerto Rican is definitely born in you.

There is no price tag on an American life - whether it's in Florida, Texas, or Puerto Rico.

Over 90 percent of parents in Puerto Rico want their children to be totally fluent in English.

American imperialism is often traced to the takeover of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Hawaii in 1898.

The common goals of Puerto Rico and the United States have always been for the benefit of both.

After my homeland of Puerto Rico, Miami has been the most important city in my life and career.

When I started making music, I figured the name Rico Nasty would give a background of who I am.

We're going to Puerto Rico, where we're gonna close. And we're so excited, we can't see straight.

We are a possession of the United States. Congress has full authorization power over Puerto Rico.

We're going to rebuild Puerto Rico with money that we saved from the IRS in a Robin Hood fashion.

I wasn't born to a wealthy or powerful family - mother from Puerto Rico, dad from the South Bronx.

My mom's family is Russian Jewish, and my dad's Puerto Rico Catholic, so it's kind of a weird mix.

In Puerto Rico, we continue to see the perpetuation of second-class citizenship in the United States.

Expenditures have gone rampant in Puerto Rico: lack of accountability - total lack of accountability.

Puerto Rico got too futuristic with the electronic reggaeton. It lost the essence of the reggae music.

Dick Dart emerged from the ether during a flight from New York with my wife and children to Puerto Rico.

I had been successful in Japan, Mexico, and Puerto Rico, but nothing in the U.S. where it really matters.

In Puerto Rico, there has developed a culture of taking out loans and not paying them back. That has ended.

I live in Puerto Rico, my family lives in Puerto Rico, my friends. What happens in Puerto Rico matters to me.

'Teen Beach Movie' was a lot of fun because we were in Puerto Rico on an island - you can't even call it work!

I love being in Puerto Rico. I am so excited that they embrace me, and I feel that I am giving back to my fans.

The 3.5 million people in Puerto Rico are American citizens. They deserve fair and equal treatment as Americans.

When I left Chicago, people said, 'Careful with that Texas heat'. I'm like, 'I'm from Puerto Rico. I know heat.'

It's great to be Puerto Rican, because Puerto Rico loves boxing. They don't have a lot of major sports down there.

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