Posted on 06/29/2010 11:41:01 PM PDT by saundby
The pic at the article is something else. An American Indian, perhaps? I can't tell. Not for the faint of heart, though.
BOYCOTT! BOYCOTT!
The grass skirt is a dead giveaway. Obviously a mathematics student going to Moscow for post-Doctoral work.
Well, looks like we need a new location for our shashlik cookout.
While you’re here, you’ll want to click the link and play the “What Country is that the Costume Of?” game. (Trust me on this one.)
Sounds sensible to me. My sister used to teach English to Vietnamese refugees in the 1970s. Some of them had lived extremely primitively, so she had to teach them not to barbecue in their living room, among other things. I’m not surprised that some people need to be told not to kill a goat in their apartment courtyard.
In America, I’d like to tell immigrants to refrain from trashing public restrooms. Also, when camping in a campground or picnicking at the park, keep music turned down so the people nearby can’t hear it. Finally, they should remember that they don’t speak English nearly as well as they think they do, so they must slow down and separate the words.
But he added that Muscovites are a community that is bigger than a nationality because it is a tangle of various cultures.
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Mmmnnnnnnoooo....I think not. In the 90’s, after the wall fell and the former Soviet Union broke apart - it turned out that ‘some were more equal than others’. Living in Moscow was quite a privilege and meant access to resources only dreamed of in the rest of the country. This had been true for years prior to the breakup of the USSR -so much so that a person had to have a permit to live in Moscow and those without permits knew not to try to stay without one.
However, once the USSR broke apart, ‘white Russians’ laid claim to Russia. Unfortunately that meant driving out persons who had lived in Moscow all their lives if they were ‘diverse’ (i.e. any other ethnicity than ‘White Russian’). A friend spent nights crying in fear for her Georgian mother who was living in Russia; the elderly woman was afraid to go to the store or be seen in public because she was ‘too dark skinned’ to pass for ‘White Russian’ and was legitimately afraid of being abused and cast out of Moscow. She had no place else to go but...she was the wrong ethnicity. So, no, I don’t imagine you’ll find quite the ‘Melting Pot’ described in the article although I am sure there are exceptions.
And no shrimp on the barbie? Backwards savages!
Says the guy while showing a picture with a Pepsi ad in the background.
I don't think there is one thing "centuries-old Muscovite" in that photo including "fat guy with boutique shopping bag", "nosy lady with Bermuda shorts" and "umbrella girl with denim vest", even the weird guy looks like he is pulling up Mapquest on his cell.
This is still true. A Russian's internal National Passport says where they live. They are not allowed to reside in any other city within Russia. They cannot even rent a hotel room in another city. Many workers stay just outside the city limits (camping out at night) and enter the city during the day for work (day laborers, you might say - just no Home Depots).
Pepsi does not equal culture.
That's rubbish. A Russian may reside wherever he wants excluding certain areas of military importance. He's required to register his residence with the police. He needs a document to prove owning/hiring an accomodation. And no tent camps outside Russian cities!
No killing of sheep, but beheading infidels is okay?...............
Guess we have a slight disagreement here. My Russian wife “owns” a flat in Russia. Her sister and her brother-in-law occupy it because they can’t get a flat authorized by the gov’t. My wife is an authorized resident of Nab. Chelny and is “allowed “ to stay in a hotel room I reserve in Moscow only because the hotel staff allows it. She could not register with the local police because they would not have allowed it. Of course, as a foreigner, i can stay anywhere I want but I have to turn over my passport to the hotel staff so they can report my residence to the local Moscow police. I have many times recently seen workers standing around a fire in the woods outside of Moscow city limits early in the morning waiting for work start time because they are not allowed to stay in the borders of Moscow at night. You have to have a Moscow internal passport and gov’t authorization to reside in Moscow or any other city. I don’t say a Russian can’t get permission to reside in any other city, only that they are not authorized to reside in any city for which their internal passport address is different. They can move, but only with gov’t approval. The problem is getting a gov’t authorized flat within a different city. It can take years and you have to show a need (usually spelled b-r-i-b-e) that is important to the gov’t.
And don’t mention the labor camps in Siberia.
Years ago I did a job in a subdivision at a rent house occupied by some Pakistani folks that had a blood stained tree stump surrounded by goat hooves in the backyard.
>...prior to the breakup of the USSR -so much so that a person had to have a permit to live in Moscow and those without permits knew not to try to stay without one.
This is still true. A Russian’s internal National Passport says where they live. They are not allowed to reside in any other city within Russia. They cannot even rent a hotel room in another city. Many workers stay just outside the city limits (camping out at night) and enter the city during the day for work (day laborers, you might say - just no Home Depots).>
Wrong. You are not allowed to be in any other city if you have no place to stay there having arrived more than 3 days ago. It is a minor offence there. If you have property, relatives or friends who are giving you a place to stay you have to inform local police and they gives you some sort of visa. If you are renting a room in a hotel you are getting that visa by default.
IMO that is quite fair in terms of immigration and crime control.
Police enforces the law by random stop of unusual people (mostly asians or wearing muslim clothes)checking their passports, visas and tickets to know if they are overstay their 3 days or not.
If you are a well dressed Russian or a white American they will never engage you.
Same is about so called day laborers who are mostly illegal Tajik or Vietnamese nationals. They are stay outside the cities for a good reason not to be prosecuted or deported.
>...prior to the breakup of the USSR -so much so that a person had to have a permit to live in Moscow and those without permits knew not to try to stay without one.
This is still true. A Russian’s internal National Passport says where they live. They are not allowed to reside in any other city within Russia. They cannot even rent a hotel room in another city. Many workers stay just outside the city limits (camping out at night) and enter the city during the day for work (day laborers, you might say - just no Home Depots).>
Wrong. You are not allowed to be in any other city if you have no place to stay there having arrived more than 3 days ago. It is a minor offence there. If you have property, relatives or friends who are giving you a place to stay you have to inform local police and they gives you some sort of visa. If you are renting a room in a hotel you are getting that visa by default.
IMO that is quite fair in terms of immigration and crime control.
Police enforces the law by random stop of unusual people (mostly asians or wearing muslim clothes)checking their passports, visas and tickets to know if they are overstay their 3 days or not.
If you are a well dressed Russian or a white American they will never engage you.
Same is about so called day laborers who are mostly illegal Tajik or Vietnamese nationals. They are stay outside the cities for a good reason not to be prosecuted or deported.
I can’t slaughter my sheep in the courtyard?!!! Well, that tears it... I won’t be visiting Moscow anytime soon. Did they say anything about slaughtering goats?
I can’t slaughter my sheep in the courtyard?!!! Well, that tears it... I won’t be visiting Moscow anytime soon. Did they say anything about slaughtering goats?
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