Russia in China Eyes!

Russia and China have long been separated by countries such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Mongolia. As America is going to withdrawl from Afghanistan, numerous countries are going to contend to fill the power vacancy in Central Asia. Russia’s goal is to gain security cooperation with China through the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), and thus, overpower the influence of NATO in the area. Although both Russia and China have different goals- China wants to weaken America’s “overbearing strategy of encirclement and suffocation”, and Russia wants to maintain its political influence in Central Asia- the SCO may be beneficial to both countries. If Russia and China unite through this organization, they can work together to prevent U.S. missiles from being stationed there. Even though Russia’s economy is one-fourth that of China’s, it is in its best interest to “make friends with the big beasts”. Even though Russia and China have been frightened of the U.S. in the past, uniting may just be enough to curb that fear and gain lasting global influence.

Thank You for allowing me to post!

快乐的阳光

uCan-Post on Windows to Russia!

How about a chance to post your own article? Well Sveta and I are going to give you a chance to post that Russian article link that you found, that Russian quote that you love, that Russian comment that you are dying to tell the world and that excerpt from your favorite Russian article or just tell the world what you think about Russia in an editorial…

Well today we started a new stage in Windows to Russia’s development. We hope that this is a viable working proposition and that people will use it to advantage and not to detriment…

You can post or as the software is called uCan-Post is installed on Windows to Russia. Right now it is set up so that anyone can post but nothing is posted officially until we get to have a looksie at it… 🙂

So no spam and Criticism is acceptable but hate, extreme aversion, hostility, loathe, execrate; despise, abhor, detest and abominate will not be tolerated. As well as discrimination and or unfair treatment of a person, racial group, minority, etc; action based on prejudice. Cussing will not be allowed and all above plus more will either result in post removal or editing to clean up the trash. You can dislike Russia but do it in a civilized manner…

As of right now it will not allow pictures or videos to be uploaded. Just let me know in an email and I can insert the media for you… (contact on top menu bar)

Try it out and name will not show up unless you put in the post. So please enter your name in the post so we know who you are. Of course you can stay nameless and let Admin post everything…

 

Update – They are no longer in business…

Have fun!

Kyle and Sveta

Questions just leave a comment on this post and we will try to solve issues…

Coffee and Nobel Prize and Visa and MasterCard… (Priceless)

The snow is falling thick as thieves and my morning cup of coffee is really good. As I sipped the delightful beverage. I was thinking about a couple of e-mails I received last night. Two good readers sent me some links, that led to interesting articles…

First one: (Link) It seems that China, Afghanistan, Colombia, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Morocco, Pakistan, the Philippines, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Sudan, Tunisia, Ukraine, Venezuela and Vietnam so far have declined attending the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremonies…

It seems that China was pissed off by the Nobel committee’s choice of Mr. Liu, who is in prison in China.  The Nobel prize will not be handed over because no one is around to receive it…

So for whatever good reasons they think that they have, for giving it to Mr. Liu means “jack squat” to me because the Nobel Peace prize has become a joke since Obama was given one last year…

So I found it interesting that Russia is amongst the countries that will not go and China will have its own award…

Second one: (Link) President Dmitry Medvedev had asked officials last December to modernism Russia’s electronic payment system and come up with a home-grown version of the western model. Base it out of Russia…

A state department cable just released this by WikiLeaks reveals that US diplomats have intervened to try to amend a draft law going through Russia’s duma, or lower house of parliament. Their explicit aim was to ensure the new law did not “disadvantage” the two US companies because Russia is a huge account and they do not want Russia to have their own Master Card / Visa or similar set up by themselves…

Russia better do its own thing and keep American politics out of the duma…

But from what I am starting to see. There is a serious rift developing between East and West. It looks like many countries that have ridden the fence for decades are going to have to choose a side in the future…

Hummm interesting issues going on right now…

Since South Korea Started This in the First Place…

Well it is official we have threatened North Korea with annihilation over something that South Korea started…

South Korea will attack North Korean military bases in case of new provocation by Pyongyang. This statement was made by the US and South Korean military commanders during their talks in Seoul… Read More >>>

Seems an interesting situation has arisen from all this and we just cocked the gun to start a war…

Also the Western press is alight with the fact that North Korea has been firing big guns off on their own territory… (And Chicken Little is running around screaming the sky is falling also…)

North Korea military drills are destabilizing region, says US… What? Who has the giant Carrier floating off of North and South Korea with an armada of ships to make play time with? First two guesses do not count…

What also has been conveniently left out of the Western press, that the Eastern press has remembered, is that South Korea instigated this whole affair with the off balanced North…

Back on the 24th of November:

Russia blames South Korean increased military activity for latest escalation

Interfax in Russian

11/24/10

Delhi – The escalation of tension on the Korean peninsula is the result of increased military activity in the region on the part of South Korea and its partners, Vladimir Nazarov, deputy secretary of the Russian Security Council, said in Delhi on Wednesday [24 November].

“The latest escalation of tension [between the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea) and the Republic of Korea – Interfax] is particularly alarming. At the same time it is the logical conclusion of the increased military activity of South Korea and its partners,” he stressed. [Passage omitted]

Nazarov, who is in Delhi for consultations with the Indian side on Security Council matters, stressed that “Russia and India are very concerned by the escalation of the situation on the Korean peninsula”.

“This conflict could grow into a serious confrontation which would be a threat to peace and security,” he said.

According to Nazarov, the particular threat is posed by the fact that “both sides possess nuclear weapons – the US tactical nuclear weapons deployed at South Korean bases and North Korea’s nuclear weapons which have already been tested twice”.

“The international community should call for restraint on both sides. A new escalation of military activity, including military-training manoeuvrings, should not be allowed – this is a dangerous path. What has happened confirms what we have been talking about for quite a long time and what we have warned some of our partners about,” the deputy secretary of the Russian Security Council said.

He said the situation on the Korean peninsula had been the most important topic discussed at the talks he had held in Delhi. According to Nazarov, the talks had been held as part of preparations for a visit by the Russian president to Delhi in December.

I certainly do not think this whole issue was justifiable by either side. But I do believe it is a common reaction on the part of an off balanced government (which is what the rulers of North Korea are) that they will shoot back at somebody shooting into their yard even if it is not at their house. So saying “We were just shooting into the sea, we didn’t hit anybody” is a pretty stupid excuse. Inciting North Korea to shoot at you is stupid. It makes me wonder who is the real lunatic in all this situation is…

The North Koreans may have over-reacted and they did, but it was only responding to a bunch of aggressors shooting big guns into their particular maritime territory…

So be it right or wrong. We need to defuse the situation not load the gun. We need to quit playing games. I known a lot of people from the Korea’s and they are wonderful individuals. I would hate to see North and South become a nuclear waste land…

This all reminds me of the stupid situation against Russia when Georgia decided to blow the hell out of South Ossetia. Then the Western press went crazy and pointed at evil bad Russia for an eternity. Then we find out it was all lies…

Now America is pressuring China to corral North Korea. But China knows that they did not start this ordeal…

Think that I am talking out of line? Just look at the bull in links below. The press is spouting war and if it doesn’t happen at this point it will only be because North Korea is smart and saner that we give them credit for. It will not be because America and South Korea tried to defuse it. Because they have not tried…

This is one issue that everyone better take serious. China and Russia do, but it seems that rest of us are stuck in the La La Land of hate evil North Korea…

Remember the sinking of the Cheonan…

http://windowstorussia.com/could-it-be-that-north-korea-did-not-sink-the-cheonan.html

They did not do that either. That was proven and everyone went home…

The Chicken Never Leaves the News in Russia…

On January 1, Russia introduced new sanitary standards, banning the treatment of meat with chlorine of a higher concentration than in drinking water.Almost 25 tons of U.S.A. Poultry Seized on Russian Border…06:38 08/12/2010 The Far Eastern department of Russia’s agriculture watchdog has seized almost 25 metric tons of U.S. poultry due to concerns over its quality.Read More >>

You would think that something like a chicken would not be worth getting upset over. Well if the chicken was raised correctly. It would be OK…

While the door has been opened back for American chicken. This is the type of headline news that America does not need in their battle to keep chicken back in Russia…

From what all the news sources are saying, This chicken was mislabeled and was an attempt to get chicken that does not meet the standards set up between Russia and America, across the border…

Now whether this is true or not really does not mean a whole hill of beans to anyone in Russia. The fact is that they really do not want American chicken here. So they (Russia) will be watching very carefully what America sends as a chicken product. It is already well know that America will send trash and call it chicken. Russia has been a well known chicken dumping ground until the last year…

Now that American chicken is back in the stores you have to be careful what you buy. If the store repackages it and cuts it up themselves. You may get more than you bargained for…

An example is that a few weeks ago I purchased some chicken backs to make a soup with. When I got home and started to use them. I realized that they were not the regular backs that I get normally. They were so fat covered and very little meat. I made a trip back to the store and checked out what they had for chicken. Yes they had American chicken, priced the same as Russian chicken and repackaged / relabeled to help cover up the fact…

And No I will not shut up about lousy American chicken being sold here in Russia. Of all the wonderful things that America could send and sell to Russia. It has to be Antibiotic filled, water injected, Fatty Chicken…

Preserving the effectiveness of antibiotics and other antimicrobial will require changes in all major areas of use: human medicine, veterinary medicine, and agriculture. But agricultural uses deserve special attention, since they account for 70 percent of the antibiotics and related drugs used in the United States, and since they provide resistant bacteria with a direct route into people’s kitchens… Read More >>>

Say What? 70% of the total antibiotic use and there is a lot of antibiotics used in America…

These are links to all our articles below on chicken between America and Russia…

Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link

Our Blogs…

Just a list of our main blogs:

The Admiral Gorshkov Aircraft Carrier has been Renamed the Vikramaditya…

Vikramaditya means “Brave as the Sun” is the new name for the former Soviet aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov, which has been procured by India, and is estimated to enter service in the Indian Navy after 2012. Read More >>>

“Vikramāditya” is Sanskrit for “Brave as the Sun” and was the title of some of the most famous kings in Indian history, such as the Vikramaditya of Ujjain, famed as a noble ruler and a mighty warrior. It is also a title that was used by the Indian king Chandragupta II who ruled between 375-413/15 AD…

I like it…

Medvedev’s Article: Go Russia!

In his opening remarks President said:

“I wrote the article that was published today to lay out to each of you, to all citizens of Russia, my idea of the strategic challenges that lie ahead. Challenges regarding the present and the future of our country. I invite all those who have something to say to participate in the discussion surrounding these issues. Your views, comments and suggestions will be taken into account in preparing the President’s Annual Address to the Federal Assembly and the practical plans governing our country’s development.”

E-mail address for feedback and suggestions: kremlin@gov.ru.

The full text of the article in English will be published.

The Excerpts from Dmitry Medvedev’s Article, Go Russia!:

“Let’s answer a simple but very serious question. Should a primitive economy based on raw materials and endemic corruption accompany us into the future? And should the inveterate habit of relying on the government, foreign countries, some kind of comprehensive doctrine, on anything or anyone – as long as it’s not ourselves – to solve our problems do so as well? And if Russia can relieve itself from these burdens, can it really find its own path for the future?”

“As the contemporary generation of Russian people, we have received a huge inheritance. Gains that were well-deserved, hard-fought and hard-earned by the persistent efforts of our predecessors. Sometimes the cost of hardships really was terrible casualties. We have a huge territory, large amounts of natural resources, solid industrial potential, an impressive list of outstanding achievements in science, technology, education and art, a glorious history regarding our army, navy, and nuclear weapons. By using its authority Russian power has played a significant — and in some periods determinate — role in events of historic proportions.

How should we manage that legacy? How to magnify it? What will the future of Russia be for my son, for the children and grandchildren of my fellow citizens? What will be Russia’s place, and hence the place of our descendants, heirs, and future generations, among other nations in the global labor market, in the system of international relations, in global culture? What must we do to steadily improve the quality of life of Russian citizens today and in the future? To allow our society to become richer, freer, more humane and more attractive? So that Russian society can give to those who desire it a better education, an interesting job, a good income, and comfortable environment for both personal life and creative activity?

I have answers to these questions.”

“An inefficient economy, semi-Soviet social sphere, fragile democracy, harmful demographic trends, and unstable Caucasus represent very big problems, even for a country such as Russia.

Of course we do not need to exaggerate. Much is being done, Russia is working. It is not a half-paralyzed, half-functioning country as it was ten years ago. All social systems are operating. But this is still not enough. After all, such systems only propagate the current model, and do not develop it. They cannot change current ways of life and therefore bad habits remain.

Achieving leadership by relying on oil and gas markets is impossible. We must understand and appreciate the complexity of our problems. We must frankly discuss them in order to act. In the end, commodity exchanges must not determine Russia’s fate; our own ideas about ourselves, our history and future must do so. Our intellect, honest self-assessment, strength, dignity and enterprise must be the decisive factors.

By setting out five priorities for technological development, offering specific measures for the modernization of the political system, as well as measures to strengthen the judiciary and fight corruption, my starting point is my views on Russia’s future. And for the sake of our future it is necessary to liberate our country from persistent social ills that inhibit its creative energy and restrict our common progress. These ills include:

1. Centuries of economic backwardness and the habit of relying on the export of raw materials, actually exchanging them for finished products. Peter the Great, the last tsars and the Bolsheviks all created – and not unsuccessfully – elements of an innovative system. But the price of their successes was too high. As a rule, by making extreme efforts, they opened the door to the possibility of a totalitarian state machine.

2. Centuries of corruption have debilitated Russia from time immemorial. Until today this corrosion has been due to the excessive government presence in many significant aspects of economic and other social activities. But it is not limited to governmental excess — business is also not without fault. Many entrepreneurs are not worried about finding talented inventors, introducing unique technologies, creating and marketing new products, but rather with bribing officials for the sake of ‘controlling the flows’ of property redistribution.

3. Paternalistic attitudes are widespread in our society, such as the conviction that all problems should be resolved by the government. Or by someone else, but never by the person who is actually there. The desire to make a career from scratch, to achieve personal success step by step is not one of our national habits. This is reflected in a lack of initiative, lack of new ideas, outstanding unresolved issues, the poor quality of public debate, including criticism. Public acceptance and support is usually expressed in silence. Objections are very often emotional, scathing, but superficial and irresponsible. Well, this is not the first century that Russia has had to confront these phenomena.”

“The more intelligent, smarter and efficient our economy is, the higher the level of our citizens’ welfare, and our political system and society as a whole will also be freer, fairer and more humane.”

“Russia’s political system will also be extremely open, flexible and internally complex. It will be adequate for a dynamic, active, transparent and multi-dimensional social structure. It will correspond to the political culture of free, secure, critical thinking, self-confident people.”

“Not everyone is satisfied with the pace at which we are moving in this direction. They talk about the need to accelerate changes in the political system. And sometimes about going back to the ‘democratic’ nineties. But it is inexcusable to return to a paralyzed country. So I want to disappoint the supporters of permanent revolution. We will not rush. Hasty and ill-considered political reforms have led to tragic consequences more than once in our history. They have pushed Russia to the brink of collapse. We cannot risk our social stability and endanger the safety of our citizens for the sake of abstract theories. We are not entitled to sacrifice stable life, even for the highest goals. In his time Confucius remarked: “Impatience in small matters destroys a great idea”. We have all too often experienced this in the past. Reforms for the people, not the people for reform. At the same time this will displease those who are completely satisfied with the status quo. Those who are afraid and do not want change. Changes will take place, but they will be gradual, thought-through, and step-by-step. But they will nevertheless be steady and consistent.

Russian democracy will not merely copy foreign models. Civil society cannot be bought by foreign grants. Political culture will not be reconfigured as a simple imitation of the political traditions of advanced societies. An effective judicial system cannot be imported. Freedom is impossible to simply copy out of a book, even a very clever one. Of course we’ll learn from other nations – from their experiences, their successes and failures in developing democratic institutions. But no one will live our lives for us. Nobody is going to make us free, successful and responsible. Only our own experience of democratic endeavor will give us the right to say: we are free, we are responsible, we are successful.”

“The modernization of Russian democracy and establishment of a new economy will, in my opinion, only be possible if we use the intellectual resources of post-industrial societies. And we should do so without any complexes, openly and pragmatically. The issue of harmonizing our relations with western democracies is not a question of taste, personal preferences or the prerogatives of given political groups. Our current domestic financial and technological capabilities are not sufficient for a qualitative improvement in the quality of life. We need money and technology from Europe, America and Asia. In turn, these countries need the opportunities Russia offers. We are very interested in the rapprochement and interpenetration of our cultures and economies.

Of course no relationship is free from contradictions. There will always be controversial topics, reasons for disagreement. But resentment, arrogance, various complexes, mistrust and especially hostility should be excluded from the relations between Russia and the leading democratic countries.

We have many common goals, including absolute priorities which affect every inhabitant on Earth such as the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons and reducing the risk of adverse effects from man-made climate change.

We must have interested partners and involve them in joint activities. And if we need to change something ourselves in order to do so, abandon previous prejudices and illusions, then we should do so. I am of course not referring to a policy of unilateral concessions. Lack of will and incompetence will not gain us any respect, gratitude, or gains. This has already happened in our recent history. Naive notions of the infallible and happy West and the eternally underdeveloped Russia are unacceptable, offensive and dangerous. But no less dangerous is the path of confrontation, self-isolation, mutual insults and recrimination.

Nostalgia should not guide our foreign policy and our strategic long-term goal is Russia’s modernization.”

“I would invite all those who share my convictions to get involved. I would also invite those who do not agree with my ideas but sincerely desire change for the better to be involved as well. People will attempt to interfere with our work. An influential group of corrupt officials and do-nothing ‘entrepreneurs’ are well ensconced. They have everything and are satisfied. They’re going to squeeze the profits from the remnants of Soviet industry and squander the natural resources that belong to all of us until the end. They are not creating anything new, do not want development, and fear it. But the future does not belong to them – it belongs to us. And we are an absolute majority. We will act patiently, pragmatically, consistently and in a balanced manner. And act now: act today and tomorrow. We will overcome the crisis, backwardness and corruption. We will create a new Russia. Go Russia!”

Windows to Russia!

News From Russia… (12/07/2010)

# Western analysts predict a bright future for the Russian economy, with global oil prices capping $100 per barrel. If this does indeed transpire, then the Russian government will be able to balance its budget by mid-2011, rather than needing another four years, as local forecasts suggest…

# “PepsiCo is planning to acquire one of Russia’s leading dairy and juice producers, Wimm-Bill-Dann, next spring. If skeptics’ fears prove right and PepsiCo’s plan is to move away from dairy to soft drinks and similar products, Russia could face a shortage of popular milk-based drinks.

# Media and civil society activists gathered for yet another protest in Moscow against attacks on Russian journalists. The rally was planned a month ago. Results of the investigation into the attack on Kommersant correspondent Oleg Kashin were expected to be revealed at the rally. In the absence of any results, the journalists talked about their personal experiences.

# Russian providers of Internet services may avoid responsibility for offensive or controversial content stored on their servers, according to amendments to the Russian Civil Code proposed by the presidential law codification council, a Russian business daily said on Tuesday.

# China is not going to take either side in the standoff on the Korean Peninsula, but says dialogue is the only way out as tensions mount between the two Koreas.

# NATO drew up plans in January to defend the Baltic states against Russia, the latest batch of leaked U.S. cables released by Wikileaks show.

# Nuclear warheads have been completed for Russia’s new Bulava submarine-launched ballistic missile, its Yury Solomonov said on Tuesday in an interview with Russia’s Natsionalnaya Oborona journal to be published later in December.

# Moscow and Kiev have signed an agreement to guarantee gas transits through Ukrainian territory, Ukrainian Minister of Fuel and Energy Yuriy Boyko said on Tuesday.

# The founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, has been arrested by the Metropolitan Police in London on sexual assault charges, the BBC said.

# The EU enlargement commissioner described the EU’s relations with Russia as a “strategic partnership” based on “strong mutual interests and interdependence.”

# Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered that the country’s missile and air defense systems be unified before December 2011, the Kremlin press service said on Tuesday.

# Russia is completing the modernization of the Admiral Gorshkov aircraft carrier which has been renamed the Vikramaditya. The ship will be transferred to the Indian Navy in 2012.

# Russia and the EU signed a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday paving the way for Russia’s entry to the World Trade Organization (WTO).

# Russia’s foreign trade surplus increased by 30% year-on-year in January-October 2010 to $136.4 billion, the Federal Customs Service said on Tuesday.

Miracles Do Happen With Google… (Sitelinks)

Google made Windows to Russia’s day today! 🙂 🙂

We have sitelinks: Read More About Sitelinks Here…

We took a picture of them (As proof!) because like everything else we expect them to just disappear at any time. (Just click picture above and it will expand. The links are right above the windowstorussia.com link at the bottom of the first search result.) Nothing seems to stay when it comes to Windows to Russia and that is most likely an issue of mine and always trying new things…

We have tried for a long time to get Windows to Russia to have sitelinks and they are not easy to get. They also are only on the links that are prevalent to the site in Google’s eyes, they have to be links that rank very high in keyword usage. Other words a lot of people find us through these keywords by searching. We have Russian, Russian News, Russia and Russian Foods as our top links…

This will help drive more traffic to Windows to Russia! We hope…

So even if they disappear tomorrow. We know they were there and it is possible to get these little site links if we keep working hard at it…