The Old Lady From the Past…

Sveta was in a hurry today. She had to run to get to her train and that was still a 20 minute run from our flat. I had to walk the dog still, before I got on with my excursions for the day…

Now Boza does not like being left behind by Sveta. But I can not move as fast as I use to because of many injuries from past experiences. Since Boza is on a leash he is limited to my pace. That is OK with him except at the times that Sveta has to run to the train or bus station…

It was during this Boza trying to pull daddy faster times, that Boza and I came upon a very very very old lady…

She was trying to cross the road and was having a bad time of doing that. Boza and I came up beside her and I extended my arm for her to grab. Then we proceeded to cross the road at a snails pace… 🙂

When we got to the other side she looked at me and reached into her pocket. Out of her pocket she pulled a tiny pamphlet that I recognized immediately…

The picture above is the picture on the pamphlet. I have seen it a thousand times in my life. It is from the Watch Tower Society (Jehovah’s Witnesses)…

Now normally I can be a real bear with the Jehovah’s Witnesses. They have a bad track record with me in America. I will not go into details but it extends from multiples of issues and the least of those issues is from one of the Jehovah’s Witnesses men trying to force his way into my house thinking that there was only a young lady in the house at the time. That turned out poorly for the guy…

But I regress at this point and lets get back on track to the present…

I took the pamphlet from the old lady and she started to rattle about God and Glory and the Great Name. I looked at her while she was talking and realized that she had to be in her 90’s and getting older by the second…

I looked into her eyes and saw the long ago American that was still hidden down deep inside those eyes…

I then said in English, “How long have you been in Russia?” She hesitated in her rattling about God. I could see the gears turning in her head trying to assimilate what I just said. Then the spark came into her eyes and she said in a ancient cracking voice, “I know you…”

She then almost fell down and I grabbed her by the arm to steady her. She then said something to the effect about how she never thanked me. How that she was never able to thank me because she was debriefed and told to stay quiet. She said that she went home to America after that and decided on staying away from America the rest of her life. She left and never looked back…

The very old lady turned and walked away and never looked back. She was running as fast as her old legs would let her. I could feel her fear of what she knew about me and the past. I did not have time to tell her that life has mellowed me. She was too busy still running again from the past…

I then took Boza and we continued our walk. I turned several times and looked at the escaping Old Lady. I then dredged up memories that I had pushed aside…

Lets have a memory flashback: Once a long time ago. I was in another country. I had come upon a woman around late 50’s year old. She was in a bad place at a very bad time in the history of the American war machine. She was a government employee that had been taken as a hostage. She was not important nor vital and she should have been left to her own accords because she had messed up and gotten herself in a pickle. I ignored direct orders and did what I did best. Besides ignore orders. 🙂 This incident is one of several that shaped my future and thinking’s in life…

To make a very long story short. She was brought back to safety and I never knew what happened to her after that. Until today…

The world has become a small place indeed…

This was the subject of my thinking’s this morning. I then had a flood of memories and the least of which was that I have outlived the age that my dad and his three brothers had lived to. Funny how somethings trigger certain memories. The very old lady from America handing out pamphlets from the Watch Tower publications, took me back to my past and future at the same time…

It seems that I remember someone telling me once that we all run from something. It is just that we all have different way of running from that something. Some drink, some do drugs, some run and some etc. Yes we all do run from something. We just never seem to figure it out. Sometimes I wonder what I am running from?

Now I have a pamphlet that will go into my collection of memories. It will be the thank you, that took thirty years in coming…

God does work in strange ways…

Latest News From Russia… (10/23/2010)

Russian News...

Just some News about Russia from a variety of Russian sources. From Russian TV to Russian newspapers. Just to keep you informed on what is happening…

Sberbank’s head German Gref sees no reason for the ruble rate to drop in the next few months, the banker was quoted as saying at “The Russian Monetary Market” conference. According to him, the ruble may even strengthen, provided that there is a favorable investment climate. The Bank of Russia expects the ruble rate to remain at RUB/USD 30.3-30.5.

More…

Poland will not ratify the deal between Gazprom and PGNiG unless the gas monopoly provides 10-percent discounts on additional gas supplies, RBC Daily wrote today citing Poland’s Economy Minister Waldemar Pawlak. If Gazprom accepts, however, it could fall $300m short of revenue.

More…

Russia and Bulgaria will set up a joint venture by November 15, 2010 to conduct a feasibility study of Bulgaria’s South Stream leg. According to the Russian government’s press office, the agreement was reached during a telephone conversation between Prime Minister of Russia Vladimir Putin and his Bulgarian counterpart Boyko Borissov.

More…

Russia’s oil production will top 500m tonnes in 2010 to remain virtually unchanged throughout 2011-2012, Russia’s Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko told journalists today.

More…

Ukraine rules out the possibility of any problems in gas transit to Europe in view of its talks with Russia on gas prices for Ukrainian consumers, the nation’s Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Klyuyev told a press conference yesterday. He expressed confidence that Europeans will celebrate the New Year peacefully in their warm homes, as Ukraine undertakes, as a reliable partner, to ensure an uninterrupted supply of Russian gas to Europe.

More…

Russia could end up with a balanced budget without any deficit next year if oil price hovered at around $109 per barrel, Russia’s Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin stated today at a meeting of the United Russia faction.

More…

Former head of the government’s executive office Sergei Sobyanin has taken oaths and assumed the office of the Mayor of Moscow.

More…

The Russian government extended the ban on grain exports until July 1, 2011, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin stated today at a meeting on agricultural development in Rostov-on-Don.

More…

Two militants were killed and two police officers injured in a shootout in Russia’s volatile southern republic of Dagestan on Saturday, local police said.

More…

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen dismissed the idea that Russia is likely to become a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the near future and called instead for a “strategic partnership” with Moscow, Deutsche Welle reported.

More…

China and Russia Financial Comparison...

Windows to Russia!

President Medvedev Talks With Channel One in Russia!

October 11, 2009

Conversation between Dmitry Medvedev and Director of News Program at Russia’s Channel One, Kirill Kleimenov

DIRECTOR OF NEWS PROGRAMMES AT RUSSIA’S CHANNEL ONE KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Mr President, I am happy to welcome you to our new news studio, at Channel One’s news centre. Usually, it is the journalists who visit the President, but today, you are coming to us. Perhaps this is the beginning of a new tradition.

PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Perhaps. In any case, I am happy to be here. It is interesting for me to be here at the studio, which appears very modern and convenient to work in, so I hope that we will have a good talk.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: It has been about a year since the terms “global crisis” or “global financial crisis” began appearing regularly throughout the world. The difficult times are not yet behind us, but if the reputable economists are right, Russia has been able to avoid the worst possible scenarios that were predicted earlier. I would like to know, first of all, do you agree with this view? And if so, why do you believe that we have gotten through this period with fewer losses than initially predicted?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I’ll answer your question by dividing my response into two parts. As far as Russia’s forecasts for worst possible scenarios are concerned, I must admit that we sunk below our lowest expectations. In other words, the real damage to our economy was far greater than anything predicted by ourselves, the World Bank, and other expert organisations. In the beginning, there was talk of seeing the economy drop by 3 or 3.5 percent. But this year, we are expecting to see the GDP decline by about 7.5 percent. This figure is very serious, and I want to emphasize again that our forecasts had been far less severe.

But as far as how people are feeling and the social effects of the crisis, I believe that the opposite is the case. We were ultimately able to make fairly good use of anti-crisis measures to avoid the worst possible scenarios in terms of unemployment and direct financial consequences from the crisis, as well as effects on the work of the banking system and the non-financial sector. Thus, the negative consequences in this area turned out to be less dramatic than what we had predicted.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Without talking about economic theories or large numbers, what is your current assessment of the non-financial sector, the industrial sector and agriculture?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Both the industrial sector and the agriculture sector are going through hard times. This does not mean that everything was ideal before the crisis, either. But indeed, the crisis has exacerbated problems in certain sectors of industry, as well as specific problems in agriculture. Still, as far as the industrial sector is concerned, the key problems are related to individual plants and corporations that dominate the economies of entire cities, resulting in single-company towns. They found themselves in the most serious situations, because when such corporations or single-company towns offer only one particular product, often intended for export, which is no longer in demand or whose prices have dropped, this often leads to intensified social problems and an increase in unemployment. And in essence, we were forced to take direct control and responsibility for the situation at some companies, which is not very good. We must try to take measures that will have a large-scale effect, rather than ones aimed at individual cases. But nevertheless, in some circumstances, this kind of direct support was unavoidable, so we supported strategic corporations, single-company towns, and the most sensitive sectors of the economy, which ultimately make major contributions to our budget revenues. These efforts will be continued.

As far as agriculture is concerned, the situation is somewhat different. In contrast to industry, which fell by nearly 14 percent in our nation during the first six months of this year, our agriculture has not been hit nearly as hard. Furthermore, if we compare its performance in the first six months of 2009 to the same period a year earlier, we can even see growth registered in certain areas. We have even observed growth with certain types of livestock – first and foremost in poultry farming and some other areas, which had fairly significant growth at eight or even twelve percent.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Did this result from replacing imports?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: It resulted in part from import substitution and in part from implementing programs we had launched earlier – I am referring to the government program for supporting agriculture, which originated from a national priority project. And so, in some areas, we have seen gains. This year was a difficult one for crop production, at least for the Russian harvest. We had a drought, which led to a smaller harvest than we had planned on. Overall, our harvest was decent though – some 90 to 95 million tonnes – but it was nevertheless lower than what we had counted on, and lower than last year, when we had approximately 108 million tonnes. Thus, our export potential in grain has become slightly smaller. Still, grain production, which is the major component of our national agriculture, is nevertheless sufficient to meet our domestic needs in terms of grain, and guarantee reasonable exports. Russia is still trying to become a major grain exporter, and I believe that we must continue these efforts. But overall, agriculture also faced the problem of receiving fewer loans. There were problems in the funding system that we needed to fix on a case-by-case basis – I am referring to the situation in the banking sector.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: The fact that money wasn’t getting out to those who needed it.

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Yes, that and other problems. Still, I want to emphasise again that since the demand for food does not drop significantly even during a crisis, the agriculture sector fared better than the industrial sector – and we must learn certain lessons from this. This means that our agriculture sector has great potential. We absolutely must invest in this area, especially since more than one third of our nation’s citizens live in rural areas.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: There were many different predictions about what would happen to the Russian economy this summer. Now, it is fall and we can draw some conclusions, since there were negative forecasts in regard to the ruble value and the banks performance.

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: In my view, the government made a multitude of good decisions. We supported our banking system. At a certain point, it had begun to waver. As a result of our direct support to the banks, we had additional money on the inter-bank market, and our banking system withstood the stress, and now, it is doing just fine.

Once we overcame the negative situation in the banking sector, we were able to extend some of the loans and some of the additional anti-crisis funds toward supporting various industries, manufacturers, the defense industry, agriculture, and just ordinary enterprises that were facing financial difficulties. We maintained nearly all kinds of subsidies and nearly all forms of aid, such as the various types of agricultural loans with the so-called subsidized interest rates, wherein part of the interest, up to 95 or even 100 percent, is paid by the government, while the agricultural producers pay significantly less.

Thus, having overcome the situation in the financial sector, we essentially created decent conditions for the industrial and agriculture sectors performance. This was the most important factor.

The national currency situation was also quite difficult. At the beginning of the year, the ruble became significantly weaker. This was an unavoidable move, which occurred in an orderly way. We did not allow for abrupt, intermittent changes in our exchange rate. Nevertheless, nobody was happy about weakening of the ruble, because it painfully hurt people’s incomes. Currently, the situation with the national currency market and the ruble is entirely calm and stable. Moreover, our national currency has even become stronger – you are aware of its current exchange rate. This is due to a variety of reasons, such as the anti-crisis measures and oil prices which are higher now than during the first and second quarters of this year. Thus, it seems to me that overall, our reasonably optimistic expectations are now justified. At the same time, there are grounds to believe that next year we will have a whole new set of problems to address.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: The anti-crisis plan has now been around for a year. What are the greatest difficulties? What has been hardest to implement?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: There are some areas where we are not progressing as quickly as we would like. I have spoken about this before, and I have given instructions to my colleagues in the Government. What areas are these? Well, one example is that at the end of last year, we remembered about one important measure – government guaranties. Unfortunately, they were not being employed actively, even though we really ought to be using them, even during non-crisis periods. So we made a decision and signed a document. At first, the document was not very successful, so we improved the document. One would think that the banks would then find it acceptable and therefore make active use of it. However, despite an established threshold level for these guaranties equal to 300 billion roubles, there are currently very few of them issued. This means that we have yet to fully learn how to implement our decisions quickly, even ones that are quite timely, urgent and very much needed. In other words, a great deal of time passed between the moment when we made the decision and the moment when it was actually implemented. And this has implications about the future: it implies that in difficult times and during periods of economic instability, we must work as actively and consistently as we can. Otherwise, we simply won’t achieve the necessary results. This is just one example, but it is a very telling one.

Another issue is unemployment, and it is a very difficult problem. Indeed, growth in joblessness was far greater than we had expected. At some point, we had about 5 million unemployed individuals, but then that number grew to 7.5 million. Currently, these figures have decreased somewhat, which means that the programs we implemented to fight unemployment are working. Still, unemployment figures are nevertheless very high, and we must put maximum effort into reducing them drastically. This challenge stands before the Russian economy as well as other nations, because according to a multitude of estimates, unemployment is the biggest problem that we must overcome. We will promote economic growth and we will give our manufacturing enterprises the opportunity to develop, but what’s most important is to control unemployment. This is a clear challenge for the President, the Cabinet, and other government authorities.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: And the regions?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: It goes without saying that these are precisely the sorts of issues that the regions have to address. We have strongly encouraged them to take full advantage of employment programs and to create new jobs, and that has helped with some of these problems. But this does not mean that the situation will resolve itself. We have to get behind them and push.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: If we turn to the current situation, the rate of inflation in Russia has dropped significantly. In August it was practically zero. Is this a seasonal factor? Or is it also the result of the measures we have taken?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: As you are aware, inflation was rampant in this country. We made a commitment to do everything possible to contain it. Some of our efforts have been unsuccessful. Spending has soared in a number of areas. And of course this has created problems. This includes difficulties in making credit available for ordinary people. Mortgages, for example: we fought hard to maintain set interest rates, but it didn’t work. Now inflation for all intents and purposes really has slowed down and prices are going up more slowly as a result. In the month of August the rate of inflation was zero percent. This is a very rare phenomenon in recent years. There are several reasons for this. Of course it is linked to a drop in the money supply and an accompanying decrease in production. Our inflation rate has dropped considerably. Generally speaking this is a good thing for people’s incomes and their purchasing power. It’s good for consumers too. I wouldn’t attribute it exclusively to stabilization measures. After all, these are the consequences of a general economic slowdown. Our challenge now is to continue to work on reducing inflation, because our job is to bring it down to 5-7 percent or less. Then we will be able to lend at normal rates. Then our citizens will be able to obtain mortgages and consumer loans at reasonable rates.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: From the very beginning of the crisis the authorities have emphasized that despite the tight government spending, the social programs of the budget will be left untouched. This runs directly counter to what is happening in other countries, even some of the most affluent ones. This year salaries of public employees have increased. Our pensions have gone up, along with salaries of the military and social benefits. Is this one of the anti-crisis measures, or is it part of an overall economic strategy?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, I think that of course this is part of our overall strategy. It is a choice that we’ve made. And this is what it’s linked to: we’re not a very rich country, we still have a lot of problems, and we have very high, unacceptably high levels of poverty in this country. Therefore, crisis or no crisis, we are simply obliged to do it. And no matter what stage of development our economy achieves, our budget still has to be more socially oriented than the budgets of, say, countries that are at a different level of development. Crises come and go – our budget must continue to be socially oriented. This should be crystal clear to everyone. And this will be the case until we have achieved an acceptable standard of living for a significant part of the population. On the other hand, this special social support does constitute part of our anti-crisis strategy. In this sense elevating pensions and wages, even in circumstances where there are no apparent resources for an increase, is a way of increasing people’s purchasing power, which of course helps the domestic market. So it’s not only support for individuals, but support for the economy as a whole. In effect it’s a twofold challenge that we face.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: But if I understand you correctly, this will effectively be the strategy for years to come?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Kirill, you have understood me correctly. I mean that our strategy is precisely to fulfill all of our social obligations. This is not some short-term ploy, but part of a strategy that will be in effect for many years to come. For as long as we have a developing economy and have not yet achieved the sort of life we want. That is why every social obligation will be funded, and pensions and other social payments will increase according to the schedule that outlines how the increases are to be implemented.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: But in such a situation are we as a country generally living within our means? Won’t all those social obligations have an extremely negative effect on the budget?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, it is true we now have a very tight budget. Our budget used to be deficit-free or, as economists say, we had a budget surplus because revenues exceeded expenses. Now we have a budget deficit, and next year it will be quite significant. Nevertheless, we are perfectly capable of functioning with this deficit and servicing it. This is not a tragedy, not a catastrophe for the economy. It simply means that we have to work very hard to improve. Our goal is to achieve a balanced budget or a budget with a minimal deficit within a year. And all the government’s efforts and decisions should be directed to this end.

But overall stability, macroeconomic stability, fiscal stability – all these will of course be maintained. There should be no doubt whatsoever about this. We are obliged to make all our payments as they come due: social payments, those associated with the financing of major industrial and economic programs, payments to the military, and our international obligations. All this needs to be taken into account in the budget. The budget has already been submitted to the State Duma and they are working on it as we speak. I think that this work will be completed on time. In this sense I don’t foresee any particular problems.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Now the authorities and those in the private sector are already discussing how we will emerge from the crisis. They are even discussing specific points of growth. That is also the subject of your recent article “Go Russia!” in which in effect you lay out the key provisions of the forthcoming Presidential Address to the Federal Assembly. In the context of the current crisis could you talk more specifically about the challenges that you think our country is facing at this time?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, whether we’re in a crisis or not in a crisis, we can safely say that the economic challenge facing us is the same: we need to modernize the economy. What the crisis has revealed is the economy’s various weaknesses. And we must take advantage of this very unpleasant period in our lives, this financial crisis, in order to fundamentally change our economy. Because however you look at it our development has been very sluggish. True, everything was okay as long as prices for energy and raw materials were high. Then those prices fell. Our economy was hit hard. Our citizens were hit hard. So we needed to defend ourselves. But there’s only one defense against such crises and that is diversifying the economy. We need, as they say, a diversified economy. So our principal task is modernization.

I have identified five main priorities for modernizing our country, to which we must relentlessly give our attention, energy and resources. Everybody knows what they are. There is energy efficiency, because we waste enormous energy resources doing what amounts to heating the outside air. In this regard there are a number of very interesting programs, including those in creation of efficient new fuels and energy saving. There is information infrastructure, both ground-based and in outer space. There is nuclear power, which has always been our trump card and really can change lives for the better in different parts of our country. There are medical drugs. We need to produce our own medicines. They must be of good quality and they must be sold at affordable prices.

Now, if we make progress in all of these areas, we’ll have a different sort of economy, one that is not reliant on only oil and gas – even though these are very important for us, and I’m sure that for decades to come we will continue to be one of the main suppliers of oil and gas – but an economy that has another essential component, one that is firmly based on high technology. We need a modernized, up-to-date economy as our foundation. In this context modernization means economic modernization.

Of course we have to get on with modernizing our society and our political system. As I have already said, our system of social support also requires changes. We are now engaged in a reform of the pension system. This is a very important subject and long overdue. And we need to do it carefully, so as not to create problems for our citizens, but at the same time improve their situations. A number of new laws on this subject will soon come into effect. For next year we have allocated large sums of money to finance the pension system. There will be an increase in pension assets, which in turn determine the pension benefit available for each recipient. Now it will be linked to previous insurance payments, to the incomes an individual received both in the Soviet Union and more recently. There will be an increase of 10 percent across the board and 1 additional percent for each of the years of employment before 1991. All of these programmes are also involved in the process of modernization.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: When you talk of modernization, what sort of time frame do you have in mind? About how many years will this process take?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Well, as you know, making predictions is a thankless task. But we are keen to make sure that it takes place as quickly as possible. Not a year, not two, not three, but maybe 10-15 years – that is a perfectly plausible time frame in which to create a new economy, an economy that will be competitive with other major world economies.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: I wanted to ask you about something else in this regard: have you set for yourself a point of no return in so far as modernisation is concerned? A point of no return in the sense that there will be no backsliding and we’ll be 100 percent committed to the new economy.

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: I think that once a significant portion of our revenue is generated by something other than energy exports, let’s say at least 30 or 40 percent of it, then we would already be living in a different economy and in a different country. If we talk about the crisis, the point of comparison is a bit different, because the question of when the crisis is over is everyone’s favourite question.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Of course. By the way, how do you imagine the day when you can say that the crisis is over?

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: You know, if we approach the question in orthodox economic terms, of course it is the day or the moment when our macroeconomic indicators have returned to their pre-crisis levels or even surpassed them. But this is something that ordinary people cannot really feel. I think that it will be the day that Russia’s citizens, any ordinary Russian person wakes up and is able to say: yes, I believe that the economic problems I once had are gone.

KIRILL KLEIMENOV: Thank you very much, Mr President.

DMITRY MEDVEDEV: Thank you, Kirill.

Windows to Russia!
comments always welcome.

A Bridge to Crimea…

Kerch.

I was drinking my morning cup of coffee & came across this neat article about a bridge from the Crimea to Russia.

This is really a much needed bridge …

Under the project worked out by the Russian design-construction company Spetsfundamentstroy the Crimea-Kuban bridge construction will cost 480 million US dollars. ‘We are working at this project. There is a working group in the nearest time we are considering the project technical-economical grounds. Talks with our neighbors, our strategic partners from Russia are being held. I ordered the Crimean authorities to hold talks next week and to sign the appropriate minutes’ – the prime minister noted. He says the Crimean authorities representatives are going to Russia to consider this question together with the Russian Federation Economic development ministry.

The Vesti channel says the length of the bridge across the Kerch strait will be 4.5 km and its width will be 22 meters. ‘It will enable to have two-way car, railway and pedestrian traffic. Besides the bridge may be the carrier of electric, gas and oil lines, a water pipe’ – Mr. Yanukovich said. He also suggested that the ‘new transport corridor will encourage the Crimea eastern part development’.

Kerch...

Earlier the Crimean authorities applied to the Ukrainian and the Russian Federation authorities to consider the possibility to sign the intergovernmental agreement on the construction of a transport passage across the Kerch strait. The Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov made the same suggestion. Under the Crimean ministers council press service the transport passage across the Kerch strait will provide the traffic of up to 10 million people a year.

Some History of the Kerch Strait:

In 1944, the Soviets built a “provisional” railway bridge across the strait. Construction made use some of the supplies brought by the Germans, who had planned to build a highway bridge across the strait. The bridge was completed in November 1944, but already in February 1945 it was destroyed by moving ice. Reconstruction was not attempted.

Ferry transportation across the strait was established in 1952, connecting Crimea and the Krasnodar Krai (Port Krym – Port Kavkaz line). Originally there were four train-ferry ships; later three car-ferry ships were added. Train transportation continued for almost 40 years. aging train-ferries became obsolete in the late 1980s and were removed from operation. In the autumn of 2004 new ships were delivered as replacements and train transportation has been re-established.

The Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov campaigned for a bridge to be constructed across the strait. Construction of an approach was actually started in 2003, provoking the Tuzla Island conflict. Furthermore, the difficult geological configuration of the area makes bridge projects expensive…

When we traveled this last time in April to Ukraine, we crossed the border to Russia at the Kerch Strait. We had to cross by ferry boat and it was a lot of fun! We had pictures of the crossing but of course I broke the hard drive. 🙁

What was neat about it is that our passports got an ocean liner stamp in them. When you cross a International border they stamp your passport with the means that you crossed the border. We have train, car & now a boat stamp. That is Cool!

So I have the feelings of yes they need a bridge but one of the neatest border crossings was at the Kerch Strait, because of the trip by boat across the border…..

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

English Music on the Moscow Train…

If you listen to the radio in Russia you will find English songs many times playing. If you go to a McDonald’s or similar place to eat that has music playing in the background, it will 90% of the time be canned music from the Western world and in English…

But in everyday life on trains and the metro, English music is not common. So the other day Sveta got a surprise on board the train that she travels all the time. A man started to sing in English. Sveta just had to tape him because as she said, “No One can understand him…”

Sveta put this on her video blog and I had to put it here because I liked it so much. It is a hundred times better than the canned Rap music that McDonald’s plays all the time…

The people sing on the train and try to make a little money by donations. Just normally they sing in Russian… 🙂

You need to try out Sveta’s video blog. She has some great videos on it!

Russian Videos From Russia!

We Will Buy YOU!

I had a saying when training managers: “Respect all who you work with, for they may be your Boss Next Year!”

Nikita Khrushchev, the leader of the Soviet Union in 1956, told the Western world, “We will bury you.” Now Dmitry Medvedev, the newly elected president of Russia, has come back with a revised offer — “We will buy you.”

You know what? I think that he is correct!
The USA should have shown more compassion & less gloating during the fall of the USSR!

Update: Several years later this article has come true. Russia has the money and America is broke…

Kyle

comments always welcome.
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New Moscow Mayor a “Shoo-In” for the Job…

Sergey Sobyanin, Russian politician
Sobyanin…

We have a term that I like to use in life and it is called “shoo-in”. That term as I recollect came from the early 1900’s and it came from horse racing, where a shoo-in was the winner of a rigged race…

So this morning while drinking my morning cup of coffee, I had to chuckle when I thought about the fact that the new Moscow Mayor is the deputy prime minister and chief of staff to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin…

Hummm lets see what the grapevine says…

According to local gossip over 99 per cent of the Duma deputies intend to OK Sobyanin for the position of Moscow Mayor. If he is given the job by the Duma, Sobyanin will step down as deputy prime minister and chief of staff to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin… 🙂

Now that is just “ducky” wouldn’t you say?

Russia – Georgia: World "Wake up and Smell The Coffee!"

Sitting ducks for a stray bomb……..?

I just read an article about the Presidents of…….

Presidents attend Georgia rally after cease-fire deal:
The presidents of Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland showed support for Georgia by appearing on stage with Georgia’s president in front of a large crowd in Tbilisi. Earlier, the Russian and French presidents announced a six-point plan for settling the conflict in Georgia.

I want to say something,: If Russia is such a bad, evil, terrible, tyrannic and despicable Empire. What are the Presidents of five (5) countries that hate Russia, doing standing all together in a so called war zone of death, on a stage proclaiming their hate for Russia!

The way I look at this situation if Russia was all they say, there would be five (5) less presidents at this moment. They either are the least intelligent Presidents that live on earth or they know that Georgia has been feeding the world a line of elephant droppings to exploit the media system.

I think that the World needs to wake up and see the “Hand Writing on the Wall” or better yet as my Grandma would have said, “Wake up and Smell the Coffee!”

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia: Nobel-prize winning Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn has died at the age of 89!

Solzhenitsyn
Solzhenitsyn...

Nobel prize winner Solzhenitsyn dies at 89 – The Nobel-prize winning Russian writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn has died at the age of 89. He passed away in Moscow in the early hours of Monday. It is believed he died of a stroke.

Solzhenitsyn’s books were the first to tell millions of people across the world about the Soviet prison system and Stalin’s repressions.

Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev expressed his condolences to Solzhenitsyn’s widow and sons.

Meanwhile, French President Nicolas Sarkozy paid his respects by calling Solzhenitsyn one of the greatest Russians of the 20th century.

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Always Trying to Find the Dirt on Putin…

Everyone is always looking for dirt on Putin. The Russian blogging scene is always flying rumors at a furious pace and the Western press likes to pick up on those rumors…

Well this is a video from the Telegraph in the UK. They like everyone else take a simple video about the Putin and his wife answering the questions on the census that is going on in Russia now…

Medvedev has been all over the news because of the same census but only Putin gets smeared all over the Western press…

Expressed by the Telegraph:

In a stilted interview, the Putin’s allowed themselves to be filmed in a sitting room at the Russian prime minister’s official residence in Moscow.

Dressed in matching beige and seated on a beige sofa, they were shown fielding questions about their backgrounds, income, and children from a government official helping compile a new Russian census.

Ludmila Putina looked distinctly uncomfortable during the interview, while Mr Putin showered his attention on his black Labrador Koni, who was curled up on the sofa, rather than his wife.

The show of marital bliss failed to convince Russian bloggers who dredged up long-standing rumors that the couple is actually divorced.

So I watched the video and could not see what they were trying to claim…

Oh well we make what we want out of anything…