https://youtu.be/VHhePpl723g

These dudes are obviously old white dudes who by their own admission were pretty well off already, but the objective things they are relaying blew my mind. I already knew about the QOL of the USSR and how sharply it declined following its collapse but I had no idea that it had rebounded. I’m already used to not believing anything Americans say about other countries, but I admit I had no idea modern Russia had this much good going for it domestically and had a vague idea only based off of the West’s negative fictional horseshit.

Do our Russian comrades here attest to this?

Also if you like the video check out the channel’s newer videos, the journalist is in the Donetsk!

  • @Shrike502
    link
    171 year ago

    Well there’s Russia and there’s Russia. Does it say where they live? Many foreigners gravitate naturally towards Moscow, but as we joke “Moscow is not Russia”. Some cities did get better, some got worse (i.e. cities centered around specific industries from the Soviet era that got closed). Plus it’s all plagued with the same issues as any capitalist country - traffic jams, corruption, the lot.

    • @redtea
      link
      71 year ago

      Sounds like one of them is a tour guide in St Petersburg, but it wasn’t clear.

      • @Shrike502
        link
        71 year ago

        Thanks! Well St Pete’s used to be similar to Moscow in a sense that it was above the rest in QOL. Although it has obviously suffered heavily in the 90’s.

        Nowadays it’s a different matter, AFAIK. They still have some great architecture and quality diners, but the communal services (i.e. snow removal) are lacking, people occasionally find dismembered bodies and all that.

        • SovereignState
          link
          61 year ago

          people occasionally find dismembered bodies and all that.

          Dropping this right after complaints about snow removal is something else lol

          • @DeHuq2
            link
            21 year ago

            Its a running joke about St Pete, there is even an untranslateable word play nickname for it.

  • @cfgaussian
    link
    121 year ago

    How well-off foreigners experience life in a semi-peripheral country like Russia is not exactly the most representative of the experiences of the average Russian. They tend to stay within in a certain milieu, usually the wealthier and more cosmopolitan cities, and mostly only interact with people from there.

    That being said Russia has indeed experienced an enormous rebound over the past 20 years and this is not something anecdotal, it is shown by virtually all social and economic indicators. But it must always be remembered that this is only relative to the absolute rock bottom post-apocalyptic conditions of the 1990s.

    Compared to the conditions before 1990 and especially before Gorbachev’s disastrous reforms that destroyed the socialist economy, there is still a long way to go, and it is probably not something that capitalism, even an industrial capitalism like Russia’s with a large state sector can achieve.

    I still am unsure of the direction in which Russia will go, it may be that the current conflict with the West pushes them in the direction of a more state led economy and a rejection of neoliberalism out of necessity, in which case they would eventually be better off than the rapidly declining Europeans.

    Or it may be that their ruling class has learned nothing and they will still stubbornly cling to liberalism in which case Russia will begin to resemble the West more and more and the benefits of the recovery will not reach the working class and the rural regions.

    It remains to be seen whether the Russian ruling class are as short sighted as the Western bourgeoisie. They must know that if they do not continue to improve conditions this will lead to increased social unrest and a political strengthening of the communists.

  • @redtea
    link
    10
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    deleted by creator