To say the person inside the opaque glass enclosure was stunned, physically flummoxed and surprised in the moment just before the security officers arrived to escort me to the guarded holding area, would be an understatement. And trust me, there’s been some stunned moments visible in the eyes of people who encountered me.
“You need to come with us,” was the end result of a brief conversation at passport control. Followed by “We need to ask you some questions.” A few hours later I exited onto the streets of the forbidden zone, with an ear-to-ear grin that would only be understood by those in my family who saw how it started as a child. However, before getting to that part of the story, let me begin with the end in mind.
This journey is not for those of worried disposition, and I do not recommend it for anyone who does not carry a strong stable constitution of snarky and pragmatically humorous outlook. In many ways this journey is exactly what you would expect, in other ways it is so completely the opposite it’s bizarre.
Y’all already know the motives and intents of how it started [Background] so, I’m going to skip the part about why I chose to do this, and instead focus on the stuff that’s likely of greater interest, the discovery stuff. I’m only here to find out the truth of stuff in Russia vs what we are led to believe.
To begin, I have found the majority of people do not understand the truth of real things and do not believe that its possible for an American to travel to Russia. Perhaps you would be surprised at the number of people who have bought into the pretenses sold by media and don’t think such a journey is physically possible.
The funny thing is, within the system of travel requests and travel permissions, nothing has changed; yet, everyone acts like everything has changed. It’s a weird dynamic to navigate a system that everyone -on both sides- believes no longer exists, but it does.
Almost all of the Russian visa centers, consulates and offices within the Western Zone, are no longer operable. For example, in the USA there are only two offices to submit an application to travel to the “forbidden zone.” One office in Washington DC another in New York. Neither accepts mail applications nor mailed documents, so that makes the logistics more challenging, but not impossible. It depends on how determined you are.
I should also add that some U.S. politicians have no idea what is legally possible. I say this because oddly some asked me to give them instructions on the process. (I have no idea why.) I should also note that everything in this process I’m describing is done with legitimate compliance, nothing is sketchy.
Current travel to the FZ is a little goofy; then again, it always was. You first have to get a letter of invitation – a strangely worded process from what I can only fathom was a former Soviet era approach that somehow remains in place. You get the letter of invitation from a quasi-official process. Keep in mind, everything RU is “quasi-something.”
So, you text a phone number +1(202) 436-XX55 [I filtered the number because I don’t want any unsuspecting knucklehead to try it out and get on some list, but if you want it – email CTH]. Within your text you need to give them your name, email address and approximate date for your travel. The travel voucher people will respond with a link to fill out a voucher application with details. Once you fill out and submit the form, they send you a bill. You pay the bill, and you get a travel voucher/invitation via pdf attachment. This is your “invitation.” The cost of the invitation depends on the type of travel visa you need.
After you get the travel invitation, you then fill out a lengthy VISA application form on a Russian consulate site. The questions are lengthy, detailed and generally you are giving them your life story. Then you print the application, attach your photograph, and you must take it to a Russian VISA center. Another quasi-governmental process.
In the USA you cannot mail the documents. You must physically take the visa application, travel invitation and your passport to Washington DC or New York. You pay the visa center to process your request. You must pay in cash. You leave the documents and your passport with the center, who then send everything to the consulate for review and/or visa approval. The center gives you a receipt with a consulate link to track your application.
You check the link provided on your receipt, and when you notice the process has returned to the visa center (a few weeks), you must then travel back to pick up your passport and visa. You do not know if you are approved or not until you pick up your passport and check. If yes, there is a full-page visa sticker inside. If no, then nothing, and you don’t get an explanation.
You can tell following the official and legal process is a little complicated, a little expensive (with travel) and annoying, but generally, it’s not unmanageable. From beginning to end, give yourself about a month to complete the tasks.
Once you have the visa, you can then plan travel. However, given the nature of the current politics, you cannot travel directly. You have to travel to a place where you can transition to travel into the RU. Turkey, a NATO member, but not an EU member state, is the hub most people use to transfer from the west to a flight into the Russian Federation.
Turkey, particularly Istanbul, is making a ton of money as an RU transit hub. Their economy is booming as the gateway into and out of the Russian federation. However, you don’t have to use Turkey; once you have an RU visa, you can fly into Russia from any Grey Zone country.
There are not many people doing this. During my trips to the visa centers, I could tell the only people there were operatives of various opaque three-letter agencies and some American contractors (some glowing brightly). The Russians and the USA agents/contractors all knew each other well and conversed with great ‘openly visible’ affection. It was like visiting a secret club where everyone else knew the rules except me. lol.. Seriously… it was casually funny.
This was a travel request process with great deliberateness, and I undertook it with extreme compliance for the detail needed. At the same time, I went through the process with a lighthearted approach and laughed at the silly stuff I discovered along the way. That humorous approach became very useful when the RU passport control officers, uniformed military, took me into the airport holding room for “questioning.”
Apparently, not many people are getting RU travel visas, and the arriving officers were a little surprised that everything was done “by the book” so to speak. After lengthy questioning (which was a little funny if you are not prone to intimidation), fingerprinting (took six guards in case I went full Jason Bourne on them), pictures (yes lots of them, the lineup kind) and general waiting while sitting on a green metal chair in an empty room while officers called other officers to find out what to do, I conjured up mental images of low-earth orbiting satellites suddenly activating and various computer networks coming online in dark and unused basements, the tone changed…. slightly.
I was escorted to passport check kiosk #47 for the friendly “welcome to Russia” part.
Big heavy stamp, thud SHIOO-WHACK noise!
“Wait, wha.., that’s it?… Da!
At this point the airport was generally closed, everything was dark, and as I descended the stopped escalator (now a stairs), I noticed my checked bag sitting on the floor in a big empty room at the end of a long-ago-stopped baggage claim conveyor belt.
I grabbed my bag, laughed at the hollow sound of the dark green/rusty exit door slamming behind me, and was greeted by a couple of laughing Ruskie wolverines sitting on the hood of a car eating pizza and smiling. “Comrade!“, funny – not funny.
Oh, and it’s the middle of April and snowing!
I’ll have much more later… Fascinating stuff about the WEST vs RU communication networks, blocked online systems, banking etc in the next article.
Oh, and remember how much you paid attention to the daily happenings of the U.S. war in Afghanistan? That’s the analogy for how the average Russian I have encountered thinks of Ukraine, which is to say – not much really. There’s far more discussion of Ukraine in the USA than there is in Russia.
Another odd little social detail I noticed. I’m in the most culturally progressive, young, urban, hip, coffee shop type geography in the country (St Petersburg); everyone has a newer model cell phone, and I noticed something different immediately. People don’t walk around attached to their devices here, you just don’t see it. People physically talk to each other, use phones for actual phone calls, and at dinner there’s no one with their head in their cell phone in the entire restaurant. It’s like 1990’s USA.
Ask me anything in general terms and I will try to respond shortly. Remember, one question per comment.




Sundance:
Thanks for this post.
I recall in the 70’s and 80’s how the US media spoke of Pravda and propaganda.
Today it seems self evident the US media are propagandists for democrats……are the Russian media more factual and honest than they were in the Soviet days?
Or is the media for both countries something that could use a healthy dose of honesty?
The Russian people are more honest than Americans
Russians do not pretend. That’s the big difference.
Thank you, Sundance.
The US and Western Media and TV stations are now Pravda
Are you visiting other parts of Russia?
Yes
I’ll go into that part in more detail later. Right now it’s best not to explain how to function with money.
I think this must have been a reply to Patience’s comment….that was later deleted by flagging.
Figured that.
Thanks, Ad rem😜
I thought it was hilarious….but that’s me. 🤪
A Sundance backside calendar is no laughing matter, Ad rem!!!
(Hear the serious tone?) 😊
See, while looking at the backside of Sundance
we all have 12 months of looking foward; like Sundance. 😜
I agree. I hope I didn’t say something I ought not have said. 😢
How do you unflag?
Sorry I flagged you while trying to click the link button.
What did you do?! 😱
A lot of that happening lately.
She made a hilarious comment, which apparently offended 20 people, but that’s beside the point. We have a number of people who are flagging comments not because they are really bad or should not be posted material, but because they didn’t like them. Instead of engaging in discussion, these Karens keep flagging posts until they are removed.
🤔🙄🥴😁🤣🤣🤣🤣😂 🥳
Karen’s have NO sense of humor.
Like the DemScumoCrats
So they have trained the bots to censor too? LOL
Actually, I think some of the flagging is accidental.
Asked 2 questions —sorta.
One about $
The other was a backside photo request
—honest…,
for Mrs. Sundance; I shall not tell a fib (🤞🏽) 😹
Ditto. We have some real idgits here with the flagging button. A serious pet peeve of mine.
could you flag the flaggers by flagging their IP address?
karens with a button are trouble! 😆
Word Press offers the functionality to see who liked a post, so I suspect who Flagged Off could be seen if they chose to offer that capability and CTH chose to afford it.
We all need to consider making donations a personal obligation to keep our beloved Treehouse afloat and resource rich; I consider a tenth of a tithe a pittance and is my absolute minimum monthly, though I do choose to exceed it.
Glad to keep you awake, girlfriend😘
They’re probably US government officials. Our KGB
Someone’s government, or their deluded minions, to be sure.
I think that’s a cop out. We have some regular people here who want everyone to think like them. They might as well be lefties.
Must be awfully boring to be around people like that…
Sitting around in an echo chamber.
No sense of humor or differing views.
😴
I’ve noticed when I hit the thumbs-up /like button, it will also activate the flag. I’m on an iPad.
MM – Coming back to your post because I just “liked” Sundance’s comment below about sharing lots of photos and the flag came up on that also! I’m on an iPad also.
Can we change the algorithm so that the post is not removed unless wolverines agree with the happy flaggers?
Do you think some of it is people just inadvertently touching the screen to the right when they scroll up – not noticing that they’ve left a flag? I have done that before although have seen and gotten rid of it. It’s pretty easy to do if you’re not paying attention. But yeah…Duhhhhh… Pay Attention!
YES!
I am an older lady and sometimes my fingers are a bit shaky.
Fascinating!! Enjoy your travels … looking forward to more updates!
Wishing you safe travels ❤️
Sundance, you mentioned Russians don’t use their phones as much as we do. Do you know if their access to sites is restricted?
I follow a guy who lives in Moscow and at Christmas he posted on X the most spectacular Christmas decorations. I’ve also been impressed with their apparent food quality and its cost and how attractive and clean cut the people appear to be. The architecture is amazing and the city appears to be quite clean. Wish I could go there. I can’t help but think we’ve been sold a pack of lies to keep us pacified while the MIC is funded with our taxes.
Twitter is restricted in Russia along with Instagram. There are workarounds obviously, and most people use them.
I believe it is Travelling with Russell on Youtube. His videos are quite good and give a good view into Russian life.
A sense of humor.❤️
I am still picturing the
Wolverines sitting on the hood eating pizza.
And yeah, it was funny 😁
Please keep us updated.
Enjoy your trip.
🙏
Pictures! Are you able to share photos? I’d love to see some images of the culture, the people, and what the society looks like. Something visual to continue breaking down the old propaganda vision we’ve all been given here in the U.S. Thank you so much for bringing us along with you, Sundance. This is invaluable.
I will share lots of pictures.
Thunder, if you want to tag along and enjoy a typical day in St. Petersburg, take a peek at some of this Russian young man’s live streams. He does some excellent streams with highlights the history and current events.
Sergey did a live stream 2 days ago from St. P. in the link below. Sundance most likely enjoyed the snowfall, too! ❄️
I saw the Mary Kay (make up) car, given to sales ladies who do well with the product. In the US they are usually the Mary Kay pink.
Are Americans, or westerners in general, permitted to purchase real property in RU and are there any restrictions on that, as there are in Mexico?
I’m not sure yet
How much is a gallon of gas or liter, I suppose.
Glass of wine.
Typical meal.
Thanks in advance.
Everything is much less.
Typical meal $5 / fancy
Typical wine $1
Gasoline $1.50/gal
WOW!!!
Like we had under President Trump
Wow.
Thank You again.
Safe Travels
OMG- we are getting so screwed!!
I watched a video of a guy doing a walk around (St. Petersburg I think). He got a cheeseburger and Dr. Pepper for nearly what the food trucks are charging for a can of Dr. Pepper, and I’m in the south where Dr. Pepper hails from – probably doesn’t even have the fake sugar crap we’re stuck with causes it’s “cheaper”.
i recommend watching videos of people shopping. At least on camera the meat looks better than what’s in stores here and much cheaper. If I remember correctly +/- $7 for a pound of steak (I’m leaning on it being a bit lower, but been awhile since I watched one).
I notice from Russian shopping channels that the produce still has dirt on it. Nothing is trimmed up, fancied, or sprayed with wax and chemicals. It looks wonderful like the farmer just dug it up, and you get to choose what you want rather than being prepackaged size bags. I also love the look of the frozen goods. Fresh fish is frozen whole. You get the whole thing and not a machine manicured fillet!
None of that Apeel crap on produce, great!~
Sundance can check on local wages and salaries, which are very relevant when comparing prices. When I was there, long ago, 50 bucks a month was pretty normal and my girlfriend, who was 46 at the time and had been a doctor for many years, was making 150 or so a month working at the local hospital.
Stuff was very ‘cheap’ to me but that was because of the strength of the dollar at the time, around 25-30 years ago. Forex, a dinner at a nice restaurant for myself, my girlfriend, my interpreter and driver was under ten bucks. I remember it because I got Stalin’s revenge from the ice cream. Dairy was a no-no for westerners back then.
SD’s recount of the visa process and interrogation brought back some marked memories. I had contacts in-country to help me out; an ex-pat network and my girlfriend.
Yea think! I am with you!
For sure.
This is just what I was thinking.
This actually has me fuming– knowing how many are struggling and being driven into poverty and dire straits by this filthy government.
Exactly!!!
And making it worse is that our population is so moronic that pedo joe could actually have a chance.
SMH
Problem is that, though we know we are being screwed, we don’t know who is responsible
Just look at the Globalist owned Uniparty.
Everyday under Xiden is No Lube Tuesday!
Forget Texas!
Sundance: Are the Russian people aware of the US administrative state lawfare against Trump and why it is being waged?
YEs and no. Yes they understand corruption, no not the Lawfare details.
For those Russian folks you chat with…if you mentioned Edward Snowden…what is their reaction?
They say, “who”?
They don’t care.
It’s funny, not so funny, that you mention Turkey’s “booming” economy due to the government policy know-it-all’s creating an artificial problem that needs to be “solved”. I was just driving home(epm on a Sat) and passed by a large CNC shop. Prior to the great illness of 2020 and the JoeBama administration there was 20ish/20+ vehicles in the parking lot on Saturdays and the same to a few less on Sundays – today, empty. Before a sign in the front lawn area with “hiring machinists”, I haven’t seen that sign for a few years. I’m in Huntsville, AL – a lot of space and vehicle manufacturing.
Is the grey zone, in general, “crushing it” in terms of thriving economies? I wonder if my anecdotal observation is a better indicator of our economy than the government “reports” that say we’re going great.
H0w common are tattos and piercings aomg young people?
Not as common. Roughly about 50% less than you see in the USA amid young people.
Not much visible facial piercings on anyone.
The not pretending attitude might explain the lack of facial piercing.
“ cool bolt thru your nose, man…”
Question.
The videos that many of us have posted trying to show people that Russia is not what they are led to believe….that it is NOT the old USSR …
Are they propaganda as many claim?
Reread what you are trying to say, it doesn’t make sense.
Is Russia -St Pete and Moscow- as beautiful as the videos many of have shared?
Many claim the videos we have shared are propaganda.
IME, it depended on what part of the cities. Forex, it was exceedingly drab and glum looking in the suburbs dominated by the Soviet era concrete apartment towers. The city centers, far more vibrant. From what I’ve seen of the livestreamers content of late, it’s even nicer now than when I was there back in the 90’s.
I think my best combination of price and accommodation came in Lvov in an 18th century building near the city center that I rented from a local family. Beautiful, multiple bedrooms and bathrooms, a laundry room and quite elegantly furnished. All for fifty bucks a month. Steam heat was free but they did ask to limit electrical use so I used the window ledge for a refer, as did many of the occupants apparently, and left the refer off. Mostly, people bought what they needed for a day or two and didn’t ‘store’ stuff, so I had to learn that habit.
Right outside the front door of the building was the trolley stop. Very convenient. Trolleys ran like a Swiss watch even in the freeze of winter.
Most of my experience was in the smaller cities in the FSU with only tourist type stuff in the big cities. One exception might have been in Odesa, where my girlfriend’s apartment on the tenth floor in a nondescript apartment bloc gave us a birds-eye view of the then first McDonalds in the city. Odesa was often a combination of drab Soviet and vibrant pre-Soviet architecture. It always felt clean and safe to me, even when out and about alone with no other English speakers within earshot.
IMO, what the livestreamers in Moscow and St. Pete and elsewhere are showing is the real deal, not a set up or being selective. Watch the grocery shopping videos in the suburbs of those cities for an alternative view. I would imagine the situation in Odesa and other cities in Ukraine has been markedly affected by the war. I hope we can weather the challenges they’ve faced in the last century.
Do you think you are being monitored by any three letter agencies, theirs or ours?
There’s? No… they don’t care.
Ours? Absolutely, they are scared to death.
Total reversal from Iron Curtain days, described in this Quora post:
‘You could approach people in the street and try to talk to them.
‘No, they wouldn’t talk to you. Not even if you spoke Russian (no one spoke English, of course). Because you would have the KGB on your heels 24/7, even if you didn’t notice it, and if they talked to you, they would be interviewed by the KGB. At some length. No, they wouldn’t be tortured or shot or sent to Siberia or anything, but they would have come to the notice of the KGB, which wasn’t anyone’s idea of a good time.’
We’re the Soviets now, comrade. Say hi to Mark Warner, hunched over his laptop in the basement in his manky underwear, with his headphones on.
Even after the end of Communism, when there, I was admonished to not smile in public and never speak English or to try Russian or Ukrainian in the streets. Hence, I had either my interpreter Tanya who posed as my girlfriend, or my actual girlfriend, with me.
Basically, wear black, don’t make eye contact, don’t smile and for Heaven’s sake don’t speak English, ever.
My family background is from Russia so physically I looked Russian so fit in that way. The rest though, American habits, nyet. It got better over time and by the end of the 90’s, had relaxed a bit, though was still prevalent in the smaller cities IME. I can’t imagine it being a factor now, except perhaps in some of the ‘Stans and for different reasons than ex-Communism.
Get em big dog. If you catch them in the act, try to memorialize please.
That would be classic.
SD- This will be a great long form story if we het the ending right.
Q- What do you and the RU wolverines project as the main effects of increased communications btw normal US and normal RU citizens on the overall state of world affairs?
Thanks & Na zdrovie
Peace !!
I’ve been praying for peace b/w USA and Russia since I was a child in the 50’s. It is attainable if the masses want it. So far, only DJT has stood for peace with Russia and other Nations.
Give peace a chance.
Peace is the Prize.
Standing is the Price.
I wish I could relate this info to the rest of the world, especially since most people are completely oblivious to what the real world is like when it comes to the Russians. Why don’t you want this info out to a broader audience?
Thanks.
I am going to get questions that could compromise my position.
It’s not the RU I worry about, it’s the USA
Sad that it is the reverse of what we are led to believe.
I am conflicted.
Happy for them.
Sad for us.
Blessings on your journey.
Sigh …
Feel like there was a sign that you went through Kiosk # 47
Great catch!
If a million or more of us sent a text to that number and filled out the voucher same as Sundance………
Yea, they’d probably shoot us anyway.
Me when I see another password protected SD post has just been queued
IKR?
And then this happened…
💍
☎️
-from Russia with love
This is what the “Russia invaded Ukraine” narrative looks like
and no, they do not genuinely believe they are doing what the American people want them to do.
They are all traitors.
That photo is shameful.
It is such a treat to read this article and the comments. Makes me think of a June 2017, trip
hubby and I did, last minute to Moscow and St. P. We were in UK (from Canada) and set it
up ourselves using the internet before we left Canada.
Guide and driver met us in Moscow, spent 3 days with them then they put us on train to St. P., where another guide and driver picked us up. Whole 7 days was seamless, interesting and enjoyable. One of the guides was surprised that we could watch RT at home but she that could not watch Fox !- yet, here we are today and we cannot watch RT!
We flew from UK and had a 7 day visa, which we got online with guidance from our Russian helper online but if you travel from Finland on the ferry you can stay for 72 hours without a visa, if I remember correctly.
St.P. is well worth many repeat visits. (We came home only knowing one Russian word,
Спасибо, ‘Thank you’, which was used liberally!!)
Pronounced “spasebo?”
Absolutely!
Never ascribe to ignorance that which is most accurately explained by evil.
Do not help your opponent by accepting his whitewash.
Yup. 😁
You rock Sundance. Thanks for this valuable information and your experience
Sundance: Any EV vehicles? What ratio to gas engines?
I saw two EVs’.
I think in Moscow they might be more prevalent. Moscovites are more pretentious.
the Russians had a saying….” V Pravda nyet izvestya, V Izvestya nyet pravda.”~~~”In truth there is no news, in news there is no truth”, yes, I took Russian, yes, I wouldn’t mind living there,,,,,I am glad you are back safely, no questions right now, I still don’t think it is safe yet, even with the password, you are being looked at I am sure
Why is Russia still pretending to invade Ukraine over 2 years later?
Huh?
?
Is Ukraine still being invaded by Russia?
Smart Move by Zelensky, Puts Date on U.S. Claim of Russian Invasion, State Dept Begins Embassy Evacuations in Ukraine
Has the “invasion” part ended yet?
I went to Russia in the mid 80’s. It was part of a time abroad. It was beyond cool. Our group was small and our time about 2 weeks.
I know I did my best to keep up diplomatic relations, in that little bar in Leningrad. Not sure who had previously been representing US but we went toe to toe on the vodka, and never flinched.
The Astoria was aged but old world cool. We did stick out though. Maybe it was the accent. We were a hit!
Back then our visas were issues directly by the Russian embassy in DC. If there was another avenue, I can’t say. I just remember it was very complicated. Took months.
Looking back, I think there were some other things going on. Our two guides might have been fronting. Who knows.
I have wanted to go back for a while now.
Back in the ussr, you don’t know how lucky you are…
What made you decide to go to Russia at this time?
I think the EU and Russia are the key to predicting our future.
I think NZ and AU are the testing ground for the Western control mechanisms that are about to be unleashed upon us. I think we are all going to be very surprised and this is my way of prepping.
Bring a Western phone into the Grey zone and you have a directional communication tool that is of great value. Bring a grey zone phone into the yellow zone and you have a directional communication tool of great value. There are tools available and I want them secure before SHTF
Very interesting and mysterious. Thanks for undertaking this great journey and reporting back to your loyal fans.
You are a great scribe and scout. May God take care of you and protect you always.
Second this! No questions, just trying to get that grey zone phone!
Smart move.
This may very well be key to discovering how best for those of us in the west can act, by learning the lessons of how the citizens in the old soviet block nations survived and maintain a semblance of sanity. Love that you are able to go and do in person and learn on site through your travels. Thank you for this; and thank you whoever our Russian Treepers are;
am pretty sure a wry sense of humor will be key regardless of what is heading our way.
Samizdat.
Be Sand.
That does not portend good things for elderly Aussie geriatrics, SD.
I have to admit, though, that there are but a few of us that see most of the ‘blind leading the uninitiated’ for what it is – which leads to a certain amount of approbation from sleeping fellows should we dissent in the slightest.
Resisting “The Man & The Woman” is fun, in some respects – a battle of wits, per se.
Enjoy your time away from the madhouse.
Stay vigilant – and safe.
Totally agree with first two paragraphs. i hope you are correct about the third paragraph. A grey phone to do business outside the dollar and CBDC.
FYI, launches have been twice a week for months. Unusually busy. Quite a few starlink but not all.
I’d be interested to know if you have or plan to attend any large sporting events? I’m curious about the levels of security at those events vs the levels of security in the US knowing terrorism is a threat in both places.
After the recent terrorist attack in Moscow, security at venues has increased
Thank you for the amusing/bemusing story, Sundance!
My question: did you attend any Orthodox services and/or noticed the number of people attending services?
Yes, and Christianity is thriving.
That sounds encouraging!
I am so happy to hear that! When i was in St Pete in 1996, I watched as the helicopter was replacing the crucifix on the dome of an Orthodox Church. All of us cheered. Loudly. And we made the sign of the cross as in blessing ourselves.
I remember, during that period, what, to me, was an exceedingly long holiday period because different areas used different holiday/religious calendars.
Forex, I celebrated New Years twice in different areas due to one being on the Julian calendar and another being on the Gregorian one.
Also, there were two Christmases, at least what I understood them to be, one Orthodox and one secular. I remember bringing family gifts at two different times in different areas for
Christmas.
I believe that was related to the recent fall of Communism at the time. I believe the Communists had outlawed what we know as Christmas.
Back then, the instant information of the internet was still pretty much a dream. 🙂
You’ve motivated me to plan a trip.
Do you detect any racial problems in Russia like we have here in the USA?
No. However, it should be noted there’s not much diversity here. At least where I am. I have not seen a single black person in almost a week.
What are the Russians opinions of it today?
I have been following this guys blog for a couple of years. He gives a nice slice of life all over Russia
https://www.youtube.com/@baklykovlive
Sergey is excellent to watch!
I remember you posting a video of someone doing a walk around of St. Petersburg, led to a rabbit hole of watching a few other similar walk-around/shopping videos in Moscow and St. P. That’s when I learned of Star’s Coffee and the KFC re-branding (the American companies sold their operations at losses creating a huge tax break I imagine).
In the long run, do you think the western companies will ever go back in or are their brands going to be permanently lost to the new Russian brand?
I don’t think the Russian owners will allow the USA companies back in.
The Russians are doing quite well without us or the EU. They will likely reopen for some products, but the retail businesses that left Russia are not likely to be permitted to return.
That was my thought reading about. Especially the rapper that bought into Stars. The west screwed it’s companies, but I’m sure those at the top (woke CEO’s) welcomed the tax break and thought: “we’ll be back at it in 12 to 18 months).
I think they’re all toast except those that are making side money as conduit to Russia, think KFC – the colonel sells his recipe spices pre-mixed to China and China sells it to Russian KFC.
I think of hearing stories where kids in Japan, China, etc think KFC, McDonald’s etc originated in their country. In 5 to 10 years they’re be a whole generation of growing Russians who think Star’s coffee was always Star’s Coffee.
Good for Russia. They do not need the USA or the EU to survive. I anticipate that they will actually thrive in the very near future. The USA and the EU under “mandates” by the WEF are going to go SOUTH, as they find out that we know that they are BS operatives based on lies.
World War Xi.
WEF is a suicide pact for the West on behalf of China.
Run out of the City of London.
The war on Russia? Ultimately to the benefit of China if they can pull it off.
Putin won’t live forever
Any idea on who is being groomed to take over?
No idea.
Thanks for sharing. Look forward for more information. Please share any beautiful sites you may see. Mountains, etc.
Does Russia fund Iran’s military hostility toward the State of Israel solely because the State of Israel is a U.S. client, or is there another reason?
Huh? Explain your premise with citation
The US funds Iran.
Obama & pallets of cash ring a bell?
How about pedo joe releasing the millions of $ to Iran that President Trump had locked down?
Get your facts straight!!!
I love it! Reminded me of a Brad Thor novel.
Brad Thor hates Donald Trump…. FYI
THANK YOU SUNDANCE!!!!
It has become quite unsafe for Americans to travel through the EU (and any American big city) due to crime.
Is rampant crime apparent where you are?
Can you freely walk about the city without worrying about being mugged?
HUh? The EU is very safe, much safer than the USA. I have been to Barcelona, Paris, Amsterdam, Budapest, Hamburg, Dresden, Breman, Warsaw, Prague, Milan, Rome, Matera, Bari, Madiera, Lisbon, Istanbul, Capadocia and St Petersburg. Not a single place where crime was a factor.
No crime here at all that I can see.
My sister just got back from Madrid, Valencia and Amsterdam and said she felt safer in all those places than Seattle.
I assume our leaders want us living in a state of decay and fear.
Yes, that is the Obama plan to transform America – into a country unsafe for normal everyday American citizens. Vote PDJT to end this catastrophe.
Stay safe Sundance. We can’t spare you.
Would you describe the food you ate for the usual three meals a day. Safe travels and look forward to your photos.
Eggs, coffee, OJ, toast, salmon, granola.
Sandwiches, fish, salad, water
Pizza, pasta, hamburgers, fish, meat
All good.
I am stunned. It seems that the USA is mired in some kind of bubble. That bubble does not reflect the true nature and condition of the rest of the world. We are devolving into a 3rd world country rapidly.
When I was working in academe I had the opportunity to meet a former ussr kgb officer who became a professor, and received a grant to my university. Sergei was very interesting. Heard many stories. This was back in 2005. I would ask him pointed questions. He would laugh and answer :het. I liked him. I like noisy high maintenance men.
As you around the Russian people, do they seem happy? I have this old lady’s image in my head from the USSR days. Thank you.
The Russian people are busy, industrious and living life… having families.
The easiest way to explain modern Russia is to remember 1990’s USA… IT really is like that.
Wow. How sad for us.
Have the refineries been badly damaged by drones?
No. Not that I am aware.
I’m curious whether they get USA television, USA news channels or USA internet.
They get Russian television, news and internet. It’s Russia.
Not a question, just a comment. When I went to St. Petersburg in around 2004 there used to be services (here in the UK) that would obtain the visa because there has always been the sort of process you described to some degree.
I found it slightly ironic that it was a little easier to go to Russia on my US passport than my EU one as the latter required some sort of insurance policy also be purchased. The US passport did require some questionnaire be filled out that was a mirror image of what the US required to issue any Russian national a visa. Questions like “do you know how to operate a rifle”, etc. as at that time I was a “military aged” male.
The place was great and I would have thought seriously about living there but the cuisine is not to my liking so much and the wine was mediocre. Anything from western Europe in this regard was very expensive.
I’ve always had respect for any country that can put a man in space. Snowden can–and I expect is–living very happily there.
I look forward to reading your reports and commentaries.
My dad, who was as American as apple pie, always said there were only two places in the word outside of the US that he really wanted to see in person. One was Normandy and the other was St. Petersburg…he made it to the first, but not the second, so I will read your stories from that place with a little extra personal interest Sundance! Stay safe and Godspeed!
PS – no specific questions but please post pictures as you are able!
What are you hearing about the Gaza War?
I lived and worked in Moscow 1990-1995 and purchased clothing at local markets so I didn’t stand out as a foreigner. (Local price vs westerner price) How are ordinary folks dressing there these day? More European I would imagine. Be safe and thanks for all you do for us in the branches.
We were in Istanbul at Christmas. You can tell the region is booming. Can see Erdogan has invested into tourism infrastructure. Saw Bill Gates house and a few other billionaires homes too.
Greece – especially Athens was booming. Loved being there in the cool of winter.
Pre Covied we had plans to visit Russia, go on the Volga river & St Petersburg. Baltic states have to be hurting for tourist business – No one wants to travel to Estonia & Latvia & damn sure Finland unless you go to St Petersburg.
We’ll be in Hungary next year looking to see how they are doing since we visited a few years before Covid.
SD it is amazing your outlining US/EU cellphones don’t use same software as non-G20 – spying bastards.
As to the Geopolitical fighting, if US/EU separate money with BRICs would think trading of hard assets w/b the place where you see the difference in value of such – food, gas prices, electricity. And with FedReserve Monopoly money, the West’s ability to inflate away wealth will be easy. Instead of $2-3 Trillion in diluted USD every year, they can do $20-30 Trillion, the path like Brazil did in 80s & 90s – everyone in US will just move the decimal place over another space or two to the right.
How does this site operate with no cabal interference while you’re in Russia?
What is the difference?
No issue at all accessing CTH from Russia. It’s like I’m in my office at home.
What did you declare as the “purpose” for your visit and do you think they (Russians) believed you?
Tourism. I don’t care if they believed me. lolol