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.




This is not a plug to watch, but I have recently come across a Russian video/blogger vasya in the hay on YouTube . He goes to forgotten villages, poor elderly and helps different people in Russian villages. He lives in Kaluga. Just thought some of you may enjoy watching some of the heartwarming stories.
He is great! The village reminds me of living there 1996-1999.
Sundance, it is my honor to say the Treehouse is my only source of real news. Thank you for walking the walk and not just talking the talk.
My question:
I saw your response regarding the price of various things like gas, wine, etc. and it sounds wonderful.
Is there such thing as an “average income” for an “average Joe” in Russia?
You are covered in prayer by so many, and it is my privilege to be one of them. Thank you seems trivial, but it is from a heart of gratitude.
Godspeed, Sir 🙏🏻
The “average” Russian probably makes around $1,000 to $1,500 USD per month. Keep in mind there are a lot of rural Russians. A family of 4 can easily live well on $2,000 USD/month.
$1 = 85 Rubles.
I am pleased that they are living quality lives. It is what we wish for all people. It is important to me personally that someone I trust is able to report authentically. The view through a clear lens is very valuable these days.
That clear-lens-view is also uncommonly rare in our mal-dis-mis age.
What’s interesting about this is when I was in Moscow in 1999, our translator taught at Moscow University. I don’t recall if she taught full or part time.
I don’t recall if her husband was employed.
Her mother worked for the Department of Education there…or what passed for it.
The translator and her husband lived in a nice apartment somewhat nearby where the statue of Yuri Gagarin is, and her mother lived in another apartment upstairs in the same building. We stayed in her and her husbands apartment while there, and they stayed with her mother.
Her salary then was about $500/month. I say it is interesting because from what you report their current income is, it does not seem like it has increased all that much from 25 years ago. I don’t say that as a bad thing, but I see the difference between an increase in income over there over that time, and think about the increase in income here from 25 years ago to today.
Question: Are the prices of common groceries still inexpensive? Restaurant prices? Other goods? It seemed inexpensive when we were there, but commensurate with their monthly income.
Bottom line, is their economy in line with their income? I can’t believe they have the outrageous inflation we have had.
One can get a good overview of ordinary life from locals who relate their experiences and shop the stores with Youtube videos of their wanderings.
From what Sundance has related on income, IMO the average person in St. Pete or Moscow or similar cities could live comfortably on that salary.
Forex, I live comfortably on the minimum SS for my age here in the U.S. Frugally, yes, but comfortably. It’s less than the figures Sundance shared.
When I was there, off and on, a typical wage was 50 bucks a month and my girlfriend made a good wage as a doctor, around 150 bucks a month. Of course, that was long ago, just after the end of Communism. She also got her apartment for free when Communism ended, perhaps like a paid-for condominium here in the U.S. There were still upkeep and common space costs, etc.
Watch a few videos and see what you think. Paying attention to details (look around at other things besides what the videographer is focusing on) can be eye-opening.
Tucker Carlson did a video about Russian grocery prices and product availability (hint: the Moscow grocery store looked very Aldi-esque). That video contained enough positive facts about Russian prices that all the usual sources went ballistic on Tucker, the “yuppie commie rat bastard agent”.
Wow. The last time that was possible here was in the 50s & 60s. Welcome to the American Nightmare.
Yes, we lived a comfortable life in a new house on dad’s government salary of about 1200/mo in the early 60’s. He did do tax returns for people on the side to pay to send me to private school. Mom was a full time household manager.
Ironically, she made more money than he did when they met after the war, as a commissioned sales person and print (magazine/newspaper) clothing model, but gave that up when I was born in the 50’s.
She was my connection to Russia, firstborn here after her parents escaped the Reds in 1918. I learned frugality and the rural Russian way of life from her.
I went to USSR when Andropov was Premier in the 80’s. We had to keep receipts of every transaction, money exchange and purchases. When we left, if things didn’t zero out then you were in trouble. Interesting trip then. Everyone wanted Levis and Walkmans.
I went to Czech in the late 90’s. We drove to Salzburg Austria. Started on a 4 lane highway. Turned onto a two lane road. Turned onto a dirt road. Down to one lane dirt road. Then we saw the fence and boarder check station. They lifted the gate to a 4 lane highway that was empty for the first 5 miles until we hit the first intersection. Austria was quick and efficient to build the highway to the boarder. Czech had nice internal roads, but hadn’t started connecting them to the west.
It’s been said that the greatest artists have at least a tiny bit of madness lurking beneath the surface. Yep. 😉
(No questions for you right now, Sundance, but just some advice… don’t let them try to make you sit on the Group W bench!)
Are you kidding? The group W bench is where all the cool guys are!
Listen to the song “Alice’s Restuarant” again. Within the theme, you will understand my current disposition, snark and approach toward this journey.
Love you like a brother!
yes, jello has been around for while. I remember him well. Be safe my friend.
Since Trayvon was still warm. 😄
Me too… thank you Sundance
Yep, be the seeing eye dog for the blind judge…
Absolutely, because with our disposition, snark and approach to our combined journey, they are going to get the picture that this…… IS A MOVEMENT! I am loving the journey! God bless you all!
God Speed.
So the pizza thick or thin crust, what toppings?
Margherita pizza, with fresh basil. Super good. Stunningly so.
I didn’t grasp the full meaning of “wolverines on the hood of a car” when I read this. Nice.
Stay safe sir.
mmmm…Sounds like the Northern Italian kind.
Fresh Mozzarella by any chance? And plain ground up delicious tomatoes?
haha. I’ve been craving a Pizza Margherita since the last time I was in Italy>>>>> 1970’s!.
Will you visit an ice skating show while you are there? Russia has the most awesome skating shows in the world….numerous and AWESOME athletes. If I were to ever go to Russia that would be my must see. Evgeny Plushenko’s shows….you can google them or what ever they do in Russia. Most amazing.
I hope he does. Also, their opera and symphony and theater are amazing IMO. What caught me off-guard was the opulence of, of all things, the circus. My girlfriend in Odesa surprised me with that one time and it was awesome, not in a big tent but in an indoor coliseum where we sat in the round and way up high and watched the amazing aerialists do their thing, among many other acts.
Admission, to me, was dirt cheap, fifty cents in hryvnia. I found the other arts to be equally accessible and TBH I didn’t mind the language barrier, being woefully lacking in the local languages. It was the experience that mattered.
What is the feedback you get about the Russian people’s opinion of Putin.
Russians hate politics. Russians are surrounded by politics. Russians try to escape politics whenever possible.
Curious, do they lump”Geopolitics” into the same category, and avoid like the plague?
For instance, are they aware of, or interested in WEF, and your whole Yellow vs Gray perspective?
I’m not too wild about politics myself.
Sounds like what all my friends say about politics.
Can most young people, 40 or younger, afford to buy a home? Car?
Eh…. It depends. Yes, and capable more so than the average young American, but not independently. Russian families, parents and grandparents usually help out and provide the modest financial resources to get started.
Please confirm or refute whether or not you need a Drs Rx to buy medicines in Russia.
Is it like the U.S., EU, etc or like Mexico, India etc where no Drs Rx is required?
I’m not sure. I’ll ask.
Thx.
A lot of US prescription meds are available over the counter there. Not everything, but more common things such as antibiotics.
I was expecting that you were talking about OUR 3-letter Agencies questioning you, nop the RU.
Do you expect any questioning buy our agencies when you return? Have any questioned you on previous trips?
I was fingerprinted last year and questioned in the USA aggressively after returning from Budapest. My fingers are crossed for allowed reentry this time. I don’t want to think about it yet.
There’s always the southern border.
Heh, I was thinking the same thing.
SD can just walk across the border freely, apparently, if he is at all worried about being bothered by the modern day US KGB. 😉
Good thing he is not a woman, I mean, a REAL woman, not as the latest trend.
Just stroll across, with no I.D. and get all sorts of free bennies,…AND a new alternate I.D.
Such a deal!
😉
I mean it, I would do that, myself, if I was him. Hehe! Not even a joke!
They are always messing with him, so just play their game. Walk right in, like you own the place! Luggage in tow, dressed nice, not skinny and starving. He would fit right in. Apparently no questions asked either!
But, Im also a shade of brown ( Native ) so it would be easy peasy eh!
Joey Chalupa from Mexico City. Which way to the airport and where’s my free charge card?
My name: Jose Jimenez.
That’s pathetically funny. But it is still funny. Then Sundance can also get auto registered as a Dem and be invited to go squat in some rental unit in the nearest “Blue” state.
He could even probably be given a new phone. Yes, pathetically funny. Maybe they’d even fly him into Fort Lauderdale. That’s where they’re dumping the most illegals in Florida.
LOL!
Sorry but that is funny s**t!
His back up plan could be to hitch a ride with the many illegals landing by small motor boards on the treasure coast area (Jupiter, Stuart, etc.). That’s a very viable option these days. He needs to stay area from Ft Pierce area as the Coast Guard does a good job of picking off those boats/illegals. Yeh. This would work too.
Yup, for me whats actually makes it almost tempting (if I was 10 years younger!) is the opportunity to begin the process of developing an alternate identity to slip into….
I can’t think of a downside….
A+
😆 🤣 😂!
🤣🤣🤣
Godspeed and safe I pray.
Sundance,
Are you getting a sense of how propagandized the media is there vs how it was during the Soviet Union (or the way it is in the USA today)?
There is an inversion afoot, and it is very noticeable in the media.
The Russian media are more honest about things than the USA media. This is a big part of the inversion.
Pravda is now CNN. Not an exaggeration
I had my suspicions. Thanks.
Not that CNN was ever all that honest.
I just want to say “Thank you” for ALL: information, joy, laughter, sadness, prayer, fellowship incognito and reassurance that there is indeed some intelligent patriotic life in these united states. I continue to pray for you, all treepers and the return to sanity for this once great nation. May God grant our hopes for America as a true constitutional republic instead of the mess we have now. And soon, please, Dear Lord.
How do Russians perceive our freedom/government control versus their freedom/government control?
Thanks for the education you have provided for years.
They have not yet noticed the inversion underway, though they do notice that American liberty is not what it once was.
Sundance, thank you for taking the time to share your insights about Russia. Many interesting questions and answers.
What do Russians think about China and the Chinese people? Is the current closeness of Sino-Russian relations mirrored at the popular level?
Keep in mind a great percentage of Russians are geographically considered Asian.
China and Russia are friendly, but the Western Russians -those used to buying USA/EU stuff- don’t seem to care for the Chinese goods.
My father traveled to Russia in the late ’60s as part of an educational exchange (he was a high school history teacher at the time, later a professor at University of Virginia). So that was back when the USSR was still in place.
His trip was likely far less rigorous than yours, process-wise.
I have no animosity towards Russia, it’s government, or it’s people (including Putin).
They should be our ally, not our adversary.
Interested in hearing more about your adventure.
I love these articles Sundance. It’s a look into another world that the media tells us doesn’t exist. At my age I don’t envision having the opportunity to see Russia, so seeing through your eyes will do.
I spoke to my girlfriend in Brasil today. Bolsarno is drawing hundreds of thousands at rallies.
This was a rally in Rio on Copacabana Beach today
She has never been political and did not vote in the last election. Everyone hates Lula now.
Brasil is a very Catholic nation and they are not on board with the alphabet agenda
Sundance, excellent thread.
My question. Do you have any interest in attempting to convince Ace at Ace of Spades — and a few of his otherwise excellent readers — that you, in fact, are not being shown a “Potemkin Village”?
He, his co-bloggers, and the lion’s share of his readers are on the same page ideologically, intellectually, and spiritually — mostly — as Treepers. I just wonder if you could be bothered to, someday, address Ace directly in an attempt to change his position on this whole Russia thing.
I don’t agree with him on this. I don’t believe everyone on the Right who visits Russia is shown a carefully planned tour of a Potemkin Village, but I’m not in a position to change anyone’s mind, because I’m a nobody who’s never left the U.S. You, on the other hand…
I can only assure you that I am totally free range, completely independent, and not for a single second getting a different experience of Russia than the average Russian. It sucks for me just as it would suck for them; and/or conversely if it is nice… it is as nice for me as it would be for them.
I have no handlers and no one who would create a false impression. My experience is raw, unfiltered and very ordinary.
You are preaching to the choir here. I believe you.
I just wanted to see if you had any interest in convincing Ace.
Not only Ace. Just in writing with people of that particular mindset in your mind. Even at the back of your mind. Everyone here, bar one or two, already believes you. I’d like to see minds changed.
I don’t ask for much! 😄
Well said Taq.
Why don’t you comment there yourself?
I do, and for at least as long as I have here. Probably longer, as I only discovered the Treehouse around 2012.
I have neither the silver tongue nor the expertise to sway anyone.
Don’t underestimate yourself!!
AOS can easily come to CTH and read Sundance’s article and replies to questions just like everyone else.
I wish we lived in a world where prominent bloggers would participate in each others’ forums. The best we can hope for, and thankful for both Sundance and Ace, is that they at least participate in their own, which is rare as hens’ teeth. I doubt anyone ever saw anyone named Hoft involved in a discussion at TGP, for instance.
Why should any of us care what a spittle flecked RINO Never Trump rag of blog thinks about Sundance’s travels? Ace is full of himself and full of 💩
Taq, I wish a lot of things were different than the hard reality. The Hoft bros. aren’t operating a blog; it’s a news site with subscriber commenting.
I’ve read AOS in the past because it used to be on Sundances list of sites in the right hand frame of CTH 1.0. But I eventually stopped visiting.
At the beginning of the sanctions I laughed and told my spouse that we may consider investing in rubles and Russia as a possible future home. All in fun as I have never traveled there. But it might not be a joke after all.
What’s the process for RU citizens to buy a firearm? Thank you.
No idea, but I did see a nice 9mm for sale in a convenient store and they do have lots of hunting.
I didn’t ask about the handgun because that would have been very visibly English.
You are also my main source. I read others but I am always here first. I know I can always get the truth here. You lead such an interesting life! I can’t wait to read more. Many prayers for your safe journey. Vaya con Dios young man.
How can we open up comms with our fellow wolverines abroad? It’s past time we put our (stupid) politics aside and started a direct dialog. Hoping this is part of what your trying to do!
I would love to book a hunting trip in Russia!
In order to figure out how to overcome the oppressive tyrannical Gummint we have, its helpful to study how the USSR was undermined and defeated.
It couldn’t hurt to ask people in the know “How did you DO that?”
👆👆👆👆👆
Try using YouTube, Instagram or Telegram. Russians seem to use those platforms.
Doing a lot of Telegram (since 2020), and I even have some (seemingly) RU channels… though Apple clearly censors a lot of content. If the folks abroad have any good channel suggestions, send them out!
I was politely stopped upon re-entering the country from Canada once. Apparently I was a “triple name match.” (My wife was waved through but chose to stay with me.) This was in mostly pre-computer days and I could peer through the window to watch two officers flipping through piles of green-bar paper (remember that stuff?) and filling out a rather large form. When they had finally finished doing that, they let me go on my way, having asked only the most superficial questions. It was obvious enough that “I wasn’t the ‘droid they were looking for.” But, patience matters. (Remember: “you could have their job! Ick.”)
Loving your missives, Sundance, thank you!
Question for you and sincerest apologies if it’s been asked, but I *think* I read through all the questions: My 34-year-old niece, who lives in England with her Brit hubby, detests Putin for what she presumes to be his/KGB murder of journalists, not to mention Navalny. She is all-in for Ukraine. She is a practicing Anglican and a recovering liberal, she is seeing the light, but it’s a dead-end when it comes to Putin.
Have you been able to get a take on what Russians think about these events? Thank you!
Russians generally don’t have any issue with Putin that I can visibly identify. The general sense is that Putin’s a tough guy and average Russians prefer to stay as grey people to avoid having the RU radar looking at them.
” average Russians prefer to stay as grey people to avoid having the RU radar looking at them. ”
That I would assume, is ingrained in their DNA. Stay below the radar, dont cause problems, dont attract attention. That part of the Russian psyche, Im sure, has been handed down through the generations considering the tyranny they have been subjected to, for hundreds of years at this point.
Recent immigrants, I know from Russia, do have a problem with Putin. Yet it is not as vitriol as the American left has with Trump.
People whose families (or themselves) had problems in Russia years ago will never believe or trust a change there.
Have your patriot hosts described what life in RU was like under Covid? Did they succumb to the masks, were they forced to take the jab or be fired or did RU not succumb to the Fauci dictates?
I didn’t ask, but it’s a good question. I will ask them.
Thanks!
What’s the “feel” on the street? Do you sense the need to keep your head on a swivel, or do you feel secure enough to relax?
Just to say, he already spoke of there being no crime, back further in the thread. He did say, he is free. No tails, nothing like that. They dont care, is what he said….
Read the thread, and you’ll see answers to most of the questions we can think of. Good questions anyways.
Some of them he wont touch, for obvious reasons. All of the questions I would have, have already been asked, and answered.
Yeah, I read what he said.
I have a lot of experience living and working in some fairly sketchy areas. Sometimes, you get a “vibe” that is not congruent with what your eyes and ears perceive. Sometimes it’s positive and sometimes it’s not.
If you haven’t had this experience, you wouldn’t understand.
I have.
Ive traveled to several continents. For work.
Just for an example. Sao Paolo, Brazil. I did not feel safe, and there was some sense that people were just faking it. Or afraid to make eye contact, little things like that. I get ya…..
Exactly. I felt more at ease in Colombia than, say, certain parts of Turkey, even though Colombia has an objectively higher crime rate and Turkey is, in theory, a “friend”
My most interesting experience was crossing into East Berlin when the wall was still up. Despite the militarization, deprivation, obvious injustice, and machinations of communist society, the vibe on the street was one of tranquility.
I traveled in Rio, Sao Paolo & the countryside between those two cities in 2022 before Lula came back into power.
I traveled with my GF who is a native Brasilian, and she is very street smart.
At no time in Rio did I feel unsafe in the least. I witnessed the police roughing up some thieves outside the big shopping mall there.
On the beach in Santos near Sao Paolo we were warned about thieves on bicycles snatching cellphones from the unaware. Again, witnessed the cops doing rough duty on some deserving perps. We did have one 20 minute stroll at night from dinner that was stressing out the GF
but – – – compared to the mayhem I’ve witnessed on Telegram and YouTube in the USA, I felt safer most of the time in Brasil than I would in NYC or SFO.
I live in the Florida Panhandle countryside and it’s positively bucolic here. The cops tell illegals to find another town.
Everything’s relative.
The thing about high crime in a lot of places is that it can feel safe until it happens to you – several times.
Snake-eaters of SE Asia. Ningo. Trust your gut. Always.
Bingo is the word mis-typed.
You have already answered any good questions I was going to ask.
A few comments though:
The level of respect you get from me personally, is about as high as it could get. I know no one, who would do what you do, and say what you say, and not give a flying you know what, about what some think of it. I swear to God, I would sit down and have a beer and a steak with you, and it would be like my own best friends in my life. You are that guy, and your pragmatism, sense of humor and snark, is exactly my people! God Bless ya SD. You are a man that most should aspire to be.
You have a very, very large brass set sir, there is no back down or give in, in you, and for that, I am grateful to get to read your insights and travels, to get us the truth, no matter the cost.
Its not a bromance either! 🙂
Bottom line is, you are a good and decent man, whose mission in life is to do good for others, and to open the eyes of our fellow human beings. for that, I thank you sir.
God Speed. Have fun too man! For sure!
We are truly living in a Bizarro world. When I was in Strategic Air Command sitting nuclear alert, many of the targets our squadron was ordered to hit if the war started were in Ukraine, and now our corrupt politicians are taxing us to send money to the very Communists and Oligarchs who still control it.
Truly, it is Bizarro world. Up is down, down is up.
Big O bizarrO for almost 16 years now.
So much Deep State was still running under O during Trump’s stymied term.
I had the SAC experience, too. Then I had the opportunity to hang out with a TU-95 Bear bomber crew and found out that we shared more in common with them than we did with most of our friends and neighbors.
I was in Ljubljana, Slovenia last month. In general, a young hip crowd. Everyone was outside at bars/restaurants each evening drinking with family and friends. Propane heaters lit, ski type jackets on, and furry blankets to sit on. Everyone was jovial and having a good time. Was that what you saw and experienced in Russia?
Question for SD: is there still a large Jewish community there preparing for Passover? Thank you and Praying for you.🙏😇🌺
I have not noticed any visible jewish organizations. However, that said I assume they are here as they are in other countries.
Recommend:
Beer at Fiddler’s Green (Rubenshtein Ulitza)
Eats at Pelmenia (I think there are a few around town)
Enjoy! I’m jealous — would love to revisit. SPB was my favorite place in Russia (been twice).
Any defund the FSB protesters over there?
Hahahahaha!
I love it! 🙂
SD what is the average Russian’s opinion of the USA and is citizens? My belief is that the non-governing class of ever country would get along well as neighbors but for the awful governments/bankers/oligarchs who profit from warmongering.
From several of his answers to similar questions, it sounds like we would get along once we got used to their brutal honesty. They mostly know that our govt is not us.
Would you ever consider living there?
Thank you so much, Sir, for all you do.
Safe travels upon your return.
He actually already said that. No was the answer.
Hmm. Read all the comments but didn’t see that asked directly or answered.
Bubby asked him that, on page 1.
” I wouldn’t want to live here long term. Just not as modern and some aspects of government censorship and control are very visible.”
Thank you!
No. It seems like a nice place to visit, but I would not want to live here unless I was totally off the grid and living in a high mountain range away from everyone. There are conveniences of American life I would miss, and I love my country.
America, despite her flaws and recent issues, is still the greatest country on earth. Let’s all work hard to keep it that way and Make it Great Again.
…”America, despite her flaws and recent issues, is still the greatest country on earth. Let’s all work hard to keep it that way and Make it Great Again…”
Amen, Sundance; America is worth saving. And I am so very grateful that you have the fortitude, the courage and willingness to stand in the gap against those determined to destroy it. While wearing a smile, no less. I sincerely hope your trip is wonderful and memorable.
SD,…. Several hundred years ago, formal education for young Englishmen of means was considered to be travel on the EU continent to experience and learn to compare and contrast life/cultures in foreign countries,… not at an university, as today.
My MD wife is Russian from Riga and a US Citizen here for 28 years now and has taught me much about RU. Enjoyed very much visiting her family in Latvia. Much of what you report here I noticed when there, as well.
I had a hard time learning Not to smile and/or make eye contact while in public,…. my deep seated Southern hospitality training kept my wife busy scolding me about maintaining their de rigueur public behavior.
Bon voyage,…. enjoy your Education and thanks for your Postcards.
“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.”
Is there a way we can get a grey zone phone without having to go into the grey zone?
Easiest way:
Get an “unlocked international” phone from Ebay, preferably from a Chinese seller.
Thank you for the information!
I’m not dumb, just an old granny who never thought she’d need to know this kind of stuff, yet alone want to get it!
Sundance, Do your hosts may have any questions for those of our community within the yellow zone?
Surely we can answer a few of theirs in return for some of ours.
I will generate a list of questions and post for a discussion topic. Great idea.
What is the Russian healthcare system like compared to our odious costly obamacare system not subject to members of Congress? Hospitals, urgent care clinics, Doctor practitioners run by the state or private?
Not sure, but access to healthcare seems quite easy.
My only request is that you post everything, that you can be certain about, of what you encounter over there. I am actually looking into finding another locale to live in if things go completely nuts here where I currently reside. The part about the cell phones did get my attention. Hang in there, Sundance. I believe God will be helping you with your journey.
Just a comment, not a question. I hope you get to see the Marinsky ballet. I miss their visits to the Kennedy Center as it seems that since Ukraine, they no longer come to perform.
Are they allowed to home school?
Just wondering about the freedoms they have as to personal choices of different sorts.
I’m not sure about “home school” permissions per se’. However, at first blush I would say there’s no need for it. The level of education in primary and secondary school seems very strong and of high caliber.
My late husband went to Moscow in 1984. He went to visit his aunt who lived in Vilna. He flew via Sweden to Moscow then by train to Vilna. He stayed overnight in a Moscow flat of a friends wife.He didnt realise he needed a separate visa for Vilna so he kept a low profile. On the train he was in a compartment with 5 Russian army officers. He just about crapped himself. However they left him alone. He said there was a big samovar at the end of every coach and and an old babushka dispensing hot black tea and sugar cubes
Later they all went to the dining car. He didnt go. The senior offier came back with a whole chicken for him and he was so embarrassed and afraid. But he got to Vilna OK and spent some days with his very old aunt, her husband and her 2 sons, the one son’s wife and son who became a doctor at Vilnius university and subsequently emigrated.
Old aunt was a magistrate in her day. Anyway it was a very interesting experience and the locals were very friendly. He went again a year later via Latvian ferry from Sweden with his Swedish friend. Same story.
Very friendly locals no threats although they were afraid all the time because of all the propaganda put out by the West especially the country where we were living.
I learn so much here at CTH. Thank you Sundance for all you do. You’ll be in my prayers for safe travels while there and returning home.
The visa process to go to RU sounds worse than the green card process to live in the US. I suppose one could just walk across the border like they do here, but there would be no welcome wagon goody bag handed to an “undocumented newcomer” in RU.
It sounds complicated, but in practice once you do it it’s not hard. It’s just a process that must be followed and seems odd to us as it did to me because it is not something we are familiar with.
Think about Russian border crossing differently. Permission is needed to go in both directions, even for Russians.
Fascinating, truly.
That is a crazy complicated and expensive process to get a Visa.
2 RT plane tickets to NY or D.C.
Sure must cut down on the # of people entering Russia from the U.S., especially if they don’t live on the East Coast.
Is it all of the “Yellow” countries on that map that must do it this way? Or just the U.S.?
Do the Gray Zone countries have to do it, too?
It’s more complicated now only because most of the venues to request VISA access are closed. If there were offices or mail in options it wouldn’t be too difficult. It’s the need to physically do everything in person with the documents that makes the process challenging.
Is borscht in restaurants?
It was a staple when I was there, practically everywhere, but we ate mostly at home since my girlfriend had a teenage daughter and she was also a good cook. Nothing quite like an angry Russian woman yelling at me to get out of her kitchen! The holiday meals rarely included it but it was a staple after holiday celebrating ended and frugality returned. Beets and potatoes were low cost staples of many meals. However, I was used to them since my mother was Russian.
Probably the most adventurous thing I ate when out was sweetbreads. I made the mistake one time of eating ice cream (dairy was a no-no back then) and had a number of days of Stalin’s revenge as a result.
Pots of borscht were often simmering away at the farmer’s markets where we’d get produce and other daily goods. Street food was common. Very few of the people I personally interacted with ate ‘out’ much, like at restaurants. Of course I expect that’s all changed with the improvements in the economy over the interceding decades.
Sundance, I just saw this posted on twitter/X, be careful out there.
“Just in – Russian President Vladimir Putin purportedly RUSHED TO the Kremlin for a late meeting” developing story:
Read it here with comments:
https://nitter.poast.org/intelFromBrian/status/1782227182552559750
French forces arrive in Odessa, Ukraine
Many nasty snarky comments here
If this is what’s being reported, it’s old.
Published Apr 27, 2023 at 10:15 AM EDT
https://www.newsweek.com/putin-rushed-kremlin-conspiracy-theories-erdogan-health-1797089
I don’t know; the tweet/X is dated April 21, 2024 at 8:27 pm – it doesn’t make reference to anything particular and only a commenter on that twitter thread brought up the possibility of the French forces in Odessa. Guess we will know soon enough.
So many invaders to France and Micron is still stirring sh!t in ME and former USSR.
Wouldn’t be surprised if the French woke up one morning and decided shorty needed to be tried and shortened a head like his royal priors. Hopefully that morning is not after Paris got vaporized.
Thanks so much for these reports. If I were there now , I’d want to meet these guys;
I recognize a few of these singers because they also sing in Leonid & Friends a fantastic American music cover band. They have toured in the USA and have their 2024 Tour Schedule posted on their website.
I am waiting for them to fill up their west coast dates so I can finally see them live.
I have heard a rumor that the singer with the long hair and beard is Ukrainian and left the band to go fight with Ukraine. I have not heard about his fate.
Yes, they are fantastic with instruments in their hands as well. Haven’t seen them live yet (also west coast) and hope they can get back over here soon.
One of my favorite pieces they do is Beginning;
(As showing in Your last photo) are all the huge buildings in Saint Petersburg apartment type dwellings ?
Thank You So Much , Sundance , for taking the time and sharing all
this with us ! Extremely Interesting 😊
I look forward to viewing more of Your photographs !
🌬Fair Winds and GodSpeed to You ✝️
Most of Russian metropolitan areas are built like this. Big blocks of housing apartments in precincts or districts. Each district has its own characteristics and is self-sufficient for the people within it.
Can the people freely transit between districts or are they controlled ala the future 15 minute cities envisioned for us?
Thank You So Much for Taking the Time , Sundance 😊
So Interesting !
Safe and Healthy Travels to You !
How easy was it to get around w/o speaking Russian?
Curious if many people there speak any English at all.
Or do you speak (some) Russian?
In St Petersburg there are many English speaking Russians, mostly younger. However, it is very difficult to be in the ordinary lifestyle of an average Russian without speaking Russian.
Sundance,
Earlier you stated NZ and Australia are the testing grounds and that we will be surprised on what is coming our way, can you expand on that?
I will in another article.