Post
Topic
Board Politics & Society
Re: Russian Invasion of Ukraine[In Progress] AKA Siege of the World by WEF elite
by
tvbcof
on 09/12/2022, 15:47:10 UTC
I've been studying the subject a lot lately.  It's not particularly easy to just 'switch sides' physically. Even the handful of nations who will sell citizenship (e.g., Turkey) do want upwards of half a million $$$.

You're studying something irrelevant. You don't need citizenship to pursue freedom in the dictatorship country of your choice. Russia will happily hand out permanent resident permits to pretty much anyone, all you need is a job.

The last thing I need or have any interest in is a job.  Been there, done that.  I also don't need a place to actually live since I have a number of properties that I like.

What I really need is a passport else I wouldn't be looking at all.  Turkey will give you citizenship if you start a company and hire 50 people or more, but providing that sounds dangerously close to 'a job' from my perspective.  I'm leery that any of these countries will still exist in their present form for all that much longer, and will the replacement honor the deal.  The nice thing about a Turkish citizenship is you don't have to learn Turkish or spend much time in the place.

Honestly, the 'special military operation' has elevated my perception of the Russian nation by quite a bit.  I'd not re-calibrated from my youth when it was the Soviet Union and such a re-calibration was overdue.  Putin seems to have bent over backwards to resolve the necessary issues in the most humane way possible out of deference to the salvageable elements of population, and the actual Russian citizenry have shown a surprising degree of tolerance for his methods in the face of sacrifices and some really ugly actions by the NaZiocons.  These don't seem to be the people I (thought I) knew after going through the grist mill of Soviet Communism and Chicago-school gang rape complements of Yeltsin.

All said, based on the best information I can ascertain, Russia is kind of near the top of governments who I could feel OK about marginally supporting (and maybe more).  I'd have to study more in order to swear to it I'd need to do some more due diligence.  I know of some objectionable issues in domestic policy, and being the most ethical large government is a bit like being the thinnest kit at fat camp.  Ethical considerations aside, I think that Russia given, her resources, is well poised to provide her citizens a relatively decent quality of life if they don't fall into the technocratic 'great reset' trap.  The Russian leadership seem to be among the few who even have the potential to spot the disadvantages of doing so.

But Russia doesn't sell citizenship as best I can tell.