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Life in Armenia

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  • Re: Life in Armenia

    Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
    Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
    Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

    Comment


    • Re: Life in Armenia

      U.S. Says Uzbekistan, Russia, Iran Worst For Human Trafficking

      By Heather Maher

      Last updated (GMT/UTC): 20.06.2013 18:28
      WASHINGTON -- Uzbekistan and Russia have received the lowest possible rating from the U.S. State Department in its annual report on human trafficking around the world.

      Along with Iran, the two countries received failing marks from Washington because their governments have not addressed -- and have no concrete plans to address -- the problem. As punishment, the United States could decide to withhold some types of foreign aid.

      "We're not doing this not just to pass judgment on other people but because we know that we can advance this cause, we can make a difference," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said as he presented the report in Washington.

      "We're going to keep working with [our] partners around the world in order to develop new approaches, new practices. And we're going to keep engaging with governments on this issue, because modern-day slavery affects every country in the world, including the United States, and every government is responsible for dealing with it, and no government is yet doing enough."

      Forced labor remains the predominant human-trafficking problem in Russia, according to the report, which cites statistics from the Migration Research Center that show some 1 million people in the country are exposed to "exploitative" labor conditions, including the withholding of documents, nonpayment for services, physical abuse, and extremely poor living conditions.

      Russia expressed "indignation" about the possibility of being hit by U.S. sanctions in connection with the views in the report, and China's Foreign Ministry described U.S. criticism of Beijing's record as biased, "unilateral," and "arbitrary."

      READ MORE about Moscow and Beijing's reactions

      In Uzbekistan, the report said, internal labor trafficking remains prevalent during the annual cotton harvest, in which children and adults are victims of government-organized forced labor.

      'Depth Of The Challenge'

      The U.S. ambassador for monitoring and combating human trafficking, Luis CdeBaca, said the number of convictions of criminals who force people into slavery increased in 2012.

      "One of the successes is that the number of global convictions of human traffickers is up about 20 percent," CdeBaca said. "We were able to identify 4,746 convictions in the last year. As well, there was a continuation of an upward trend in the number of victims that are identified, to about 46,500. Unfortunately, 46,000 identified victims in a world in which up to 27 million people are enslaved shows the depth of the challenge that's ahead of us."

      Countries that received the State Department’s second-worst rating include Afghanistan, Ukraine, Albania, Belarus, and Turkmenistan.

      Those nations are on a "watch list" because although their number of trafficking victims is increasing, the governments are making significant efforts to combat the problem.

      Plan In Afghanistan

      Afghanistan remained on the watch list for a fourth consecutive year but was spared an automatic downgrade because its government has developed a plan to combat trafficking.

      Internal trafficking of children is rife in Afghanistan, said the report, which documents their forced labor in the brick- and carpet-making industries, as domestic servants, beggars, sex slaves, and drug mules.

      CdeBaca said Armenia earned the distinction of raising its rating.

      "This year, Armenia was the Tier 2 country that moved up to Tier 1," he said. "We saw that on the basis of increased training, increased prosecutions, increased victim identification, and quite a bit of political will on the part of the Armenian government.”


      Rated second-best were Azerbaijan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Georgia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Romania, and Tajikistan.

      CdeBaca praised Iraqi Bassam al-Nasseri, saying he had helped rescue 35 Ukrainian and Bulgarian construction workers who had been stranded in Iraq after being trafficked and held in deplorable conditions.

      Uzbekistan and Russia have received the lowest possible rating from the U.S. State Department in its annual report on human trafficking around the world.

      Comment


      • Re: Life in Armenia

        21 June 2013 Last updated at 10:03 ET


        Sochi Olympics site worker 'tortured by Russian police'

        The Russian authorities are investigating reports that an electrician working at a Sochi Winter Olympics site was tortured by police.

        Martiros Demerchyan says he was detained and sexually assaulted with a crow-bar after he complained to his foreman that he had been underpaid.

        His brother-in-law and fellow worker was also detained and beaten, but less seriously, Russian media report.

        Russian police have frequently been accused of violence against detainees.

        Two officers were jailed in the Republic of Tatarstan in September after a suspect was mortally wounded while being assaulted with a bottle.
        'Beaten all night'

        A huge building project is under way in the Black Sea region for the Sochi Winter Olympics, which are set to be the country's most high-profile international sporting event since the Moscow Summer Games of 1980.

        Mr Demerchyan and his brother-in-law worked on a residential bloc for Olympic volunteers between 25 March and 16 May.

        Each man had been promised 90,000 roubles (£1,780; $2,750) for the work but was given only 37,000, Mr Demerchyan's wife told Russian media.

        When they complained, they were first threatened, then called to a meeting with the foreman on 12 June, she said. However, they found police officers there instead, and were taken to a police station, she added.

        In custody, they were allegedly told to confess in writing to stealing building materials from the construction site.

        Mr Demerchyan's wife said that when he refused, he was beaten all night by five policemen, losing some of his teeth. At one stage, he was assaulted with the crow-bar, she alleged.

        He finally signed a blank piece of paper.

        Mr Demerchyan was allegedly offered no medical treatment by the police. But on his way to court, he fell ill and police called an ambulance, Russia's NEWSru website reports.

        He was treated in hospital, but doctors told his family they had found no serious injuries on his body.

        Mr Demerchyan's wife has filed complaints against the police - for assaulting her husband and for failing to provide medical help, the Sochi 24 news agency reports.

        A lawyer for Mr Demerchyan said he had worked on similar allegations from others detained at the same police station in the past.

        Russia's Investigative Committee - its equivalent of the US FBI - is expected to decide within a month whether to take action against the police officers involved.

        The Russian authorities are investigating reports that an electrician working at a Sochi Winter Olympics site was tortured by police.


        __________________________________________________ _________________________________________
        And this is the wonderful sochi that our compatriots are fleeing Armenia for

        Comment


        • Re: Life in Armenia

          ARMENIA IS THE REGIONAL LEADER AMONG INTERNET USERS

          Armenia is the leader in South Caucasus by internet usage indicators. About this fact speak the results of The 2012 Caucasus Barometer research implemented by...

          19:27, 3 September, 2013

          YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS: Armenia is the leader in South
          Caucasus by internet usage indicators. About this fact speak the
          results of The 2012 Caucasus Barometer research implemented by
          "Caucasian Research Resource center" in Armenia, Georgia and
          Azerbaijan. "Armenpress" reports that The 2012 Caucasus Barometer
          research reveals that under half of each population uses the internet
          once a week or more, and within that 33% of Armenians, 26% of Georgians
          and 11% of Azerbaijanis use it every day. While internet use is more
          common in Armenia, its usage has increased in all three countries since
          2010. Additionally, internet use is more common among men than women,
          among capital residents, and among those 18-35 years old.

          Although internet usage is increasing in each country, over half
          of each population does not use the internet. Lack of need for the
          internet is the primary reason in Armenia and Azerbaijan, whereas lack
          of access to a computer is the primary reason that people do not use
          the internet in Georgia. Additionally, about a quarter of Azerbaijanis
          indicate that they are not interested in using the internet (24%)
          or have no way to connect (20%).

          Those who use the internet were asked to name their most frequent
          activities online. The majority of people in Georgia and about half
          in Armenia and Azerbaijan mentioned social networking sites such
          as Odnoklassniki, Facebook and Myspace. Searching for information
          was also frequently mentioned, as was using Skype, particularly
          in Armenia. The data also shows that Azerbaijanis more frequently
          download, listen to and watch music and videos, as well as receive
          or send emails than in their Caucasian neighbors. Other internet
          activities such as playing online games, visiting dating websites,
          blogging, shopping or engaging in forum discussions were not frequently
          mentioned and thus remain less popular in the region.
          Hayastan or Bust.

          Comment


          • Re: Life in Armenia

            DEEP PURPLE'S IAN GILLAN IN ARMENIA

            18:15 ~U 19.09.13

            Deep Purple soloist Ian Gillan is in Armenia to attend the opening
            of a renovated musical school in the second largest city of Gyumri.

            Speaking to reporters on Thursday, the musician admitted that his
            involvement in the project was very personalized and symbolic.

            He said that the band came up with the idea after visiting the town
            of Spitak in 1989, (a year after the devastating earthquake which
            claimed thousands of lives, leaving lots of people homeless) and
            realizing that life would be very difficult without music.

            The soloist said it was very exciting for him to see the one-time
            forlorn construction having changed new image. He said his central
            role in both the band and the Rock Aid Armenia project had made the
            renovation project possible. But he also admitted that the Armenians'
            too, had their contribution.

            Asked what made him choose especially Armenia among the many
            disaster-stricken countries around the world, the musician said it
            was a personalized initiative that made him spiritually bound to
            the country.

            Armenian News - Tert.am
            Hayastan or Bust.

            Comment


            • Re: Life in Armenia

              Edit:

              Posted in wrong thread
              B0zkurt Hunter

              Comment


              • Re: Life in Armenia

                FREEDOM HOUSE CALLS ARMENIA A COUNTRY WITH FREE INTERNET

                October 03, 2013 | 13:26

                Freedom House called Armenia a country with free internet in its new
                report "Freedom of the Net 2013".

                In terms of obstacles to access Armenia got 8 points out of 25, in
                terms of limits on content - 9 out of 35 and 12 points out of 40 on
                violation of user rights.

                The report says internet access in Armenia has significantly increased
                over the past few years due to decreased cost of connectivity and
                improved network coverage. At the same time, however, there have
                been minimal efforts to improve community access to the internet and
                digital literacy remains somewhat low, with television remaining the
                predominant source by which people receive news and information.

                The report indicates that since the incident in 2008, following the
                presidential election, the government has engaged in minimal blocking
                or deletion of online content.

                The neighboring Georgia is also called a country with "free" internet,
                unlike Turkey, Azerbaijan and Russia rated as "partly free".

                Overall, only 17 countries have "free" internet according to the
                report. Iceland tops the ranking followed by Estonia, Germany and
                the U.S.

                News from Armenia - NEWS.am
                Hayastan or Bust.

                Comment


                • Re: Life in Armenia

                  THE MEN FROM MOUSH

                  Maria Titizian

                  BY MARIA TITIZIAN

                  Developing complex models and postulating theories, writing academic
                  papers, organizing high-level conferences and advancing policies
                  to address some of the most pressing issues facing the Armenian
                  nation is typically the method we employ. We discuss and analyze,
                  argue incessantly, lose our composure in the melee of verbal and
                  pseudo-intellectual traffic and usually end up nowhere.

                  One of the most crippling problems in contemporary Armenian life is
                  the divide or disconnect between our two selves - the homeland and
                  the Diaspora. We have yet to find the right formula that will help
                  us to see the world and ourselves with a common vision and end game.

                  Sometimes the answers are so very simple. Case in point, the men
                  from Moush.

                  I have had many incredible experiences in Armenia. A few nights ago,
                  I was blessed to experience yet another. Friends visiting from abroad
                  wanted to take a group of us out for their last night in Yerevan. They
                  had one condition - the restaurant should have a band that played
                  traditional Armenian instruments. You would think that this wouldn't
                  be a problem in the homeland but sometimes it is. Nonetheless, we
                  discussed the list of possibilities and agreed to go to a restaurant
                  called Noyan Tapan.

                  My girlfriend was commissioned with making the reservations. She
                  called me early Saturday morning to say that the arrangements were
                  made and we should all be at the restaurant at 7:30. That night,
                  my husband and I picked up some of the guests and made our way down
                  to the city. En route, we got a phone call to say that the plans had
                  changed and we were to go to another restaurant, Ayas, instead. It's
                  Armenia, we don't ask a lot of questions, we just change our route.

                  However, before we got to Ayas, we received yet another call to say
                  that there were no tables available at Ayas.

                  Imagine if you will the situation... three cars full of repatriates,
                  plus a couple of tourists, trying to figure out where to go to listen
                  to some traditional Armenian music live. So, as we were driving the
                  streets of Yerevan, we were thinking about alternative locations. A
                  few minutes later another call was received to say that Hin Yerevan
                  had an available table for our group. There was a collective groan
                  in the car as we protested but we didn't have much of a choice. Our
                  hosts wanted a place with traditional Armenian music, so off we went.

                  When we arrived we inquired as to why Noyan Tapan fell through. This
                  is how the story goes - my friend calls Spyur, an information service,
                  to get the number for the restaurant. The operator at Spyur gives
                  her the number for Noyan Tun, not Noyan Tapan and when they arrive
                  at Noyan Tapan, they realize it has closed down. My friend calls the
                  number she's gotten from Spyur, purportedly for Noyan Tapan, only to
                  realize that she's made reservations at Noyan Tun instead. Because
                  Noyan Tun doesn't have live music, the erroneously made reservations
                  are cancelled.

                  So we arrived at Hin Yerevan, not looking forward to it because we had
                  had some bad experiences there but we kept an open mind. We walked
                  in, the place was full save for our table and the band was playing
                  the right kind of music. So far, so good. We said things happen for
                  a reason but we had no idea they really do.

                  The evening started out pleasant enough, the food was mediocre,
                  the music was just fine, and the alcohol was flowing.

                  Right next to our table was a group of men, singing, drinking,
                  toasting and making requests for songs. We kept hearing toasts to
                  Moush, the ancient Armenian city which is now in present-day Turkey.

                  They were all Mshetsis. My husband, who was at this point in high
                  spirits, no pun intended, decided to walk over to their table and drink
                  a toast to Moush and told the group of men that one day we would all
                  return there. Well, this was the ice breaker. For the next several
                  hours the two tables became one, literally and figuratively. Their
                  table, Hayastantsis whose grandfathers were from Moush, and our table,
                  repatriates who had been living in the homeland for more than a decade
                  and some Diaspora tourists.

                  We sang together, danced together, made toasts together and in the
                  end, some even cried together. It will remain one of the highlights
                  of my life here in Armenia for so many reasons. These men who called
                  themselves Mshetsis had never been to Moush. The ancestry of our
                  table was a mixture from Kharpert, Aynteb, Musa Ler, Yozgat, Kessab
                  and Garin, places in Western Armenia where our grandparents were from
                  but which most of us hadn't been to before either.

                  It didn't matter and yet it did.

                  Those connections to our ghostly past, to the places on maps which no
                  longer said Armenia, meant something to us. It meant that our lineage
                  didn't end or begin with 1915 when we were driven from those lands. It
                  meant traditions and heritage and ties that could be traced back for
                  centuries if not millennia. It meant that we were all connected to
                  each other regardless of geography. It meant a fusion of Eastern and
                  Western Armenia and Armenians. The lines of division between homeland
                  and Diaspora blurred and we were just a group of Armenians singing,
                  laughing and dancing together.

                  The evening spent with the men from Moush taught all of us there
                  an important lesson - if you're Armenian, it doesn't matter where
                  you're born, what matters is what you do with that birthright and
                  how you decide to live your life. It reinforced the power of shared
                  memory and a rootedness to a particular place and most importantly,
                  it underscored how powerful human connections can be in forging
                  understanding, tolerance and comradery.

                  Luckily for us, the operator at Spyur inadvertently played an important
                  role in that journey of discovery.

                  Hayastan or Bust.

                  Comment


                  • Re: Life in Armenia

                    Dual Survival: Man and Church in the Lake Van Region of Historic Armenia

                    Story and photos by Mathhew Karanian (Special to the Armenian Weekly) If you’ve ever watched a reality survival show on television—one of those shows were a couple of adventurers get dropped off in a desert [...]

                    By Matthew Karanian // October 26, 2013

                    Story and photos by Mathhew Karanian
                    (Special to the Armenian Weekly)

                    If you've ever watched a reality survival show on television - one of
                    those shows were a couple of adventurers get dropped off in a desert
                    with instructions to survive long enough to make it back home - then you
                    might be able to conjure up an image of me hiking in Historic Armenia.

                    I was on the shore of Lake Van, researching and photographing the
                    Armenian churches of the region.

                    My goal for this day was modest: hike to the ancient Armenian
                    monastery of St. Thomas, a monastery that looks older than the
                    treeless mountain that it's perched upon. Survival was the last thing
                    on my mind.

                    But my priority for the day changed when I was about mid-way through
                    the 90-minute trek to the top.

                    The 10th to 11th century Armenian Monastery of St. Thomas rests on a
                    hilltop above the southeast shore of Lake Van. (Photo by Matthew
                    Karanian)

                    This was roughly about the same time that my supply of water ran out.
                    Remember, survival had been the last thing on my mind. So, of course I
                    hadn't carried any water.

                    The mid-day temperature was pushing closer to 100 degrees, and I had
                    begun to reminisce about better times - like the time, earlier that day,
                    when the mercury hadn't yet risen above 90.



                    The mid-day temperature was pushing closer to 100 degrees, and I had
                    begun to reminisce about better times - like the time, earlier that day,
                    when the mercury hadn't yet risen above 90. (Photo by Matthew
                    Karanian)

                    I still wanted to see the church.

                    But now that the risks of dehydration and heat stroke had been added
                    to my itinerary, my priority was to make it back down the mountain. I
                    wanted it all! I wanted to see the church, and I also wanted to
                    survive.

                    I was hiking with Khatchig Mouradian, the Editor of the Armenian
                    Weekly. He and I had the same goals. Better yet, he also had some
                    water. He offered me half of what remained in his bottle. We were
                    brothers in arms, and would share our water supply, 50-50. I reached
                    for the bottle. It contained about two ounces of warm water.

                    I was incredulous. `Really, Khatchig, I can only have one ounce?'

                    Yes, he replied. `We will need the rest to survive.'

                    I took a drink, and we continued our ascent.

                    There were no trees to shelter us from the sun as we scrambled up the
                    mountain, but every two or three hundred feet there was some dwarf
                    scrub that cast just enough shade to offer a bit of relief from the
                    heat. We dashed from brush to brush, like soldiers in battle, until we
                    had reached the monastic walls of St. Thomas.

                    We dashed from brush to brush, like soldiers in battle, until we had
                    reached the monastic walls of St. Thomas. (Photo by Matthew Karanian)

                    We discovered that the survival of the church was also at risk.

                    A Remote Treasure

                    The buildings of St. Thomas were constructed in the tenth and eleventh
                    centuries, and are stoically sited on a mountaintop overlooking the
                    southeast shore of Lake Van. The main surviving building, the
                    cathedral, is about one thousand years old.

                    The current peril to the structure is caused, at least in part, by
                    local people who are acting upon a long-discredited myth. Some of the
                    Kurds who now live in Historic Armenia believe, incorrectly, that
                    there is buried treasure at Armenian churches.

                    And so some of these treasure seekers dig for gold and xxxels wherever
                    they see the ruins of an Armenian site. Judging from what I observed
                    at St Thomas last month, some people appear to have believed that
                    there was treasure hidden in the ground beneath this church, too.

                    We saw holes dug in the earth near the foundation, at the entrance,
                    and in the church yard. These excavations have undermined the
                    foundation of St. Thomas, and similar burrowing undermines other
                    churches, such as the nearby Karmravank, where treasure hunters have
                    also sought supposedly long lost gold.

                    The ruins of Karmravank, on the southeast shore of Lake Van, a short
                    distance from the Monastery of St. Thomas. (Photo by Matthew Karanian)

                    According to the discredited myth, Armenians buried gold and other
                    valuables beneath the altars and near the points of entry to their
                    churches. Ask a Kurdish villager if the Armenians supposedly did this
                    while fleeing during the Genocide, or whether they buried their gold
                    as a matter of routine in the years before the Genocide, and they are
                    apt to just shrug their shoulders.

                    The odds of buying a winning lottery ticket are better than the odds
                    of finding buried treasure at an Armenian church, because the odds of
                    finding the buried treasure are zero. There's no treasure. But people
                    still buy lotto and they still dig for treasure.

                    Even if the legend was true, which it isn't, any treasure would surely
                    have been dug up many years ago. Still, logic and truth have not
                    deterred treasure hunters, even now, a century after the Armenians
                    were expelled from this area.

                    As a result, the only treasures that really exist in places such as
                    St. Thomas and at nearby Karmravank - the sacred structures
                    themselves - are at risk of being destroyed.

                    We made it safely back down the mountainside, and found plenty of
                    shade and water. We lived to share the story of yet another ancient
                    Armenian site that may not survive.



                    Matthew Karanian is an author and attorney, and he practices law in
                    Pasadena, Calif. He has spent several years working in Armenia as
                    both law professor and Associate Dean at the American University of
                    Armenia. His latest book is `Armenia and Karabakh: The Stone Garden
                    Travel Guide. He is currently working on a new book about Historic
                    Armenia that will be published in 2015. Book details at
                    www.ArmeniaTravelGuide.com and at www.Amazon.com
                    Hayastan or Bust.

                    Comment


                    • Re: Life in Armenia

                      Cheq Zzvel?
                      BY BAIRAMIAN JULY 8, 2013 MALAISE OPTIMISM POSITIVITY TAXI DRIVER YEREVAN

                      Taxicabs are tabloids on wheels. Their drivers will tell you all sorts of stories, some true, some not. Yerevan’s taxi drivers aren’t as talkative as the ones in New York or pretty much anywhere else I’ve encountered them. They don’t seem to care much where you come from, only where you’re going. And if you’re not a local, you may be inclined, by fear or interest, to attentively watch the road as your vessel comes painfully close to running over several people during the length of your trip instead of striking up a conversation. But, like any taxi, if they talk, the information you glean, if true, can be a window to the society of which they are the transporters.

                      Taxi in Yerevan's Republic Square. Credit: Vigen Hakhverdyan
                      Taxi in Yerevan’s Republic Square. Credit: Vigen Hakhverdyan

                      Alas, we happened upon a jolly-looking-though-not-so-jolly young fella who, as soon as we sat in the car, started musing angrily about the people walking up and down Northern Avenue on a warm evening rather than spending their time in a park surrounded by trees and wildlife. I recently spent two weeks exploring wilderness throughout California; there wasn’t much question which side of that question I ended up on. We made a connection so now we had to talk – otherwise it’d be too awkward – so we did.

                      He must have noticed from my accent that I’m not from Yerevan, which isn’t hard to do. He asked me how long it had been since we’d come to Yerevan and I responded by saying, “one week.” He didn’t even flinch, immediately following up with, «դեր չեք զզվե՞լ» (“aren’t you disgusted, yet?”). It was a suggested eventuality in the form of a question. I wasn’t sure how to respond except by honestly saying that I wasn’t yet disgusted but sarcastically gave him the opportunity to tell us what was disgusting so we could become disgusted, too. He sounded off his laundry list of problems that I’d heard a thousand times. Nothing is ever new – except he was younger than the others, maybe in his 30s. I was hopeful that he was an exception, that he was the fake tabloid story. I didn’t have high hopes but I kept an open mind.

                      A few days later, I was speaking with a younger man, probably in his late 20s. We were doing some work together so he asked me what I was doing in Armenia and I told him that this trip was for a project but that it’d please me to move here in the future. He quipped back with the most common of the anti-Armenia retorts: «Երկիրը երկիր չի» (literally, “the country is not a country”, i.e. the country is a worthless xxxxhole that doesn’t deserve to be lived in by anybody who has half a brain) accompanied by him emphatically telling me not to move.

                      If a tabloid story could be considered a thesis, it would need to be validated by a few different sources before taking it seriously. I had one corroboration that Armenia was better off dead. Another taxi ride later, I might have been convinced.

                      Seated for a long car ride in another taxi, just barely beyond urban Yerevan, the complaints started flowing with unhindered fury. Everything from how much Kirk Kerkorian never wants to have anything more to do with Armenia to the condition of the roads to how villagers weren’t picking all their apricots thus letting them go to waste.

                      It’s a national pastime, really, complaining. I’m not at all surprised so many people want to leave. If I had to listen to that my whole life, I can’t imagine I would think that living anywhere, possibly even a dog shelter, was better than Armenia.

                      Thesis confirmed. Mass disdain, dismissal, disgust.

                      But I won’t accept it. The results are not final.



                      I had given that first taxi driver a tip when paying him, which he thought was a mistake and commendably pointed out. I told him it wasn’t a mistake. What I didn’t tell him was that I was sure that he would eventually find a way out and that I was especially pleased that I had contributed to him leaving by giving him that extra 100 drams so he could abandon this place he disdained so much.

                      He, or any of the people I have met, could have talked about better things. There are great things going on, too: Ayb High School, Luys Foundation, AYF Youth Corps, Civilnet, Green Bean, urbanlabEVN, Tumo Center for Creative Technologies, Dilijan International School of Armenia, Gyumri Information Technologies Center, ONEArmenia. And a plethora of others. If not talk about these things, perhaps the scenery, or the food, or that hundreds of children can run around soaking random people with water throughout the country, unattended by their parents, with nary a worry about their safety. We can talk about these things but we choose to focus on self-pity instead.



                      Young people who are supposed to compose the vivacious, sprightly, hopeful core of any country are repeating the same tired aphorisms of their parents. After many years of reflecting on this malaise, there is not one thing that I can point to that I consider valid: not that there are no jobs, not that the government is corrupt, not that the prices have gone up, not that the trash is not being collected. These problems aren’t exclusive to Armenia, it’s just that Armenians think that they are. What’s more, there is no interest by most in solving the problems. Somehow, invariably, the onus is always upon somebody else to figure things out and make them better. If that doesn’t happen, time to head for the hills (of Glendale).

                      Fact is, in Glendale, and whatever other place refugees (because that’s what people who leave a place they no longer feel at home are called) from Armenia settle outside of Armenia, this mentality hardly changes. The complaints remain. The nuclear physicist lamenting that he’s driving a taxi in Yerevan will be doing the same lamenting in Santa Monica except to someone who has a harder time understanding him.



                      America wasn’t perfect. People did xxxx. When there were no jobs, they created them. When the government was corrupt (I only wrote that in the past tense for effect), they organized and demanded accountability. When the prices went up, they toughed it out (side note: inflation is a well-known concept in this thing called economics and every time that the prices go up in Armenia, it’s not a governmental conspiracy, it might just happen, you know, just like that. That’s why I can’t buy a Double-Double for 50 cents as portrayed in those goddamn posters they have at every In-N-Out surely put there to mock you). When the trash wasn’t picked up, they threw it in the Hudson River and thus created the largest landfill in human history and called it New Jersey – and they even started living on it!

                      I’m only using America’s example because that’s the one with which I’m most familiar. But there are others. When English people realized how much England sucked, they didn’t relocate to Spain (although they decided to lay claim to a rock named Gibraltar just to piss them off), they conquered most of the world so they could create the most important city on earth and vacation in exotic places like India, Kenya, and the Americas without having to get a visa. When the Japanese realized they were living on a rocky strip of land that was useless in every way a normal country would need to operate, they started inventing things like samurai, Toyota, and sushi and are now able to buy whatever they want. Even Canadians, who long ago had to helplessly reconcile being an American territory, somehow resist the urge to join the mainland and keep working on being the most socialist state of the Union.



                      There is surely someone reading this and thinking that it’s so easy for me, a Diasporan, to so freely criticize the decisions of these suffering people from my comfortable Diasporan life (lol). First, I’m commentating on this as an interested party. That is, I live in Glendale and that is where at least 50% of emigrants from Armenia end up so I definitely have a chicken in this fight. Second, I’m commenting as an observer and a student of politics, history, and societies. Armenians need to realize that their problems are not unique and they are not the worst in the world and that if they’re going to leave Armenia en masse, they should be honest about the real reason they are doing so: they do not love the country. Until they’re in Glendale, of course, which is when the xxxxxing starts about America and reminiscing starts about the wonderfulness of Garabi Leech, Opera, and Cascade. Which is kind of like belittling and cursing your spouse until you get a divorce then, when you’re with your new partner, extolling your ex’s virtues.

                      Let’s put it all out on the table: when one loves something (a nation, perhaps) or someone, they commit to them, come hell or high water, in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer, till death does them part. If hell, sickness, and poverty dissuade you from your love, then it wasn’t love to begin with and it’s not love once you leave and profess it.

                      I hate to air dirty laundry but this is one of those things. Our nation has been overcome by naysayers and it needs to stop. The eternally depressed and depressing don’t get a pass because they think their life (and I guess no one else’s) blows a fat one.

                      The people who live here in Armenia who are working so hard to make this place better should not have to be subjected to the incessant morass of the depressed masses. Their work is already difficult. The young people who are optimistic about their country shouldn’t have their beliefs tested by the half-witted uninterested at such a young age. These people have to deal with unemployment, corruption, rising prices, sporadic trash cleanup. The last thing they need is someone telling them all the things that are going wrong in the country. After all, they must know – they are the ones trying to make it better.

                      Instead of asking if we are yet disgusted of this country, let’s ask another question: Բողոքելո՛ւց դեր չեք զզվե՞լ:

                      Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

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