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Life in Armenia

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  • Re: Life in Armenia

    Wonderful reading with great comments . Thats what i want to read ,a change from within .

    Comment


    • Re: Life in Armenia

      Originally posted by UrMistake View Post
      Wonderful reading with great comments . Thats what i want to read ,a change from within .
      Agreed.

      I recommend you guys read the post on the actual website as the post contains many hyperlinks that lead to interesting things as well as to check the comments he received from both optimists and pessimists.
      Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

      Comment


      • Re: Life in Armenia

        Yeh there are plenty of people like Vrej1915 in Armenia and the diaspora who dwell on what is wrong and ignore what is right in this world.
        Hayastan or Bust.

        Comment


        • Re: Life in Armenia

          Armenia improves ranking in Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index



          2011-128th (score of 26)
          2012-105th (score of 34)
          2013-94th (score of 36)

          Arach Hayastan
          Last edited by Mher; 12-03-2013, 02:22 PM.

          Comment


          • Re: Life in Armenia

            Originally posted by Mher View Post
            Armenia improves ranking in Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index



            2011-128th
            2012-105th
            2013-94th

            Arach Hayastan
            Bracing myself for liberals to explain this as: "It's not that Armenia is improving, it's that everyone else is getting worse."
            Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

            Comment


            • Re: Life in Armenia

              Originally posted by Federate View Post
              Bracing myself for liberals to explain this as: "It's not that Armenia is improving, it's that everyone else is getting worse."
              "Or Armenia is the best in CIS? that's nothing to brag about, why compare it to those countries"

              Comment


              • Re: Life in Armenia

                Originally posted by Federate View Post
                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:

                http://thegampr.com/2013/07/08/cheq-zzvel-3/
                So I read that a 100 dram tip is given to a taxi driver from a person from Glendale.
                So I check the exchange rate to see how much 100 drams is worth in US$.
                -------- 25 cents -------
                In the US we call that a quarter.
                If I gave a quarter tip (twenty five cents) to anyone where tipping is appropriate it likely would be handed back to me with this refrain --- I think you need this more than me.
                May I ask if anyone out there thinks that the small finger of a poor man is worth less than the small finger of a fortunate one?
                Artashes

                Comment


                • Re: Life in Armenia

                  Originally posted by Federate View Post
                  Bracing myself for liberals to explain this as: "It's not that Armenia is improving, it's that everyone else is getting worse."
                  lmao you called it


                  "Head of Transparency International’s Armenia office Varuzhan Hoktanyan, however, attributed the improvement to poor performances by a number of other countries rather than to Armenian authorities’ efforts to reduce corruption."

                  How can that be true if Armenia's score itself, different from it ranking, also improved from 34 to 36

                  Comment


                  • Re: Life in Armenia

                    Originally posted by Mher View Post
                    lmao you called it


                    "Head of Transparency International’s Armenia office Varuzhan Hoktanyan, however, attributed the improvement to poor performances by a number of other countries rather than to Armenian authorities’ efforts to reduce corruption."

                    How can that be true if Armenia's score itself, different from it ranking, also improved from 34 to 36
                    o_O Are they becoming THAT predictable?

                    Mher, you're being too logical.
                    Azerbaboon: 9.000 Google hits and counting!

                    Comment


                    • Re: Life in Armenia

                      Originally posted by Artashes View Post
                      So I read that a 100 dram tip is given to a taxi driver from a person from Glendale.
                      So I check the exchange rate to see how much 100 drams is worth in US$.
                      -------- 25 cents -------
                      In the US we call that a quarter.
                      If I gave a quarter tip (twenty five cents) to anyone where tipping is appropriate it likely would be handed back to me with this refrain --- I think you need this more than me.
                      May I ask if anyone out there thinks that the small finger of a poor man is worth less than the small finger of a fortunate one?
                      Artashes
                      I love you, here is 25 cents.
                      Artashes

                      Comment

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