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md5: 96ab8f08... 🔍

I lived and worked in Chile for six months (I won't say where), and I can say that it is a pretty good country to live in, if you get used to the fact that you can be robbed at any moment within the city limits, which shocks some Russians at first, but then you get used to it (preparing yourself). Chile lags significantly behind Russia in terms of technical innovations integrated into public life, but in fact, this is even better. Life is less convenient, but thanks to this, it is also less stressful (which I consider a huge plus). Excellent views of Latin America, a predominantly liberal population, pleasant people, no thousands of prohibitions - Chile is a more natural country for the average person to live in, as it is not an empire that can turn the globe on its dick. Russia is not a natural place for the average person to live. Russia has a huge number of powerful enemies and competitors who spare no expense on destructive propaganda, interference in elections, politics, attempts at militarized separatism, and “Balkanization.” Thousands of foreign NGOs and media outlets are working on this, and all of this has an impact on society internally, which is why Russia is “tightening the screws,” making life stressful. Many Russian emigrants do not need this.
If I am invited to work in Chile again, I will be delighted. Chilie > Russia.
If I am invited to work in Chile again, I will be delighted. Chilie > Russia.