Archive for February, 2009

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Learn About Russia’s National Day

Russia National Day
 by: Jane S. Roseen 7eb

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Russia Day is one of the newest holidays celebrated by the Russian people. This does not mean, however, that it comes without due pomp and circumstance. Although it’s still young, Russia Day is evolving into a holiday revered by the Russian people.

On June 12, 1990, the Russian parliament formally declared its sovereignty from the Soviet Union. The National Sovereignty Declaration set the wheels in motion for the creation of what is now known as the Russian Federation, or more commonly Russia.

Russia Day was officially recognized by Boris Yeltsin in 1991 as a national holiday. As the new federation developed over the next decade, the holiday wasn’t truly celebrated in any other method than the Russian people having a day off of work. There just wasn’t any large national unity around the day.

This changed, however, in 2003. For the first time in 47 years, warplanes flew over the Kremlin to celebrate Russia Day. After a magnificent parade reminiscent of the Soviet military parades on Revolution Day, President Vladimir Putin watched from a stage in front of Lenin’s tomb on Red Square. Dozens of dignitaries including Boris Yeltsin joined President Putin as the 10 military jets flew in triangular formation overhead.

"On this day, we honor our motherland, our Russia. We honor the country of a thousand years history and unique heritage, the country which united on a huge space many peoples, territories and cultures," Putin said in an address to the crowd on this historic Russia Day.

This celebration set the tone for Russia Day festivities since. Bands often play some of the most popular songs in Russian history, including tunes from the Soviet era. Cavalrymen gallop across public squares (including Red Square) wearing uniforms from the early 1800’s, prior to the Russian Revolution. Historical parades feature the uniforms dating from other periods of Russia’s military glory, including during the reign of Peter the Great and Catherine II.

In addition to the show of military magnificence, people choose to use Russia Day to celebrate the history of their individual communities within Russia. Representatives from various regions show off the distinctive dress and dance styles of their respective communities, highlighting Russia’s cultural and ethnic diversity.

These shows are staged throughout the country, not just in Moscow. It’s estimated that one million people have attended Russia Day (or Independence Day) celebrations in recent years, a number that’s only expected to grow as Russia Day evolves into an even more beautiful celebration of Russia past and present.

About The Author

Jane S. Roseen is the Owner and President of Harmony Sweets, an international gourmet chocolate shop. Harmony Sweets’ mission focuses on individual consumers purchasing gourmet chocolates from around the world for their friends and relatives, as well as corporate gift giving. Gourmet chocolate gift baskets and personalized chocolates are also available.

Website: http://www.harmonysweets.com

 

This article was posted on September 04, 2006

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International Cost Of Living Comparison Trends

International Cost Of Living Comparison Trends

The ongoing impact of the credit crisis, slowing global economies, falling house prices, global stock market and exchange rate volatility, together with the US dollar strengthening against most currencies are all factors contributing to a major change in the global cost of living rankings.

The International Cost of Living Comparison comprises indexes for each of 276 global locations. The indexes are calculated using the prices for specific quantities of the same goods and services in each location, based on expatriate spending patterns across 13 broad categories (Basket Groups).

The latest international cost of living ranking, together with the overall cost of living index is as follows:

Rank Location (Overall Cost of Living Index New York=100)
1Japan, Tokyo (126.03)
2Norway, Oslo (123.74)
3Denmark, Copenhagen (121.11)
4Switzerland, Geneva (119.59)
5Brazil, Brasilia (118.53)
6United Kingdom, London (118.23)
7Greenland, Nuuk (117.14)
8Switzerland, Zurich (116.18)
9Hungary, Budapest (114.36)
10Russia, Moscow (113.41)
11Nigeria, Lagos (112.69)
12Ireland, Dublin (112.65)
13New Caledonia, Noumea (112.43)
14France, Paris (112.38)
15Chad, N’Djamena (111.3)
16Italy, Milan (111.19)
17Cameroon, Douala (111.06)
18Liechtenstein, Vaduz (110.89)
19San Marino, San Marino (110.78)
20Monaco, Monaco (109.83)
21Czech Republic, Prague (109.81)
22Austria, Vienna (109.68)
23Slovakia, Bratislava (109.31)
24Isle of Man, Douglas (108.97)
25Poland, Warsaw (107.63)
26Bermuda, Hamilton (107.53)
27Italy, Rome (107.29)
28Finland, Helsinki (107.07)
29Australia, Sydney (106.52)
30USA, San Francisco Calif (104.53)
31Cote D’Ivoire, Abidjan (104.4)
32Venezuela, Caracas (104.02)
33China, Hong Kong (103.43)
34United Arab Emirates, Dubai (103.36)
35Croatia, Zagreb (103.29)
36Angola, Luanda (103.27)
37Belgium, Brussels (103.19)
38Netherlands, Amsterdam (102.33)
39Jersey, Saint Helier (102.24)
40Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby (102.22)
41Korea Republic of, Seoul (101.94)
42Iceland, Reykjavk (101.66)
43Ukraine, Kiev (101.2)
44Guernsey, St Peter Port (100.68)
45Qatar, Doha (100.64)
46Central African Republic, Bangui (100.58)
47Spain, Madrid (100.26)
48USA, San Jose Calif (100.13)
49Falkland Islands, Stanley (100)
50USA, New York NY (100)
51Sweden, Stockholm (99.76)
52USA, Boston Mass (99.63)
53Cameroon, Yaounde (98.84)
54Mali, Bamako (98.74)
55Benin, Cotonou (98.6)
56Germany, Berlin (98.18)
57Micronesia, Palikir (97.98)
58Gabon, Libreville (97.77)
59Canada, Toronto (97.39)
60Germany, Bonn (96.38)
61Vatican City, Vatican City (96.23)
62Australia, Melbourne (95.88)
63Australia, Canberra (95.88)
64Estonia, Tallinn (95.08)
65Turkey, Ankara (94.87)
66Singapore, Singapore (94.6)
67Guinea-Bissau, Bissau (94.24)
68USA, Los Angeles Calif (93.93)
69Palau, Melekeok (93.85)
70Luxembourg, Luxembourg (93.77)
71Canada, Vancouver (93.48)
72Portugal, Lisbon (92.84)
73Australia, Perth (92.82)
74Germany, Frankfurt (92.81)
75Azerbaijan, Baku (92.76)
76Gibraltar, Gibraltar (92.33)
77Comores, Moroni (92.04)
78USA, Washington DC (91.8)
79USA, Philadelphia Pa (91.49)
80Nauru, Yaren (91.16)
81Kazakhstan, Almaty (90.99)
82Bahrain, Manama (90.82)
83USA, San Diego Calif (90.7)
84Bahamas, Nassau (90.63)
85Togo, Lome (90.11)
86Taiwan, Taipei (90.07)
87Haiti, Port-au-Prince (90)
88Senegal, Dakar (89.57)
89Saint Helena, Jamestown (89.26)
90USA, Baltimore Md (89.25)
91United Kingdom, Glasgow (88.88)
92Djibouti, Djibouti (88.45)
93Niger, Niamey (88.38)
94Zambia, Lusaka (88.36)
95USA, Seattle Wash (88.3)
96Andorra, Andorra la Vella (88.13)
97Vietnam, Hanoi (88.03)
98Tonga, Nuku’Alofa (87.34)
99Gambia, Banjul (87.23)
100United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi (87.16)
101Cayman Islands, George Town (86.81)
102Sudan, Khartoum (86.64)
103Greece, Athens (86.59)
104Barbados, Bridgetown (86.5)
105USA, Portland Ore (86.1)
106Sierra Leone, Freetown (85.92)
107Equatorial Guinea, Malabo (85.89)
108USA, Chicago Ill (85.73)
109Romania, Bucharest (85.55)
110USA, Miami Fla (85.54)
111Marshall Islands, Majuro (85.41)
112Cyprus, Nicosia (85.26)
113Malta, Velletta (84.99)
114Moldova, Chisinau (84.89)
115Ghana, Accra (84.89)
116United Kingdom, Birmingham (84.76)
117Canada, Montreal (84.37)
118Algeria, Algiers (84.01)
119Israel, Jerusalem (83.82)
120Australia, Brisbane (83.29)
121Burkina Faso, Ouagadougou (82.92)
122Lebanon, Beirut (82.74)
123Jordan, Amman (82.41)
124Guinea, Conakry (82.16)
125Jamaica, Kingston (82.11)
126Philippines, Manila (82.07)
127Georgia Republic of, Tbilisi (82.03)
128Congo Democratic Rep, Kinshasa (81.84)
129Seychelles, Victoria (81.78)
130Indonesia, Jakarta (81.76)
131USA, Las Vegas Nev (81.75)
132Lithuania, Vilnius (81.67)
133Vanuatu, Port Vila (81.35)
134Grenada, Saint George’s (81.23)
135Trinidad and Tobago, Port-of-Spain (81.13)
136Mozambique, Maputo (80.82)
137New Zealand, Auckland (80.71)
138Samoa, Apia (80.64)
139Congo, Brazzaville (80.14)
140Armenia, Yerevan (80.13)
141Albania, Tirana (80.1)
142Martinique, Fort-de-France (80.09)
143Latvia, Riga (79.92)
144Thailand, Bangkok (79.86)
145Sao Tome and Principe, Sao Tome (79.79)
146USA, Denver Colo (79.74)
147China, Beijing (79.73)
148Fiji, Suva (78.99)
149Slovenia, Ljubljana (78.85)
150Canada, Ottawa (78.82)
151Tuvalu, Funafuti (78.78)
152Myanmar, Yangon (78.51)
153Puerto Rico, San Juan (78.49)
154Kenya, Nairobi (78.4)
155USA, Phoenix Ariz (78.26)
156Mauritius, Port Louis (78.25)
157Madagascar, Antananarivo (78.24)
158USA, Tampa Fla (78.22)
159Serbia, Belgrade (78.13)
160Kiribati, South Tarawa (78.06)
161Guam, Hagatna (77.8)
162Brunei, Bandar Seri Begawan (77.72)
163Uruguay, Montevideo (77.41)
164Colombia, Bogota (77.23)
165USA, Atlanta GA (76.99)
166Morocco, Rabat (76.93)
167USA, Milwaukee Wis (76.77)
168Paraguay, Asuncion (76.49)
169Mexico, Mexico City (76.13)
170USA, Columbus Ohio (76.06)
171India, Mumbai (76.04)
172Tanzania, Dar es Salaam (76)
173Solomon Islands, Honiara (75.93)
174USA, Cleveland Ohio (75.84)
175USA, Detroit Mich (75.74)
176Liberia, Monrovia (75.63)
177USA, Austin Tex (75.57)
178USA, Dallas Tex (75.47)
179USA, Jacksonville Fla (75.47)
180Australia, Adelaide (75.39)
181Kuwait, Kuwait City (75.22)
182Bulgaria, Sofia (75.14)
183Saudi Arabia, Riyadh (75.08)
184USA, Pittsburgh Penn (74.54)
185Timor-Leste, Dili (74.29)
186Iran, Tehran (74.24)
187USA, Indianapolis Ind (74.13)
188USA, Fort Worth Tex (73.64)
189Somalia, Mogadishu (73.49)
190Maldives, Male (73.48)
191USA, Charlotte NC (73.47)
192USA, Houston Tex (73.36)
193Chile, Santiago (73.01)
194Mauritania, Nouakchott (72.99)
195Botswana, Gaberone (72.86)
196Cape Verde, Praia (72.81)
197USA, El Paso Tex (72.61)
198Uganda, Kampala (72.25)
199Afghanistan, Kabul (72.13)
200Antigua and Barbuda, Saint John’s (72.04)
201USA, St Louis MO (71.93)
202Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur (71.82)
203Peru, Lima (71.7)
204Korea Democratic Republic of, Pyongyang (71.62)
205Kosovo, Pristina (71.55)
206India, New Delhi (71.4)
207Belarus, Minsk (71.28)
208Malawi, Lilongwe (71.24)
209Saint Kitts and Nevis, Basseterre (71.07)
210USA, Memphis Tenn (71.02)
211India, Chennai (70.76)
212Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek (70.29)
213Burundi, Bujumbura (70.07)
214Macedonia, Skopje (70.02)
215USA, San Antonio Tex (70.02)
216Guatemala, Guatemala City (69.74)
217Honduras, Tegucigalpa (69.57)
218Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Kingstown (69.5)
219Canada, Calgary (69.46)
220India, Calcutta (69.31)
221India, Hyderabad (68.85)
222Dominica, Roseau (68.79)
223Rwanda, Kigali (68.75)
224Panama, Panama City (68.58)
225Guyana, Georgetown (68.58)
226China, Shanghai (68.48)
227Syria, Damascus (67.99)
228Montenegro, Podgorica (67.75)
229Laos, Vientiane (67.43)
230Ethiopia, Addis Ababa (66.87)
231Cuba, Havana (66.61)
232Belize, Belmopan (66.33)
233Nicaragua, Managua (65.89)
234Nepal, Kathmandu (65.67)
235Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo (64.93)
236Tunisia, Tunis (64.87)
237Suriname, Paramaribo (64.75)
238India, Bangalore (64.56)
239South Africa, Johannesburg (64.51)
240Costa Rica, San Jose (64.47)
241Egypt, Cairo (64.18)
242El Salvador, San Salvador (63.34)
243Swaziland, Mbabane (63.11)
244Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar (62.85)
245South Africa, Pretoria (62.71)
246Oman, Muscat (61.61)
247Saint Lucia, Castries (61.2)
248Pakistan, Lahore (59.48)
249Tajikistan, Dushanbe (59.25)
250South Africa, Cape Town (58.99)
251Namibia, Windhoek (58.89)
252Sri Lanka, Colombo (58.51)
253Pakistan, Islamabad (58.33)
254Iraq, Baghdad (58.25)
255Pakistan, Karachi (57.72)
256Lesotho, Maseru (57.49)
257Argentina, Buenos Aires (57.46)
258Bangladesh, Dhaka (57.03)
259Bhutan, Thimphu (56.78)
260Bolivia, La Paz (56.66)
261China, Macao (56.41)
262South Africa, Durban (56.07)
263Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo (54.35)
264Ecuador, Quito (53.83)
265Uzbekistan, Tashkent (53.03)
266Libya, Tripoli (52.74)
267China, Shenzhen (51.65)
268Eritrea, Asmara (50.72)
269China, Dalian (50.54)
270China, Wuhan (49.93)
271China, Guangzhou (47.28)
272Cambodia, Phnom Penh (45.65)
273Yemen, Sanaa (45.6)
274Turkmenistan, Ashgabat (38.77)
275China, Tianjin (29.5)
276Zimbabwe, Harare (17.12)

By: Steven Coleman

Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Steven Coleman runs the most comprehensive international cost of living website available www.xpatulator.com an internet service that provides free cost of living and hardship information for 276 global locations to registered users. The premium content calculators allow you to customise your own cost of living index by choosing your own basket groups.

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business climate in russia

The Gary Baumgarten Report: U.S. More Socialist Than Russia?

UNEMPLOYMENT - HUMAN RESOURCES - *Talent management is very complex in today’s business climate with mergers, acquisitions, world events and market trends drastically changing. In addit… …   Read more…

what is the russian business climate now

A WEF report ahead of the meeting said the main risks facing the world included deteriorating government finances, a slowing Chinese economy and threats to food and health from climate change, …   Read more…

Current Business Climate In Eastern Europe

Currently chairing the EU, Germany has prepared the summit as an opportunity to secure Russian agreements on energy security, human rights and climate change. But Berlin’s wooing of Moscow h…   Read more…

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international franchisors

Thinking made Easy: International Franchising of the Emerging Markets

The paper provides practi fef cal information to existing international franchisors and those firms considering the move into the international marketplace via the franchise mode …   Read more…

Hottest International Franchise Info

Though established businesses are fairly stationary, international franchises are travel-ready, capable of going almost anywhere on the globe, so if you’ve always dreamed of owning a pretzel …   Read more…

Franchise expo Paris Franchise UK - The international franchise

Each year, these experts offer vital advice and information on franchise selling: contracts, obligations, code of ethics, the Doubin Law requiring the franchisor to provide various items…   Read more…

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how to become a franchisor

Business Franchise Opportunities: Sample Franchise Agreement

States of America, and Franchisor may in the future become the owner, licensee and/or authorized distributor for related trademarks, including logos and designs (collectively, "Franch…   Read more…

become a franchisor overseas

As the franchisor, Edward provides his franchisees with training on inventory management, merchandise visual design, customer s… Read more… Franchise Opportunities - Get Yourself The Right…   Read more…

Franchises provide another way to become your own boss

Potential franchisees should use business news sources and franchising Web sites to investigate franchisors. Determine the number of franchises the franchisor has, the success rate of fr…   Read more…

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learn about international franchising

Traditional Media: Let’s Take it Offline: Realty Executives

Realty Executives International began advertising on television in 2006, and quickly realized that it needed a more affordable and targeted way to reach viewers on TV. The company provides corporate support and marketing for its real Traffic to our website has increased exponentially, and our franchises are seeing positive impact on their businesses. Our brokers and sales executives from all over the country tell us that people approach them on the streets to say ……   Read more…

Franchise Talk - Franchising News For Entrepreneurs

Seminar speakers also include experts from Cassels Brock and Blackwell LLP, CIBC, Franchise Network International, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, the Office of Small to Medium Enterprise and Revenue Canada. The Seminar Series is free and open to The Franchise Show, produced by the Canadian Franchise Association, is designed to assist people who are interested in exploring franchise opportunities and learning more about franchising. As Ca…   Read more…

Real Estate Blog - EXIT Realty Shines at the Western Connection

International):The Western Connection Real Estate Show held in Banff, Alberta once every two years is a always a tremendous success. Over 700 real estate agents and brokers attend the event to learn about new technology, real estate industry developments and business growth In addition, EXIT’s top-producing trainers offer the industry’s best hands-on, interactive real estate sales training at all levels, including regional, franchise, sales and administrat…   Read more…

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learn about russian life

Russian Life Blog: US News & World Report: Learn Russian!

US News & World Report: Learn Russian! This appeared in the Dec 18 issue of USN&WR:. "Why not get ahead of the geopolitical curve and study Russian? Though it has never been a top foreign language among American students, Russian did    Read more…

Visualizing Russia’s Kaleidoscopic History | ShelfLife@Texas

She co-authored “Europe and the Making of Modernity, 1815-1914” and co-edited “Imitations of Life: Two Centuries of Melodrama in Russia.” Learn more about the sights and sounds of Russia at the university’s annual Russia Day from 10    Read more…

Russian Language Podcast

Russian Language Podcast - this podcast is for those who already know basic grammar and want to improve their Russian level. If you don’t speak Russian at all, but can understand few words, you still can listen to this podcast, I have never heard such HS in my life. He’s a salesman, not a trader. I doubt he even trades; DJ Wade Reggae Mix Tapes Old school riddim. Yo yo thanks for providing the sound. It was good to hear the those old riddims…good …   Read more…

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Sudden Expansion Of Auto Industry In Russia

Expansion Of Auto Industry In Russia
 by: James Marriot 7eb

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Undeniably, huge potential for growth exists in Russian automotive industry. Prominent western players, including FORD & GM, have already ventured in this sector. However, further opportunities continue to open up for both the manufacturers as well as component suppliers in this sector.

Growth in Russian automotive industry will have a significant impact on the growth prospects & restructuring in Central East Europe. Though largely unsuccessful yet numerous attempts have been made by foreign investors to enter the Russian market during the past decade. However, a few joint ventures are making a gradual progress in this market.

Today, Russian producers such as AvtoVaz, GAZ or SOK make up for more than 70% of current market demand in the country. However, international carmakers are anticipated to account for 60% of all new cars sold in the country by the year 2014. As, Russian market is bound to open up after the country gains entry into the WTO. Russian consumer preferences are turning towards global standards & spending power of people living in the country is also increasing.

Mainly two things are needed for continued growth in the automotive market in Russia. Firstly, automotive companies must device workable strategies & targeted management. Secondly, a stable economic and legal framework is required in the country if it wants to take advantage of low labor costs and the size of its economy.

To conclude, Russia is emerging as a main automotive base for exporting both the vehicles as well as components to the rest of the world.

To read more about the Russian automotive industry you can read the report "Russian Automotive Industry Forecast (2006-2011)" available at http://www.rncos.com/Other%20Industry.htm.

RNCOS is a leader in the field of online business research and specializes in industry research on various business verticals. To read our other reports, please visit us at http://www.rncos.com/Report.htm or email us at info@rncos.com

About The Author

James Marriot

RNCOS offers complete e-publishing solutions for your business. We provide personalized world-class content development and management solutions that are qualitative and result-oriented.

 

This article was posted on September 04, 2006

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What is Putin’s State Model

On February 8, 2008 President Vladimir Putin of Russia made an extraordinary speech at the Expanded Meeting of the State Council. The 13 page speech was titled Russia’s Development Strategy to 2020. The document is a template, a guide for the creation of the 21st Century Flex-State. A State with strong, even aggressive leadership that seeks to keep its story, its history, its people alive and prosperous in an era of competitive globalization where information about any organization, any individual, in any country is nearly impossible to hide. It is a bold, even historical document about Russia’s experience with a method of US economic torture called The Shock Doctrine (see Naomi Klein’s book of the same name), and its trials and tribulations with low birth rates and dismal healthcare. It is astonishingly open.

More than anything, though, it’s about the long-term. It is about country and national interest coming first, agency second.

Putin recognizes that only The State has the authority to wield power to protect the national interest, play referee when financial markets convulse, and ensure that a nation’s infrastructure, its culture, its people and its security come first. After all, those are the critical components of The State. It is vital that, as much as possible, The State should attempt to remain unincorporated. “We have rid the country of the harmful practice that saw state decisions taken under pressure from commodities and financial monopolies, media magnates, foreign political circles and shameless populists, a practice that was not only detrimental to our national interests but that cynically ignored the basic needs of millions of people,” said Putin.

According to Goldman Sachs, Russia has become a “remarkable” performing member of the BRIC’s (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) with its economy growing at an annual rate of 6.8 percent. Even so, according to Putin, much remains to be done and Russia can’t borrow and spend its way to national prosperity and security. In short, Putin’s “non-democratic” plan, much maligned in the world’s mainstream media, is working.

Putin’s Way

The American people would do themselves a big favor by reading his speech. The entire US economic, political, military, and diplomatic apparatus–presidential candidates included—would do their country a great service by taking the time to understand and heed the message behind the words. That message is clear: The State exists to serve the interests of the people. The State will not fade away, it can’t. Indeed, Evolutionary Psychology teaches that human beings are hierarchical creatures that in groups need structure, discipline, and unitary purpose. The State should be the guardian of the national psyche and not the captains of industry.

According to Putin, “Our children will no longer have to pay our old debts. The state foreign debt has shrunk to 3 percent of GDP – one of the lowest ratios in the world. What choice can there be between the opportunity to become a leader in economic and social development, a leader in ensuring our national security, and the threat of losing our economic standing, losing our security and ultimately even losing our sovereignty? Russia must become the country offering the best life, and I am sure that we can achieve this goal, not by sacrificing the present for some radiant future, but by working day by day to improve people’s lives.

The transition to an innovative development path calls above all for large-scale investment in human capital. Human development is the main goal and essential condition for progress in modern society. This is our absolute national priority now and in the future. Russia’s future and our success depend on people’s education and health and their desire to improve themselves and make use of their skills and talents. I am not saying this because presidential elections are just around the corner. This is not a campaign slogan. This is vital for our country’s development. Russia’s future depends on our citizens’ enthusiasm for innovation and on the fruit of the labors of each and every individual.

Political parties must not forget their immense responsibility for Russia’s future, for the nation’s unity and for our country’s stable development. No matter how fierce the political battles and no matter how irreconcilable the differences between parties might be, they are never worth so much as to bring the country to the brink of chaos. Irresponsible demagogy and attempts to divide society and use foreign help or intervention in domestic political struggles are not only immoral but are illegal. They belittle our people’s dignity and undermine our democratic state. Russia’s political system must not only be in accordance with our national political culture but should develop together with it. Then it will be both flexible and stable.”

Rice-Minded Arrogance

Much of the world’s mainstream media outlets focused their attention on the last two pages of Putin’s remarks in which he bluntly, but not surprisingly, indicated that Russia would respond to further military encroachments by the United States–and its NATO partners–by re-engineering its national security apparatus to counter US/NATO plans to encircle the Russian Federation with a ring of tripwire military bases. With its hand forced, Putin said that “Russia has a response to these new challenges and it always will.” He went on to say that “The use of new technology calls for a rethinking of strategy in the way our Armed Forces are organized. After all, new breakthroughs in bio-, nano-, and information technology could lead to revolutionary changes in weapons and defense.”

Officials from the US State Department, the Pentagon, US defense industry–and the many think tanks/interest groups they rely on–have carefully deconstructed and reconstructed President Putin’s comments on national defense.

Their considered—and predictable–recommendations on Putin’s remarks reads something like this: The US national security strategy of provoking Russia, and much of the rest of the planet, has been successful. Said provocation has produced additional and in some cases unforeseen threats, as the Putin speech demonstrates. Therefore, the out-year budget planning is already dated and inadequate for the previously anticipated threat scenario. To meet new and as yet undefined threats posed by the Russians—and the world—an increase in funding requests next year is an absolute certainty. We must lobby the US Congress and convince the US public that an increase in program funding for all the US military services and their contractors is essential to counter this new Russian belligerency and other threats we cannot at this time predict.

Right on schedule, the marketing campaign kicked-off. On February 13, 2008, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had this to say about Putin. “The unhelpful [remarks] and really, I will use a different word; reprehensible rhetoric that is coming out of Moscow is unacceptable.”

Unacceptable? Who does she think she’s talking to?

Soviet Model or Chinese Communist Model

Rice’s flippant statement is yet another example of the F***! You! US national security policy—an in-your-face mandate to corporatize and militarize The State for neocolonialist ends. This incendiary national policy has been wonderful for those who want to turn The State into a for-profit enterprise. As such, when Putin talks tough–because US national security strategy compels him to—he ends up providing the rationale for US corporatists/militarists who want to perpetually develop and market new weapons platforms, increase the centralization of national security systems to monitor public opposition, and use The State to justify shady practices (retroactively too!) from preemptive intervention and torture to US central bank policies that sanction Wall Street’s appetite for the Roulette Wheel.

It’s tough to gage whether those in power in the USA–and the many who are now seeking elected and appointed office–want to turn the US State into capitalist version of the former Soviet Union or today’s Communist China with its capitalist face. Perhaps they want the best of both. Whatever designs they have, this much is certain:

1.) the continued corporate takeover—encouraged by the three branches of the US government—of The State’s social, education, infrastructure and security functions, to include resource assets;

2.) increased militarization of the US economy;

3.) bigger defense budgets for kinetic overkill platforms for land, sea, space that ignore William Lind’s Nth Generation Warfare principles and consume a greater percentage of US GDP;

4.) unprecedented expansion and centralization of domestic surveillance and homeland security activities;

5.) widening income disparity and increases in cost-of-living;

6.) ignorance of America’s story–its good, bad, and ugly history—as it has struggled to live up to the ideals embodied in the US Declaration of Independence and US Constitution;

7.) loss of national and global identity;

8.) painful economic collapse/financial insolvency—a dramatic replay of the Soviet Union’s end—that terminates the American Nation State;

9.) violent anarchy as The State fails, the population disperses and pledges allegiance to whatever group or individual can provide food, shelter, clothing and security.

Putin offers a sensible means to avoid a nasty end.

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Why The Car Industry Is Loving Russia

News from Russia’s business and tourist capital, St. Petersburg, say that Japanese auto maker Mitsubishi has had some of its top executives visiting the mentioned location. Because of this, rumors have abound that this is perhaps because the company is set on building a new facility or assembly plant here.

This was in fact backed up and confirmed by one of the major Mitsubishi distributors in Russia. The distributor said that the company is indeed planning on building an assembly plant in St. Petersburg. Mitsubishi actually sent off a whole delegation of the company’s officials to see the possibilities of setting the plan into action. This is according to Matt Donnelly who holds the rank as the president of Rolf, the exclusive distributor of Mitsubishi performance parts and Mitsubishi vehicles in Russia as well as in Kazakhstan. Donnelly even adds, “They came to see what is it that everybody is so excited about.” He even further adds that the whole trip was made so as to gain further information on the place as the future home of a Mitsubishi plant.

It could not be denied that St. Petersburg and the rest of Russia has been one of the major locations of manufacturing and assembly plants for various auto manufacturers. In fact, General Motors, Nissan, and Toyota are also building up their plans of having their plants set up in this area. Aside from this, the Ford Motor Company already has its own plant in the country since the year 2002 where Ford Focus models are being assembled.

As per the Mitsubishi delegation of officials, they were able to visit two possible locations for their plant. These two locations are found south of St. Petersburg. It even includes the area of Shushary which is the current site of plants for Japanese Toyota and American General Motors.

If this plan becomes reality, then sure enough, Mitsubishi would be able to produce more and more of their exemplary vehicles as well as their quality products. Aside from this, the company would sure be able to find time to create and design new vehicles for the various markets that it sells its wares to.

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