Guide to Central Asia

Owen | Humour, Russia | Monday, December 29th, 2003

I got this post from Cinderella Bloggerfeller. I can’t, as of yet, confirm it’s veracity. To this point, the only interaction I’ve had with Central Asia has been Uzbek food and Tajiks in the dorm who speak Persian. I found the read funny enough, and hope to be able to experience some of it first hand.

Understand Central Asia with the Moq Guide:

Uzbeks are the Germans of Central Asia. There’s lots of them, they spill over borders, they like hard work, lack much of a sense of humour, are very clean, think they should run the region, are plain and hefty to look at, sing the praises of stodgy food in vast quantities, and are cordially despised by their neighbours, whom they regard as a bunch of degenerate nomads and Russian-lickspittles.

The Kazakhs are the Americans of Central Asia. They like wide open spaces, big slabs of meat, crude oil, horses, whoopin’ an’ a-hollerin’. They are divided into three groups - The Great Horde in the East, which is dominant; the Little Horde in the West, which is innovative and has the natural resources; and the Middle Horde, which sits in the middle of wheat fields and gets jeered at by the rest. They think they should run Central Asia and don’t give a monkey’s knackers for any of their neighbours except the Russians, whose spit they lickle.

The Tajiks are the Irish of Central Asia. An ancient and cultured people, fond of singing and poetry, proud of their descent from the Persians. They inhabit a small, beautiful country, but are often more divided north against south than they are united. And God gave them a right bunch of bastards as neighbours. They have the strongest trend of religious fanaticism in the region, and are the only country to have had a proper civil war. They know that when they ran Central Asia sure it was grand, and that’s good enough for them. There’s also millions of them running another country - Afghanistan - and think they’re doing a good enough job of that. They think their neighbours are degenerate nomads, but agree with most of them on the urgent need to lick Russian spittle. Their neighbours think they have girly voices and lead the regional pederasty league.

The Kyrgyz are the Welsh of Central Asia. They’re jolly, profoundly democratic, and inhabit a beautiful, mountainous country that no one visits and which has no natural resources at all except for some gold and clapped-out mining. They are divided north and south in lifestyle and geographical orientation, and are widely associated with sheep-related activities. They still practice droving, and have the worst cuisine in the world. Their southern valleys are home to heroin connoisseurs. They have never ruled anything, not even Kyrgyzstan, and don’t really seem to care. They think their neighbours are soft and secretly wish they too were Kyrgyz. Their neighbours rarely think of them at all, except in a comic context, but if pushed will say they distrust them as sly and two-faced. Russian spittle-licking suits them just fine, and hey, Ivan, why don’t you buy some of our lovely smack while you’re here?

The Turkmen are the Albanians of Europe. A good-looking people with a strict code of honour and remarkable social grace. No one has any idea where they came from, and think it unwise to ask. Their language is full of lisping sounds. Their neighbours don’t really take them seriously, but wouldn’t push the point of actually telling them that to their face. They really like knives, and are to be found where ever there is trouble in the general region, such as Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey. There’s no reason why their country couldn’t be a going concern given its good location, abundant hydrocarbon resources and small industrious population. Sadly, they are run by a f***ing lunatic. Their neighbours feel a little sorry for their having to cope with him, but not as sorry as they themselves feel about having to do the same. The Turkmen are not really aware that they have any neighbours, just potentially new camel parks full of poofs.

Home Sweet Russia

Owen | Russia | Monday, December 29th, 2003

It’s an odd feeling to be back in St. Petersburg. I’ve not even been here two months, but getting off the plane, speaking Russian to the bus driver, taking the metro and arriving at Primorskaya all seemed completely natural. As if I had been doing so for quite some time now. Looking around at my familiar surroundings, I already feel at home.

Wresting in Baghdad

Owen | Politics | Thursday, December 25th, 2003

On Christmas Eve day, the WWE (formerly WWF) was in Baghdad, in what I think to be one of the greatest television deals ever. I spent several hours on Christmas day watching a brilliant piece of “knowing your audience.” Wrestling and soldiers, especially of the 18-25 year old variety, is a perfect match. Furthermore, it was a great recruiting opportunity for the military. All these adolescent boys watching their favorite wrestlers surrounded by barbed wire and machine guns, spectators standing on tanks, and helicopters flying overhead.

Most memorable quote: “Who’s Your Baghdaddy?!”

Read about it here, here, and here.

Christmas Eve

Owen | Russia | Wednesday, December 24th, 2003

Well, I’ve had a productive trip so far. I bought a new digital camera, that seems to be a pretty good deal so far. I got some shoes to wear around the dorm, and I hope to get a nice wool coat by the end of the week.

I won’t be bloging much again until this weekend, when I return to Russia. In the meantime, check out some of my categories - just look at the sidebar, or click on one of the links below:

Russia

Humour

Politics

Quizes

Christmas in Germany

Owen | Russia | Monday, December 22nd, 2003

I’ll be spending the next week in Germany, so expect more limited posting throughout this Christmas week. I have plent of Russia things to blog about so check back every so often. Additionally, I’ll be going to Murmansk, which is way up north, from the 2nd through the 6th. I’m sure there will be killer stories and pictures, so you don’t want to miss that.

Bonus, I’m going to be able to buy a real coat in Germany so I won’t freeze in this coming winter. I also hope to buy a new camera, so I will be able to take zoom photos and what not. It will much improve upon the current pictures.

How They Get Here

Owen | Personal | Saturday, December 20th, 2003

Update at Bottom

I probably get at least half of my hits per day from various search engines, and I’ve done my best to try and find out what search terms are leading people to my site. I’ve uncovered some interesting paths, although my webcounter sucks and I only find out one of every thirty search phrases. Here are the highlights of what I’ve found so far:

“Buckwheat Nutritional Information” - dogpile.com

-Makes perfect sense seeing as how I have a post dedicated to the nutritional information of buckwheat.

“Pics of Sweetbread and Candy Food” - google.com

-I’m number three on the list when this is the search phrase, and the two above me are porn sites. So if you truly want pictures of sweetbread and candy, then I’m number one on Google. If, however, you want pictures of “sweetbread and candy,” you should click on one of the first two links before mine.

“Iran Food Pics” - search.msn.com

-I’m number 11 here, and the ones ahead do seem to be non-porn, although the first hit for this search is “Christic Institute RICO Iran Contra CIA.” I could be wrong, but I don’t think they have any pictures of Iranian food. Neither do I, so I guess we’re even.

“Scary pics” - dogpile.com

-If you’re looking for “scary pics” on dogpile, I’m number 9 on the list - not too shabby. Anytime I come up on the first page of results for a search, I’m happy. And I admit that some of the one’s above are probably more deserving of their place. My favorite being “Am I a Scary Clown or Not,” which is down for the moment.

“Bending Over Pics” - search.msn.com

-Some frustrated fellow went through 110 other candidates before deciding that my site might be a good repository of pictures featuring people bending over. I can see why, the flavor text under my entry in the search engine is “… is a staple of life over here. It’s about … Plenty of bending over. -Girls holding oranges next to breasts, … “. I can understand how somebody could the wrong idea about what pictures, exactly, were or were not on my site. You could easily get the (not necessarily wrong) impression that “plenty of bending over,” and “girls holding oranges next to breasts” was a “staple of life over here.”

Lastly, though not a search path, I’m proud of my link on a newspaper’s website. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has me listed in their “Election ‘04” coverage, under “Left/Right: ‘We link, you decide’.” Their description of my site, “Lefty bloggers could learn a bit about humorous blogging from some of these folks on the other side if you catch my drift.” Score, take that you humourless hippies!

Anyways, this is how people find me. Not much on Russia, not much on my witty quiz comments. Just alot of pics, some scary, some probably indecent, and the occasional election, with the same attributes as the photos.

Update: I just got a new search that may beat the “bending over pics.”

“hot foreign women looking foe husbands in america” - aolsearch.aol.com

I’m number three on the list, with the following as flavor text: “Hot girls now in bikinis walking towards the man on … drink orange juice, and bikini-clad women will emerge … but that the money has followed French foreign policy … ” - That has to be confusing.

SC: Watch Your Step

Owen | Russia, Stupid Californian | Saturday, December 20th, 2003

Perhaps this entry should fall under the heading of “Stupid Southern Californian,” because I know that there are parts of CA where people are not stricken with this particular problem.

This is my first time (since I was seven) that I have spent a considerable amount of time in icy conditions. Until now, I only ever saw snow was when I wanted to, namely, when I went snowboarding. Now, however, snow and ice have become a part of my daily routine.

While this may not seem like such a big problem, I have an inherent inability to walk on ice. A genetic origin is the only way I can explain why I continue to fall down, when others around me walk just fine. An alternate explanation could be my shoes, and I intended to from a committee to inquire into possible remedies.

As it stands now, I have fallen flat ten times. This includes my worst day ever, when on Wednesday I fell three times. For one of those falls, I wasn’t even walking when it happened. I was just standing still, perhaps on an embankment, when all of a sudden up fly my legs (a feeling I’m quite accustomed to by know) and I land flat on my a**. One of the side benefits of almost always carrying my backpack is that it has provided cushioning for nearly every fall. I would be in much worse pain if not for this valliant companion.

I’m thinking about having a running meter on my sidebar. Perhaps I could have a special symbol when a fall results in blood being drawn. That ought to up my traffic flow from search engines.

Seeing as how we’re not even in winter yet, and I have more than three months of snow to go through, I expect my fall number to pass 100. I’ll have to do something special to commemorate when that occurs.

I did go to a Russian Army-Navy surplus store a couple of weeks ago, and saw some sweet boots with steel spikes on the soles. I’m thinking about purchasing a pair. As well as some Spetznaz shirts.

Ah! My Liver!

Owen | Russia | Friday, December 19th, 2003

Just a little post to let you know I’m still alive. The mafia haven’t got a hold of me … yet.

It’s two in the morning, and I still have a massive amount of homework due tomorrow morning. I’ve spent the past hour plus helping an Armenian student prepare his grant proposal for graduate study at U Mich. The atmosphere in the dorm has only facilitated my already powerful urge to procrastinate.

Having focused on politics these past couple of days, I have some good cultural stuff in the queue. For now, though, Russian vocab awaits. Have faith, tomorrow I will get back to my expose on life in St. Petersburg. And if I haven’t emailed you back yet, it’s on it’s way … except you Bug, you can go к черту!!

Site Design

Owen | Personal | Thursday, December 18th, 2003

I’m thinking about changing some things here at Lex Libertas, and I would very much appreciate reader feedback. Even random people passing through.

First, should I keep the political stuff and the travel stuff on the same webpage. I originally intended to have two blogs, but I never had time to set it up before my trip. I know that some of you aren’t of the same political persuasion as me, and I hate to make you sit through my rants just to hear about Russia. But, it’s way easier this way. With two, they each wouldn’t be updated as often.

Second, if I keep it all on one page, should I redisign the site. I’m thinking about working a theme around the Russian Flag (three horizontal bars, white, blue, and red). Does that sound interesting, or are things good now?

Thanks

I’m Prescient

Owen | Politics | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

This being the blogosphere, I feel a certain right to brag. I predicted that the world will start their “America sucks” game by criticizing the death penalty for Saddam. It was quick, but I got in there first. Before any politician or newspaper started off about it.

My post came out a day before any media representation of the issue, and I haven’t seen anyone else in the blogosphere talk about it.

Just a little pat on the back. Sometimes I think that the tens of thousands of dollars spent on a “European Studies” degree just might have been worth something. Then I come back to reality.

Environmental Fundamentalism

Owen | Politics | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Michael Crichton gave an amazing speech about the dangers of the Environmental Movement’s fundamentalism and religiosity.

I have been asked to talk about what I consider the most important challenge facing mankind, and I have a fundamental answer. The greatest challenge facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from fantasy, truth from propaganda. Perceiving the truth has always been a challenge to mankind, but in the information age (or as I think of it, the disinformation age) it takes on a special urgency and importance.

The speech is kind of long, but it is definitely worth reading.

Hillary Visits Iraq

Owen | Politics | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Hillary in Iraq.jpg

Thanks to Aaron’s Rantblog for this and the Dean pic.

Coalition Building

Owen | Politics | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Dean Circus Freak.jpg

Getting a majority, one interest group at a time. There’s a reason Howard Dean is a lightning rod for grassroots groups.

Which Deadly Sin?

Owen | Quizes | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003

Wrath
Which deadly sin do you represent? (Angel Sanctuary Pics)

brought to you by Quizilla

Probably the most accurate of the 7 options. Besides, who would miss a few Democrats and Fascists here and there?

Which World Leader?

Owen | Quizes | Tuesday, December 16th, 2003


What Famous Leader Are You?

I was hoping for someone a bit more badass, especially after the wrath quiz. Oh well, I guess developing the theory behind nukes is pretty badass in and of itself.

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