Interesting and Humour - page 1466
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Probably a Muscovite? About 70 per cent of Russians live and feel the "gaps", though in the family budget. A pension of 8,000 (if one pensioner lives alone), an average salary in the city of 15 to 20 t.r./month. The rent is 6400r. a month, electricity 400r. a month. One trip to the shop = -700 - 1200r., And the children to feed / learn / dress. Can you do the math? Now do the math in Moscow... Muscovites come here every year and wonder how we manage to survive here... Food/clothes are one and a half or two times higher than in Moscow, and wages are three or four times lower... 2/3 of the city budget goes to Moscow. Credit to you, sir.
You don't get any credit. I have been living in Moscow for a long time, but I am not a Muscovite myself (due to my propiska).
Pension for provincials is about the same - yes, yes, about the same as for Muscovites.
Average salary in Moscow is higher, yes (by 2-2.5 times). But this is at the expense of migrants who have to pay for rented flats, and to pay quite differently than in the provinces. It is much more expensive. Muscovites themselves, according to my feeling, do not really want anything, and do not aspire to it. And they berate all the "newcomers" (and prefer to rent empty flats themselves).
I am not even going to talk about the electricity bill. 400 a month is my dream. And this despite the fact that I have energy-saving light bulbs at home, and old household appliances that burn a lot, not at all. True, the computer stays on all day long, but it consumes very little compared to everything else.
Transport in Moscow, by the way, is several times more expensive than in the provinces. The provinces do not notice it, but it significantly affects Muscovites' pockets.
You could talk about where the budget goes in the Soviet era, but not now. You live in the 20th century, and now it's the 21st. And there is no such thing as the sovcus. It's about time you woke up and stopped thinking in soviet categories, you're not a stupid man at all.
Not for you. I have been living in Moscow for a long time, but I am not a Muscovite myself (according to my propiska).
Pension for provincials is about the same - yes, yes, about the same as for Muscovites.
Average salary in Moscow is higher, yes (by 2-2.5 times). But this is at the expense of migrants who have to pay for rented flats, and to pay quite differently than in the provinces. It is much more expensive. Muscovites themselves, according to my feeling, do not really want anything, and do not aspire to it. And they berate all the "newcomers" (and prefer to rent empty flats themselves).
I am not even going to talk about the electricity bill. 400 a month is my dream. And this despite the fact that I have energy-saving light bulbs at home, and old household appliances that burn a lot, not at all. True, the computer stays on all day long, but it consumes very little compared to everything else.
Transport in Moscow, by the way, is several times more expensive than in the provinces. The provinces do not notice it, but it significantly affects Muscovites' pockets.
You could talk about where the budget goes in the Soviet era, but not now. You live in the 20th century, and now it's the 21st. And there is no such thing as the sovcus any more. It's about time you woke up and stopped thinking in soviet categories, you're not a stupid man at all.
Where do you get these prices from? My dog was bitten by an encephalitis tick, blood test - 9,000 rubles. injections once a day cost about 1,000 rubles and so for a fortnight.
Where do you even get such prices? My dog was bitten by an encephalitis tick, blood test - 9,000 rubles. injections once a day cost about 1,000 rubles and so for a fortnight.
Where do you even get such prices? My dog was bitten by an encephalitis tick, blood test - 9,000 rubles. injections once a day cost about 1,000 rubles and so for a fortnight.
Anyway, we've all deliberated and I've decided
Starting tomorrow, all forum members with Moscow IPs should submit a photo of their cancelled mayoral vote ballot
Those who haven't submitted are to be banned within three days.
Those who have a tick against Navalny will be recalculated by a factor of 10 in case Navalny wins the election.
Anyway, we've all deliberated and I've decided
Starting tomorrow, all forum members with Moscow IPs should submit a photo of their cancelled mayoral vote ballot
Those who haven't submitted are to be banned within three days.
Those who have a tick against Navalny will be recalculated by a factor of 10 in case Navalny wins the election.
Such an amount is very far from the Moscow average, by the way.
Well, in short, I have already laid out all the relevant arguments, I'm too lazy to repeat myself.
Your hatred of Muscovites is unfounded. They come in all shapes and sizes, just like in any other city.