1 | #+TITLE: Immigration experience after events of 2022
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2 | #+DATE: <2024-10-30 Wed>
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3 | #+LANGUAGE: en
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4 |
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5 | * Immigration experience after events of 2022
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6 |
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7 | [[../../public/images/wkz-immigration.gif]]
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8 |
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9 | I had left Russia in September of 2022 as many other Russian
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10 | developers. Not sure if I did it permanently or temporary. I've moved
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11 | to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_(country)][Georgia (country)]] (also named Sakartvelo) with the help of [[https://trop.in/][Andrew
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12 | Tropin]] (big kudos to him) as a temporary solution after [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_Russian_mobilization][partial
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13 | mobilization]] was announced in Russia. That temporary solution did last
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14 | 2 years already and third year is to come.
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15 |
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16 | [[https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/flights-out-of-moscow-russia-putin-intl/index.html][The aircraft tickets price went high]] immediately after partial
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17 | mobilization, so the only choice left was to move by land. The only
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18 | Russia-Georgia border was [[https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2022/10/03/in-photos-russians-fleeing-putins-draft-queue-at-georgian-border-a78957][stuck in a huge traffic jam]] before even we
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19 | started to drive. It took us ~3-4 days to manage to drive there facing
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20 | corruption, closed oblasts (Russian administration borders) and buses
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21 | on roads with ongoing mobilization. My mental state was bad, because
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22 | it felt like the country can be closed at any moment (government can
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23 | accept new laws extremely quickly, like for 1-2 hours). I don't want
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24 | to concentrate my story on that part much, because there are already
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25 | many evidence published.
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26 |
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27 | So we passed the border after all the struggle and stayed at the
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28 | longest traffic jam of my life. Both borders were quite easy to pass
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29 | thankfully. I had a two hour long small-talk with FSB guys at spring
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30 | before when I first tried to leave Russia, so I was nervous.
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31 |
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32 | I decided to migrate extremely low on cash: I had about $600-800. So I
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33 | needed to find a job to grind my way for a living in a new
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34 | place. Luckily the tax-rate is extremely low here: only 1% for small
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35 | business and 0% for micro-business. I wanted to stay outside of Russia
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36 | as long as I could, so I found a job in a two-three weeks as Symfony
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37 | Developer (php) and made some money to stay here for some time.
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38 |
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39 | ** Why I have left Russia in a first place
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40 | - Men can be mobilized. Mobilization thing is still going.
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41 | - USD and EUR were prohibited or limited at banks atm and
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42 | VISA/Mastercard stopped working + sanctions (mostly minor)
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43 | - [[https://www.investing.com/currencies/usd-rub-advanced-chart][Ruble became weak]]. There is less and less reason to work with it,
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44 | because it drops all the time and salaries usually don't get
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45 | re-indexed.
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46 | - Many random censorship blockages of Internet resources (and other
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47 | media for example books). For example GNU Mailing lists were
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48 | banned. Also [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-guix/2022-03/msg00004.html][Guix servers were banning ru IPs]], so you can't use
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49 | substitutes there, which is critical for such system as GNU Guix.
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50 |
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51 | - Censorship is strong enough to get you into jail just for [[https://roskomsvoboda.org/en/post/gigest-apr-2022-kritika-derzhavy/][posting
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52 | online that war is a war]]. ([[https://roskomsvoboda.org/en/cards/card/safe-posting-rules/][Instruction on how to not get arrested
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53 | for posting]]).
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54 |
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55 | - Censorship is strong enough to get you into jail just for LIKES
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56 | and REPOSTS of some materials. For example there is ongoing thing
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57 | of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_foreign_agent_law][FOREIGN AGENTS]], if you repost them without marking YOU will be
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58 | fined.
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59 |
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60 | - Censorship is strong enough to get you into jail for [[https://meduza.io/en/feature/2018/05/23/russia-finds-a-new-tor-criminal][hosting TOR
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61 | exit node]]. In general in Russia you have a feeling that everything
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62 | is prohibited if otherwise is not stated, not the other way
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63 | around. The state has a centralized control over society.
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64 |
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65 | - Political propaganda became [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinformation_in_the_Russian_invasion_of_Ukraine][too wild to handle]]. Schools started to
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66 | have propaganda too ([[https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/02/17/russian-tv-airs-wartime-patriotism-lessons-for-schoolchildren-a80253][Уроки о важном]]).
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67 | - I was arrested once at the protest (and after that police might be
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68 | interested in you)
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69 |
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70 | Those reasons you might find a bit silly, but I believe if you are
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71 | involved into IT it would be a shame to be not connected to the rest
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72 | of community especially if you are into free software. Internal market
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73 | might be ok, but I think it would suck like it sucked in USSR.
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74 |
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75 | Majority of my Russian friends stayed in Russia. Immigration is costly,
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76 | standard of living will be lower and there is no guarantee that
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77 | immigration is even the answer. I find myself that I might return
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78 | any-day if something critical happens to my friends, family or
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79 | something else. At the same time would be nice to distance from Russia
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80 | even further.
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81 |
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82 | ** Tbilisi
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83 |
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84 | [[../../public/images/tbilisi.gif]]
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85 |
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86 | [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tbilisi][Tbilisi]] is a capital of Georgia. It is very nice city and I like being
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87 | here. At the time of arriving it had lots of support of Ukrainian
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88 | people and lots of hate to Russia expressed in wall graffities and
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89 | demonstrating Ukrainian flags. It was a bit of a shock for me, because
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90 | in Moscow if you do something like this you just get arrested, you
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91 | literally can't even write something on a wall without being punished
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92 | hard. Tbilisi also has lots of EU flags, because the state and people
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93 | want (or wanted) to be in EU hard enough.
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94 |
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95 | The currency is [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_lari][Georgian Lari]] (GEL). And when I've arrived it was
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96 | something like 20 rubles per lari, now it is 35 rubles per lari. Ruble
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97 | has dropped for at least 33% if you ask me and lari became much
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98 | stronger currency compared to it. It was easy to buy crypto here, it
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99 | became a bit harder after the regulations, but it is still
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100 | possible. Yet I don't use this, just noting that you can see some
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101 | Bitcoin shops in the city, which was a surprise for me because there
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102 | is literally none in Moscow.
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103 |
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104 | *** Arrival
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105 |
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106 | [[../../public/images/tbilisi2.gif]]
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107 |
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108 | I've arrived with no plan at all. I was randomly luring the city with
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109 | a backpack full of my clothes + my Thinkpad. My phone was low on
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110 | charge, so I've stopped a random taxi driver and asked for direction
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111 | to hotels. Because [[https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-65790759][~100-200k Russian migrated at the same time]] (not
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112 | exactly to Tbilisi) all hotels were full. Gladly that driver invited
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113 | me to his house, I've recharged my phone there and ate. After he
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114 | proposed me a deal to rent his country-side place. Knowing that
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115 | everything has high prices right now I've agreed.
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116 |
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117 | It was 40-60 minutes away from Tbilisi which felt actually far away
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118 | and it was on a mountain, so it was colder. Tbilisi itself is very
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119 | warm city, when I've arrived in the end of September it was +33
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120 | Celsius. I was using my winter clothes because the border was located
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121 | in mountains, so it was cold there.
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122 |
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123 | [[../../public/images/tbilisi3.gif]]
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124 |
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125 | After settled down in a country side, I've came back to Tbilisi
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126 | city. I've bought a local sim-card, Georgia doesn't has stupid
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127 | limitations for tourists, so I've bought same sim-card as locals. Went
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128 | to the bank and opened VISA card with no problem. Other Russian
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129 | fellows had problems with that, so the process is a bit random, but I
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130 | particularly had no issue. After that I went and registered a small
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131 | business. It took me 1-3 days to do everything, which is extremely
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132 | quick and it was easy in general. After all of that done I was ready
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133 | for legally earning the money.
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134 |
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135 | After that I found a job and after several months moved to the city to
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136 | better neighborhood.
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137 |
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138 | ** Why Georgia is nice
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139 |
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140 | [[../../public/images/tbilisi4.gif]]
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141 |
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142 | - No VISA required :: Russians can stay here for 1 year without a visa
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143 | as a tourist and than do the visa run and stay another
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144 | year. Ukrainians can stay for 2 years straight.
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145 | - 0-1% business tax :: probably the lowest in the world
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146 | - Rent is cheaper :: I think the minimal is $300-350 per month
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147 | here. It was even cheaper before big migration wave.
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148 | - Products :: Products are generally cheaper than in EU (I hope)
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149 | - Community :: Many Russian-speaking people are here. It means that
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150 | Georgia is a good place for meetups, conferences and other
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151 | activities. For example there is a hackerspace F0rthsp4ce. @akater
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152 | organized [[https://gitlab.com/akater/emacs-tbilisi-meetup-page/-/blob/main/public/index.org][Emacs meetup]] and @tropin did [[https://fosstodon.org/@w96k/112483547960128437][guix meetup]].
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153 | - Russia :: Georgia is close to Russia, so friends, family and other
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154 | can come here more easily compared to other countries.
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155 | - Climate :: Georgia has a warm climate. There is almost no snow at
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156 | winter and generally very warm.
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157 | - Nature :: Georgia has a lot of mountains and caves and it is great
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158 | for hiking.
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159 | - Georgian are friendly :: hospitality is their feature
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160 | - Free (Libre) Internet :: Mostly not blocked at all.
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161 | - No bureaucracy :: It was extremely easy to open a business and bank
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162 | card. In general country feels much less trouble than others, I'm
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163 | sure that EU has much harder procedures for everything.
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164 | - Minimum regulation :: Georgia feels like it has low government
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165 | regulations in general, but it might be only a feeling. Russia and
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166 | Moscow felt much more over-regulated, you can be arrested if you
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167 | cross the road in non appropriate place for example.
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168 |
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169 | ** Why Georgia is not so nice
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170 |
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171 | [[../../public/images/tbilisi5.gif]]
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172 |
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173 | - Russia :: Russia is too close and has influence in Georgian
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174 | politics. Also it might be dangerous for activists.
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175 | - Citizenship :: It is mostly impossible to get a citizenship. You
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176 | need to stay here for 10 years with a permit for a living and
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177 | government often declines providing those.
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178 | - Less jobs :: If you work outside of IT it is much harder to get a
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179 | job compared to Moscow.
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180 | - Less salary :: If you handle to get a job it will be less
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181 | profitable. My brother works here and get 50% less. I might guess
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182 | that IT jobs has the same downside here, but not sure.
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183 | - High import fees :: You need to pay 20% fee if you order stuff from
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184 | Internet markets above $100.
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185 | - Hard language :: Georgian language is very hard to learn compared to
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186 | others. It is old and niche language.
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187 | - Visa problem :: Many embassies requires a permit for a living in a
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188 | country before your visa request, so I can't for example do a visa
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189 | in Georgia. I need to go either to Russia or seek other countries to
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190 | get a permit. The only exception is Spain Embassy in Armenia which
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191 | works as a proxy for Embassy in Russia, so you can get a visa
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192 | without a permit.
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193 | - Internet is expensive and slow :: In Moscow I've paid $3 per month
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194 | to get 40MBit. Here 45MBit costs $12.5. It is actually not so
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195 | critical as packet losses and overall quality.
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196 | - Electricity shutdowns :: Compared to Moscow it happens a bit too
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197 | often and it depends on your neighborhood.
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198 |
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199 | ** Other options
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200 | Of course Georgia is not the only option for migration. It was for a
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201 | moment because of mass emigration and prices, but in general there is
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202 | a choice. EU and other countries closed its borders for Russians or
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203 | made it harder to get a VISA.
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204 |
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205 | If something happens to Georgia, most likely I would move to one of
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206 | these countries:
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207 |
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208 | - Serbia ::
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209 | - Montenegro ::
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210 | - Spain ::
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211 | - Portugal ::
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212 | - Argentina ::
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213 | - Urugway ::
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214 |
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215 | Most options has a common problem - *T* *A* *X* *E* *S*. They are extremely
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216 | high. In Russia the tax for individual business is 6-12%. I'm not
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217 | saying that this is a bad thing in general, but it is a bad thing for
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218 | the guy, who wants to start living in a country without having
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219 | billions beforehand. 15-22% is kinda nice, but still quite high
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220 | compared to Georgian 0-1%.
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221 |
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222 | ** Conclusion
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223 |
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224 | [[../../public/images/georgia_mountains.gif]]
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225 |
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226 | Overall I'm glad that I've left Russia. Even if I would return it is
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227 | nice to have an experience living abroad. I never been abroad before
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228 | and generally I'm more "sitting at one place all my life" type of
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229 | person. I've found new connections here and not feeling alone, maybe I
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230 | even became more social here. I hope other Russian fellows who decided
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231 | to not participate in government actions are doing well.
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232 |
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233 |
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234 | /Peace./
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