I feel the outcome of the Ukrainian crisis regarding game and traveling has been neglected. I've read almost everything and couldn't see a full discussion about how this crisis better be solved so that it will be in the best interest of a love tourist who wants to live in Ukraine and make love to beautiful feminine women by putting the minimum effort. So the question is, what is the ideal resolution to this problem for us?
Personally, when I look at the right sector's agenda, I see a terrifying risk of Ukraine becoming another Poland in the future. Now that the pro-Russian goverment got overthrown and Crimea is gone, it's almost a guarantee that a nationalist, pro-EU government will win the elections on 25th of May. While I don't think the economy is likely to get better anytime soon, I'm afraid the hardcore nationalists and EU supporters will ruin the country culturally. I'm afraid the next generation of girls won't even speak Russian due to their hardcore nationalist parents and the ''revolution'' they have brought.
Most Ukrainians supported the coup just for the hope of open borders and traveling without a visa. If that happens, Ukraine will quickly become like its neighbor Poland. As Roosh mentioned in his last Poland post, an invasion of smartphones, sex tourists and obesity will follow. I lived 6 months in Poland and 2 months in Ukraine and to me it seems like Ukraine is just a Poland of 20 years ago, if things go the way they are. Everything nice and feminine about an average Ukrainian woman will be replaced by a hardcore nationalist, iphone obsessed attention-whore who refuses to speak Russian and who explores her sexuality with numerous men from Italy and Spain every summer.
In my opinion, the country splitting will do no good to anyone but Russia. On the other hand, the westerners shouldn't be allowed to push their agenda on Ukraine so easily. The ideal situation for me is status quo, the right sector pulling Ukraine to EU and the ethnically-Russians pulling Ukraine in the other direction, so there will be balance. When the right sector wins the elections in may, those pro-Russians in the East and their protests will help to have a strong opposition to the government so that Ukraine won't shift to either direction too easily.
That's just me. I'm curious about your take?
Personally, when I look at the right sector's agenda, I see a terrifying risk of Ukraine becoming another Poland in the future. Now that the pro-Russian goverment got overthrown and Crimea is gone, it's almost a guarantee that a nationalist, pro-EU government will win the elections on 25th of May. While I don't think the economy is likely to get better anytime soon, I'm afraid the hardcore nationalists and EU supporters will ruin the country culturally. I'm afraid the next generation of girls won't even speak Russian due to their hardcore nationalist parents and the ''revolution'' they have brought.
Most Ukrainians supported the coup just for the hope of open borders and traveling without a visa. If that happens, Ukraine will quickly become like its neighbor Poland. As Roosh mentioned in his last Poland post, an invasion of smartphones, sex tourists and obesity will follow. I lived 6 months in Poland and 2 months in Ukraine and to me it seems like Ukraine is just a Poland of 20 years ago, if things go the way they are. Everything nice and feminine about an average Ukrainian woman will be replaced by a hardcore nationalist, iphone obsessed attention-whore who refuses to speak Russian and who explores her sexuality with numerous men from Italy and Spain every summer.
In my opinion, the country splitting will do no good to anyone but Russia. On the other hand, the westerners shouldn't be allowed to push their agenda on Ukraine so easily. The ideal situation for me is status quo, the right sector pulling Ukraine to EU and the ethnically-Russians pulling Ukraine in the other direction, so there will be balance. When the right sector wins the elections in may, those pro-Russians in the East and their protests will help to have a strong opposition to the government so that Ukraine won't shift to either direction too easily.
That's just me. I'm curious about your take?