Wednesday, September 26, 2012

How Many NGO's in Latvia?



54 NGOs demand Latvian Welfare Minister’s resignation


An excerpt from the original article:


The letter emphasizes that gender roles and sex differences are natural and self-explanatory. Society needs to have girls who are aware of their femininity and beauty, who understand their function and role of a woman and a mother. Boys, on the other hand, must develop their manhood, learn to be responsible for their families and be brave enough to protect their country if need be.
If you read the full article you'll find that Natalija Magazeina doesn’t google
I found 7 NGO’s in Latvia
I mention this because since I heard it on RadioBalkom this morning, and then read a reprint from the original LETA in the Baltic Times, I have not been able to verify this 54 number at all.
Besides, combined with all the symbolic dead babies in Old Town lately I see a very real attack on reality happening in this country. Is it originating from within, or without?

<edit> i was on a flight from Brussels to Latvia on the 17 of Sept. (BT604) that had a contingent of LGBT folks in funny hats stuffed into the back of the plane due to their bon vivant attitude who I would enjoy a comment from!

EDIT 29.12.2012: As of February 2011, there were 13,284 registered nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Latvia, almost two-thirds of which were founded after Latvia joined the European Union (EU) in 2004.
source FREEDOM HOUSE


Thursday, September 20, 2012

Bauska Waffen SS War Memorial

Is the Pope a Nazi because of his membership in the Hitler Youth? Catholics would obviously say no. Were the French Resistance really freedom fighters or surrender monkeys as some would have it? I think you know the answer to that. So, are Latvians who enlisted or were pressed into service in the Waffen SS divisions during WWII to be considered Nazi's or fighters against the Soviet occupiers? Do they warrant a monument in the center of Bauska and a yearly parade to Milda in Riga every March? As always it depends on your point of view. But it is very important to understanding the national psychology.

Unsurprisingly the Russian media and it's masters in the Power Vertical take the view that the monument recently erected in Bauska to the Latvian Waffen SS Legions serving in WWII is an affront against mankind. Oddly enough a quick search of known hate sites like Stormfront (News For White People Worldwide) or National Alliance News (White Pride Worldwide) show little activity on the issue. So maybe it's more political than anything else. But it still doesn't stop pundits from expressing an opinion.

So, my opinion is this. Latvians don't seem to be very open about important conversations that will shape the country. Citizenship for ethnics, corruption, the past. All of this points to a problem with moving forward. I read in the comments section of another blog that people were expecting too much in the 21 years that have passed since the collapse of the Soviet Union. But I used to have the same conversations with people when I lived in Moscow after the collapse of the USSR before Pooty Poot got a toe hold. You need several generations was the wisdom proffered, but of course the momentum was lost and that country is now firmly stuck in reverse.

How would one describe Latvia's progress I wonder. Moving forward? Or backward.

All these unresolved issues that Latvians keep kicking down the road lead me to believe that the country is in fact moving backwards.



<edit> I would just like to add, for perspective, that when I pass Tornakalns on my Riga train commute which is twice daily The Victory Memorial to the Soviet Army in Riga is visible in the distance, erected in 1985 to commemorate the Soviet Army's victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. As is this. Latvians will recognize it for what it is.



<edit> for those who are waiting for the really interesting post, this isn't it. I have to really be careful with the accuracy of what will be coming down the pipe, so bear with me.



Thursday, September 6, 2012

Bullet Points From The Foul Bowels of Latvia

Or, "Random Stories From The Abyss"

My wife is just back from a week of checking on our flat in Moscow (it's still there although I have some negative stories to regale you with about how Putin's Moscow is degrading, more on that in another post) and we are busy winding up the summer so a blogging format change is in order to allow for a quick post with a minimum of effort on my part. Because I don't get paid to do this you know. It's only narcissism with a dollop of masochism and 100 grams of Black Balsams that makes it possible. The famous Latvian tipple has been owned for some time by a Russian by the way.
  • Since I returned to Riga mid-April I have been hearing Russian 75% of the time which surprises me since this is not a Russian enclave. In Riga at least for business it seems to be Russian first, then English, then Latvian. I can understand Latvians wanting to keep their language alive but there is no escaping the fact that Russian is more prevalent and therefore more useful to know. Plus the very obvious fact that everything in Latvia is for sale, and Russians are in a mood to buy.
  • The recently implemented e-signature electronic verification format (eParaksts.lv) so far only adopted by 45% of Latvian citizens as they replaced their personal id card with the new eID card (also replacing the old visa like Permanent Resident Permit with an eID card like that which I & Mrs. TRex now have) is not surprisingly being used by government departments like Municipal Police as a way to insulate themselves from the public. A recent personal example: "We don't want your hand written hard copy complaint sir, so please go home and submit your statement to our user (un)friendly web-site using your e-signature account." Of course one needs to purchase a Smart Card Reader (most shops have sold out long ago), have access to a computer, e-bank account and the perseverance to slog through the opaque procedure of downloading exe. files to ones PC (it's not very Mac friendly) and then purchase the minimum sized service package of e-signatures in the case of a business eID card (did I mention there are three types of eID?) in order to submit one (1) doc. Yeah. Like that's going to happen with your average citizen although I certainly made the effort not being average or even a citizen. This is doubly surreal when you take into account the relatively high percentage of the population that are older citizens who live in one or two rooms with a wood stove for heat, basic electricity consisting of sixty year old rat chewed wiring feeding two light bulbs and three wall outlets and no phone line and a communal squat at the end of the hallway who along with this stark reality have to field suggestions from the teller every time they go to the bank that they use the bank computer (at 50 centimes/transaction, their bread ration for the day) or get their own computer and wifi! Whut!? 90% of the poor things can't even use an ATM! And then I heard on the Radio Baltkom this morning that the issuance of these "Smart" cards has been suspended indefinitely anyway but no one knows why! Who is in charge of this country? 
  • These neon green bottle recycle containers confuse me. Every one I have seen has had the rubber receptacle vandalized by bottle pickers attempting to fish out the bottles. I mean, why didn't they just let the bottle pickers take the bottles and recycle them, putting the small profit in their pocket?  Without all the industrial bullshit! Is it an EU thing? I've seen a few of these bins burnt to the ground and I'm not really sure if it's just random property damage or something else. I have only ever seen one young guy with a huge gold chain around his neck picking bottles. Everyone else looks pretty desperate to me.
  • Listen, speaking mat, driving a 20 year old Merc with Russian flags on the dash and wearing vintage Adidas's gym gear periodically puked out of a huge warehouse in Vladivostok doesn't make you a gangster. The USSR fell 20 years ago boyo, move along now. And besides, it's impossible that everyone of a certain age can be a gangster, the odds are just against it. It's just as improbable that everyone else in the country is a hugely successful business mogul or Elite real estate wizard. If you know what I mean and I think that you do.
  • I can't figure out the food situation in this country. I mean, you can eat really really well, good healthy hot food, for two or three lats in literally a hundred different Kafe's around Riga but you can't purchase the food in any Rimi, Elvi or Maxima and take it home and cook it for the same price. I've tried. I'm a hell of a good cook and even if I spread my purchases out between the Riga Market and various different grocers I simply cannot make meals for less than what I can pay eating out. And I'm not talking about the Lido chain also owned by a Russian which has gotten hella expensive. It's a mystery, although a rather pleasant one I must admit. Many of these Kafe's simply disappear from one location only to re-appear somewhere else. Tax dodge? Avoiding a rent increase? I don't know but it's become a hobby of mine to try and keep track of these things.
  • Hospital staff & EMT remain very professional and easy going in what must be very challenging and poorly paid professions. Back on X-mas day 2009 I suffered an attack of kidney stones while walking along Jurmala beach and barely made it back to the pharmacy in Majori where Mrs. T called a cab and got me home with me flopping all over the back seat and freaking out the driver, my plan being to just simply tough it out. I lasted about 1 hr on my bed before I was begging for an ambulance which showed up promptly. The EMT even shot me up full of dope straight away and then took me to the hospital where I was kept comfortable with more shots until I had passed three stones. Cost was three lats which I paid as I left. Contrast that with an attack I had @2:30 am in Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada in 2010 that had my poor dad and Mrs. T driving me to the Emergency while | tried to not kick out the back windows of the SUV. It took forever to get processed, then I had to lay on a gurney forever while I waited for someone to show up, make an evaluation and then finally give me a small shot for the pain whereupon my gurney was placed in the hallway where I was forgotten about while I waited to pass a couple stones. Cost to me was nothing but then that's about what the level of care I received was worth. I've also received excellent care in Moscow so I chuckle when Canadians hold their bloated health care system as an example to others. Latvians should be proud of their medical sector, I sure am.
From some of the things that I write it may appear that I loath Latvia and Latvians, but I don't. I know many kind and decent, intelligent Latvians who have a vision for the future of their country. I would consider them the intelligentsia if you will. But I don't run across them every day. I run across a meaner and more venal type. |'m not a professional reporter, I just write about my day and what I experience, so it's not like I chase down a story and research it. I just present my experiences along with my opinion.

And that's why you should pay attention to my next post which will present a problem that my wife and I have had to deal with for 20 years since she was repatriated, the concept of private property in Latvia and the hypocrisy of Latvians on this issue. A story of lies, cheats and incompetent cops. And me beating the tar out of someone with impunity. So stay tuned fair reader!