Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Never heard so many educated and knowledgeable comments in one interview. They could all get jobs as foreign correspondents with our national media. First class interview !
Is anyone else impressed with how well informed and articulate everyone being interviewed is? Makes me want to learn more about Kazakhstan, it’s people and culture. Thank you for these wonderful interviews.
Guess what, Kazahstan has an better live standard than Russia, but they have 40% of they population Russian, they speak Russian language, in Putins eyes they can all do that as long as they listen to Moscow.
@@Jopa955 40 percent of the population is not russian but around 20. and not everyone in kazakhstan who speaks russian are ethnic russians. almost all people in central asia can speak russian because they were colonized by russians in 19th century. kazakhs have their own native language which is a turkic language. but they tend to speak russian more i think.
I am pretty sure russian citizens didn’t come personally and did all of that You need to distinguish between government and its people Both russians and kazakhs are in pretty good terms, but as for its government, that’s a different story
@@somelove9872 just telling by experience. Russians still are very arrogant and have this almost American way of thinking they’re a superior nation. They still have that mindset. You can separate governments from the people but to a limited extent
У нас была общая история, да, были и плохие, и хорошие моменты. Мы должны быть хорошими соседями, и не пытаться оттяпать у друг друга разными проводами территории. И Украина, и Россия, и Казахстан имеют большие территории, где у России и у Казахстана есть много полезных ископаемых. Нужно пользоваться этими благами, и поднимать свои народы, и продолжать быть хорошими соседями, не навязывая свою политику, не вторгаясь к друг другу, не вмешиваться во внутреннюю политику друг друга. К сожалению все это портит один человек по имени Путин! Каждый казах неплохо знает русский, я тому пример, и такие русские как Вы, отличный пример, что ещё не все потеряно. Надеюсь, россияне, которые поддерживают войну Путина одумаются, и все мы вернёмся на те же рельсы всестороннего развития, но у же без него!
More content about central Asia please! I'd love to know also about Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, etc. These central Asian countries definitely need more attention. Thank you all Bosses, you are doing a great job ❤️
It's an area we don't hear about much ( in the west) if the people are as articulate and educated as the ones in this video then I'd love to hear more of their opinions
@@ЧеловекУмный-ф8с it is offensive only for nationally complexed people, because every adequate and invulnerable to propaganda people understand that kazakhstan IS really unknown among masses worldwide. Және бораттың танымалдығы тек уақытты және оның елімізге еш қатысы жоқ екенін ұмытпағаның жөн
Impressive. They all seem very articulate and well informed on political issues. Big thumbs up to Asian Boss for bringing forth the perspective from a Central Asian nation. Looking forward to more such interesting contents covering different parts of Asia.
@@JohnSmith-pf1vg I love American ppl. But I truly think that any nation in the rest of the World is more informed than Americans😂😂 You guys live like on another planet. You know nothing about other countries and actually not interested. Peace☮️
I once met someone from Kazakhstan and i asked her where she was from. "I from Kazakhstan, its a SMALL country in the middle of asia, u probably never heard of it", "course i have" i answered, "every time i eat an apple i think of your country because thats where apples originated"
@@IIIIIllIIlll i know, why did she say small? She was very nice, plus, she knows alot of english are a bit thick n probably cant picture the place on a map.
@@tyunpeters3170 for one, zelensky refused to sign the minsk agreement, ukraine also agreed not to join NATO, but begged and applied anyways breaking his word, there is also the Budapest Memorandum, the 1994 NPT agreement to denuclearize. Are you aware that when the USSR broke apart, the treaty with the current Legacy government of Russia clearly stated that NATO would not move one inch towards their border. Ukraine was the last country that had not joined NATO and was looking to do so. Putin is merely bringing freedom and peace to Ukraine citizens who were being abused by the zelensky traitor. Russia is not at war with Ukraine or innocent people who live in Ukraine, it is a peacekeeping military operation to remove the radical NAZI's that have taken over the Ukranian gov, through a coup. zelensky is a corrupt oligarch imposter and traitor to the Ukranian people.
@@AUMINER1 God do you realize how brainwashed you are and how what you're saying is completely illogic? You invade an entire country to make a coup? Do you know what a coup is?
This mustached guy in white shirt and blue jacket killing it - his answers are very logical and well-structured, he sounds much smarter, more educated than most politicians.
The lady with blue cap is so weird. She adores Russia so much. But when the interviewer asked about the probability of Russia taking control of Kazakhstan, then she switched side. Honey, that's your reality! I think she still lives in a bubble!
She also expressed an extremely unpopular positive opinion about the president. Kazakhs don’t support Tokayev, thus the mass protests back in 2019 and 2 months ago. Random ppl are being detained and tortured in prisons as an aftermath of those protests. And everybody knows that, but with Russia as an “ally” to the Kazakh elites, there’s not much ordinary ppl can do. This woman sounds like a paid actor.
@@BA-bo7kx Watch less BBC and CNN, those protests were fabricated by the US. Why is everyone who inclines positive towards Russia is instantly labelled as a Putin muppet or some paid actor? The brainwashing is sureal.
@@natureblank1401 lol. Who are you trying to deceive? I’m a Kazakh myself, so chill. The protests were very natural, ppl just got fed up with old dictators in power, we don’t need the US to see how their corrupt ruling is degrading the quality of our lives. Talk about brainwashing! You are the one living in constant fear of imaginary enemies and owe towards Putin, who ruined Russian economy (when it actually had so much potential to bloom back in the 90s and 2000s. Well, there WAS a natural economic growth, but it had nothing to do with putin’s policies). He lied to you all this time! He used your post Cold War trauma to stay in power and keep robbing Russia. He’s feeding you the hope for the restored Empire because y’all are ready to sacrifice your well-being for that hope. This war will only strengthen the NATO and create a tension between Russia and the West which hasn’t been there in the last decades. Is that what Russians wanted?
@@natureblank1401 dude I’m Kazakh and B A is spitting some facts, it is a Russian and Kazakh state propaganda claiming protests were organized from the outside. People were fed up and bursted out, only Russian soldiers stopped our marches to seize capital.
I think she talkes about the average russian citizen and later about the threats of there gouverment. Its not that hard to understand guys 😅. Maybe because of the translation but if you understand russian you get her point.
I am impressed with the people interviewed. Their responses reflected a higher level of education than one would expect from the streets of other countries. In other countries, in random sample interviews, one almost always comes across people who are not informed and act less mature. None of the Kazakhstanis seemed lacking in education or rational reasoning. I appreciated their practicality on the matter, their frankness and compassion for those in Ukraine.
what the hell is other countries? if you are from the US you should know that US people are largely perceived as highly uneducated in most parts of the world.
@@zhenyalandyak8258 That’s right. Most of the US people knows nothing about what their government has been doing in the geopolitics world. I think their media is responsible
I'm not impressed at all about your aussumption that they are randomly selected. I'm annoyedand pissed at the selection, whch obviousy only took the smartet 0,5% by asking in front of some government/bank building, far far away of any average citizen.
Sadly that simply shows how little you know and thus because you think similar things you think "they believe the same stuff I believe that makes them smart". Some were smart but they all lacked essential facts and awareness.
@@jenniexx9528 not really, in fact I think the reason people are impressed is because if you did this style of interview in the west most people wouldn’t be half as informed as the people being interviewed here.
I loved these kazakh videos. I am so impressed with them. They are not only intelligent, articulate and aware of the truth, but also quite elegant and attractive people. The dentistry worker and the guy with moustache were specially insightful Ultimately the infamous Borat may have actually made fun of our wesetern prejudices and bigotry about a nation we hardly know anything
A lot of people defend Borat saying it was a joke on the western people, but it is not how a lot of people here see it. Even though we agree - anyone who believes Kazakhstan is what was shown in the movie must be very ignorant. It’s just bad taste to make those satire jokes at the expense of the whole nation - and one that’s unable to defend their image. I’ve been haunted by Borat jokes when I was in school and just started exploring the internet and was so happy to see it die down. Of course they had to release another movie to prolonge this mess for the next decade
@@stayhoodie7860 I recently watched Borat again and concluded that the joke really was on America. In that these stereotypes exist in the west about certain countries being backwards, but just look at the backwardness and stupidity in America. Really, he should have gone back to Kazakhstan and done a proper documentary to compensate.
@@evamasters5028 i've never watched a borat movie, but when i saw the guy i had more of a turk in mind. Maybe because i was born in Kazakhstan and spent my childhood there? hmmmm
There aren't many secular Muslim countries while ALL Turkic countries are secular from Turkey to Kazakhistan!! Even this alone says a lot about Turkic people but sadly there is insane amount of misinformation and especially western media is always trying to portray Turkic people with a bad light. To be fair there is a historical hatred between Turks and westerners because of their invasion of Europe, however Europeans themselves invaded literally 80% of the world if not more so still fueling past hatred could be nothing but hypocrisy. If western countries properly supported Turkic countries after soviet union collapsed Russia wasn't going to have this much power and influence today and Europe was supplying it's oil and gas from not Russia rather Central Asia. It is really time western countries finally ditching this medieval way of thinking and giving a real chance to Turkic countries which are a million times more trustworthy than Russia or China...
I am Italian and after watching this video I really hope to be able to visit Kazakhstan. The people interviewed, even with different ideas, convey a truly admirable culture and sense of respect. I wish you the best!
that's a great decision to expand the area of coverage to include Central Asian countries! Those states are so underrepresented globally, but definitely deserve for more attention. Congratulations and good luck with everything you do! 👍👍
"Now is not the century to pick up swords and start wars". I strongly felt the gentleman's message. We, the whole world, must learn from our tragic history and never repeat them. "Let's live in peace." 🙏🏾
The problem is that a lot of countries disagree with the so-called "international order" imposed by the West, that for its part had 30 years of "vacation from history", and thereby the opportunity to use its temporary superiority in order to lay the foundations for a world that is build on mutual respect and constructive cooperation. Instead they assumed the "end of history" and behaved accordingly.
@@LOLBTLOLBT It’s more a case of if the USA stuck to its word and didn’t expand the military block, but here we are and the arms deals are flowing, how convenient!
It is interesting, because in russian he used a more figurative phrase, like "care for people, not for cockroaches in your head (about politicians)" I know, it sounds weird
I don't know why are people so impressed, here in Kazakhstan we have kinda bad designed cities, but regarding education and technology we are not that much behind Europe. Our kids win world math and chess competitions and you can download important documents using no more than your smartphone. We also have apps for everything - from your official medical data and appointments, to sending official letters to your local administratiom and/or to the government. My 75 year old gramma watches youtube and shops on her tablet. We don't live in dark ages, you know. Edit: Hey, guys, please stop saying bad things about USA))) USA has a problem with geography, but i personaly love that gay rights and knowledge about gay people are so well developed there. Most of adults above 35 in Kazakhstan still think that being gay means that you HAVE to look and act feminine and other ignorant stuff like that. I'm not gay, but the ammount of ignorant people in my country pains me deeply, because it means that in a way we actually do live in the dark ages. Every country has it's gap in knowledge. I hope we all can overcome our gaps and grow as humanity, all of us. And fck the war.
As a European, we never ever even hear of Kazakhstan (or other central Asian countries) in the news and know very little about them. I would bet most people just assume it's yet another Middle Eastern war-struck country run by the Taliban.
In America, the media will typically highlight dumb or funny answers and cut out coherent ones. For comedy or political purposes. "Ha ha, look at how stupid this person is," or "look at how dumb the people who don't agree with my politics are!" "Just think about how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that!" - American Comedian George Carlin
I know, right? I stated to look up information of Kazakhstan due to an outstanding singer (Dimash Qudaibergen) and then I saw lots of pictures of landscapes and people... And hands down, overall, gorgeous people and gorgeous places. I want to visit sometime.
As a Kazakh living in Kazakhstan, I feel very stressed now. We have plenty of friends and colleagues come here from both Russia and Ukraine. We have friends and relatives move to both countries in pursuit of better opportunities. And now we are in a war zone. The currency rates are dropping like crazy. Everything is getting more and more expensive and our brands feel the same sanctions as Russia - because Putin’s regime has tied us down to Russia for so long. I think a lot of people in Kazakhstan understand that Ukraine is just the first victim. And we are next - most likely. Russian government kept saying that Ukraine was frayed by the Bolsheviks, that they don’t have their own nation or culture. And they are saying the same about Kazakhstan. Ukrainians fighting and protecting their land now aren’t just in it for themselves - they are defending the peaceful futures of all the Central Asian nations - and beyond. The one good thing that came from this - we as Kazakhstan citizens certainly feel more connected to our land and our people now - we really don’t want this to happen to us. And of course it goes without saying - this is not done by the ordinary people. There are no bad nations, only bad people.
Khazakhstan is a country that I don't think gets enough recognition. Now all of a sudden because of this crisis I feel really bad for central asian countries, unfortunate that being tied to Putin's sphere just by geography kind of screws you guys via proximity, especially since the oil pipelines are shared with Russia and the country is landlocked which makes it very difficult to not be affected. I hope things don't get too bad, since there's not sanctions there I would think wouldn't it even become lucrative to import products under sanctions and import it to Russia?
@@mechano6505 The sad reality is that for a lot of people we simply don’t exist. For others - we are Russian colonies - which we basically were. For some - we are the generic Muslim country - which we really aren’t, at least not remotely in the way people see it. In this regard - I’m happy ÇA states are under the radar. It gives us all time to grow and develop enough for the people to be surprised and hopefully willing to educate themselves on what’s up here. On your last point - in general we are optimistic that our govt and entrepreneurs will be able to use this situation to our advantage. KZ got great potential for tourism for neighboring countries, we got good produce that we can export to other countries who relied on Russia, we got a lot to offer - to people within and outside our borders. If we play our cards right I’m sure KZ will grow stronger because of this. Plus Kazakhstan citizens were among the first ones to collect and send humanitarian aid to Ukraine and we also went on protests pleasing KZ to not support the Russian invasion at all. It’s a shared effort to make sure KZ isn’t involved directly and the Russian sanctions effect can be overcome
@@stayhoodie7860 Yeah that last part was the most surprising to me, how people weren't fully behind Russia. The general understanding was that it was somewhat closed off under Nazarbayev and generally just a Russian-dictatorship satellite but with the reforms and such it does seem like things are rather different. I do think Kazakhstan could also build up it's brand in the west and become more of a global partner rather than solely with Russia, especially if they lose this war and their influence is diminished. I hope that we get to hear more about Kazakhstan and other central asian countries on the global stage, the rich resources and strategic position could really change things a lot, really not that far from Europe especially considering how much Georgia has been aligning that way so it can really act as an intermediary between Europe and Central Asia.
classy. love the way they let these intelligent, educated people develop their perspective without agenda and cutting them off. watch most of these street interviews and people can hardly finish a sentence...
Wow- what a well-informed group of citizens. I'm ashamed to admit it's not an area I've ever given any attention to. Russia always, yes, Ukraine for a few years, Poland, Serbia, Romania- but never the "stans". It's time to change that. Thank you for this informative video.
Russia itself has several -stans inside it, like republics of Bashkortostan, Dagestan etc. Republic of Tatarstan, for example, is one of the most advanced regions of Russia in terms of education, science, economy and culture
Happy to hear you broadening your knowledge. Btw, we were forcing to change the name of our country to Qazaq Republic to get rid of that ‘stan’ stereotype few years back, but it did not get traction :(
@@frostflower5555 "Стан" is a common slavic word not only Serbian as far as I know. However -stan suffix is of Persian origin meaning "land", but because these lanuages are Indo-European both words probably related.
@Pim Max 1. Huge corruption in gov + youth mostly is apolitical and doesn't even vote 2. Those who voted had no other choice bcuz Putin and his party always try to get rid of whatever candidate that seems to be a threat to their regime. Like they did with Navalny, who exposed Putin and his oligarchs corruption. The gov tried to poison him, and now they finally jailed him. There is another candidate Bondarenko who pointed out governments corruption a year ago, and no one is even sure if he is still alive. 3. Nobody expected a war to happen. Those who support Putin are old ppl who are afraid of changes and believe his every word + brainwashed gangs of idiots, who are either paid to flame on people who oppose Putin, or are attention-whoring. Those, who oppose Putin, go to protests or simply call a spade a spade - pay a huge ass fine and go to jail for 15 years + many get beaten there by police. Source: I'm Russian.
The Russian view is, that they feel threatened by the USA. The illegal coup d'etat that was sponsored by the west in 2014 and supported by Ukrainians Nazis, made Ukraine a puppet-state of the US.Hunter Biden, the son of Biden even worked at a gas and oil company there! I suggest you to watch coach red pill.
Soulmate my a**! How about genocide of Kazakhs in 1930s?! These people need to study their history. I am Kazakh and just don’t get how they can say bs like this
They're being careful about their words because anything too divisive could come back to haunt them. I think if they interviewed Kazakh people living elsewhere the answers would be different
How impressive and well thought out their answers were- I like many other commenters here did not know much about Kazakhstan and its people, they are so thoughtful - i could listen to them for hours. The guy with the moustache (sorry no names were given) was so spot on with his analysis, and overall their comments were compassionate and kind as well as being clear and intelligent - no to war- we as ordinary people around the world do not sanction this barbarity.
Well educated and compassionate people in Kazakhstan. I tip my hat to you all. This war is an abomination and needs to stop now before it breaks out into WW3
As a Kazakh living in Kazakhstan I do not see anything in common with Russians as these guy is saying that Kazakhs and Russians have common culture and spirit. Totally disagree with that, because majority of Kazakhs are traditional muslims and turkic speaking people, whereas russians are slavic christians. We have different food from each other, we celebrate different events. Yes, historically and politically we are unfortunately integrated and we speak russian as well, but that is it. No any russian will think of kazakh as a brother or good friend, I lived in Moscow and I faced a lot of discrimination from Russians and saw racism agains other Central Asian nationals. Russians even show it in their movies.
what will happen with Baikonur if the russians cant pay for it? i read that they pay 115M dollar for a year, they can not afford this in the future for sure
Total fake turkish-state-bot propaganda. Racism in Moscow LOL the most multinational city in Russia where 30-40% of population are asians yeah, HILARIOUS. Saying that most kazakh are muslim is also fake, most are atheist.
Hats off from Finland to all Kazakhstani people. Mostly very smart people, who have not fallen into dark web of propaganda like their northern neighbours.
@Mahd Why should they speak their "own" language? The message they say is what matters. I speak four different languages. Does it make me less patriot when I speak the one which is not my native?
@@trikebeatstrexnodiff by calling Turkic people Turkish you call all Turkics minors to Turkish or like all Turks are part of Turkish. While it's not true, Anatolian Turkish are the most distant people from original Siberian Turks in terms of language, culture and blood. I'm Tatar (a Turkic people) but I would never call myself Turkish, I'm proud of my own Tatar culture. So to diminish Turkish and Turkic is necessary, it's different yhings
as a Lithuanian whose grandparents were deported to Karlag (Karaganda region in Kazakhstan) by the Soviet regime, I can say that I have never met such empathy from the Kazakh people, they helped my grandparents to survive exile. We will forever be grateful to the Kazakh people. Kazakhs are very educated and cultured and benevolent people. Литвадан барша қазақ халқына сүйіспеншілікпен
I read a book by a Lithuanian author about the Soviet deportations from Lithuania in the 20th century; it definitely gave perspective to what injustices people had to go through under the Soviet regime. I myself am Korean, and we Koreans were actually the first ethnic group to be deported by the Soviets too. My heart goes out to your grandparents, and everyone affected by these deportations.
Hi! Nice to see Lithunians here! I'm partly lithuanian and live in Kazakhstan for my whole live, some of my ancestors also were sent off in Kazakhstan during those times and intermarried with Kazakhs after.
I want to mark that in the interview only the opinion of the Russian-speaking people. in Kazakhstan there is a Kazakh-speaking population, for example, in the south-west of the country where I live, there are many people who speak only Kazakh and there are many of them. The opinion of the Kazakh-speaking population is quite different. and Putin's propaganda does not work for them.
@@formica. that was set near by my apartment , although I’m in Canada right now. Seems too familiar. It’s Almaty, the largest city. Population is around 2-2,5 m, and it’s much more “western” than the rest of the country
@@prostoname5338 Thanks, Almaty. Wikipedia has a very complementary article about it! "Almaty is still the major commercial and cultural centre of Kazakhstan, as well as its most populous and most cosmopolitan city." 2 million people. Summer temps in the low 20s. "Almaty is largely considered to be the heart and soul of Kazakhstan's classical and popular cultures. The Almaty Region and the city itself have a distinct vibe and pace compared to other regions and cities in Kazakhstan. Contemporary Almaty has a more European vibe due to more cafes and restaurants with outdoor seating and public green space. " I could dig that vibe!
They weren't really pro-Putin though. Most believe that the war is manufactured by the Russian government(Putin) and are sad that Russians and Ukrainians, two brother countries, are fighting. That's pretty much the general view of the war in the rest of the world.
I agree, but still feel that almaty is a good place to interview, as the city is the most bilingual, and mixed. Almaty kazakh myself, I think that people there are in some sense representative of kazakh and Russian speaking populations
Look up Kazakhstan's own Dimash Kudaibergen! This man has probably the most amazing voice in this world. Listen on youtube to his "S.O.S." or "Ogni Pietra"!
@@sjplus36 I think Dimash Qudaibergen has the most amazing voice... and his stage presence is so powerful. He is a very articulate young man and has spoken out against the war.
The east Asian race extends from east Asia,south east Asia,north Asia and all of central Asia and technically Polynesia and native Americans north n south.
For people commenting about how articulate and well informed the interviwees are I want to say the english subs do not do them jusdtice for their vocabulary. They've spoken even more articulate and used a lot of ploitical and financial terminology that were not translated accrodingly. i am not judging Asian boss however, its better to keep it simple for the viewers. anyways, Thank you for covering Asian Boss, you hve a lot of followers from Kazakhstan and here we are more informed about the world because we live in the middle of West and East and KAzkahstan borders with China, russia and the muslim world. We must be informed, we have no choice.
Riding on your comment - it’s also interesting that the political jargon they use is juxtaposed to colloquial phrases they use too. Like it’s clear these are regular people yet they know the lingo - they clearly are interested in what’s happening and that’s cool to see
@@stayhoodie7860 exactly. I've studied and travelled abroad, and from my observations kazakhstani people are generally very open-minded and well educated regarding global issues like the politics, economy and pop culture. Maybe it's the subproduct of living besides two geopolitical giants like china and Russia and having huge Muslim population. Living under threat makes people better, but also Kazakhstan unlike Russia has no censorship over western media and news and we have no anti western propaganda.
@Mahd from what I can tell, the interviewer asked the questions in Russian. In here most people will reply in the language they are asked since it’s practical. You’re just showing your ignorance rather than anything - most people in Kazakh are multilingual, not just bilingual
Moreover not just intelligent, they're decent, humble and considerate, the same qualities found in the general Russian population. And it is not the case in anglo countries like the UK , US if you did a street interview you'd get the exact opposite : dumb, arrogant and selfish.
@@freakguyy_ are you from the 19th century.??....... You know Russia is not even a country, right?... It's a Moskow State Empire., made up of stolen lands and crushed cultures....Tatarstan, Bashkiria, Buryatia ,Dagestan, Tuva, Karelia, Chuvashia, Sakha, to name some of them.. As well as many indigenous peoples , slaughtered in Russia's north.. An area of the World, that should be rich in diverse cultures, languages and traditions, is a bland, anemic, soulless, State controlled prison, for 240 million captives. Who are forced to call themselves Russian.. I hope one day, these captured territories, will rise up and claim their true , individual independence's... When these Nations first existed... Moskow was still a forest...
The most powerful takeaway I get from interviews is that most people in China and Kazahkstan do not want war and do not have animosity towards any people or nation that treats them fairly and kindly. I think this is true of people across the World. The sad thing of human existence is a small group of powerful people can cause horrible death and destruction simply to support their desires and illusions. When a population is lied to, when a population is afraid of other people based on untruths, inevitbly bad things happen. Thank you Asian Boss for keeping truth alive as best as possible.
They're very intelligent, but I don't think they realize they've been infiltrated by subversive U.S. 'so-called' NGO's like Thailand. That's why their President called for Russian help with those rebel rousers.
@@robertrichard6107 there was no external intervention. The president Tokayev lied about the external intervention to justify calling Russian troops for help while there was going to happen a revolution that would oust the dictator Tokayev. The Kazakh army started joining the protesters. Tokayev freaked out and called Russians asap. The government admitted recently that there were no any 20k terrorists that flew from abroad, and embarrassed themselves. Now all the peaceful protesters are being tortured and killed in jails. And the worst thing is Tokayev ordered to shoot to kill peaceful protesters without warning. The marauders were sent by the government itself to discredit the peaceful protesters. In the West Kazakhstan everything was peaceful without killing anyone, because there were no government sent fake brawlers.
China has a general policy of not getting involved in other country's issues so why should this be a surprise. It's Western mistrust of communism and China historically which is actually based on very little reasoning. China would have a lot more to be fearful of the West.
Absolutely support more media attention for Kazakhstan. As someone living in the "west", we don't hear enough from Central Asian countries. Tough bind to be stuck between western media and Putin's Russia.
Kazakh people speaking russian in their country where they have they own language. That’s said everything about russia and their imperialism. russia claims that everyone is their brothers and yet fighting them.
I am a Kazakh and I am frankly shocked at how many people actually support Putin in this interview. For me it feels like a not representative enough sample of interviewees, but maybe I’m just biased and surrounded by people who criticize the war and the politics of Russian government
Don't worry, it was not so bad. Generally I am positive impressed of the very realistic view of some of Kazakh people. I think you will survive. I am not so sure about my own homeland - Poland... But anyway Russia will pay for what is doing, sooner or later.
@@XKS99 I have a bad attitude towards Russians who in every possible way infringe and humiliate non-Russians. Unfortunately, there are a lot of such Nazis in Russia
I do love the Kazakhstani. A nation of proud and strong people. They have enough strength and national resources to become a strong state in the years to come, and become one of the next of many to come to maintain their identity while being part of a global community in which their people will thrive.
Well told. Sorry for the confusion. I do hope you will not be too affected for what's to come. Because its going to blow my head off, literally. Have fun with that, my old friends :)
That Johnny Depp guy is the smartest. But I am overall impressed by how knowledgeable the Kazak population is when compared to their Russian or American counterparts.
The mustache guy who called Putin a dictator seemed to have the most insightful views of the world (eg comments about imperialism). Although most of them seem well informed and articulate. Great interviews!
Damn.. I guess most of the post-soviet republics, that are now free, have really similar viewpoints. It was almost like listening to our own people. Greetings from Latvia! Say strong Kazakhstan!
@Fish Butt I am from Kazakhstan and have been following the war since 2014. Everything you wrote is partly true, but it is propaganda. There are more neo-Nazis in Russia than in Ukraine. One battalion is 600 people, does this mean that 40 million must suffer. I even know some from Azov, they are adequate people. They fight for their country, land and homeland. Do not believe what the Russians write. The President of Ukraine is Jewish, there are many blacks in Ukraine and there is even a black deputy. The governor of the whole region is Korean. The Nationalist Party in the Decree collected less than 1% and did not receive a single seat in the Verkhovna Rada. What kind of Nazism are you talking about. Russia also accused Kazakhstan of Nazism and claimed it for the northern territories. I have many friends from Ukraine, all the same people as we are. And also many acquaintances from Russia. Putin is just scared that he can be overthrown as his pawn was overthrown in 2014. Putin is scared that in the CIS there can be democracy and not a dictatorship, there can be freedom of speech and not a prison
Gosh I don't know how to react to all those "enlightened" commenters who used to view Cental Asians as primitive shepherds living in tents lol. People wake up we are all the same, not better not worse.
Wow, these people are wonderful. Thoughtful, informed, balanced. I've watched Kazakh singers before because I love their language, but now I love the people as well! Greetings from England 💕
I really like the interview. The people who make the statement; are very well informed, sensible and think logically. I am from Hungary, my country has a very good relationship with Kazakhstan.
I would like to hear a similar street interview made in Hungary about how it's ppl think of the situation in Ukraine and situation with Orbanian Hungary too. I lived in Pecs for a year in early 2000 and I can't believe what has happened to Hungary and why...
I`m Slovak and when I listen to Ukranians or Russians speak I can catch maybe 10% of common vocabulary (I know Ukranian and Russian are separate languages), but here I could understand maybe 30%. Their accent is easier to understand. I would`ve guessted the opposite just because of the fact that we are geographically further apart. Interesting
@@malachirench6937 the Kazakhs in the video definitely have a slight accent, and a very typical one, if I heard it without seeing, I would guess they are Kazakhs, but I am from Kazakhstan myself. I was told by Russians in Russia that we Russians from Kazakhstan also have sort of an accent, but it is perceived differently by people from different parts of Russia, some notice it more than others.
Great interview segment. Thank you to all the Kazakh brothers and sisters who are supporting Ukraine in this time. I was in Kazakhstan about 3 years ago and was very impressed by the warmth and hospitality of the people.
I’m from Los Angeles, and I can tell you that I love the people that were interviewed. They seem incredibly intelligent and informed. It’s sad that most Americans couldn’t even find Kazakhstan on a map if their lives depended on it. Excellent interviews, keep it up.
I’m of two minds on that. I do personally totally agree with you. On one hand,though, to play devil’s advocate first, Kazakhstan isn’t as involved in the world stage as some of the “big players (that is NOT a criticism or a bad thing whatsoever.) They just tend to keep to themselves. I respect that. So it’s a bit more understandable when some people might have a difficult time placing it. On the other hand, my own opinion is shared with yours. I take pride and personal interest in learning geography, history, and learning as much as possible about other cultures and their histories, and usually end up falling in love with those different cultures, countries, and peoples. It also makes me sad others don’t share that desire, and I feel it somewhat cheapens their opinions on matters of the world if they aren’t willing to learn about it. I know some are too busy working, raising families, etc, or simply don’t care to get involved in foreign affairs or cultures, and that’s fair, but to me, even in this video and the terrible situation it is asking opinions about, it was great to hear people from a different part of the world than my own, their insights, lives, and people.
And the Kazaks couldn't find Uruguay on a map if their lives depended on it. Know why? It just not an important country to them, no offence intended to either country. There's a YT channel that asks people in different countries about where other countries are on a map. One thing is clear, most people in the world suck at geography.
@@jyllian3990 I can't remember but it popped up on the "Recommended Videos" sidebar while I was watching an old Jay Leno video asking Americans to name world countries. This was a recurring segment on the Tonight Show where he took to the streets and asked Americans science and geography questions. I clicked on one of the recommended videos and it was a guy in Europe asking geography questions ...Europeans are as geographically ignorant as Americans. Maybe search YT for "europeans name countries". Sorry.
What excellent thoughtful people, As a person from the West (Ireland) I find it hard to disagree with most of the interviews. Good wishes to all ordinary people affected by this war
Russia is our brother country. Thats nonsense. As kazakh myself thats completely wrong. Turkey, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan etc are our brother country. But not Russia, they are colonisers.
That's a problem of a multiracial place I guess. Kazakhstan had population of Turk, Slav, Tatar, and Mongols. Won't be surprised if the slavs see Russia as they bigger brother
I had no idea how advanced a country Kazakhstan is. We get a distorted picture of foreign countries here in the United States. An excellent piece of journalism. Kudos to Asian Boss.
As far as I know, there are only two cities in KZ that have average citizenry modern in their worldview, it's Almaty and Astana or whatever it's called now. Other cities are much more provincial and you'll struggle to find people as articulate and aware of the political goings-on. At least, you'll hardly be able to conduct an interview in russian in other cities as few will speak it decently and russian IS still the lingua franca in the region and their window to the world through the russian segment of internet that dwarfs their own. English is coming along fast but not fast enough.
@@azuragoddess, I will not call provincial people less intelligent, it is an insulting thing to say, I find. I would say however that they are obviously not as world savvy due to lesser exposure to the big world outside.
I love what you guys are doing, interviewing people around the world for their opinions on the war, I'm looking forward to more of these videos if you make more
Kazakhs seem like very cool folks. I've had a fascination about Kazakhstan and wanted to visit that country since I was a kid. I'm learning Russian, hopefully someday I'd like to come and check it out. Such an awesome and underrated country with an underappreciated history and culture. Greetings from USA
@@ga4110 for a fact Russian's going to be easier for an American because it's closer to English than Kazakh. And he can go around in Kazakhstan only knowing Russian. I'd appreciate of he learnt Kazakh but forcing him to do it would be more torturous when Russian is enough to just travel.
I have a very nice Tipp for you. If you add a couple of simple words in Kazakh to your vocabulary, you can quickly win the respect of people here. For example: Rakhmet - Thank you, Salemetsizbe or Salem (less formal version) - Hello. Saubolynyz/Saubol - good bye
@@stereomachine, I see your point, but it seems you forget how easily done that is, and how much of it has already existed even in the most benign reports and interviews. Everything gets reducted and cut to create quality content, else you'd always see 20 people interviewed who don't want to answer, another 20 who want but have no opinion, you'd even have plenty of opposing views, etc. That's just what interviewing randoms looks like. So, you're actually making the stretch believing these aren't selected answers.
The gentleman @4:15 summed up how everyone think when trying to understand a given country. You shouldn’t paint all the people in a country with the same paint brush. You need to separate the people from their government, and consider the demographical groups which the people are divided into to fully understand a country. China and the US are extremely difficult to fully understand as they have so many groups to consider. This guy ‘hit the nail on the head’ with summing up the groups, although the oligarchs are a group to consider.
They say that Russia is their closest ally and consider Russians to be their brothers but at the same time find it likely that Russia will attack them too... That's not a very good ally and brother to have...
@@magzhantursunbayev8534 i dont know much about that my parents came from Belarus and from russia. But since i am a small child i am living in germany and have a german citizenship as well. I always consider russians, belarussians and ukrainians as one big folk now im not sure about it. The kazakh people were always the closest to us russian speaking germans here in Germany because most of them came from kasachstan and not from russia. Since the war i hate politics even more but i still have hope that these nations can all have a good relationship if not as brothers than atleast as good neighbours
This interview covers only small number of people from Russian-speaking city Almaty. Therefore, viewers could have wrong picture about relationship of Kazakhs towards the war in Ukraine. Majority of Kazakh-speaking population is against Putin and his regime, independent of what reasons are behind of invasion (NATO expanding to the East, Russian language being oppressed, and bla bla bla). There is no justification for war. As a Kazakh guy I fully support Ukraine and hope they win in this unfair war. Much ❤️ to Ukraine.
It was interesting (though maybe controversial) that the two most pro-russia people in this video were a lot more slavic/european looking than the other interviewees, you think this observation ties in with your point?
@@usgreth sorry, just saw your comment. For sure your observation makes sense, since slavic/european looking interviewees have closer relationship with Russia, have relatives there, watch pro-Russian channels and content. Therefore, majority of them supports or at least keeps a neutral position on this matter. But, luckily, not all of them. Among asian looking people u also find pro-Russian opinions, but not as much. Most of them are Russian-speaking Kazakhs who were raised in an environment where content and information in Russian prevails. And surprisingly some of them are smart guys who studied abroad and know what critical thinking means. All in all, the most important thing is that now after 5 months we can see the true face of Russian imperialism. And there is no excuse for it.
Interview is takeb in almaty, cultural capital of kz, however there u can find any kind of people cuz it is a boiler of citizens coming up from various cities of the country. Yet, it is a centre of the city, so u would have higher chances to find well educated people there than going slightly down the city towards poorer areas
I don't think i have seen a set of interviews on this subject with such a well balanced set of people who are so politically aware of the world. As an ignorant person that has little knowledge of Kazakhstan, i am hugely impressed by these people and my opinion of Kazakhstan has greatly increased. It is a more educated and thoughtful set of replies than most of our "Western" countries could have have come up with. Thank you for educating me.
Yeaaahh, so impressive, on the NEGATIVE side! BECAUSE: Kazakhs should speak Kazakh!! The LANGUAGE is the real blood of a sane nation! Not the flag, nor the anthem, etc. The Language yes, is the glue, the cement of a truly unified country and respective population. It's very very sad when we watch a people speaking the language of their tortuous invader which by every means tried so hard to destroy their native language (Kazakh) and their homeland, and their culture, etc, exactly as per what ruSSia always did and keeps doing around its never-ending expanding borders, at an enormous cost to the native _(really autochthonous)_ peoples! Ukraine and Kazakhstan are 2 among many other historical victims of ruSSia. Why are you(s) so masochistic?! It's possible to realize that you've the slaves' mindset. You do, perform, act, say, speak only what your manipulative master wants and allows. I thought that Kazakhs had at least the basic ability to learn something from their tortuous past under moSScow's whip, and that such valuable knowledge would have them aware, realistically prepared and conscious for the really -- past, PRESENT and future. But, against all odds, too many are still blind. Impressive.
me and my friends, we all feel very distressed. In Kazakhstan, for Kazakhstani people, it is really hard and sad to watch, how almost two brothers of slavyan ethnicity fight - Ukraine and Russia. I worked for a Ukraninan company and have friends from russian federartion and I feel really sorry and want to express sincere condolences to the ordinary people of both nations. Please, stop the war. Any adequate person, living in the 2022 in this world wouldn't like to live in horror. PEace for everyone! Ukraine, we stand with you. Agressor and dictatorship of Russia must be stopped. Our government supports Russia, of course, but will never support killing and murders of kids and women, it is their future generation. Please, be safe everyone and let's cherish the peace and every minute of life. With all the sincere and full respect, from Kazakhstan.
I think all Turkic countries and Georgia must form a defensive alliance as it looks like we have no other option to prevent further wars. Why Georgia you might ask, pretty much all trade between Turkey and Turkic countries travel through Iran and especially Georgia including oil and gas pipelines and railways. Iran is a Russian ally and might block entire trade in case of an escalation then only Georgia is left. While there are already Russian backed separatist regions in Georgia so Russia also invading Georgia is a real possibility. If Turkic countries loose both Iran and Georgia they will be separated once again like past centuries and can't support each others, we can not afford such a thing no matter what...
Won't stop, "people" put an administration into office which brought back the architects of this disaster like Victoria Nuland, Empty peace talk is substance free, this is the consequence of decades of ignoring warnings from many including John Mearshiemer, Pat Buchanan, Noam Chomsky, Henry Kissinger, across the political spectrum they warned the wests actions would cause this, and instead of listening people listened to mindless propaganda
I find it interesting that the Slavic Kazakhs (maybe they’re actually just russian, I don’t know) have a very naive view of Putin, whereas the ethnically Asian Kazakhs are not so naive and they realize that Putin is a dictator and that he has imperialist aims…aims that also don’t bode well for Kazakhstan
Hey everyone. As a Kazakh person from Kazakhstan I would like to express my opinion on some of the comments who question the interviewees’ words “Russia is our brother, soulmate, etc.” that would seem controversial for you. The reason why we say that comes back from history. Russian Empire and Kazakh Khanate had quite a history together since 18th century. In 1700s our people suffered from the attacks of Dzungar people. At that time, it was a Holodomor, and we lost a lot of people. I don’t want to dive into it, but basically our Khan(ruler) of the younger tribe asked for help from the emperor of the Russian Empire. Some of the sources say that our Khan asked for being a subject(only the younger tribe asked for help at the time) of Russian Empire since we suffered too many losses and we had a choice joining either Russian Empire or China. Other sources say that the translator that came to Khan to let him sign the agreement messed up the translation, so instead of asking for military support it seemed that we asked for being Russian Empire’s subject. Anyways, the other two Khans of the older and middle tribes disagreed with this decision, but later on they also joined RE. For the Emperor in Russian Empire, Anna Ioannovna, it was extremely beneficial to have our territory since through our land there was a Silk way. Kazakhstan is the border between Europe and Asia which many of the nations back then saw as the candy that they could steal from a kid. Then we have USSR, when during the Stalin’s regime many Russians, Germans, Koreans, and other ethnicities were deported to Kazakhstan, Siberia, Tajikistan and later to the rest of the Post-Soviet countries. Which is why in Kazakhstan you see diversity of people. Back to the point, it’s like a double edged sword. We consider Russians as friends but there is also a fear since in Russia, there are people with chauvinistic intents towards Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, and other minorities living in Russia. I am not saying all of them, but quite a few of them are like that and that includes the government. To be completely honest, there are territories that belong originally to Kazakhstan, and for years Russia has been looking at the rest of our land, such as Pavlodar, Petropavlovsk, Kokshetau as historically their land which is not. That is why lots of our people have mixed feelings but we don’t see Russians particularly as enemies. As my granny once said “don’t look for enemies, they might be right next to you”. For my fellow Kazakhs, please correct me if I’m wrong and add anything you guys want to. I might be wrong in the history part, so please do correct me. This is purely my opinion on that and I’m only saying what I feel about it as a Kazakh. I do not speak for the rest of Kazakh people.
The average Kazakh person sounds like he has a degree in political sciences!! And you speak english much better than the average french or italian. I hope all the best for your wonderfull country, lots of love from Greece.
That’s a really nice write up - hope a lot of people learn this about our history, it’d make it much easier to at least grasp the complexity of KZ-RUS relations. To give a bit more of the modern perspective - the two countries have been so intertwined for so long that it’s impossible to find a single person in KZ who’d have no connections in Russia or Russian people. Whether it’s university peer, colleague or a neighbor. There’s a decent number of mixed marriages and families - so many people with different bloods mixed together. There’s little ‘foreign’ or ‘alien’ in Russians for us in KZ. We have known them our whole lives, have broken bread with them, there’s a definite level of kinship. It’s what makes Kazakhstan such a nice place to be - there may be differences, but the peaceful coexisting of so many cool cultures together is a rare sight - and an eye candy
@@stayhoodie7860 It helps to understand, for you to say that. A long history of friendship and family. As an American, due to communism, Stalin, post-WW2 Eastern block, cold war, we saw USSR as an evil empire, threatening the whole world. After 1989, I still don't understand what happened, there was a reset into 15 new states. But instead of integrating into Europe and the world, Russia stayed distant and kept supporting communist revolutionary trouble-makers like Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, North Vietnam. The American idea of a happy country is one where there is freedom, human rights, democracy, fair justice systems, equal opportunity. It sort of comes from Christianity historically, it probably doesn't fit everyplace. Some peoples may need a patriarchal government, a strong dad. Our idea (and the U.N.) of a happy world is a network of countries working together, not fighting, invading, stealing, hurting people. We still see Russia as one of the bad actors. We don't hear good stories, where Russians have helped their neighbors to develop. We don't get stories about how the republics are happy to have Russia as its brother. I like to hear all the stories. I know real life is not black and white, it is complicated. But going back to the present, seeing Russia invade and kill thousands of its neighbor, a new WW2 aggressor, is a surprise, but also not. After what you write, I assume it is a complete shock to its neighbors and brothers.
@@LalaLa-ze7kv well, not all people in Kazakhstan speak Russian too. Kazakh is official language in Kazakhstan and mother tongue of Kazakh people, so have some respect.
@@АсельАскарова-с3ф Don't worry. Russian-speaking people in Kazakhstan are privileged and considered "cool". Those who are being erased are Kazakhs who speak Kazakh.
1:11 this ignorent is not Kazakh, he is Russian, wtf is wrong with you? If you are going to speak with Russians then why you make interview in Kazakhstan????????
This is the best interview, i have watched so far, after Chinese one.. It seems, that the Kazakhstan people have a clearer vision of the consequences of war They are better informed, and knowledge of the actual situation in Ukraine. Even though they have strong friendship with Russia, they don't want to come back to the past, when they were under the USSR's control, They rather have their own sovereignty, as a nation. I really enjoyed this interview. Thank you.
Well it makes sense tbh, if your friend started a fight, you wouldn’t help him simply because he’s your friend, you would only help if you thought his cause was just. It’s pretty hard to truly justify Russia’s actions so why would anyone, even their friends, want to help them. I think the responses about if it could happen to them are the most intriguing, they think he’s mad enough to do it and are simply hoping that their status as "friends" will save them.
Making it out at a young age is quite difficult. I started a side hustle at 17, saved up and made some good investments. l'm 28,live on my own and having a good life for myself. Big ups to you and everyone out there trying
@@steceymorgan814 Yes it sure is. I put in money in investments and get profits. That 's how I make more money without working. This does not sound new to you right ?
Dictator, world community, blah blah. The same world community that enslaved African till this day, siphoning their riches for a penny? Or that community that bombed half of the Middle East into a Stone Age? The same community that allows Saudi Arabia to bomb Yemen, that already long ago became a humanitarian catastrophe? Of Israel to keep stealing Palestinian land? Typical hypocrite: here I see, here I don't. Btw, this "dictator" saved him and his country from headchoppers not so long ago. But it seems he already forgot.
I am saddened by the young lady with the blue baseball cap who seems 100% malleable to Putin's war and actions to the point that she'd have her country fight alongside Russia "against the world". Sad too was the white Russian failing to justify his views. He doesn't get it...the world wants peace, not dictators. The rest of the respondents had clearly thought responses, consider Ukrainians friendly (even brothers and cousins), and just want to avoid war...like most citizens of the planet. Surprisingly, one Kazak man predicted that Putin will continue and even use false flag techniques to pick a fight with Kazakstan. This is what a fair number of pundits predict, especially if Putin fails to kill Ukraine. Love to all Kazaks from France 😘
"I think Putin felt pressured... he didn't want a NATO country right on his border..." So how does he feel about Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania? News flash, NATO already borders Russia.
@@Нога_Кремля why not? NATO is a defensive pact. Putin has nothing to fear unless he attacks. Nothing would've changed for Russia if Ukraine joined NATO.
@@FloofyMinari we could watch in many places all over the world how NATO worked. Ask people in countries which was bombed by NATO do they have any fear. NATO doesn't need any reason to attack, if US doesn't like any country that's enough.
I wish my fellow Americans were even half as well informed and thoughtful as these folks are. I visited Almaty briefly a few years ago, meeting family members of my soon-to-be daughter-in-law. They were perfect hosts, interesting and fun to converse with, and wonderfully generous and down to earth. I am not at all surprised that the people in this video express themselves with intelligence and compassion. Just my take on it.
Kazakhstan will always hold a special place in the heart. Did the Mongol Rally back in 2017, we were in Kazakhstan looking for a Hotel or somewhere to camp at about 11pm after a long days driving. As we were stopped by the side of the road looking at the map, a family in a white SUV pulled up along side us and asked us what we were doing. They spoke decent English and we told them we were looking for somewhere to camp or or a hotel. They tried to ring a few local hotels fpr us but none were open, so they invited us (a convoy of 4-5 cars and about 12 people) to sleep at their house. They had just come back from a wedding and had loads of left over food, I will never forget all of us and all of them being under their awning at like 1am having a full-on feast with them, all laughing and joking and smiles all around. They prepared mattresses and sheets in their kitchen and hallway for us to sleep on. They were extremely generous and refused to take any form of payment. Luckily we had a load of toys in the cars (that we were going to glue to our cars) that we gave to their children, they were very thankful. Such kind, generous, utterly utterly lovely people. Love them.
@@spencep7919 our ancestors were nomads and therefore there was an unspoken rule. Treat every traveler like family. Give him food, water and lodging. Because when you find yourself in his place, you will be sure that you will be treated exactly the same way.
LOL you mean half as brainwashed by their highly censored media? You are a POS to have all this information at your disposal and to take the side of the mass murderers.
The reactions here really show how you *are* making a difference, Asian Boss. Not only by providing insights, information, and introducing us to other viewpoints, but also by reminding us how little we know about a lot of countries/people (and how misguided our preconceptions can be). I like all of your work (and your reasons for doing this): Please keep it up.
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Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians
are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians
are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians
are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Western and pro-Western people, including the channel's authors, are very ignorant. Each event has its own story, they see the consequences, but they do not know the reasons that led to this. For example, you are walking down the street and you see a man approach a woman and start hitting her. The woman screams, asks for help, then the police arrive. You, as a witness, say that the man is to blame, because the woman was walking down the street, did nothing wrong, and the man just came and began to beat her. During the investigation, it turns out that the woman is a fraud, she met a man in a bar, went to his house, drugged him and robbed him. Many months passed, the man met her on the street and recognized her, but she said she did not know him, he got angry and began to beat her. Is the man right? Perhaps not, because he raised his hands to the woman. But, is it possible to understand a man? Of course, yes, because she robbed him. Will your attitude towards a man change? Will you definitely be on the woman's side? I think not! There are often situations in life when there is no definite answer. To understand it correctly, you should listen to different sides, identify the reasons and only then express your attitude. Russia had very good reasons to launch this military operation. It is being conducted only against the Ukrainian army, but not the civilian population. As Putin said, Russians and Ukrainians are essentially a single nation. Many residents of the center, south and east of Ukraine are waiting for the arrival of Russians. This is not an invasion, this is the liberation of Ukraine from Nazi rule! Russia is on the side of truth and justice! Greetings from Uzbekistan!
Never heard so many educated and knowledgeable comments in one interview. They could all get jobs as foreign correspondents with our national media. First class interview !
even if they did work for media, thereintervieuws get not online, because pressagency decides what put online............
Yeah even people who couldn't provide a detailed answer would state that they lack the knowledge to do so. It's refreshing!
The video has been edited . Obviously to show a range of views
Yes!
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. 😂😂😂😂
Is anyone else impressed with how well informed and articulate everyone being interviewed is? Makes me want to learn more about Kazakhstan, it’s people and culture. Thank you for these wonderful interviews.
Guess what, Kazahstan has an better live standard than Russia, but they have 40% of they population Russian, they speak Russian language, in Putins eyes they can all do that as long as they listen to Moscow.
I was thinking exactly the same.
That's a great point
Exactly, I thought so
@@Jopa955 40 percent of the population is not russian but around 20. and not everyone in kazakhstan who speaks russian are ethnic russians. almost all people in central asia can speak russian because they were colonized by russians in 19th century. kazakhs have their own native language which is a turkic language. but they tend to speak russian more i think.
I am a romanian young man. Ik this is off topic but I think I am starting to fall in love with Kazakhstan.
Soulmates? Kazakhstan was used by the Soviet Union. Between 1949 and 1989, the Soviet Union exploded 460 nuclear bombs in eastern Kazakhstan.
Soviet Union isn't Russia of today though. Many people in Russia hates their communist past.
I am pretty sure russian citizens didn’t come personally and did all of that
You need to distinguish between government and its people
Both russians and kazakhs are in pretty good terms, but as for its government, that’s a different story
@@somelove9872 don't know about that. Plenty of Russians believe that the central asian countries are dirty and without culture.
@@divx1001 Вы россиянин, что бы это писать?
@@somelove9872 just telling by experience. Russians still are very arrogant and have this almost American way of thinking they’re a superior nation. They still have that mindset. You can separate governments from the people but to a limited extent
Я всегда знал, что Казахи мудрый народ! Я русский и я не хочу вражды с казахами
У нас была общая история, да, были и плохие, и хорошие моменты. Мы должны быть хорошими соседями, и не пытаться оттяпать у друг друга разными проводами территории. И Украина, и Россия, и Казахстан имеют большие территории, где у России и у Казахстана есть много полезных ископаемых. Нужно пользоваться этими благами, и поднимать свои народы, и продолжать быть хорошими соседями, не навязывая свою политику, не вторгаясь к друг другу, не вмешиваться во внутреннюю политику друг друга. К сожалению все это портит один человек по имени Путин! Каждый казах неплохо знает русский, я тому пример, и такие русские как Вы, отличный пример, что ещё не все потеряно. Надеюсь, россияне, которые поддерживают войну Путина одумаются, и все мы вернёмся на те же рельсы всестороннего развития, но у же без него!
@@yernat7777 Бәрі жақсы болады!🙏
@@Alex_trader79 бәрі біздің қолымызда!💪
More content about central Asia please! I'd love to know also about Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, etc. These central Asian countries definitely need more attention. Thank you all Bosses, you are doing a great job ❤️
It's an area we don't hear about much ( in the west) if the people are as articulate and educated as the ones in this video then I'd love to hear more of their opinions
I'm curious about them too
@Zenith true about geography, but I think we all know what OP meant
Most of these contries have dictators like small Putler who is rulling them.
@Tinker Belle its a mix to say the least.
As a fella kazakh person Im glad that AsianBoss is expanding their shores and touching such an unknown country like Kazakhstan
I find it offensive that you call our country unknown! Have you forgotten that we STILL have Borat?!
@@ЧеловекУмный-ф8с it is offensive only for nationally complexed people, because every adequate and invulnerable to propaganda people understand that kazakhstan IS really unknown among masses worldwide. Және бораттың танымалдығы тек уақытты және оның елімізге еш қатысы жоқ екенін ұмытпағаның жөн
@@sandwitch3371 азиль го. Неге сондай серьезный болып турсын)
Eh, for me i always remember it when i heard word "russia" since kazakhstan is former of uni soviet and near russia.
One of the Top 10 big countries on the earth. You can easily find it on the world map. I don’t consider it as a unknown. For American maybe..
Politics aside. Kazakhstan has some of the best food ever, truly a blend of cultures and flavors, just like it's people.
I think Spanish food is best in Europe, but I like spicy foods
@@rodrozil6544 so basic
@@wearewatchingyouhumans6956 Basically awesome.
Best vocalist in the world is also from Kazakhstan.
Its Dimash Kudaibergen.
@@rodrozil6544 wtf you saying Spanish food is garbage, russian food is much better lmao
Impressive. They all seem very articulate and well informed on political issues. Big thumbs up to Asian Boss for bringing forth the perspective from a Central Asian nation. Looking forward to more such interesting contents covering different parts of Asia.
@@erwinsmith3198 incel alert
LOL why do i feel like people from other countries are better informed and educated on political issues than Americans....
@@JohnSmith-pf1vg it's cause they obviously are, I mean where do you think Qanon, flat earthers etc originated from XD
@@erwinsmith3198 The dentist woman seemed to be the most clued in.
@@JohnSmith-pf1vg I love American ppl. But I truly think that any nation in the rest of the World is more informed than Americans😂😂 You guys live like on another planet. You know nothing about other countries and actually not interested. Peace☮️
I have met a number of kazakh people and all of them were well-educated, intelligent and nice. And this video confirms that.
I once met someone from Kazakhstan and i asked her where she was from. "I from Kazakhstan, its a SMALL country in the middle of asia, u probably never heard of it", "course i have" i answered, "every time i eat an apple i think of your country because thats where apples originated"
Alma ata, the former capital, iw named after apples
Kazakhstan small country?
🥺
@@IIIIIllIIlll i know, why did she say small? She was very nice, plus, she knows alot of english are a bit thick n probably cant picture the place on a map.
🇰🇿 Kazakhstan has a lot of potential
Greetings
Keep making more videos about Kazakhstan. Underrated country
@@AUMINER1 What treaty?
@@tyunpeters3170 for one, zelensky refused to sign the minsk agreement, ukraine also agreed not to join NATO, but begged and applied anyways breaking his word, there is also the Budapest Memorandum, the 1994 NPT agreement to denuclearize. Are you aware that when the USSR broke apart, the treaty with the current Legacy government of Russia clearly stated that NATO would not move one inch towards their border. Ukraine was the last country that had not joined NATO and was looking to do so. Putin is merely bringing freedom and peace to Ukraine citizens who were being abused by the zelensky traitor. Russia is not at war with Ukraine or innocent people who live in Ukraine, it is a peacekeeping military operation to remove the radical NAZI's that have taken over the Ukranian gov, through a coup. zelensky is a corrupt oligarch imposter and traitor to the Ukranian people.
@@AUMINER1 God do you realize how brainwashed you are and how what you're saying is completely illogic? You invade an entire country to make a coup? Do you know what a coup is?
@@kevinmichalak476 AU miner is trolling. Don't buy into it.
At least it is known, not like it's neighbors :D
This mustached guy in white shirt and blue jacket killing it - his answers are very logical and well-structured, he sounds much smarter, more educated than most politicians.
I came here to say this. He has an amazing understanding of the situation.
because politicians working for the maffia, WEF..........its all a plan. to sell weapons .............USA weapons.
Agreed! Impressive guy! Very coherent, and thoughtful. You should interview him on more issues.
I knew some one would say so, totallly agree!
he is a socialist with all that imperialist rhetoric, i guarantee it
The lady with blue cap is so weird. She adores Russia so much. But when the interviewer asked about the probability of Russia taking control of Kazakhstan, then she switched side. Honey, that's your reality! I think she still lives in a bubble!
She also expressed an extremely unpopular positive opinion about the president. Kazakhs don’t support Tokayev, thus the mass protests back in 2019 and 2 months ago. Random ppl are being detained and tortured in prisons as an aftermath of those protests. And everybody knows that, but with Russia as an “ally” to the Kazakh elites, there’s not much ordinary ppl can do.
This woman sounds like a paid actor.
@@BA-bo7kx Watch less BBC and CNN, those protests were fabricated by the US. Why is everyone who inclines positive towards Russia is instantly labelled as a Putin muppet or some paid actor? The brainwashing is sureal.
@@natureblank1401 lol. Who are you trying to deceive? I’m a Kazakh myself, so chill. The protests were very natural, ppl just got fed up with old dictators in power, we don’t need the US to see how their corrupt ruling is degrading the quality of our lives. Talk about brainwashing! You are the one living in constant fear of imaginary enemies and owe towards Putin, who ruined Russian economy (when it actually had so much potential to bloom back in the 90s and 2000s. Well, there WAS a natural economic growth, but it had nothing to do with putin’s policies). He lied to you all this time! He used your post Cold War trauma to stay in power and keep robbing Russia. He’s feeding you the hope for the restored Empire because y’all are ready to sacrifice your well-being for that hope. This war will only strengthen the NATO and create a tension between Russia and the West which hasn’t been there in the last decades. Is that what Russians wanted?
@@natureblank1401 dude I’m Kazakh and B A is spitting some facts, it is a Russian and Kazakh state propaganda claiming protests were organized from the outside. People were fed up and bursted out, only Russian soldiers stopped our marches to seize capital.
I think she talkes about the average russian citizen and later about the threats of there gouverment.
Its not that hard to understand guys 😅. Maybe because of the translation but if you understand russian you get her point.
Just came back from KZ after a week vacation, and omg the country is so beautiful and the people are kind. I love every minute of my vacation there.
❤
Thank you!
I am impressed with the people interviewed.
Their responses reflected a higher level of education than one would expect from the streets of other countries. In other countries, in random sample interviews, one almost always comes across people who are not informed and act less mature. None of the Kazakhstanis seemed lacking in education or rational reasoning.
I appreciated their practicality on the matter, their frankness and compassion for those in Ukraine.
That selected the people who gave the best responses.
what the hell is other countries?
if you are from the US you should know that US people are largely perceived as highly uneducated in most parts of the world.
@@zhenyalandyak8258 That’s right. Most of the US people knows nothing about what their government has been doing in the geopolitics world. I think their media is responsible
I'm not impressed at all about your aussumption that they are randomly selected.
I'm annoyedand pissed at the selection, whch obviousy only took the smartet 0,5% by asking in front of some government/bank building, far far away of any average citizen.
@@josephbegniol2051 its not just that but also general knowledge about the world
I'm impressed at the thoughtful, well informed and articulate replies by the Kazakhstan people.
Sadly that simply shows how little you know and thus because you think similar things you think "they believe the same stuff I believe that makes them smart". Some were smart but they all lacked essential facts and awareness.
and you have this preconceived notion that central Asia is not well informed at all. You think the whole world revolves around the West.
@@jenniexx9528 not really, in fact I think the reason people are impressed is because if you did this style of interview in the west most people wouldn’t be half as informed as the people being interviewed here.
@Ionasku Alexander 😂🤣
That’s so disappointing…people here not like Borat
I loved these kazakh videos. I am so impressed with them. They are not only intelligent, articulate and aware of the truth, but also quite elegant and attractive people. The dentistry worker and the guy with moustache were specially insightful
Ultimately the infamous Borat may have actually made fun of our wesetern prejudices and bigotry about a nation we hardly know anything
Mentioning Borat is so out of place here. It was such a bad taste on behalf of Sasha Baron Cohen to decide to make Borat Kazakh.
A lot of people defend Borat saying it was a joke on the western people, but it is not how a lot of people here see it. Even though we agree - anyone who believes Kazakhstan is what was shown in the movie must be very ignorant. It’s just bad taste to make those satire jokes at the expense of the whole nation - and one that’s unable to defend their image. I’ve been haunted by Borat jokes when I was in school and just started exploring the internet and was so happy to see it die down. Of course they had to release another movie to prolonge this mess for the next decade
@@stayhoodie7860 I recently watched Borat again and concluded that the joke really was on America. In that these stereotypes exist in the west about certain countries being backwards, but just look at the backwardness and stupidity in America. Really, he should have gone back to Kazakhstan and done a proper documentary to compensate.
@@evamasters5028 i've never watched a borat movie, but when i saw the guy i had more of a turk in mind. Maybe because i was born in Kazakhstan and spent my childhood there? hmmmm
There aren't many secular Muslim countries while ALL Turkic countries are secular from Turkey to Kazakhistan!! Even this alone says a lot about Turkic people but sadly there is insane amount of misinformation and especially western media is always trying to portray Turkic people with a bad light. To be fair there is a historical hatred between Turks and westerners because of their invasion of Europe, however Europeans themselves invaded literally 80% of the world if not more so still fueling past hatred could be nothing but hypocrisy. If western countries properly supported Turkic countries after soviet union collapsed Russia wasn't going to have this much power and influence today and Europe was supplying it's oil and gas from not Russia rather Central Asia. It is really time western countries finally ditching this medieval way of thinking and giving a real chance to Turkic countries which are a million times more trustworthy than Russia or China...
I am Italian and after watching this video I really hope to be able to visit Kazakhstan. The people interviewed, even with different ideas, convey a truly admirable culture and sense of respect. I wish you the best!
I’m Kazakh and my best friends during Erasmus were only Italians . We really do have so much in common
Bella 👍
They interviewed in the central part of the most prosperous city Almaty, they do not represent an kazakh, just like NYC won't represent the US.
Welcome to Kazakhstan 🇰🇿, benvenuto!
I was there a couple of times for work in Almaty and Astana (Nur Sultan). It’s better, as usual, in the summer. And yes, it’s worth the visit.
that's a great decision to expand the area of coverage to include Central Asian countries! Those states are so underrepresented globally, but definitely deserve for more attention. Congratulations and good luck with everything you do! 👍👍
The moustache guy seems very intelligent. All his answers are very articulate and thought out.
agreed i enjoyed listening to him
agree.
all of them are sheep,afraid of gov backlash
They were all amazing but I learned more from the older wise gentleman.
Why bcoz he supports your mentality
"Now is not the century to pick up swords and start wars".
I strongly felt the gentleman's message. We, the whole world, must learn from our tragic history and never repeat them.
"Let's live in peace." 🙏🏾
The problem is that a lot of countries disagree with the so-called "international order" imposed by the West, that for its part had 30 years of "vacation from history", and thereby the opportunity to use its temporary superiority in order to lay the foundations for a world that is build on mutual respect and constructive cooperation. Instead they assumed the "end of history" and behaved accordingly.
While the europeans have power there will be much more war. The vast majority of wars are started by europeans.
Cring
if only us and russia presidents can understand this msg
@@LOLBTLOLBT It’s more a case of if the USA stuck to its word and didn’t expand the military block, but here we are and the arms deals are flowing, how convenient!
The closing statement nailed it. “Care for the people more than your (politicians) benefits.”
If Putin did that, then there would be no war.
@@Lepocoloco noted.
It is interesting, because in russian he used a more figurative phrase, like "care for people, not for cockroaches in your head (about politicians)" I know, it sounds weird
@@sul41m and funny but thank you for giving a good translation. In my country, the Philippines we call them crocodiles.
If zelensky do that... Probably there will be no war
I don't know why are people so impressed, here in Kazakhstan we have kinda bad designed cities, but regarding education and technology we are not that much behind Europe. Our kids win world math and chess competitions and you can download important documents using no more than your smartphone. We also have apps for everything - from your official medical data and appointments, to sending official letters to your local administratiom and/or to the government. My 75 year old gramma watches youtube and shops on her tablet. We don't live in dark ages, you know.
Edit: Hey, guys, please stop saying bad things about USA))) USA has a problem with geography, but i personaly love that gay rights and knowledge about gay people are so well developed there. Most of adults above 35 in Kazakhstan still think that being gay means that you HAVE to look and act feminine and other ignorant stuff like that. I'm not gay, but the ammount of ignorant people in my country pains me deeply, because it means that in a way we actually do live in the dark ages. Every country has it's gap in knowledge. I hope we all can overcome our gaps and grow as humanity, all of us.
And fck the war.
As a European, we never ever even hear of Kazakhstan (or other central Asian countries) in the news and know very little about them. I would bet most people just assume it's yet another Middle Eastern war-struck country run by the Taliban.
In America, the media will typically highlight dumb or funny answers and cut out coherent ones. For comedy or political purposes.
"Ha ha, look at how stupid this person is," or "look at how dumb the people who don't agree with my politics are!"
"Just think about how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that!" - American Comedian George Carlin
It's not a bad thing that we are impressed. I think a lot of us think you put the average citizens of our own countries to shame.
True, but you also have a weirdly named capital and a presitator you only just got rid of. I hope the new guy is better.
That's because of a stupid american movie called Borat
I hope this doesn't sound superficial, but they're all so beautiful! I've never really learned about Kazakhstan. I look forward to learning more.
I know, right? I stated to look up information of Kazakhstan due to an outstanding singer (Dimash Qudaibergen) and then I saw lots of pictures of landscapes and people... And hands down, overall, gorgeous people and gorgeous places. I want to visit sometime.
yes, me too
@@mariaemiliac better looking than americans
As a Kazakh living in Kazakhstan, I feel very stressed now. We have plenty of friends and colleagues come here from both Russia and Ukraine. We have friends and relatives move to both countries in pursuit of better opportunities. And now we are in a war zone. The currency rates are dropping like crazy. Everything is getting more and more expensive and our brands feel the same sanctions as Russia - because Putin’s regime has tied us down to Russia for so long.
I think a lot of people in Kazakhstan understand that Ukraine is just the first victim. And we are next - most likely. Russian government kept saying that Ukraine was frayed by the Bolsheviks, that they don’t have their own nation or culture. And they are saying the same about Kazakhstan.
Ukrainians fighting and protecting their land now aren’t just in it for themselves - they are defending the peaceful futures of all the Central Asian nations - and beyond. The one good thing that came from this - we as Kazakhstan citizens certainly feel more connected to our land and our people now - we really don’t want this to happen to us.
And of course it goes without saying - this is not done by the ordinary people. There are no bad nations, only bad people.
💯
Khazakhstan is a country that I don't think gets enough recognition. Now all of a sudden because of this crisis I feel really bad for central asian countries, unfortunate that being tied to Putin's sphere just by geography kind of screws you guys via proximity, especially since the oil pipelines are shared with Russia and the country is landlocked which makes it very difficult to not be affected. I hope things don't get too bad, since there's not sanctions there I would think wouldn't it even become lucrative to import products under sanctions and import it to Russia?
@@mechano6505 The sad reality is that for a lot of people we simply don’t exist. For others - we are Russian colonies - which we basically were. For some - we are the generic Muslim country - which we really aren’t, at least not remotely in the way people see it. In this regard - I’m happy ÇA states are under the radar. It gives us all time to grow and develop enough for the people to be surprised and hopefully willing to educate themselves on what’s up here.
On your last point - in general we are optimistic that our govt and entrepreneurs will be able to use this situation to our advantage. KZ got great potential for tourism for neighboring countries, we got good produce that we can export to other countries who relied on Russia, we got a lot to offer - to people within and outside our borders. If we play our cards right I’m sure KZ will grow stronger because of this.
Plus Kazakhstan citizens were among the first ones to collect and send humanitarian aid to Ukraine and we also went on protests pleasing KZ to not support the Russian invasion at all. It’s a shared effort to make sure KZ isn’t involved directly and the Russian sanctions effect can be overcome
I think if you watch Oliver Stone films called Ukraine on Fire and Revealing Ukraine will give you a whole new knowledge
@@stayhoodie7860 Yeah that last part was the most surprising to me, how people weren't fully behind Russia. The general understanding was that it was somewhat closed off under Nazarbayev and generally just a Russian-dictatorship satellite but with the reforms and such it does seem like things are rather different. I do think Kazakhstan could also build up it's brand in the west and become more of a global partner rather than solely with Russia, especially if they lose this war and their influence is diminished. I hope that we get to hear more about Kazakhstan and other central asian countries on the global stage, the rich resources and strategic position could really change things a lot, really not that far from Europe especially considering how much Georgia has been aligning that way so it can really act as an intermediary between Europe and Central Asia.
classy. love the way they let these intelligent, educated people develop their perspective without agenda and cutting them off. watch most of these street interviews and people can hardly finish a sentence...
Wow- what a well-informed group of citizens. I'm ashamed to admit it's not an area I've ever given any attention to. Russia always, yes, Ukraine for a few years, Poland, Serbia, Romania- but never the "stans". It's time to change that. Thank you for this informative video.
Russia itself has several -stans inside it, like republics of Bashkortostan, Dagestan etc. Republic of Tatarstan, for example, is one of the most advanced regions of Russia in terms of education, science, economy and culture
@@mrobocop1666
Ber, ike, esh, durt!
Tatarstan - supergood!
Happy to hear you broadening your knowledge. Btw, we were forcing to change the name of our country to Qazaq Republic to get rid of that ‘stan’ stereotype few years back, but it did not get traction :(
Stan is a Serbian word to mean location, apartment, stop.
@@frostflower5555 "Стан" is a common slavic word not only Serbian as far as I know. However -stan suffix is of Persian origin meaning "land", but because these lanuages are Indo-European both words probably related.
Public opinion and what the government actually does are two entirely separate things. Just like that one dude said..
@Pim Max 1. Huge corruption in gov + youth mostly is apolitical and doesn't even vote
2. Those who voted had no other choice bcuz Putin and his party always try to get rid of whatever candidate that seems to be a threat to their regime. Like they did with Navalny, who exposed Putin and his oligarchs corruption. The gov tried to poison him, and now they finally jailed him. There is another candidate Bondarenko who pointed out governments corruption a year ago, and no one is even sure if he is still alive.
3. Nobody expected a war to happen. Those who support Putin are old ppl who are afraid of changes and believe his every word + brainwashed gangs of idiots, who are either paid to flame on people who oppose Putin, or are attention-whoring. Those, who oppose Putin, go to protests or simply call a spade a spade - pay a huge ass fine and go to jail for 15 years + many get beaten there by police.
Source: I'm Russian.
The Russian view is, that they feel threatened by the USA. The illegal coup d'etat that was sponsored by the west in 2014 and supported by Ukrainians Nazis, made Ukraine a puppet-state of the US.Hunter Biden, the son of Biden even worked at a gas and oil company there! I suggest you to watch coach red pill.
@@allu4385 it's our fault
source : i'm ukrainian lol
Soulmate my a**!
How about genocide of Kazakhs in 1930s?! These people need to study their history. I am Kazakh and just don’t get how they can say bs like this
Totally agree. Esekter!
They're being careful about their words because anything too divisive could come back to haunt them. I think if they interviewed Kazakh people living elsewhere the answers would be different
It wasn't a genocide, it was a famine. And it was on russian territories in 1932-33 too.
Why do you think Russians don't hold grudges to Germany, nor Mongols?
How impressive and well thought out their answers were- I like many other commenters here did not know much about Kazakhstan and its people, they are so thoughtful - i could listen to them for hours. The guy with the moustache (sorry no names were given) was so spot on with his analysis, and overall their comments were compassionate and kind as well as being clear and intelligent - no to war- we as ordinary people around the world do not sanction this barbarity.
Well educated and compassionate people in Kazakhstan. I tip my hat to you all. This war is an abomination and needs to stop now before it breaks out into WW3
As a Kazakh living in Kazakhstan I do not see anything in common with Russians as these guy is saying that Kazakhs and Russians have common culture and spirit. Totally disagree with that, because majority of Kazakhs are traditional muslims and turkic speaking people, whereas russians are slavic christians. We have different food from each other, we celebrate different events. Yes, historically and politically we are unfortunately integrated and we speak russian as well, but that is it. No any russian will think of kazakh as a brother or good friend, I lived in Moscow and I faced a lot of discrimination from Russians and saw racism agains other Central Asian nationals. Russians even show it in their movies.
what will happen with Baikonur if the russians cant pay for it? i read that they pay 115M dollar for a year, they can not afford this in the future for sure
@@fixpontt as usually, they will simply annex it
Total fake turkish-state-bot propaganda. Racism in Moscow LOL the most multinational city in Russia where 30-40% of population are asians yeah, HILARIOUS. Saying that most kazakh are muslim is also fake, most are atheist.
@@alex9forever don't tell me you've never heard from ladlord: "for slavs people only"? oh, wait...your name is Alexander lol
@@ar_rakis There can be nazis anywhere, but in Moscow if you try to do it publicly you will go to jail for 2-5 years
Hats off from Finland to all Kazakhstani people. Mostly very smart people, who have not fallen into dark web of propaganda like their northern neighbours.
@Mahd Why should they speak their "own" language? The message they say is what matters. I speak four different languages. Does it make me less patriot when I speak the one which is not my native?
@Mahd what's your problem? All you concerned about is what language Kazakhs use?
@mitro72 ... or the propaganda web by their Western neighbours, for that matter.
@@trikebeatstrexnodiff by calling Turkic people Turkish you call all Turkics minors to Turkish or like all Turks are part of Turkish. While it's not true, Anatolian Turkish are the most distant people from original Siberian Turks in terms of language, culture and blood.
I'm Tatar (a Turkic people) but I would never call myself Turkish, I'm proud of my own Tatar culture. So to diminish Turkish and Turkic is necessary, it's different yhings
@@mrobocop1666 Брат татар!
as a Lithuanian whose grandparents were deported to Karlag (Karaganda region in Kazakhstan) by the Soviet regime, I can say that I have never met such empathy from the Kazakh people, they helped my grandparents to survive exile. We will forever be grateful to the Kazakh people. Kazakhs are very educated and cultured and benevolent people. Литвадан барша қазақ халқына сүйіспеншілікпен
love from Kazakhstan to
I'm Polish and have heard many similar stories from my kin, I'm happy Kazakhstan doesn't participate in this criminal Russian assault.
I read a book by a Lithuanian author about the Soviet deportations from Lithuania in the 20th century; it definitely gave perspective to what injustices people had to go through under the Soviet regime. I myself am Korean, and we Koreans were actually the first ethnic group to be deported by the Soviets too. My heart goes out to your grandparents, and everyone affected by these deportations.
Hi! Nice to see Lithunians here! I'm partly lithuanian and live in Kazakhstan for my whole live, some of my ancestors also were sent off in Kazakhstan during those times and intermarried with Kazakhs after.
@@sodiumchloride3876 hi do you traveled to your historical homeland?
I want to mark that in the interview only the opinion of the Russian-speaking people. in Kazakhstan there is a Kazakh-speaking population, for example, in the south-west of the country where I live, there are many people who speak only Kazakh and there are many of them. The opinion of the Kazakh-speaking population is quite different. and Putin's propaganda does not work for them.
That's a very good point. These people all seemed to be well educated too. Maybe in just one city. Regardless, very diverse group.
@@formica. that was set near by my apartment , although I’m in Canada right now. Seems too familiar. It’s Almaty, the largest city. Population is around 2-2,5 m, and it’s much more “western” than the rest of the country
@@prostoname5338 Thanks, Almaty. Wikipedia has a very complementary article about it! "Almaty is still the major commercial and cultural centre of Kazakhstan, as well as its most populous and most cosmopolitan city." 2 million people. Summer temps in the low 20s. "Almaty is largely considered to be the heart and soul of Kazakhstan's classical and popular cultures. The Almaty Region and the city itself have a distinct vibe and pace compared to other regions and cities in Kazakhstan. Contemporary Almaty has a more European vibe due to more cafes and restaurants with outdoor seating and public green space. "
I could dig that vibe!
They weren't really pro-Putin though. Most believe that the war is manufactured by the Russian government(Putin) and are sad that Russians and Ukrainians, two brother countries, are fighting. That's pretty much the general view of the war in the rest of the world.
I agree, but still feel that almaty is a good place to interview, as the city is the most bilingual, and mixed. Almaty kazakh myself, I think that people there are in some sense representative of kazakh and Russian speaking populations
The guy in the navy suit jacket and white t shirt seems to have great political analysis skills. I appreciated his insight.
We all like mustache man. Boss needs to do a long interview with him.
@@formica. Agreed ! Moustache dude is bang on.
This is my first introduction to people from Kazakhstan and I'm in love!
You should listen to Kazakh folk then! Search "Agugai" on a search engine.
Look up Kazakhstan's own Dimash Kudaibergen! This man has probably the most amazing voice in this world. Listen on youtube to his "S.O.S." or "Ogni Pietra"!
Should watch bald and bankrupt he travels to these ex Soviet countries, I think he travels to Kazakhstan as well. 🤔
@@sjplus36 I think Dimash Qudaibergen has the most amazing voice... and his stage presence is so powerful. He is a very articulate young man and has spoken out against the war.
The east Asian race extends from east Asia,south east Asia,north Asia and all of central Asia and technically Polynesia and native Americans north n south.
Awesome!! This episode shows the humanity and empathy of the Kazakhstan people. We are not so different after all...we all want to live in peace.
Why would you ask Kazakhstani questions in russian, they have their own language.
and how many of of them speak kazakh? over russian?
@@user-tv5hc2gs6l most part of them.
Kazakhs*, not Kazakhstani.
For people commenting about how articulate and well informed the interviwees are I want to say the english subs do not do them jusdtice for their vocabulary. They've spoken even more articulate and used a lot of ploitical and financial terminology that were not translated accrodingly. i am not judging Asian boss however, its better to keep it simple for the viewers. anyways, Thank you for covering Asian Boss, you hve a lot of followers from Kazakhstan and here we are more informed about the world because we live in the middle of West and East and KAzkahstan borders with China, russia and the muslim world. We must be informed, we have no choice.
Riding on your comment - it’s also interesting that the political jargon they use is juxtaposed to colloquial phrases they use too. Like it’s clear these are regular people yet they know the lingo - they clearly are interested in what’s happening and that’s cool to see
@@stayhoodie7860 exactly. I've studied and travelled abroad, and from my observations kazakhstani people are generally very open-minded and well educated regarding global issues like the politics, economy and pop culture. Maybe it's the subproduct of living besides two geopolitical giants like china and Russia and having huge Muslim population. Living under threat makes people better, but also Kazakhstan unlike Russia has no censorship over western media and news and we have no anti western propaganda.
@Mahd from what I can tell, the interviewer asked the questions in Russian. In here most people will reply in the language they are asked since it’s practical. You’re just showing your ignorance rather than anything - most people in Kazakh are multilingual, not just bilingual
Wow, it's refreshing to see that average Kazak citizens are so informed and articulate on geopolitical matters. I would love to hear more from them.
What an articulate and intelligent group of people, enjoyed this set of interviews throughout! Respect to Kazakhstan 🇰🇿 from 🇬🇧
White racism
Moreover not just intelligent, they're decent, humble and considerate, the same qualities found in the general Russian population. And it is not the case in anglo countries like the UK , US if you did a street interview you'd get the exact opposite : dumb, arrogant and selfish.
Oh, UK, UK imperia he is wow😅
@@freakguyy_ are you from the 19th century.??....... You know Russia is not even a country, right?... It's a Moskow State Empire., made up of stolen lands and crushed cultures....Tatarstan, Bashkiria, Buryatia ,Dagestan, Tuva, Karelia, Chuvashia, Sakha, to name some of them.. As well as many indigenous peoples , slaughtered in Russia's north.. An area of the World, that should be rich in diverse cultures, languages and traditions, is a bland, anemic, soulless, State controlled prison, for 240 million captives. Who are forced to call themselves Russian.. I hope one day, these captured territories, will rise up and claim their true , individual independence's... When these Nations first existed... Moskow was still a forest...
Absolutely, I mean they did invent the mankini after all
“Now is not the century to pick up swords and start wars”
Amen!
Then there is war all over the world? Why there is NATO?
The most powerful takeaway I get from interviews is that most people in China and Kazahkstan do not want war and do not have animosity towards any people or nation that treats them fairly and kindly. I think this is true of people across the World. The sad thing of human existence is a small group of powerful people can cause horrible death and destruction simply to support their desires and illusions. When a population is lied to, when a population is afraid of other people based on untruths, inevitbly bad things happen. Thank you Asian Boss for keeping truth alive as best as possible.
They're very intelligent, but I don't think they realize they've been infiltrated by subversive U.S. 'so-called' NGO's like Thailand. That's why their President called for Russian help with those rebel rousers.
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. 😂😂😂😂😂
@@robertrichard6107 there was no external intervention. The president Tokayev lied about the external intervention to justify calling Russian troops for help while there was going to happen a revolution that would oust the dictator Tokayev. The Kazakh army started joining the protesters. Tokayev freaked out and called Russians asap. The government admitted recently that there were no any 20k terrorists that flew from abroad, and embarrassed themselves. Now all the peaceful protesters are being tortured and killed in jails. And the worst thing is Tokayev ordered to shoot to kill peaceful protesters without warning. The marauders were sent by the government itself to discredit the peaceful protesters. In the West Kazakhstan everything was peaceful without killing anyone, because there were no government sent fake brawlers.
@@axelaurelius3854 except they don’t know about the attrocities and most Chinese never had access to western internet
China has a general policy of not getting involved in other country's issues so why should this be a surprise. It's Western mistrust of communism and China historically which is actually based on very little reasoning. China would have a lot more to be fearful of the West.
Absolutely support more media attention for Kazakhstan. As someone living in the "west", we don't hear enough from Central Asian countries. Tough bind to be stuck between western media and Putin's Russia.
Plus plenty of homegrown craziness. Look up the name of the capital and check out why it has that name, for example…
Kazakh people speaking russian in their country where they have they own language. That’s said everything about russia and their imperialism. russia claims that everyone is their brothers and yet fighting them.
I’m sorry for the girl in blue cap. She is an embarrassment for us, kazakh people 😬 Don’t take her words seriously.
I guess she has a Russian boyfriend
Да глупенькая
I am a Kazakh and I am frankly shocked at how many people actually support Putin in this interview. For me it feels like a not representative enough sample of interviewees, but maybe I’m just biased and surrounded by people who criticize the war and the politics of Russian government
Don't worry, it was not so bad. Generally I am positive impressed of the very realistic view of some of Kazakh people. I think you will survive. I am not so sure about my own homeland - Poland... But anyway Russia will pay for what is doing, sooner or later.
How do you feel about the Russian people?
@@XKS99 I have a bad attitude towards Russians who in every possible way infringe and humiliate non-Russians. Unfortunately, there are a lot of such Nazis in Russia
The later.
It is a little disturbing. Its totally understandable many Kazakhs are pro Russian but what Putin is doing in Ukraine does not seem defensible to me.
I do love the Kazakhstani. A nation of proud and strong people. They have enough strength and national resources to become a strong state in the years to come, and become one of the next of many to come to maintain their identity while being part of a global community in which their people will thrive.
Thank you,but it's not Kazakhstani,it is Kazakhstan
@@whitegirl3836 yes, or Kazakh/Qazaq
"Maintain their identity" If USA and RF doesn't mess it
@@whitegirl3836 kazakhstani are the people who live there but are not kazakh descendants
Well told. Sorry for the confusion. I do hope you will not be too affected for what's to come. Because its going to blow my head off, literally. Have fun with that, my old friends :)
That Johnny Depp guy is the smartest. But I am overall impressed by how knowledgeable the Kazak population is when compared to their Russian or American counterparts.
HAHAHAHA! He does have that Johnny Depp vibe, doesn't he 😄
It's the hair I think😅🤷♀️😂
he is absolutely excellent, i did not expect people of Kazachstan are so well informed, but also with such an insight
Johnny Depp guy, lol. I was going with mustache guy that that works better. Yeah, I agree he has wisdom.
Kazak population is 5 people from the streets. Understandable
The mustache guy who called Putin a dictator seemed to have the most insightful views of the world (eg comments about imperialism). Although most of them seem well informed and articulate. Great interviews!
Yes this guy was really intelligent
You're only picking that guy because his answers were the most palatable to Western tastes
@@sarahs.thorpe857 I bet he would critique some of the West actions if he was interviewed
@@ENTmath_ он сказал что США не лучше России
Damn.. I guess most of the post-soviet republics, that are now free, have really similar viewpoints. It was almost like listening to our own people. Greetings from Latvia! Say strong Kazakhstan!
The same for Poland. We are extremely strongly against this senseless war and an apparent attempt to return to what used to be.
@@ZosiaSamosiaOo stop, ukraine is far right!!!
@@HeadhuntexGamer no it's not.
@@ZosiaSamosiaOo Doesn't Poland have enough internal problems like basically woman's rights being non existent and the far right Government in charge?
@Fish Butt I am from Kazakhstan and have been following the war since 2014. Everything you wrote is partly true, but it is propaganda. There are more neo-Nazis in Russia than in Ukraine. One battalion is 600 people, does this mean that 40 million must suffer. I even know some from Azov, they are adequate people. They fight for their country, land and homeland. Do not believe what the Russians write. The President of Ukraine is Jewish, there are many blacks in Ukraine and there is even a black deputy. The governor of the whole region is Korean. The Nationalist Party in the Decree collected less than 1% and did not receive a single seat in the Verkhovna Rada. What kind of Nazism are you talking about. Russia also accused Kazakhstan of Nazism and claimed it for the northern territories. I have many friends from Ukraine, all the same people as we are. And also many acquaintances from Russia. Putin is just scared that he can be overthrown as his pawn was overthrown in 2014. Putin is scared that in the CIS there can be democracy and not a dictatorship, there can be freedom of speech and not a prison
The moustache guy...He wasn't only against Putin but also American imperialism.
Gosh I don't know how to react to all those "enlightened" commenters who used to view Cental Asians as primitive shepherds living in tents lol. People wake up we are all the same, not better not worse.
But in fact Kazakhstan is underrated country, safe, clean.
Wow, these people are wonderful. Thoughtful, informed, balanced. I've watched Kazakh singers before because I love their language, but now I love the people as well! Greetings from England 💕
Thank you very much!
😘🇰🇿💙🇺🇦
Really enjoying these last few Kazakhstan related interviews. Thank you!
moustache guy seems really level headed and honest 10/10 would love to get coffee and have a conversation with him for sure.
Me too, most of them actually.
Love Kazakstan From Philippines 🇵🇭♥️🇰🇿
I m the only Algerian🇩🇿 who love Kazakhstan ❤️🇰🇿for no reason lol
I lived in Kazakhstan for six years and I gotta admit that Kazakhs and Kazakhstanis happen to be smart brain wise besides being very hospitable.
4:06 вот девочка глупая. Россия нам старший брат говорит) они не понимает что чуть что и РФ на нас нападет) Ооо Казахи мой бедный народ
согласен. А ещё она говорит, что Казахстан должен помочь против всего мира. Ну-ну, а она готова своих братьев, отца туда отправить?
I really like the interview. The people who make the statement; are very well informed, sensible and think logically. I am from Hungary, my country has a very good relationship with Kazakhstan.
I would like to hear a similar street interview made in Hungary about how it's ppl think of the situation in Ukraine and situation with Orbanian Hungary too.
I lived in Pecs for a year in early 2000 and I can't believe what has happened to Hungary and why...
Yes my Kipchak brother!
Because we are both BROTHERS ;)
Hello my Hun brother🤝🏻
Hello! :)
I`m Slovak and when I listen to Ukranians or Russians speak I can catch maybe 10% of common vocabulary (I know Ukranian and Russian are separate languages), but here I could understand maybe 30%. Their accent is easier to understand. I would`ve guessted the opposite just because of the fact that we are geographically further apart. Interesting
as a russian i dont hear any accent. they speak pure russian
I was told that Kazakhs put words in different order in a sentence. Maybe that makes Russian language more understandable.
@Alexey Duh.
@@malachirench6937 the Kazakhs in the video definitely have a slight accent, and a very typical one, if I heard it without seeing, I would guess they are Kazakhs, but I am from Kazakhstan myself. I was told by Russians in Russia that we Russians from Kazakhstan also have sort of an accent, but it is perceived differently by people from different parts of Russia, some notice it more than others.
@@lorainisrael it's because accents differ in Russia itself.
Great interview segment. Thank you to all the Kazakh brothers and sisters who are supporting Ukraine in this time. I was in Kazakhstan about 3 years ago and was very impressed by the warmth and hospitality of the people.
And why haven't you supported Donbass for 8 years? You don't have to answer, you Nazi filth.
Ukrainian civilians, not many support coke sniffing president and his corrupted government.
Your videos are awesome Alina
I’m from Los Angeles, and I can tell you that I love the people that were interviewed. They seem incredibly intelligent and informed. It’s sad that most Americans couldn’t even find Kazakhstan on a map if their lives depended on it. Excellent interviews, keep it up.
Well they might just by luck since its surprisingly large. Basically same size as the entirety of the midwest
I’m of two minds on that. I do personally totally agree with you. On one hand,though, to play devil’s advocate first, Kazakhstan isn’t as involved in the world stage as some of the “big players (that is NOT a criticism or a bad thing whatsoever.) They just tend to keep to themselves. I respect that. So it’s a bit more understandable when some people might have a difficult time placing it. On the other hand, my own opinion is shared with yours. I take pride and personal interest in learning geography, history, and learning as much as possible about other cultures and their histories, and usually end up falling in love with those different cultures, countries, and peoples. It also makes me sad others don’t share that desire, and I feel it somewhat cheapens their opinions on matters of the world if they aren’t willing to learn about it. I know some are too busy working, raising families, etc, or simply don’t care to get involved in foreign affairs or cultures, and that’s fair, but to me, even in this video and the terrible situation it is asking opinions about, it was great to hear people from a different part of the world than my own, their insights, lives, and people.
And the Kazaks couldn't find Uruguay on a map if their lives depended on it. Know why? It just not an important country to them, no offence intended to either country. There's a YT channel that asks people in different countries about where other countries are on a map. One thing is clear, most people in the world suck at geography.
@@red94mr28 Well said. Out of curiosity, can I ask what channel this is?
@@jyllian3990 I can't remember but it popped up on the "Recommended Videos" sidebar while I was watching an old Jay Leno video asking Americans to name world countries. This was a recurring segment on the Tonight Show where he took to the streets and asked Americans science and geography questions. I clicked on one of the recommended videos and it was a guy in Europe asking geography questions ...Europeans are as geographically ignorant as Americans. Maybe search YT for "europeans name countries". Sorry.
What excellent thoughtful people, As a person from the West (Ireland) I find it hard to disagree with most of the interviews. Good wishes to all ordinary people affected by this war
Russia is our brother country. Thats nonsense. As kazakh myself thats completely wrong. Turkey, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan etc are our brother country. But not Russia, they are colonisers.
Өте дұрыс айтасыз
💯 as a Kazakh speaking real Kazakh. Turan🤝Altay people
That's a problem of a multiracial place I guess. Kazakhstan had population of Turk, Slav, Tatar, and Mongols. Won't be surprised if the slavs see Russia as they bigger brother
Nowadays many have mixed origins, including all nations u mentioned. Especially culturally
@Onore Alla Tigre being a royal neighbor and friend of Russia for so many decades makes Kazakhstan to its poverty today.
I had no idea how advanced a country Kazakhstan is. We get a distorted picture of foreign countries here in the United States. An excellent piece of journalism. Kudos to Asian Boss.
Women are quite cute too
As far as I know, there are only two cities in KZ that have average citizenry modern in their worldview, it's Almaty and Astana or whatever it's called now. Other cities are much more provincial and you'll struggle to find people as articulate and aware of the political goings-on. At least, you'll hardly be able to conduct an interview in russian in other cities as few will speak it decently and russian IS still the lingua franca in the region and their window to the world through the russian segment of internet that dwarfs their own. English is coming along fast but not fast enough.
@@sir_humpy ложь.
@@sir_humpy well, people in provinces are always tend to be less intelligent. That`s how it is in whole world.
@@azuragoddess, I will not call provincial people less intelligent, it is an insulting thing to say, I find. I would say however that they are obviously not as world savvy due to lesser exposure to the big world outside.
I love what you guys are doing, interviewing people around the world for their opinions on the war, I'm looking forward to more of these videos if you make more
Kazakhs seem like very cool folks. I've had a fascination about Kazakhstan and wanted to visit that country since I was a kid. I'm learning Russian, hopefully someday I'd like to come and check it out. Such an awesome and underrated country with an underappreciated history and culture. Greetings from USA
рады
If you are learning russian go to russia.
You need to learn Kazakh cause nowadays even Russian learn kazakh. Since war Russian language became less popular
@@ga4110 for a fact Russian's going to be easier for an American because it's closer to English than Kazakh. And he can go around in Kazakhstan only knowing Russian. I'd appreciate of he learnt Kazakh but forcing him to do it would be more torturous when Russian is enough to just travel.
I have a very nice Tipp for you. If you add a couple of simple words in Kazakh to your vocabulary, you can quickly win the respect of people here. For example: Rakhmet - Thank you, Salemetsizbe or Salem (less formal version) - Hello. Saubolynyz/Saubol - good bye
These are the most educated, full, eloquent and objective responses I have ever heard in my life. Kazakhs, never change!
So are you not suspicious ?
@@phanupongasvakiat337 about what?
About them manipulating the answers, or rather, picking ones they find suitable to advertise to the world. Naive, tbh
@@HelerifiKtion you don't know that for certain
@@stereomachine, I see your point, but it seems you forget how easily done that is, and how much of it has already existed even in the most benign reports and interviews. Everything gets reducted and cut to create quality content, else you'd always see 20 people interviewed who don't want to answer, another 20 who want but have no opinion, you'd even have plenty of opposing views, etc. That's just what interviewing randoms looks like.
So, you're actually making the stretch believing these aren't selected answers.
The gentleman @4:15 summed up how everyone think when trying to understand a given country. You shouldn’t paint all the people in a country with the same paint brush. You need to separate the people from their government, and consider the demographical groups which the people are divided into to fully understand a country. China and the US are extremely difficult to fully understand as they have so many groups to consider. This guy ‘hit the nail on the head’ with summing up the groups, although the oligarchs are a group to consider.
They say that Russia is their closest ally and consider Russians to be their brothers but at the same time find it likely that Russia will attack them too... That's not a very good ally and brother to have...
70 years of Soviet ruling, people almost lost their national identity. But now we're reviving.
@@magzhantursunbayev8534 It's good to revive the national identity but alas it tend to an increased nationalism and nativism within a titular nation
@@magzhantursunbayev8534 its more than just 70 years. Kasachstan Was russian long before that.
@@danijaldblr3388 but policy on Russification actively started during Soviet period. During the Russian empire, Kazakhs barely spoke Russian.
@@magzhantursunbayev8534 i dont know much about that my parents came from Belarus and from russia. But since i am a small child i am living in germany and have a german citizenship as well. I always consider russians, belarussians and ukrainians as one big folk now im not sure about it. The kazakh people were always the closest to us russian speaking germans here in Germany because most of them came from kasachstan and not from russia. Since the war i hate politics even more but i still have hope that these nations can all have a good relationship if not as brothers than atleast as good neighbours
This interview covers only small number of people from Russian-speaking city Almaty. Therefore, viewers could have wrong picture about relationship of Kazakhs towards the war in Ukraine. Majority of Kazakh-speaking population is against Putin and his regime, independent of what reasons are behind of invasion (NATO expanding to the East, Russian language being oppressed, and bla bla bla). There is no justification for war. As a Kazakh guy I fully support Ukraine and hope they win in this unfair war. Much ❤️ to Ukraine.
Good and important point that this isn't a representative cross section
It was interesting (though maybe controversial) that the two most pro-russia people in this video were a lot more slavic/european looking than the other interviewees, you think this observation ties in with your point?
+++++++++
@@usgreth sorry, just saw your comment. For sure your observation makes sense, since slavic/european looking interviewees have closer relationship with Russia, have relatives there, watch pro-Russian channels and content. Therefore, majority of them supports or at least keeps a neutral position on this matter. But, luckily, not all of them.
Among asian looking people u also find pro-Russian opinions, but not as much. Most of them are Russian-speaking Kazakhs who were raised in an environment where content and information in Russian prevails. And surprisingly some of them are smart guys who studied abroad and know what critical thinking means.
All in all, the most important thing is that now after 5 months we can see the true face of Russian imperialism. And there is no excuse for it.
Interview is takeb in almaty, cultural capital of kz, however there u can find any kind of people cuz it is a boiler of citizens coming up from various cities of the country. Yet, it is a centre of the city, so u would have higher chances to find well educated people there than going slightly down the city towards poorer areas
the guy with the sunglasses and the puma jacket, so sweet and kind.
lol he looks dangerous, that's how average "almatinsky gopnik" looks like
I'm impressed by the Kazakhs they seem quite informed and a warm people wish the very best to them and peace for the world🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪 Kenyan
seems the people are more educated than their government
Kenya Kazakhstan brother
Asian Boss is hitting it out of the park lately. Well done.
Kazaks need to throw off those Russian shackles!
I don't think i have seen a set of interviews on this subject with such a well balanced set of people who are so politically aware of the world.
As an ignorant person that has little knowledge of Kazakhstan, i am hugely impressed by these people and my opinion of Kazakhstan has greatly increased.
It is a more educated and thoughtful set of replies than most of our "Western" countries could have have come up with.
Thank you for educating me.
I lived in Kazakhstan 28 years. They know about Russia and Ukraine because their entire lives revolve around the post Soviet space.
@Asl Mrrr вот поэтому мы в гавану и таити не лезем, и не рассказываем всему миру кто прав кто виноват
If a rabbit lives around the fox, the rabbit is always aware of what happens to its surroundings.
They are very brainwashed by their state controlled media. Their own government is a dictatorship closely aligned with Russia's dictatorship.
Yeaaahh, so impressive, on the NEGATIVE side! BECAUSE:
Kazakhs should speak Kazakh!!
The LANGUAGE is the real blood of a sane nation! Not the flag, nor the anthem, etc. The Language yes, is the glue, the cement of a truly unified country and respective population.
It's very very sad when we watch a people speaking the language of their tortuous invader which by every means tried so hard to destroy their native language (Kazakh) and their homeland, and their culture, etc, exactly as per what ruSSia always did and keeps doing around its never-ending expanding borders, at an enormous cost to the native _(really autochthonous)_ peoples! Ukraine and Kazakhstan are 2 among many other historical victims of ruSSia. Why are you(s) so masochistic?!
It's possible to realize that you've the slaves' mindset. You do, perform, act, say, speak only what your manipulative master wants and allows.
I thought that Kazakhs had at least the basic ability to learn something from their tortuous past under moSScow's whip, and that such valuable knowledge would have them aware, realistically prepared and conscious for the really -- past, PRESENT and future.
But, against all odds, too many are still blind.
Impressive.
me and my friends, we all feel very distressed. In Kazakhstan, for Kazakhstani people, it is really hard and sad to watch, how almost two brothers of slavyan ethnicity fight - Ukraine and Russia. I worked for a Ukraninan company and have friends from russian federartion and I feel really sorry and want to express sincere condolences to the ordinary people of both nations. Please, stop the war. Any adequate person, living in the 2022 in this world wouldn't like to live in horror. PEace for everyone! Ukraine, we stand with you. Agressor and dictatorship of Russia must be stopped. Our government supports Russia, of course, but will never support killing and murders of kids and women, it is their future generation. Please, be safe everyone and let's cherish the peace and every minute of life.
With all the sincere and full respect, from Kazakhstan.
I think all Turkic countries and Georgia must form a defensive alliance as it looks like we have no other option to prevent further wars. Why Georgia you might ask, pretty much all trade between Turkey and Turkic countries travel through Iran and especially Georgia including oil and gas pipelines and railways. Iran is a Russian ally and might block entire trade in case of an escalation then only Georgia is left. While there are already Russian backed separatist regions in Georgia so Russia also invading Georgia is a real possibility. If Turkic countries loose both Iran and Georgia they will be separated once again like past centuries and can't support each others, we can not afford such a thing no matter what...
you didnt say that when US unleashed their onslaught in the middle-east and then Afghan for so long
@@ggoddkkiller1342 as long as ur Georgia remains neutral then it wont have any problem, but it will depend who is the leader of when
Won't stop, "people" put an administration into office which brought back the architects of this disaster like Victoria Nuland, Empty peace talk is substance free, this is the consequence of decades of ignoring warnings from many including John Mearshiemer, Pat Buchanan, Noam Chomsky, Henry Kissinger, across the political spectrum they warned the wests actions would cause this, and instead of listening people listened to mindless propaganda
Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. No sexy time allowed unless you support Putin. 😂😂😂😂😂
Do this interview in Kazakh and you'll get completely different answers.
Фигню не неси! Казахскоговорящие еще больше ненавидят Россию и Путина
@@axelaurelius3854 бирак ия, особенно мынау кок кепкадагы кыз акымак екен, уят ай
@@didig5137 That's exactly my point.
Негізі, бұл қазақтар қазақтілді адамдар, акценттері бар
I find it interesting that the Slavic Kazakhs (maybe they’re actually just russian, I don’t know) have a very naive view of Putin, whereas the ethnically Asian Kazakhs are not so naive and they realize that Putin is a dictator and that he has imperialist aims…aims that also don’t bode well for Kazakhstan
There are no such thing as slavic Kazakhs. Those folks are regular russians.
@@maxh7637 I wasn’t sure of that, thanks for the clarification.
all slavic in Kazakhstan are immigrants
Они сепаратисты.Они всегда поддержавают Россию и Путина.Они наши враги в Казахстане.Но мы им открыто не говорим
Kazakhs always had different point of view from russians
That Asian Johnny Depp looking guy had the best intelligent answers.
Hey everyone. As a Kazakh person from Kazakhstan I would like to express my opinion on some of the comments who question the interviewees’ words “Russia is our brother, soulmate, etc.” that would seem controversial for you. The reason why we say that comes back from history. Russian Empire and Kazakh Khanate had quite a history together since 18th century. In 1700s our people suffered from the attacks of Dzungar people. At that time, it was a Holodomor, and we lost a lot of people. I don’t want to dive into it, but basically our Khan(ruler) of the younger tribe asked for help from the emperor of the Russian Empire. Some of the sources say that our Khan asked for being a subject(only the younger tribe asked for help at the time) of Russian Empire since we suffered too many losses and we had a choice joining either Russian Empire or China. Other sources say that the translator that came to Khan to let him sign the agreement messed up the translation, so instead of asking for military support it seemed that we asked for being Russian Empire’s subject. Anyways, the other two Khans of the older and middle tribes disagreed with this decision, but later on they also joined RE. For the Emperor in Russian Empire, Anna Ioannovna, it was extremely beneficial to have our territory since through our land there was a Silk way. Kazakhstan is the border between Europe and Asia which many of the nations back then saw as the candy that they could steal from a kid. Then we have USSR, when during the Stalin’s regime many Russians, Germans, Koreans, and other ethnicities were deported to Kazakhstan, Siberia, Tajikistan and later to the rest of the Post-Soviet countries. Which is why in Kazakhstan you see diversity of people. Back to the point, it’s like a double edged sword. We consider Russians as friends but there is also a fear since in Russia, there are people with chauvinistic intents towards Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, and other minorities living in Russia. I am not saying all of them, but quite a few of them are like that and that includes the government.
To be completely honest, there are territories that belong originally to Kazakhstan, and for years Russia has been looking at the rest of our land, such as Pavlodar, Petropavlovsk, Kokshetau as historically their land which is not. That is why lots of our people have mixed feelings but we don’t see Russians particularly as enemies. As my granny once said “don’t look for enemies, they might be right next to you”.
For my fellow Kazakhs, please correct me if I’m wrong and add anything you guys want to. I might be wrong in the history part, so please do correct me.
This is purely my opinion on that and I’m only saying what I feel about it as a Kazakh. I do not speak for the rest of Kazakh people.
The average Kazakh person sounds like he has a degree in political sciences!! And you speak english much better than the average french or italian. I hope all the best for your wonderfull country, lots of love from Greece.
That’s a really nice write up - hope a lot of people learn this about our history, it’d make it much easier to at least grasp the complexity of KZ-RUS relations.
To give a bit more of the modern perspective - the two countries have been so intertwined for so long that it’s impossible to find a single person in KZ who’d have no connections in Russia or Russian people. Whether it’s university peer, colleague or a neighbor. There’s a decent number of mixed marriages and families - so many people with different bloods mixed together. There’s little ‘foreign’ or ‘alien’ in Russians for us in KZ. We have known them our whole lives, have broken bread with them, there’s a definite level of kinship. It’s what makes Kazakhstan such a nice place to be - there may be differences, but the peaceful coexisting of so many cool cultures together is a rare sight - and an eye candy
Russia never claimed Kazakh territory, first of all, because Russia and Kazakhstan are closest allies.
@@ИванНавивов look, read my comment carefully. don’t take it personally.
@@stayhoodie7860 It helps to understand, for you to say that. A long history of friendship and family.
As an American, due to communism, Stalin, post-WW2 Eastern block, cold war, we saw USSR as an evil empire, threatening the whole world. After 1989, I still don't understand what happened, there was a reset into 15 new states. But instead of integrating into Europe and the world, Russia stayed distant and kept supporting communist revolutionary trouble-makers like Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, North Vietnam.
The American idea of a happy country is one where there is freedom, human rights, democracy, fair justice systems, equal opportunity. It sort of comes from Christianity historically, it probably doesn't fit everyplace. Some peoples may need a patriarchal government, a strong dad. Our idea (and the U.N.) of a happy world is a network of countries working together, not fighting, invading, stealing, hurting people. We still see Russia as one of the bad actors. We don't hear good stories, where Russians have helped their neighbors to develop. We don't get stories about how the republics are happy to have Russia as its brother. I like to hear all the stories. I know real life is not black and white, it is complicated.
But going back to the present, seeing Russia invade and kill thousands of its neighbor, a new WW2 aggressor, is a surprise, but also not. After what you write, I assume it is a complete shock to its neighbors and brothers.
Please make interviews in Kazakhstan in Kazakh. It’s basic respect.
A mix of both languages would be more appropriate, to not erase the Russian speaking population.
Not all of them speak it tho
@@LalaLa-ze7kv well, not all people in Kazakhstan speak Russian too. Kazakh is official language in Kazakhstan and mother tongue of Kazakh people, so have some respect.
@@АсельАскарова-с3ф Don't worry. Russian-speaking people in Kazakhstan are privileged and considered "cool". Those who are being erased are Kazakhs who speak Kazakh.
@@hydeqyzy lol, I know A LOT of kazakh folks who don't speak kazakh, especially in big cities where this interviews are being set
1:11 this ignorent is not Kazakh, he is Russian, wtf is wrong with you? If you are going to speak with Russians then why you make interview in Kazakhstan????????
There are a lot of Russians living in Kazakhstan, why not?
This is the best interview, i have watched so far, after Chinese one.. It seems, that the Kazakhstan people have a clearer vision of the consequences of war They are better informed, and knowledge of the actual situation in Ukraine. Even though they have strong friendship with Russia, they don't want to come back to the past, when they were under the USSR's control, They rather have their own sovereignty, as a nation. I really enjoyed this interview. Thank you.
Well it makes sense tbh, if your friend started a fight, you wouldn’t help him simply because he’s your friend, you would only help if you thought his cause was just. It’s pretty hard to truly justify Russia’s actions so why would anyone, even their friends, want to help them. I think the responses about if it could happen to them are the most intriguing, they think he’s mad enough to do it and are simply hoping that their status as "friends" will save them.
Russia never controlled Kazakhstan in the ussr 🙄 it was a federation
@@terrorgaming459 In theory only. Practically it was highly centrally controlled for most of its existence.
The Chinese interview is sketchy because people in China are happy but they fear CCP. So they are careful what they say in public.
@@thunderbug8640 120 year
‘’Courage taught me no matter how bad a crisis gets ... any sound investment will eventually pay off." - Carlos Slim Helu
Making it out at a young age is quite difficult. I started a side hustle at 17, saved up and made some good investments. l'm 28,live on my own and having a good life for myself. Big ups to you and everyone out there trying
@@danromero533 Sounds like plan, how do you put money to work?
@@steceymorgan814 Yes it sure is. I put in money in investments and get profits. That 's how I make more money without working. This does not sound new to you right ?
@@danromero533 Thanks for replying me, I've heard so many people talk about investment but none had said how to do it right.
@Muyiwa MG There are lots of investments options such as real estate, stock market, forex, cr ypt os, passive income,
6:08 Tell me that everything this guy says is wrong, I side with this fella 100 percent.
Yes mustache man is the best!
Some people just dont have morals!
Ой, чья бы мычала. Вы со своими кланом Назабаевых ничего сделать не можете.
Dictator, world community, blah blah. The same world community that enslaved African till this day, siphoning their riches for a penny? Or that community that bombed half of the Middle East into a Stone Age? The same community that allows Saudi Arabia to bomb Yemen, that already long ago became a humanitarian catastrophe? Of Israel to keep stealing Palestinian land? Typical hypocrite: here I see, here I don't. Btw, this "dictator" saved him and his country from headchoppers not so long ago. But it seems he already forgot.
@@someperson1829 It doesn't matter how evil the world community is, it is still the world community.
I am saddened by the young lady with the blue baseball cap who seems 100% malleable to Putin's war and actions to the point that she'd have her country fight alongside Russia "against the world". Sad too was the white Russian failing to justify his views. He doesn't get it...the world wants peace, not dictators.
The rest of the respondents had clearly thought responses, consider Ukrainians friendly (even brothers and cousins), and just want to avoid war...like most citizens of the planet. Surprisingly, one Kazak man predicted that Putin will continue and even use false flag techniques to pick a fight with Kazakstan. This is what a fair number of pundits predict, especially if Putin fails to kill Ukraine.
Love to all Kazaks from France 😘
The guy with moustache is very smart.
Недеген сұмдық 🤦🏻♂️Біреуі қазақша сөйлеген жоқ. Егерде бәрі орысқұл болса, осыдан кейін қалай Ресейдің бодандығынан шығады екенбіз.
Бурында масимовтан сурамадын ба неге казакша сойлемейсин деп булардан емес
Those interviewed are impressive people - so well informed and able to intelligently respond to the questions.
As a qazaq, I don't understand why they praise these mankurts, what Russian brothers?
"I think Putin felt pressured... he didn't want a NATO country right on his border..."
So how does he feel about Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania? News flash, NATO already borders Russia.
Then,you suggest to locate NATO in Ukraine in additional?
Completely stupid.
Ukraine isnt a small country like latvia and Estonia
@@terrorgaming459 there's no big difference between territories suspect of this countries, even distance from moscow to these countries are same
@@Нога_Кремля why not? NATO is a defensive pact. Putin has nothing to fear unless he attacks.
Nothing would've changed for Russia if Ukraine joined NATO.
@@FloofyMinari we could watch in many places all over the world how NATO worked.
Ask people in countries which was bombed by NATO do they have any fear.
NATO doesn't need any reason to attack, if US doesn't like any country that's enough.
I wish my fellow Americans were even half as well informed and thoughtful as these folks are. I visited Almaty briefly a few years ago, meeting family members of my soon-to-be daughter-in-law. They were perfect hosts, interesting and fun to converse with, and wonderfully generous and down to earth. I am not at all surprised that the people in this video express themselves with intelligence and compassion. Just my take on it.
Kazakhstan will always hold a special place in the heart. Did the Mongol Rally back in 2017, we were in Kazakhstan looking for a Hotel or somewhere to camp at about 11pm after a long days driving. As we were stopped by the side of the road looking at the map, a family in a white SUV pulled up along side us and asked us what we were doing. They spoke decent English and we told them we were looking for somewhere to camp or or a hotel. They tried to ring a few local hotels fpr us but none were open, so they invited us (a convoy of 4-5 cars and about 12 people) to sleep at their house. They had just come back from a wedding and had loads of left over food, I will never forget all of us and all of them being under their awning at like 1am having a full-on feast with them, all laughing and joking and smiles all around. They prepared mattresses and sheets in their kitchen and hallway for us to sleep on. They were extremely generous and refused to take any form of payment. Luckily we had a load of toys in the cars (that we were going to glue to our cars) that we gave to their children, they were very thankful. Such kind, generous, utterly utterly lovely people. Love them.
@@spencep7919 our ancestors were nomads and therefore there was an unspoken rule. Treat every traveler like family. Give him food, water and lodging. Because when you find yourself in his place, you will be sure that you will be treated exactly the same way.
LOL you mean half as brainwashed by their highly censored media? You are a POS to have all this information at your disposal and to take the side of the mass murderers.
I’ve always wanted to visit Kazakhstan. It’s a very unique nation in my opinion that not many people think of going to.
The reactions here really show how you *are* making a difference, Asian Boss. Not only by providing insights, information, and introducing us to other viewpoints, but also by reminding us how little we know about a lot of countries/people (and how misguided our preconceptions can be).
I like all of your work (and your reasons for doing this): Please keep it up.