One of the most famous presenters, journalists and editors on Russian television, Dmitry Kiselev, is a wealthy man in every sense of the word. He always made good money and did not hide the fact that he had high income, thanks to which he was able to purchase Moscow real estate worth one hundred and sixty million rubles.
In addition, Dmitry Konstantinovich has seven marriages behind him, and his current wife is the eighth in a row. In general, the biography of the popular TV presenter is full of rich events.
Luxurious apartments - with your hard earned money
Kiselev said in a personal interview that the high level of wages allowed him to save decent sums to move from the suburbs of the capital, where his family initially lived with his parents, to the very center of Moscow. An ultra-modern residential complex called “Legend of Tsvetnoy” is located near two places where Dmitry works. The journalist admitted that he did not have any accumulated amounts left, since all his personal funds were invested in the purchase of an apartment. In addition, we had to borrow part of the amount. But the comfortable living conditions and convenient location of the complex, although they cost a tidy sum, have an undoubted advantage - they please Kiselev and his wife.
unexpected love
Fans of TV presenter Dmitry Kiselev know that he is a very erudite and educated person. He knows 4 foreign languages perfectly and understands art and music. For his mental relaxation, the presenter decided to build himself a house on the Black Sea coast.
For construction, Dmitry chose a small but beautiful city in Crimea. But he not only built a house, but also founded the Jazz Festival , which has become regular since 2003.
It was thanks to this festival that Dmitry Kiselev met his 8th wife. The girl's name was Maria. At the time we met, she was married and raising a child. About a year after they met, Masha and Dmitry simply talked, and then the girl decisively left her husband for a new lover. Maria says that at one moment she realized that Dmitry was her man, and she wanted to be with him.
In 2007, the couple celebrated their wedding. A year later, their first child together was born. The son was named Konstantin. Three years later, the couple became happy parents again. They had a daughter, whom they named Varvara.
Having experienced 7 unsuccessful marriages, Dmitry is happy that he has finally met a woman who understands him and shares his aspirations. Maria always strives for self-improvement. Before meeting the presenter, she wanted to become a psychologist and worked hard on it. After the wedding, Maria became interested in the work of a presenter. She was entrusted with hosting a program on Vesti FM radio. Viewers love her for her openness and frankness with them. Maria can tell any episode from her life, but without touching on her relationship with Dmitry. This topic is very personal for her and she is not ready to share her happiness with the public.
How the TV presenter's career began
Once upon a time, in the late 1980s, a young journalist began his professional career on the Central Television of the Soviet Union, in the famous “Time” program. In the early 1990s, he was the host of “Television News Service”, and then returned to the first project. In addition, he began hosting Panorama. Dmitry Konstantinovich also gained all-Russian fame thanks to his active work on the Rossiya channel.
Dmitry's wives
Today Dmitry is married and happy in his family life, but before that he was married seven times. He met his first wife Alena at medical school, they were 17 years old. Family life did not work out and they soon separated. The second time he married while studying in Leningrad was student Natalya. A year later, the couple decided to divorce. A year later, Dmitry led his next chosen one, Tatyana, down the aisle, but this marriage also came to a quick end. While working at Gosteleradio, Dmitry married his colleague Alena for the fourth time.
Dmitry Kiselev with his wife Maria
Very soon the couple's son Gleb is born. When the child was one year old, the presenter left the family for his new lover Natalya, who became his fifth wife. Dmitry did not stop communicating with his son, and now maintain good relations. In 1998, Kelly Richdale became the TV presenter’s sixth wife, and a few months later they divorced. Dmitry's seventh wife's name was Olga.
In search of the one and only
As a decent person, Dmitry never refused to marry his chosen ones, but every marriage still ended in divorce. The first union at the age of seventeen with a classmate at medical school Alena lasted less than a year. Already a student at Leningrad University, the young man fell in love again and got married. But the marriage with Natalya was also short-lived. And by the age of 23, Kiselev’s fate had developed in such a way that he was in the status of a thrice divorced man. The third marriage with Tatyana, alas, did not promise him love for life.
Having got a job as a radio show host, the aspiring journalist still believed in real strong feelings, and his new chosen one, Elena, gave the happy man a son, who was named Gleb. But the baby was barely a year old when the couple divorced. The fifth attempt to find another family, marrying Natalya, also ended in a famous ending. But the sixth half of the loving journalist was his colleague from Great Britain, with whom they co-hosted a television project called “Window to Europe.” But according to the established pattern, the family boat crashed again after twelve months of relationship.
Then there was a young wife named Olga, and, finally, Dmitry Konstantinovich met his current life partner, Maria Mineeva. A certified psychologist and radio presenter, the young woman gave her husband two children, inspired by family harmony. In addition to Konstantin and Varvara, the couple also raised Maria’s son Fyodor, who was born from a previous union.
Recent article by Maria Kiseleva
Quite recently, when there was talk about pension reform, an article by Dmitry Kiselev’s wife appeared. This has already caused a real hurricane on social networks, where she talked about the benefits for Russians and increasing age. This article was not appreciated, but seemed strange; its arguments about the need to have many children turned out to be completely underestimated.
Kiselev’s wife Dmitry says that pensioners who criticize the state behave like children who constantly blame their parents for the lack of attention and love. She says that citizens are dependent and live, dreaming of retirement, when they can do nothing and live for their own pleasure. The woman talks about raising the retirement age as a project where a person is responsible for himself until the end of his days.
The author gives various arguments in which he explains the benefits for Russians of raising the retirement age. It concerns only those young people who are now in the prime of life and there is absolutely no need to panic, but there is an opportunity to hurry up and find their place in life, and most importantly, take care of their health.
A place to help people
Maria Kiseleva on the radio
The “Psychological Studio of Maria Kiseleva” operates in the capital. It is located in the Khamovniki district, on Komsomolsky Prospekt, building 25/2. There is also a branch of the center in the Moscow region - in the city of Korolev, Kosmonavtov Avenue, 20/35.
The psychological clinic provides a wide range of specialized services, including:
- Psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic therapy
- Children's sandbox. Any problems of any age are studied and, most importantly, solved. This could be difficulty falling asleep or eating. It is often almost impossible to potty train a toddler. The child is afraid to go to kindergarten or is afraid of the nanny. At a later age, aggressiveness, stubbornness or shyness, anxiety, lack of attention, poor academic performance, early sexuality, and the emergence of bad habits occur. You never know what else
- Art therapy. It is believed that artistic images should help a person understand himself. A person tries to express through colors, lines, shapes and images things that are difficult to convey in words.
- Existential therapy
- Individual therapy studio
- Psychological trainings
- Solving psychological problems in the family. It is necessary to correctly set communication priorities in a couple. It is important to pay attention to both family history and what is happening to the family “here and now”
- Consultations for children and adolescents in “transitional age”. Timely psychological help will help cope with children's disobedience, lies, uncontrollable aggression, problems with academic performance, and teenage isolation.
- Help in the fight against depression, fears, phobias and loneliness
- Psychological problems of patients with excess weight and anorexia
- Overcoming psychological crises
- Psychosexual problems
- Accompanying mental patients and their loved ones
- Working with dying patients.
In general, the palette of psychotherapeutic programs and techniques offered by the Maria Kiseleva Studio of Psychological Assistance is rich and varied.
Clients can be assisted by real professionals in the field of psychoanalysis, who are ready to use their own unique developments and approaches to effectively treat patients.
The voice of a psychologist sounded on the radio
Maria's activities are currently extensive and varied.
Since December 2013, our heroine has been a regular guest, author and presenter of programs on Radio Russia. In the studio, a professional psychologist regularly tells listeners:
- How to overcome depression
- Why is it important not to be afraid to ask for help in a critical situation?
- About factors that traumatize a child’s psyche
- Is it acceptable to have elevated levels of anxiety in certain situations?
- On the view of psychologists on religious rituals
- About crowd psychology
- About psychological problems of schoolchildren
- About the psychology of family relationships
- What causes suicide?
- About the psychology of loneliness
- About the psychology of computer, alcohol and drug addiction
- On the psychological characteristics of the personality of individual politicians.
The topics of the meetings are almost never repeated and are very often closely intertwined with political, economic and social events taking place in the country and the world. Recently, the program “An Hour with Clinical Psychologist Maria Kiseleva” has been taking place as part of the “Runway” radio show.
Practice without theory is dead...
In 2012, Maria Kiseleva defended her PhD thesis under the scientific supervision of Leo Bockeria and Yuri Zinchenko.
And just three days ago, the defense of Maria Kiseleva’s doctoral dissertation took place at Moscow State University. The topic of the scientific work concerned the psychological rehabilitation of infants with heart defects during the surgical and postoperative period. If the mother is inattentive to the child and does not show care for him, the baby, according to Maria Kiseleva, will have problems in mental development.
The emotional state of mothers whose children have heart defects is unstable; they are characterized by increased anxiety, feelings of guilt, awareness of their helplessness and inability to help the baby in any way. Therefore, the specialist’s task, according to psychologist Maria Kiseleva, is to restore family cohesion and intra-family communication during this period, to overcome the feeling of “pathological grief” in the mother. Therapy must be approached comprehensively, using all possible techniques.
Since 2011, Maria Kiseleva has published over two dozen publications, including in the National Psychological Journal, Scientific Opinion, Human Capital, Theoretical and Experimental Psychology, and several others. Some articles are recommended for university students.
In addition, Maria Kiseleva is the author of two books:
- “If a child is sick. Psychological assistance to seriously ill children and their families” - M: Genesis, 2021.
- “Psychology of the relationship between mother and child with congenital heart disease (infancy and early age). Monograph" / M: Moscow University Publishing House, 2021.
“No one is stopping you from making a fortune”: Maria Kiseleva on pension reform
The list of striking statements in defense of pension reform, started recently by Vladimir Pozner and Mikhail Boyarsky, continues to grow. On June 19, a column by the wife of TV presenter Maria Kiselyova, “Who benefits from raising the retirement age,” appeared on the website of RIA Novosti (a division of MIA Rossiya Segodnya, headed by Dmitry Kiselev). The author, Doctor of Psychology, believes that only infantile and irresponsible people dream of retirement:
Retirement has a deep psychological meaning: often it is the right to relieve oneself of responsibility for one’s life, and for some it is the right to be offended and dissatisfied. A natural question arises: who is offended by what and by whom? The target is traditionally the state, as a father figure who did not love and did not give enough to his child. <…>
...Pension is perceived as an opportunity to do what you want, without being responsible for yourself, your health, and development. For many, retirement is a permission to not be active, to become infirm, to want nothing, or to want but not do it because finances or health do not allow it. <…>
According to Maria Kiseleva, any person who wants to stop working can do so earlier:
If you want to quit your job at 40, no one is stopping you from making a fortune and enjoying idleness, either in the country or on the islands. <…>
Another interesting way to stop working is to have more children:
For those who have five children, retirement will come earlier. And it will be more fun! Or maybe you won’t have to work until you officially retire, since your children will be your helpers. <…>
The author believes that the reform will force Russians to “get their act together”:
Early permission to be old and needy fosters helplessness in us. If we do not believe that a person at 55-60 years old can be active, capable, creative, useful, healthy, then we do not strive for this. You need to rise above yourself, get yourself off the couch and start acting. <…>
Even though the method of raising the retirement age may seem shocking to some, it encourages people to live longer, if only for the sake of getting to retirement and “relaxing already.” <…>
For many, Maria Kiseleva’s speech reminded others of other famous sayings.
Vladimir Milov
Arbeit macht frei, dear Russians, Putin’s propagandists tell us. Arbeit macht frei.
Ruthless PR man
...This is exactly what a column by some wife of an SS officer might look like, describing the advantages of life in concentration camps. If they don’t have bread, let them eat cakes, Maria confidently declares from the pages of a leading Russian news agency. After all, who knows better than her: a pension will not accumulate on its own.
Ekaterina Vinokurova
The text by Kiselev’s wife forces the most ardent supporters of raising the retirement age to become ardent opponents of this reform.
And I won't even talk about the miners who spend active lives underground. About the right to rest and work, about the fact that expecting a pension from the state, for which there were deductions from your own salary, is not dependency. And I won’t say anything about the moral side of the issue, everything is obvious here.
Here is the coolest and most frank line: “Do you want to quit your job at 40? No one is stopping you from making a fortune and enjoying idleness, even in the country, even on the islands”...
No one is stopping you from making a fortune. Not to earn money, not even to “make”, is not another verb. Put together. The word is straight out of the 90s.
This phrase betrays all the misunderstanding by the wife of the main propagandist of the essence of the middle class and all her contempt for the middle class. Middle class - it’s not about cocktails on the islands at 40 years old. It is about the right to work with dignity and rest with dignity. About savings that are not “made”, but earned. About clear rules of the game that allow you to easily earn money year after year. Not to make money, but to earn money.
And this contemptuous attitude of hers illustrates a big problem when the national idea becomes “if you’re smart, why aren’t you on the islands yet?”
In a response column in the Pravmir publication, Tatyana Krasnova takes Maria Kiseleva’s arguments to their logical conclusion:
In general, it’s difficult to argue with Mr. Kiselev’s wife, and I don’t want to.
It’s a shame for my compatriots, they have become lazy, insolent and have let themselves go.
It is completely unclear, for example, why many of them still eat pasta and potatoes, while it is well known that salmon, sturgeon and seafood contain a lot of vitamins, fats and proteins, which are much more beneficial for health and figure. Most likely, these inelegant people are simply not aware of the huge selection of high-quality fresh fish provided, for example, by the Globus Gourmet chain of stores. Or they know, but they eat potatoes out of sheer stubbornness.
Apparently out of this same stubbornness, Russians are giving up the habit that every decent person has of going down to the pool in the basement of their residential complex in the morning and swimming at least a couple of kilometers in the cool sea water. It would seem like an elementary thing, but come on... They get lazy.
Or medicine. With the modern choice of European and American clinics, what could be simpler? Buy good insurance, take a leisurely and thorough examination once a year. The hospitals are of a good standard, care, attention, private ward. The medicines are excellent, diagnostics are available at every step. You can go abroad, after all. Israel, Germany. The selection is excellent.
But people are lazy and let themselves go.
Or, let's say, rest. Sea, mountains, diving, surfing. Everything for them. And ask, how many of these puffy lazy Russians know how to ski and sail a yacht? Units! They stick out in the garden as if glued, and so they grow old before the deadline proposed by the government.
By the way, you need to spend more time with your children on vacation. And then, out of pure whim, some people stick around at work for three shifts, and then clean the entrances. And children are more important. You didn't know?
In general, it seems that you didn’t know a lot, dear but stupid Russians.
For example, my dear friend Irina Markovna (35 years of work at the school, 35 graduations, students still remember and call with gratitude, and bring their children) did not know that you can exert yourself a little and “make a fortune.” Or my classmate Irina Nikolaevna (35 years in a children’s hospital, dozens of lives saved, hundreds of patients who became family and friends)… It didn’t dawn on her in time that no one was stopping her from earning money for a small island in the Pacific Ocean and doing downshifting there… About I generally keep silent about my aunt from the Kashira region. You fool, milked cows all your life, instead of dumping them in the order of downshifting in the Maldives...
OK. Enough.
I really don’t want to argue with Kiseleva.
I'm not planning on retiring. More precisely, I don’t hope for it. The state, which the husband of the respected lady sings on air every night, taught me not to trust anyone and rely only on myself. I am one of those who survived the nineties with a small child in my arms. This hedgehog will not scare my naked psyche. I only wanted to say one thing to Maria Kiseleva: there is no need to teach people how to live and what to do, dear. It is not in your position to make such speeches. In your position, you need to behave more modestly.
Political scientist Oleg Ivanov also criticizes Kiseleva on the National Expert website, but at the same time considers raising the retirement age a victory for the “liberal lobby”:
The arguments of TV presenter Maria Kiseleva look, to put it mildly, unconvincing. Among them there is a lot of outright sophistry, for example, “this will allow us to consider life as a long project”, “live here and now”, “be an example to children”, etc. There are also simply mocking conclusions. “An incentive to live long,” “to take care of your health, because now at least now you have to live ten years longer.” Well, since this is so useful, why not raise the retirement age by 30 years or more? Or, for example: “this is an incentive to have children. For those who have five children, retirement will come earlier.” A brilliant argument, especially considering that many families are below the poverty line and find it difficult to feed even one child. One gets the feeling that people who make these kinds of arguments live in some kind of their own world, in different economic and social conditions than most people in Russia. They have largely absorbed the Western way of life that the author’s husband, Dmitry Kiselev, so mercilessly denounces on television. Moreover, he, in fact, is more of a Westerner himself than his television audience. The income level of most ordinary people does not allow them to save money for retirement. Especially considering the regularly occurring financial crises and “ruble collapses.” Raising the retirement age is, of course, a victory for the liberal lobby in the government, precisely those liberals whom Dmitry Kiselev constantly criticizes.
Among liberal commentators, of course, there are also supporters of the reform - for example, the owner of the Dozhd TV channel agreed with Maria Kiseleva (albeit with reservations):
Alexander Vinokurov
I am for raising the retirement age. In the future there will be no pension system at all. We need to improve the healthcare system. And pay for the life and treatment of those who are sick and cannot work.
However, I consider the government’s decision to raise the retirement age to be an unfair reform, because a lot can be done instead of such an increase, a lot needs to be done along with such an increase, and first it would be good to abolish preferential pensions for all sorts of near-state functionaries.
Critics also point out that it would be a good idea for the state to start reforms by cutting its own appetites.
Inna Smurova
“Living for retirement is a thankless task. You need to live here and now, so that it won’t be excruciatingly painful in the future.” In my opinion, madam calls for not paying taxes and spending them here and now, and not waiting for an ephemeral pension, which “who knows” whether there will be one. Not such a stupid proposal. And by the way, the topic of dependency is very well touched upon, because it is the state apparatus with state television that depends on the tax contributions of citizens. It’s really time for the state to grow up and stop relying on endless dependence on taxes.
Dmitry Gudkov
Kiselev’s wife published a column in his hand-held RIA Novosti about dependents - “grumpy old people” who are just waiting to get involved in the budget and extract pensions from the state. Coincidence? - Don't think. But if so, let's figure it out.
Putin (who, of course, had nothing to do with it) is trying to pass off the deterioration of life as reform. So: this is not a reform. Reform is when a system is changed to improve it. That is, right now it can be bad right away, but then it will get better.
It will get bad now, that’s true, but it won’t be better later.
I know everything perfectly well about the Pension Fund deficit, and about 7 trillion in expenses, and about the demographic problem: I have written more than one article about this in recent years. I won’t repeat the arguments for promotion here; they will be told anyway, not by Kiseleva’s wife, but by her husband. The point is different: raising the retirement age (most likely inevitable given the choice between it, raising taxes and lowering pensions) should have been accompanied by a set of other measures.
For example, older people would not have to pay social contributions, so that it would be profitable for employers to hire them rather than fire them.
For example, a compensating system of funded pensions should have been created, but they were simply stolen from us.
For example, raising the age had to be planned publicly and in advance, so that people would not rely on this money and would not take out loans.
And most importantly: the state as a whole had to change its policy. It’s understandable if they tell me: things will get worse here, but wages will rise, economic growth will occur, and prices will drop. This is why we supposedly do everything.
But instead they keep me (and all of us) silent, simultaneously continuing to steal and waste money in Syria and on unprofitable gas pipelines, burying it offshore and generously sponsoring Sechin, who again does not have enough for the unprofitable Rosneft. They are also increasing our VAT by 2%, which, contrary to any promises, will increase inflation by 5% (here I completely agree with Sergei Aleksashenko).
That is, instead of a social contract there is a social fig, and instead of butter there are propagandists for whom these 20 thousand pensions are a snack one evening.
That's the whole story: if a robber demands your wallet, don't call him a reformer. Even if he insists on it.
Pavel Lobkov
The unpopular libertarian reform comes packaged with a socialist VAT increase. This is schizophrenia. Raising the retirement age can only be done in conjunction with a reduction in government spending or another popular right-wing measure, for example, fixing the property tax.
The attention of commentators was also attracted by statements in support of the reform by two officials - Speaker of the Legislative Assembly Vyacheslav Makarov and Valentina Matvienko. The first said that reform is necessary because Russia is a “warring country” with a record number of abortions. The second only said that raising the retirement age cannot be postponed, but against the backdrop of the income of a member of the Federation Council, these words, as it seemed to commentators, were on a par with the advice of Maria Kiseleva.
Daniil Khanin
A country at war? where and with whom are we fighting?
Victor Sonkin
Sometimes the IQ level of these individuals is amazing, even with all their readiness for anything. That is, it’s even touching how they, without noticing it, express anti-Putin slogans
Boris Rubinstein
I remember the evergreen classic about a man who killed his parents and asks the court to take into account mitigating circumstances: he is an orphan.
Ganna Oganesyan
The Russian doctor Minkh injected himself with the blood of a typhus patient. Russian scientist Nikolai Gamaleya took cholera germs. Russian Explorer Ilya Mechnikov infected himself with syphilis. The patriot Matvienko, screaming louder than others for pension reform, is obliged to conduct a deadly experiment on herself - to live for an hour on the pension of a Russian pensioner. Hold on, Valya, the world will tremble with your courage!
Media technologist
We believe that you should definitely listen to Valentina Ivanovna; such a wise matron will not advise anything bad. Let's just remember how in the summer of 2017, the political lioness, the griffon of Russian politics, Matvienko, advised Russian students to live not in dormitories, but in their own apartments. “Even if it’s 50 square meters, it’s not bad for a start,” says Valentina Ivanovna. Let us repeat, this woman and her experience should definitely be trusted, because she was able to raise a son who became a dollar billionaire before he even reached 30 years old! Bravo!
Sergey Fadeev
Do these super-rich scoundrels think that their words will be forgotten? (fresh speeches of those who want to take away pensions from Russians) 1. Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of St. Petersburg Vyacheslav Makarov explained the increase in the retirement age by the fact that Russia is a warring country. He made this statement at a briefing on Wednesday. 2. “As for postponing [the abolition of pensions] - no, it cannot be postponed. If the government acts this way, it will be an irresponsible government” (Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matvienko). 3. “Who benefits from raising the retirement age? For all of us!" (wife of dollar millionaire TV propagandist Dmitry Kiselev, Maria).
By the way, last week Novaya Gazeta published an investigation about Vyacheslav Makarov: it turned out that the chairman of the Legislative Assembly rented country houses intended for the summer holidays of the disabled and the poor (presumably at the same discounted price). At the same time, Makarov has another dacha - the one in which the same Valentina Matvienko used to live (there are coincidences).
Diana Kachalova
Sorry, but it seems to me that Vyacheslav Serafimovich has completely lost his shores, in other words, he has gone crazy. A week ago we published a wonderful story about how our binder rented three houses from the state dacha fund - these are the kind of miserable shacks that the Social Protection Committee provides to the disabled, mothers of many children and other “vulnerable segments of the population.” Most often, several families pack these layers into a house, but they do not resist - for many, this is the only opportunity to get fresh air in the summer. The queue for these dachas is endless. Officials admit that “not all beneficiaries have enough and they have to set priorities.” So, the disabled person Vyacheslav Serafimovich two years ago rented three houses (despite the fact that he also occupies the state dacha where Valentina Matvienko used to live) for 10!! years. To be fair, we note - on a contractual basis, that is, not for free. It’s clear that these huts didn’t give in to him, so specially trained people (the second person in the city won’t get dirty himself) surrounded three areas with a blue fence and threw all the shit unworthy of the speaker onto the street - bedside tables, lame stools, cabinets with broken mirrors . Today the speaker said that after reading the article in Novaya, within 15 seconds (where have you been for two years, dear?) he refused to rent orphanages and, God forgive me, even thanked those who pushed him to this decision. I, as one of those who “pushed” with all my might, would have cried out loud with tenderness - well, the man had catharsis, returned the disadvantaged to a place in the sun, if only the warrior of Christ (sorry, he calls himself that, I don’t guilty), did not add: “it’s still impossible to live in these budget chicken coops, there’s not even hot water or other amenities.” That is, the orphans will survive, but Makarov will not.
But let’s return to raising the retirement age: one way or another, the overwhelming majority in the country are dissatisfied with this reform, regardless of political preferences.
Valery Solovey
A sharp increase in public discontent is being recorded in connection with the pension reform. Moreover, according to closed sociology, it was not possible to shift responsibility to Medvedev. Vacations for regional authorities have been cancelled.
The government is also discussing measures to balance the reform: for example, employers may be fined for refusing to hire older employees.
Mikhail Pozharsky
Just recently I wrote that raising the retirement age is not just another scam by Russians for money, but also a cunning plan to hang social security around the neck of business. The level of health in the Russian Federation today is such that 60-year-olds will spend more time in hospitals and clinics. And the employer will have to pay them a salary for this. Instead of the pension that the state owes them. But a business can start kicking and firing people on formal pretexts. So what is needed? That's right, ban it. It seems that this is what United Russia is currently discussing with Medvedev - “guarantees of employment for people over 50 years old” (in human language: how to make dismissal as difficult as possible). The setup is beautiful: we are told that we have an “aging population,” and we need to raise the retirement age so that young people don’t have to feed the old. But in reality, everything will be the other way around: businesses will be forced to pay younger employees less in order to be able to pay for the meaningless work of old people. The old will eat the young while the state spends their pensions on maintaining Chechnya, Crimea and the Rotenbergs. However, business is what business is for: to find a way out of a situation in which the state is twisting its “arms”. The reaction here may be a reluctance to hire people approaching the dangerous age limit of 50 years. Are you 45 years old and they won’t hire you anywhere? Say thank you to Putin and the United Russia.
Although some of the population probably retained trust in Putin.
Nikolai Podosokorsky
Many Russians (especially in the outback) still continue to believe that bright-faced Putin will come out to the people in the fall and say that he knew nothing about raising the retirement age, call the initiators of this matter “fools” and order the bar to be lowered by at least 2. 3 years. So, I am sure that he will not come out and say and will not reduce it, but, on the contrary, will thank the government and the Federal Assembly for their professional work. Because the Russians will endure everything anyway, because now people are “second oil”, because the will of the tsar is the law. Otherwise, the numerous servants of the regime would not be arguing now with such foam at the mouth - how great it is when your pension was stolen for 5-8 years, because this means that, by decree of the president, old age and illness will be postponed for the same period, and people They will stop dying and yearning without work. Alas, they know their electorate very well, and understand that the aggressively obedient majority will itself attack those who “rock the boat” - to please the State Department, Navalny, liberals and the fifth column. As that crazy woman screamed: “We are even ready to die to help Putin!”
Moreover, as long as the Russian team wins matches at the 2018 World Cup, we can live for today.
Alena Solntseva
Hurray comrades! The Russian team made it to the 1/8 finals. The retirement age has been raised for Russians - veterans do not grow old at heart. Payments for housing and communal services will increase by no more than 6% from July 1. A day in a pre-trial detention center is proposed to be equated to two days in a colony.
Life becomes better, and certainly more fun.