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"videoThumbnail Бедная Америка: жизнь в трейлерах, бездомные и бесплатная еда | США от Нью-Йорка до Лос-Анджелеса
Table of contents
|

Table of contents

0:00
США: цикл роликов о самой близкой для россиян стране
0:01
Варламов и Кучер едут по США!
0:06
Провинциалы про жизнь, доходы и труд
0:09
Что такое «средний класс» в США?
0:14
Культ работы: США vs Россия
0:16
Дома на колёсах: романтика или бедность?
0:20
Рум-тур американского автодома
0:23
Жизнь среди собак и мусора
0:27
Работа пожарным в США — огонь?
0:32
Путешествия на пенсии — миф или реальность?
0:37
Как в Арзамасе и Саранске видят США?
0:38
Бездомные Америки: от Вашингтона до Лос-Анджелеса
0:43
Самый жуткий район Лос-Анджелеса
0:47
Истории бездомных из столицы Пенсильвании
0:52
«Если вы просите еду — вы её получите»
0:55
Почему люди оказываются на улице?
0:57
Американка — об американском обществе
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Video tags

Варламов
Varlamov
Илья Варламов
Varlamov Talks
путин
интервью
трейлер
путешествия
америка
сша
политика
пропаганда
автодом
дом на колесах
иннополис
работа
нью йорк
лос анджелес
свобода
казань
кучер
саранск
вашингтон
арзамас
богатство
президент
страна
бедность
северная каролина
шарлотт
бездомные
цивилизация
американцы
многоэтажки
успешный американец
американская рублевка
разговор с американцем
дом пенсионеров
богатые американцы
американские дома
средний класс
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Subtitles
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Subtitles

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  • ruRussian
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00:00:01
afford to eat delicious food When you
00:00:03
want to eat and have no money Poverty in my
00:00:07
understanding is probably when a person
00:00:10
makes ends meet What is called
00:00:12
poverty in my opinion is when you work
00:00:15
just enough to eat and pay for your
00:00:17
housing poverty is when you don’t have enough
00:00:19
money to cover basic
00:00:21
needs food security of a roof over your
00:00:24
head friends this spring I’m launching a
00:00:27
new series of videos for you it will be about the
00:00:29
most important closest and most
00:00:31
exciting country for every Russian
00:00:34
Well of course about the USA every resident of Russia
00:00:38
knows everything about the problem from America they
00:00:40
envy us. We have a lot of natural
00:00:42
resources.
00:00:59
The USA is worried, look what they are doing
00:01:02
to their own people,
00:01:04
the destruction of the family,
00:01:06
cultural and national identity in the
00:01:10
new cycle we will analyze important topics:
00:01:12
American poverty and wealth,
00:01:14
propaganda and freedom of speech, the work of
00:01:16
journalists, a view of the future and of course the
00:01:19
confrontation with Russia, we will compare how
00:01:22
the world is seen in America and in Russia and finding out
00:01:24
what the difference is. To do this, we
00:01:26
traveled through the cities of Russia and America,
00:01:28
talked to a lot of people from mayors
00:01:31
to pensioners from homeless money workers.
00:01:33
So soon you will find out what a
00:01:35
real modern America is like
00:01:40
[music ]
00:01:55
friends Hello everyone Stanislav Kucher Ilya
00:01:58
Varlamov and we are in the very heart of
00:02:01
America, or rather still in that part of the
00:02:03
head Where the brain is located in the city of
00:02:05
Washington, if you look at
00:02:07
Russian television today, it seems that
00:02:09
relations between America and Russia have
00:02:11
never been so bad America
00:02:13
is demonizing it in our country represents as the
00:02:15
main enemy And even
00:02:17
propagandist officials are already openly saying that
00:02:18
the war is going on today between Russia and
00:02:21
America Russian Federation of Ukraine
00:02:24
our country is at war with three million
00:02:29
representatives of
00:02:33
800 million people there are many
00:02:36
different stereotypes of horror stories and I
00:02:40
wanted to show what
00:02:43
America is really like today, what Americans think
00:02:45
about Russia Do they want to conquer Russia?
00:02:47
What problems are there in America?
00:03:04
different States, both rich and
00:03:06
poor, we will talk with poor Americans
00:03:08
with rich journalists with I don’t know with the
00:03:11
first ones we meet on the road and we will
00:03:12
ask them a variety of questions about
00:03:14
Russia and about America and about the future of
00:03:17
humanity. I don’t know what
00:03:19
our trip will turn out to be because we don’t have
00:03:21
clear plan absolutely improvisation Yes
00:03:23
but uh I know for sure that we will try to
00:03:27
honestly show you the real America, we will
00:03:30
have several films with different
00:03:31
problems, subscribe to the channel so as
00:03:33
not to miss anything and also in the description there
00:03:36
will be links to Stas Kucher on his
00:03:39
social networks, they too Subscribe A we're
00:03:41
starting, it's time to hit the road and don't let yourself get
00:03:43
bored
00:03:44
Well, let's start as you already understood From poverty
00:03:47
and wealth, after all, from Soviet times,
00:03:49
everyone in Russia knows in America
00:03:52
only the bourgeoisie live well And ordinary workers
00:03:54
die in poverty
00:03:55
[music]
00:04:03
friends and you choose a book according to cover,
00:04:06
there is an opinion that you shouldn’t do this,
00:04:08
but the American writer James Elroy doesn’t agree with this, he
00:04:13
called some of the greatest
00:04:15
book cover designers, the American publication
00:04:18
usatoday called him a rock star of
00:04:20
graphic design in 1986, Chip Keith
00:04:24
got a job in one of the branches of a
00:04:25
large American publishing house
00:04:27
Random House for the position of junior
00:04:29
assistant designer; now he is an assistant
00:04:31
art director; his most famous work
00:04:33
is the cover of Michael Catton's book
00:04:36
Jurassic Park; they say that it was
00:04:38
thanks to the successful cover that Steven
00:04:40
Spielberg decided to make a film adaptation of the whale; he
00:04:43
also designed covers for books by
00:04:45
Cormac McCarthy, Donna Tart, Haruki
00:04:48
Murakami and many other famous
00:04:50
authors, a graphic designer creates not
00:04:52
only book covers, he develops
00:04:54
packaging for goods and products,
00:04:56
website layouts make icons, advertising banners,
00:04:58
logos, graphic design is responsible for the
00:05:01
visual presentation of the brand, and in view of the
00:05:04
profession,
00:05:05
you can study
00:05:07
graphic tools from scratch to an
00:05:09
advanced level on the course of the educational platform Netology During training,
00:05:11
you will be able to choose a portfolio and start taking your
00:05:14
first orders 4 months from the start of the
00:05:16
course; curators, experts and graduate students
00:05:19
will support you throughout the entire
00:05:21
program and will not let you leave the distance. By the
00:05:23
way, it is netology graduates who are more likely
00:05:25
than students who completed their studies on
00:05:27
other platforms to be satisfied with the training
00:05:29
every second I’m ready to recommend the
00:05:31
platform’s courses to my friends. Such data
00:05:34
was published in a Forbes
00:05:35
education study in February last year. In
00:05:38
addition, netology will help you create a resume
00:05:40
and prepare for an interview, and the
00:05:43
educational platform
00:05:44
sends the best students to internships with its
00:05:46
partners. You can work as a designer
00:05:48
in an agency of a large company or as a
00:05:50
freelancer. A if something goes wrong
00:05:52
during training and you realize that it’s not for
00:05:54
you, you can transfer to another
00:05:57
course or get your money back within the
00:05:59
first three lessons, you can issue a
00:06:00
refund for the full amount, and starting from
00:06:03
the fourth, the
00:06:04
cost of the remaining classes will be recalculated to
00:06:06
enroll go to the course using
00:06:08
the link in the description of this video And using the
00:06:10
Varlamov promo code you will receive a
00:06:12
45% discount on all paid online courses in
00:06:15
netology
00:06:20
[music]
00:06:25
where we arrived
00:06:27
We have now arrived at the house of stacia and Marco
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Tomkins, this is a very interesting couple with
00:06:33
whom I just recently I met
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who are very unusual Americans from
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your point of view or, on the contrary, ordinary
00:06:39
because she is like that she talks all the time
00:06:41
she solves all the issues he
00:06:44
works she is the financial director of the
00:06:46
company at the same time and he
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just works and
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water skis and they live in
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such a province not far from New -York on the
00:06:57
shore of the lake all his life, that is, you can
00:07:00
say our Rublyovka No, look, this is
00:07:03
just an interesting thing, many who
00:07:06
come from Moscow came now
00:07:08
no longer come
00:07:17
to the American Rublyovka and, in principle, you
00:07:21
can drive 15 minutes in any
00:07:23
direction and find there what you want it
00:07:25
will seem like an American ruble to you, that is,
00:07:27
trees behind trees, houses are beautiful
00:07:30
mansions, they have a nice big house, but
00:07:33
this is not some outstanding Luxury mansion
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in America, well, New Riga is middle
00:07:40
class, in short, no, it’s still above the
00:07:42
middle class, this is what is called
00:07:43
upper Middle Class session she was born here,
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she has lived here since childhood, they
00:07:48
met Mark on this very
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lake. Well, that is, these are actually such
00:07:53
typical American provincials,
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so I think it will be very useful to
00:07:57
chat with American provincials to
00:07:59
find out what they think about politics About
00:08:02
Media about wealth poverty
00:08:04
Republican Democrats Well, in short
00:08:07
[music]
00:08:12
Ilya,
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you know, when I told Ilya about you
00:08:17
that you’ve lived here on the lake all your life,
00:08:18
his first reaction was Yes, they’re
00:08:23
rich,
00:08:24
why don’t they move to California or
00:08:27
another fashionable place
00:08:30
because, for example, in Russia the rich are
00:08:33
usually live in Moscow or
00:08:34
St. Petersburg in large cities
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because it’s more convenient Well, first of all, he
00:08:40
hates big cities Plus,
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our business is here, so we don’t leave here,
00:08:51
we live between three states
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[laughter]
00:09:32
who live much better than us
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from a stunning lake nearby from
00:09:39
New York Where the very poor
00:09:41
Americans live Let's move to a pensioners' house
00:09:43
in a small town in North Carolina
00:09:45
[music]
00:09:50
on the left I have luxurious houses, each of
00:09:55
which I want to photograph On a
00:09:57
postcard and send this postcard home,
00:09:59
they are very stylish in terms of architecture and
00:10:03
it looks some kind of fairy tale there
00:10:06
are no fences here we can go
00:10:09
admire all this beauty where we haven’t
00:10:11
looked
00:10:12
it’s not Rublevskoye Highway every house
00:10:15
I see oaks I want to
00:10:18
stop to take pictures because it’s
00:10:21
extraordinary beauty normal
00:10:24
village houses I think in Russia if
00:10:26
it would be very some rich
00:10:29
village
00:10:32
in the regions, especially where most likely we would
00:10:35
n’t just walk around in the first place, it would be
00:10:36
behind a fence and with some kind of security, and I’m
00:10:40
sure there would be a bunch of fences in addition. Near
00:10:42
every house they
00:10:44
really look like that and Let’s not let's
00:10:47
deceive anyone this is definitely not
00:10:49
poor this is not a poor area and this is not a
00:10:52
poor area of ​​the city Bloom Rock and it was
00:10:55
my Rock itself this is not a poor town but at the
00:10:57
same time this is not what in America
00:11:00
is called the word rich or very
00:11:03
rich
00:11:04
[music]
00:11:09
what in In the United States is considered
00:11:11
poor And who is rich
00:11:15
for example your family your couple this is how it
00:11:19
can be described middle class below
00:11:21
average above average rich very
00:11:23
rich I would say middle class
00:11:27
middle class This is a real cult in
00:11:29
America it is believed that the
00:11:30
whole country depends on it and the class is
00:11:32
divided into subclass, for example, the upper
00:11:34
middle class with a
00:11:35
good education whose income is above
00:11:38
$100,000 per year per family and the lower
00:11:40
middle class
00:11:42
receives no more than 60 thousand
00:11:49
give the upper
00:11:52
middle class and the rich we somehow
00:11:55
managed to get into this club we play
00:11:57
golf there and met with so
00:11:59
many people, it's a
00:12:02
funny feeling when you step into a
00:12:04
country club where there are both millionaires
00:12:07
and middle class people
00:12:10
like us,
00:12:12
you find yourself in an environment where people
00:12:15
have already made their fortune and no one
00:12:18
is trying to prove anything to anyone. That's how it
00:12:22
should be for some of your friends are very
00:12:24
rich And some of them earn
00:12:27
much less than you but you all relax
00:12:29
together and have a good time because
00:12:32
no one is trying to seem better than
00:12:35
he is you are just enjoying life
00:12:42
he is rich or richer than the middle class
00:12:49
class What is the difference between the middle
00:12:51
class and the upper middle
00:12:53
class rich and very rich, I
00:12:56
can’t give an exact figure Where is
00:12:58
this line? When did you work? What
00:13:01
was your average salary 35 years ago,
00:13:03
it seems to me that my highest salary
00:13:06
was 30 thousand dollars 30 thousand per
00:13:09
year per year exactly per year exactly 35
00:13:13
years ago, and you bought this house 25 years
00:13:17
ago, how much did it cost then
00:13:20
300 thousand?
00:13:25
You receiving 30 thousand a year were able to
00:13:28
afford a house worth 300 thousand yes You
00:13:32
are the owner of the house
00:13:37
per
00:13:39
month when you finally bought this house for
00:13:44
300 thousand
00:13:46
[music]
00:13:49
This is normal middle class In principle,
00:13:54
this is actually what
00:13:56
I like about the States. Of course, what I like about the States is that in different
00:14:00
parts of the country, not only there on the West
00:14:03
Coast on the East Coast, not only in the
00:14:04
capital or near the capital, but
00:14:07
almost everywhere in any province,
00:14:09
you will definitely find a district and more than one where
00:14:12
will people live like this? Moreover, the
00:14:14
farther one house from another is located, the
00:14:17
higher the likelihood that it is a beautiful,
00:14:19
cool house and that it is, in principle, cheaper.
00:14:22
One of the key features of Americans is the
00:14:25
Protestant work ethic; the
00:14:27
cult of work really reigns in the country; if an
00:14:30
American is successful, then it will be by right
00:14:32
be proud of this because you have achieved everything with your
00:14:34
work in Russia they traditionally look at this issue
00:14:36
differently
00:14:41
[applause]
00:14:45
We have a very big problem with the
00:14:49
attitude towards money, that is, for some reason
00:14:52
most people have a negative
00:14:54
perception of
00:14:56
earning a lot, striving to
00:14:59
earn a lot and or
00:15:01
buy something there - again, unnecessary things
00:15:03
and this is a very big problem. And by the way, it
00:15:06
seems to me that this
00:15:08
is being cultivated by
00:15:10
some other forces, perhaps I don’t know what to
00:15:13
call it correctly, that is, that
00:15:15
earning a lot is shameful,
00:15:19
it’s a habit that some uncle will come and
00:15:23
give you a job. for this money
00:15:26
And you will be fine, this is the reluctance of
00:15:29
people to take responsibility for themselves
00:15:35
[music] I
00:15:36
personally have problems because I’m
00:15:39
saying this, I don’t even know, I’ll tell you
00:15:43
honestly and many people probably judge me, but I
00:15:46
really don’t think so that we are obligated to solve
00:15:48
other people’s problems I work hard
00:15:51
I didn’t get anything for nothing no one
00:15:53
brought us everything ready we didn’t
00:15:56
get some big inheritance we
00:15:58
earned with our labor we worked,
00:16:00
worked and worked again I’ve been
00:16:03
supporting myself since I was 15 my
00:16:08
parents didn’t pay I
00:16:11
bought my own food for me from the age of 15, no one provides me with
00:16:19
money.
00:16:31
So I believe that by working hard
00:16:34
a person can overcome almost
00:16:36
any difficulties.
00:16:39
As you hear, for Stacy Mark and Homer, an
00:16:42
important sign of success is owning a
00:16:44
home, but some Americans have to live
00:16:47
in less than adequate houses And in trailers it is
00:16:51
absolutely clear that this is a niche than
00:16:56
Poor people are really Poor
00:16:58
people and of course any American
00:17:08
this place looks like a separate area
00:17:13
what is it called trailer park
00:17:16
trailer park There
00:17:18
used to be more trailers here But
00:17:21
here for example it burned down does that mean
00:17:24
you are moving from place to place
00:17:29
But if desired, the trailer can be taken to
00:17:33
another place
00:17:37
I have lived here for four years
00:17:47
depends on the model this model is from the 70s
00:17:52
there are the same ones released in the 2000s
00:17:56
single ones cost about 40 thousand double
00:18:00
triple up to a hundred
00:18:02
how many people live there now three
00:18:09
I don’t know exactly how many square meters there are, but how many rooms there are, two bedrooms,
00:18:13
one bathroom, living room and kitchens.
00:18:17
That is, like a three-room apartment
00:18:25
here, it’s very quiet, forgive me for asking such a
00:18:28
question. The fact is that people in our
00:18:30
country know practically nothing about
00:18:32
life in America. But those who live here
00:18:35
they are more middle class
00:18:37
lower middle upper middle class
00:18:48
[applause] does
00:18:51
n't even look like an
00:19:00
economy class house
00:19:13
but there are also lower
00:19:16
middle class families here they just
00:19:19
earn a little more and the
00:19:21
upper class people usually own these
00:19:24
parks and live in houses more
00:19:26
what you call low income
00:19:29
depends on how you look at it
00:19:32
in the States it is usually considered to be
00:19:36
40 thousand per year
00:19:39
40 per year yes
00:19:42
in Russia your income is considered low if when
00:19:46
you come to the store you find that you
00:19:48
cannot buy what you want When, for
00:19:50
example, you don’t have enough meat and
00:19:52
you have to buy sausages instead of
00:19:54
good meat When you don’t have enough
00:19:57
money for fruits or fresh vegetables
00:20:00
And here, like
00:20:03
here, people with low incomes get
00:20:06
this, let’s
00:20:18
see what a
00:20:25
trailer house looks like, that is, it’s
00:20:29
full-fledged, they also have a cat, that
00:20:31
is, it’s full-fledged toilet bathroom and
00:20:34
bedroom from the finger the bedroom is so
00:20:36
small, 5-6 square meters But
00:20:40
by the way, they usually live in a larger apartment
00:20:45
Yes,
00:20:51
thank you It’s very cozy here, it should
00:20:55
be comfortable for the three of us to live here,
00:20:57
we like
00:21:00
[music]
00:21:19
which is
00:21:20
absolutely a minority That is, you won’t
00:21:23
classify them as 20 percent even today
00:21:25
America 15 less That is, these are just those
00:21:29
people who probably may be
00:21:32
even less than the highest rich ones, we
00:21:36
went to explore the trailer park further,
00:21:38
these are ordinary trailers, you can
00:21:41
easily buy this yourself, you can buy a
00:21:43
completely new one And these already used ones
00:21:46
are also new ones No, these are not new ones Yes, I see you
00:21:51
can go to where they sell trailers,
00:21:54
buy yourself a brand new one, if you have
00:21:57
a lot of money, then you just come and
00:22:00
buy, we’re just interested in understanding
00:22:02
how much a standard
00:22:04
thriller like this costs for
00:22:07
rent. Clearly, some people rent them,
00:22:11
others buy them, rent them, rent them.
00:22:19
Yes, we rent them with my son
00:22:22
how much do you pay per month per month 400
00:22:26
dollars 400 some pay 450 for
00:22:30
their trailers
00:22:32
425 or more And you're retired Yes I don't
00:22:36
work And your son he works he's
00:22:40
just at work right now yes What does he do
00:22:44
He works at a gas station
00:22:48
not far from here
00:22:51
just It’s interesting to understand How it works at
00:22:53
home they don’t look like houses and don’t look very
00:22:56
good But the cars look great
00:22:58
does that mean that poor people
00:23:01
or the middle class live here
00:23:12
You say that you consider yourself to be
00:23:15
middle class Yes, but in the trailer park
00:23:18
we talked to one woman
00:23:22
She lives in an old, shabby trailer
00:23:25
that doesn't look anything like your
00:23:27
beautiful home.
00:23:31
We asked her what class she
00:23:34
considers herself to be. She said middle class. Lower
00:23:37
stratum. No no, this guy said
00:23:40
he was in the lower stratum. And the woman said
00:23:41
probably middle class, I think that
00:23:45
way. They were trying to say that they
00:23:47
live on benefits, that they both work and
00:23:50
in their minds they live well, they consider
00:23:54
themselves to be middle class. Even
00:23:55
some residents of the
00:23:57
parks.
00:23:59
We travel around America and see
00:24:02
things that we are not used to seeing.
00:24:12
Yes, I happen too. America, we came to a
00:24:16
dude who has these dogs. and
00:24:19
this trailer could say that this is
00:24:21
also Middle class, 20 minutes away
00:24:25
from here I have two houses, two houses, yes, but
00:24:29
my wife doesn’t like it there, so we
00:24:31
rent them out, of course,
00:24:33
and we live here. You live here in
00:24:37
this house, right. Yes, and you have there are two
00:24:40
houses in another area Yes, is it a trailer or
00:24:43
not ordinary houses my wife doesn’t like
00:24:46
their location that’s why we live here
00:24:48
we get money from renting houses
00:24:50
how many dogs do you have four adults and a
00:24:53
puppy They look aggressive they are
00:24:56
aggressive if I were you I wouldn’t go to them
00:24:58
approached me yes They are angry with me and what do you
00:25:02
do who do you work as a
00:25:12
mechanic in a company that produces
00:25:14
vacuum cleaners And at the last place of work we
00:25:17
produced cylinders for the state
00:25:19
military
00:25:23
[music]
00:25:24
Let me say it straight out and in all honesty
00:25:28
means Of course yes And I’m always a
00:25:33
little bit wrong Why are you annoying? I
00:25:36
get such a slight feeling of annoyance
00:25:37
every time I see how Ilya wants to
00:25:40
stop to take a picture or,
00:25:42
moreover, take a video of
00:25:44
some really fallen fallen
00:25:48
elements. Yes, and
00:25:50
talk to them and communicate because
00:25:53
I have this feeling, you know,
00:25:56
that Well let us now film a
00:25:59
lot of poor people and then say something
00:26:01
in America Yes, there are a lot of poor people and all
00:26:03
this will look like something less than any criticism of America in Russia, especially in the current context
00:26:05
of Americanophobia and the reasoning of Russian
00:26:08
propaganda.
00:26:15
they are also bad as such an expression,
00:26:20
that is, like you have blacks lynched and
00:26:23
therefore I treat requests with a certain wariness.
00:26:26
Let's stop.
00:26:29
Let's remove this trader of chaos, that's where the
00:26:31
homeless man went, but at the same time, of course, I
00:26:35
understand perfectly well that these are
00:26:37
settlements and where they just live there are a lot of
00:26:40
not just poor but also
00:26:43
sick people in one place, this is true, but such a
00:26:45
sign of America. That is, if in Russia
00:26:47
there are huddled, drunken villages, I
00:26:51
had to photograph them in Karelia,
00:26:52
for example, especially just a whole village of
00:26:54
huddled people walking along the street,
00:26:57
alcoholics asking for vodka. These are
00:27:00
absolutely and there are social elements, too,
00:27:02
but it’s like, well, the village was doing well, but it
00:27:04
became bad, and here it’s just people
00:27:07
who come together, buy or rent
00:27:11
these same trailers simply because,
00:27:14
simply because it’s more convenient for them to live this way, and
00:27:17
of course, any normal American
00:27:20
asks himself how this is In general,
00:27:23
it is possible that in a country that
00:27:25
is essentially the richest in the world and
00:27:28
claims to be at least a
00:27:30
world leader in the entire world of
00:27:34
economic transformations, including in
00:27:37
programs of struggle, by the way,
00:27:38
and in this country there is something that you
00:27:43
will see somewhere else only in the poorest
00:27:45
countries
00:27:49
As you can see,
00:27:51
all Americans tend to classify themselves as the middle class, both those
00:27:54
who sail on the lake in their own boat
00:27:55
and those who live in a trailer park.
00:27:58
Why Because the middle class is
00:28:00
the basis of America, according to the Census Bureau,
00:28:03
more than 50 percent of US residents
00:28:05
have an average income for a house from 35 to 150
00:28:09
thousand US dollars the largest
00:28:11
subgroup is more than 16 percent of
00:28:13
Americans who earn from 50
00:28:15
to 75 thousand dollars a year per family. Do
00:28:19
you know what the real middle class is? For
00:28:20
example, people in ordinary working
00:28:22
professions such as firefighters from
00:28:24
small towns are people who in
00:28:27
old age do not need money and can
00:28:28
afford, for example, to travel
00:28:32
Hello my name is Chris Kolbe I am the
00:28:34
deputy chief of the fire department
00:28:36
here in Belpast I work here in January I’m
00:28:39
still figuring out how it works here
00:28:42
we are the deputy chief of the fire department and
00:28:45
you hammer the
00:28:47
nails into the nails with your own hands wall Yes,
00:28:50
why did you decide to become a firefighter
00:28:54
One day when I was in college
00:28:57
I came to my hometown for Christmas and
00:29:01
met friends from school
00:29:03
who had signed up to volunteer for the
00:29:05
local fire department in
00:29:09
New Jersey when the fire caught fire
00:29:15
then I started taking special
00:29:17
classes and from then on I wanted to become a
00:29:20
firefighter
00:29:22
was it before or after September 11
00:29:25
before it was in '94
00:29:29
can you tell us more about the role of
00:29:31
firefighters in the lives of Americans
00:29:36
of course firefighters play an important
00:29:39
role everywhere, but it always seemed to me that in the States there is a
00:29:42
special attitude towards them
00:29:44
Yes, even before September 11 society highly
00:29:48
valued the work of firefighters, and after respect for
00:29:51
firefighters has increased several times, I think
00:29:54
we still enjoy the status
00:29:56
that we had after September 11.
00:29:59
Unfortunately, in order to draw attention to
00:30:02
our work, this
00:30:04
terrible event had to happen, but it just so happens, have
00:30:07
you ever risked your life Yes, for
00:30:11
example, Every time you have to
00:30:14
go into a burning building or a car
00:30:16
that has been involved in an accident
00:30:19
or a situation where you are faced with a
00:30:22
dangerous criminal, is
00:30:25
n’t that the work of the police or sheriff
00:30:29
in general, yes But as a rule, these are people with
00:30:32
mental problems and we help with
00:30:34
this and provide assistance to their victims or to
00:30:37
themselves if they hurt themselves Our jobs are
00:30:39
closely related to each other We in many
00:30:42
situations overlap with the police
00:30:44
where we come from, everything is different If it’s
00:30:47
not a secret what your salary is, salaries are
00:30:50
different everywhere We managed to achieve a
00:30:52
salary increase in the city depends on
00:30:56
what exactly what you do is just putting out
00:30:58
fires or are you also certified as a
00:31:00
paramedic there are three levels of
00:31:03
emergency
00:31:05
medical technicians basic advanced and
00:31:08
paramedics they make the most
00:31:10
I would say we get about 27
00:31:13
bucks
00:31:16
and that's how much that comes out
00:31:22
per year By local standards that's a lot very
00:31:26
little little this is not the kind of work where you can
00:31:29
earn decent money, it doesn’t
00:31:32
pay that well and everyone understands this,
00:31:34
people go into this profession not with the goal of
00:31:37
getting rich, but because it is their
00:31:40
calling. That is, you belong to the
00:31:42
middle class, above average or below
00:31:44
average, average or above, maybe It’s a good life,
00:31:47
there’s always a job and there’s a lot of overtime,
00:31:50
but taking into account that your
00:31:53
profession is respected in society,
00:32:01
this question is my wife, a teacher, teachers
00:32:04
face the same problem, they have a
00:32:06
very important job, but it’s usually
00:32:09
poorly paid in the States,
00:32:13
but I think if we continue to work for
00:32:16
such a low rate, no one will have
00:32:18
the motivation to suddenly start paying
00:32:20
[laughter]
00:32:23
It’s a pity, of course, that firefighters in America don’t
00:32:26
want to pay more, but Russians
00:32:29
in Russia, the average salary of a firefighter is
00:32:32
less than $600 a month, it’s clear that
00:32:34
the scenes are different, but most Russians remain at $1000 a month
00:32:37
just
00:32:38
dream the same way, for example, as I
00:32:40
travel in retirement
00:32:42
[music]
00:32:46
Well, actually, we just decided to approach
00:32:49
this couple everyone. To ask them
00:32:54
what they were doing here, they immediately
00:32:55
agreed to talk to us and
00:32:57
it turned out that for example a man, his
00:33:00
ancestors came here in
00:33:03
1632, imagine C
00:33:07
knows its history from those times, it’s just amazing
00:33:11
How did you end up here
00:33:12
[music] Do
00:33:14
you live here no We live in a mini-cell,
00:33:18
we came here to relax
00:33:22
We really like the coast in
00:33:25
Maine, we’ve been here twice before
00:33:28
[music]
00:33:30
it’s interesting and picturesque place
00:33:34
my ancestors
00:33:38
is another factor Why do I like it here
00:34:04
and on average per year How much time do you
00:34:07
spend traveling
00:34:09
how much time well In the winter we go to the
00:34:13
Southern states for a month or two
00:34:19
So about two to three months a year but
00:34:24
by traveling I also mean our
00:34:27
trips both within the state and to other
00:34:30
states
00:34:34
in Asia Europe Asia You have traveled around the world
00:34:45
in America there is enough money
00:35:09
sining I
00:35:10
wish I were rich she replied You are
00:35:14
as Rich
00:35:16
as you say for many in the world it is true Ilya and
00:35:23
I travel around the country and
00:35:26
met really poor
00:35:28
people we must have come across
00:35:29
trailer parks and stopped
00:35:31
to look because we've never
00:35:33
seen anything like this before the people who live in
00:35:36
these thriller parks are often very very
00:35:39
poor most in one of the parks they
00:35:42
were all sick I mean there's
00:35:45
something wrong with them okay with their heads yes they are
00:35:48
in some kind of mental state
00:35:50
the question arises
00:35:53
If in the USA
00:36:09
This was possible before
00:36:11
Yes there were even more poor people The
00:36:16
main drug in the 50s was alcohol
00:36:19
then there were no all those drugs
00:36:22
that are common now heroin and
00:36:25
so on
00:36:26
But one of the main problems in the USA and in
00:36:30
many other countries there remains a huge
00:36:33
difference between the very rich and the very
00:36:37
poor, this worries me; the
00:36:40
Republican Party made a big contribution to this;
00:36:43
what Trump did was to cut taxes for the
00:36:46
rich and big businesses,
00:36:51
and this gap became wider
00:36:54
and wider;
00:36:56
the gap between the very rich
00:37:15
[music]
00:37:24
but we have a fairly
00:37:27
socially oriented state,
00:37:29
let’s say it’s easier for our poor person
00:37:31
to live than for their poor person, I think I do
00:37:37
n’t know if they would have been in New York or not. I
00:37:39
just watched a lot
00:37:41
and followed travel blogs about New York, that’s
00:37:44
specifically. I’m talking specifically her about
00:37:47
other cities and states I’m not
00:37:49
saying anything specifically about New York, there are
00:37:53
huge tent camps of homeless people
00:37:57
who are on a 500 dollar allowance, in
00:38:01
my opinion, something like that, they don’t
00:38:05
just have to survive, in general they
00:38:09
live on it to buy themselves a tent and it’s like
00:38:11
they’re parasites on the
00:38:13
state like this, they don’t need anything, they have
00:38:15
an allowance. They drink,
00:38:18
inject themselves with strange things and
00:38:22
generally feel great, but this is not life,
00:38:28
I can please Russian Propaganda,
00:38:30
because homeless people are found even in the very
00:38:32
center of the US capital,
00:38:34
Washington. the heart of America is where
00:38:37
all the main Ministries are located The White
00:38:39
House The Capitol The State Department Museum In general, what’s
00:38:43
not here All the officials here In
00:38:45
general, the money is very pompous The
00:38:48
majestic city, wide streets,
00:38:50
cleanliness, beauty But even here there is
00:38:52
a homeless person, but the homeless people here are unusual
00:38:56
We are now literally a
00:38:57
kilometer from the monument Lincoln and
00:39:00
here along the highway there are tents,
00:39:03
huge tents in which people live and
00:39:06
uh, these are not just tents from such
00:39:09
small towns. That is, people there
00:39:11
have a trash can, grill chairs, for which
00:39:15
Apparently they cook everything. That is,
00:39:16
they just set up camping in some vacant lot
00:39:20
along roads that's where else you'll see
00:39:23
such a contrast only in America
00:39:29
behind me one of the symbols of America the
00:39:32
Lincoln Memorial here on the lawn
00:39:35
in front of him lies someone's mattress and a bag
00:39:38
of things because someone was sleeping here
00:39:40
already woke up and went about his business but
00:39:43
in the evening he will return again like this, in
00:39:46
Washington, the capital of the United States, you can sleep right
00:39:49
in the very center. On the lawn,
00:39:53
there are whole towns of homeless people with comfort, and in one
00:39:56
of the richest cities in the world,
00:39:57
Los Angeles, it should be noted that
00:40:00
the towns are located in downtown
00:40:02
Los Angeles, which is a good place there
00:40:05
has never been a place to live, Americans
00:40:07
prefer to live in the suburbs if
00:40:09
they have the opportunity, and in the
00:40:11
city centers they often go to marginalized
00:40:13
segments of the population, including the homeless,
00:40:15
but the rich houses of Santa Barbara,
00:40:17
Beverly Hills and Malibu, you look like this
00:40:20
on the Internet and I decided to show you get the inside out of the
00:40:22
legendary city of angels
00:40:24
[music]
00:40:30
behind me is the legendary club
00:40:31
gym Gol Jim which is
00:40:34
located on Windows Beach In
00:40:36
Los Angeles it was opened in the sixty-
00:40:38
fifth year and became famous because this is where
00:40:40
Arnold Schwarzenegger went and this is where
00:40:43
he did bodybuilding
00:40:46
and therefore, a cult place for
00:40:48
bodybuilders and fans of Arnold
00:40:50
Schwarzenegger, and again, it’s interesting
00:40:53
that such a wonderful place and a place with a
00:40:56
famous history, people train,
00:40:58
swing right in the sun, and around the
00:41:01
club everything is in tents, if we look
00:41:03
at the streets around there are
00:41:05
real tents,
00:41:11
there are dirty homeless people sleeping on
00:41:13
boxes
00:41:18
the weather here in Los Angeles allows you
00:41:21
to live outside all year round
00:41:24
Let's look now at the contrasts of
00:41:28
Los Angeles, the houses here are just the
00:41:31
cutest, cleanliness, order, just
00:41:34
a fairy tale, you go and enjoy just the
00:41:37
views flowers Look at these very
00:41:40
beautiful houses cars Everything is well-groomed in
00:41:45
general such beauty And if we
00:41:47
move It’s enough to cross the street
00:41:50
and we find ourselves in a real slum, a city of
00:41:54
homeless people because all the sidewalks there are already
00:41:57
occupied by tents. Well, we all
00:42:00
cross the street and here the picture just changes
00:42:03
dramatically because here is a
00:42:05
city of homeless people, if it already has tents, people have
00:42:09
bicycles. That is, these are homeless people. Here
00:42:12
it’s quite like that a serious furnished
00:42:15
home, even some decoration of the house
00:42:18
bottles
00:42:34
[music] no
00:42:45
one is afraid for them, people
00:42:48
park calmly, such are the contrasts here in
00:42:51
Los Angeles, people have their own atmosphere of
00:42:53
democracy and freedom
00:43:00
[music]
00:43:08
where we came somewhere brought us we
00:43:12
are in area, it is
00:43:14
literally a few blocks from
00:43:17
Downtown Los Angeles from the famous
00:43:19
skyscrapers, but many people think that
00:43:21
skyscrapers are the center of the city, this is not the center,
00:43:23
just a business district, and next to this
00:43:25
area there is such an unfavorable one
00:43:26
called
00:43:27
which has been unfavorable for almost a hundred years, that
00:43:30
is, it is so Los Angeles
00:43:33
Khitrovka Well let's go
00:43:35
let's go see if it's normal people are
00:43:38
sleeping right in a tent parked White socks
00:43:42
everything is fine people are using some kind of
00:43:45
drugs and they have mental
00:43:47
problems the place is certainly not the most pleasant it's
00:43:50
interesting
00:44:01
more or less normal even here already
00:44:02
this was clearly a bad building that's
00:44:05
who - then I bought and made a Loft and most
00:44:07
likely you can rent an apartment here now,
00:44:09
that is, the area is gradually being
00:44:12
gentrified and
00:44:13
narrowed. No, it all looks creepy, of course,
00:44:16
people. I think we’ll
00:44:19
talk to someone now, but the people here are not
00:44:21
very sociable.
00:44:24
Happy Sunday.
00:44:26
Happy How are you? name
00:44:30
How again do you live here I live how old are
00:44:35
you 50 50 you are homeless Yes how long y-y
00:44:43
already 15 years 15 years what happened to you
00:44:48
Well you know at first everything was fine and
00:44:52
then suddenly I stopped being homeless but
00:44:56
I still work
00:44:57
you work And who I'm a driver
00:45:01
Great
00:45:03
I'm also involved in organizational
00:45:05
matters I don't want to lose this job
00:45:09
Even though I'm homeless I cook my own
00:45:12
food I have a stove there's music You
00:45:15
live here you can watch Yes great
00:45:18
modestly of course I don't have
00:45:20
a lot of things Yes no everything is fine
00:45:23
You said that you driver
00:45:26
[music]
00:45:44
and he’s right here you can’t have people
00:45:46
like zombies walking around especially at night night
00:45:50
here such people here are so stoned
00:45:53
in places like this the most unpleasant thing is if you
00:45:55
run into dealers they can
00:45:58
upset you for something you rent them and they
00:46:00
will most likely be adequate in
00:46:01
fact, this is a very important point on how to
00:46:04
help competently in Russia, I
00:46:06
periodically come across situations
00:46:08
when, for example, people don’t know how to help,
00:46:12
often bloggers. There is one for the sake of hype,
00:46:14
they go like this, for example, and we will
00:46:16
distribute to all kinds of homeless people, we will
00:46:20
distribute money or something else and
00:46:23
often they only make it worse, that is,
00:46:27
they earn an audience that Oh,
00:46:30
how wonderful
00:46:31
they gave a homeless person 5,000 rubles, and the fact that
00:46:35
this homeless person will now use these
00:46:37
5,000 rubles will buy himself booze and just or
00:46:40
drugs and die from an overdose later on.
00:46:42
Then no one thinks about the money for him, of course
00:46:43
Helping the homeless won’t help either - it’s a
00:46:46
rather complicated program, uh,
00:46:49
because a person needs to be given a job there,
00:46:50
restore his documents, somehow return
00:46:52
him to society, cure him, it’s not done
00:46:54
just by distributing money, it’s clear that there are
00:46:58
all sorts of charitable organizations there,
00:47:00
at least they feed and And
00:47:03
somehow they get help uh that’s Okay But
00:47:07
some kind of comprehensive help it should
00:47:09
be competent
00:47:17
[music]
00:47:26
we managed to talk to the homeless in
00:47:28
Garensberg, one of the best cities for
00:47:31
family life in America according to
00:47:33
Forbes
00:47:36
We got to the capital of Pennsylvania this
00:47:40
By the way, it’s not Philadelphia, it’s Harrisburg, a
00:47:42
wonderful small town of 50 thousand
00:47:44
people. And what’s most interesting is that when I
00:47:47
found it on the map, Stas didn’t take notice of
00:47:49
its existence at all, as it turned out later, I did
00:47:51
n’t know it because Wikipedia
00:47:54
read that the crime rate here is
00:47:56
four times higher than the average That’s
00:48:00
exactly how I knew its existence.
00:48:03
But I honestly didn’t know that it was the capital of
00:48:05
Pennsylvania because the largest city of
00:48:07
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, there are
00:48:09
several other big cities. But the main thing was that
00:48:11
I was actually traveling. One day, my family
00:48:13
was passing by, I wanted to stop somewhere,
00:48:16
I think I open Wikipedia, it says the
00:48:18
city is bankrupt, the poverty level is
00:48:21
crazy. the crime rate is
00:48:23
even more enormous, the unemployment is
00:48:25
high, I read all this, I decided that, after
00:48:28
all, since I’m traveling with a child,
00:48:29
it’s better to stay at a roadside hotel
00:48:31
somewhere outside of
00:48:36
Varlamov, I found it here, I’m serious, it’s not
00:48:39
about the eagles, they really are, they
00:48:42
come out in the sun street They sleep here
00:48:45
mostly in the summer And we talked to them
00:48:49
[music]
00:48:51
What's your name John Nice to meet you
00:48:54
how old are you 60 60 are
00:48:58
you from here you're asking if
00:49:01
I was born here No I was born in Charlotte
00:49:04
North Carolina and moved here When
00:49:07
I was a little mom brought me here I do
00:49:09
n’t know why
00:49:11
You have a house No why I don’t know you don’t
00:49:16
want or want but I’m waiting to get
00:49:19
my social security why do
00:49:22
n’t you have it now I applied for it
00:49:25
just recently you have to be a certain
00:49:28
age
00:49:29
if you’re retired you’re entitled to
00:49:35
4 have you ever worked I
00:49:39
have worked all
00:49:54
my life I started having problems with my hip
00:49:57
inflammation of the sciatic nerve
00:49:59
and problems with my knees I can’t
00:50:03
sit or stand how does anyone help you
00:50:07
no the state doesn’t help at all there are
00:50:09
shelters for the homeless Personally I work and the
00:50:12
state pays I get a salary, but
00:50:14
many people here don’t have any sources of
00:50:16
income. Why don’t they get a
00:50:19
job? I don’t know,
00:50:21
ask them. I receive benefits for
00:50:25
health reasons, but I don’t have money to live on.
00:50:28
That is, you receive benefits, but
00:50:31
you don’t have enough money, yes. And
00:50:34
when do you -were they working now I can’t
00:50:37
work before I worked all my life they did
00:51:24
n’t let me go anywhere I
00:51:26
had to call everywhere
00:51:28
But even when you call they refuse
00:51:32
to get your money from them you need to
00:51:36
hire a lawyer and the lawyer also needs to be
00:51:39
paid for the work it’s some kind of vicious
00:51:43
circle Why Harris Burgoon must be given
00:51:46
credit here they feed the homeless
00:51:50
they really bake and grandfather for the
00:51:53
homeless
00:51:54
like in no other city
00:51:57
I myself was born here and they all too
00:52:02
but people come here
00:52:09
as it happens
00:52:22
[music]
00:52:29
[music]
00:52:48
I wish everyone had enough money
00:52:51
for food
00:52:53
That's why we are here
00:52:56
we give food to
00:52:59
everyone who is hungry Who knocks on our
00:53:03
door
00:53:04
It doesn't matter who it is That is, if one
00:53:07
of us knocked on your door and said that he
00:53:10
was hungry, would you give us some food
00:53:12
from here I would give it to you box of food
00:53:17
45 pounds per person
00:53:21
for two more
00:53:23
Most of our clients have large
00:53:26
families, they leave here with two or three
00:53:30
boxes
00:54:10
or get paid in the first days of
00:54:13
the month
00:54:14
so they don’t come here but in the
00:54:18
middle of the month there will be more people
00:54:21
last year we fed more than 5 thousand
00:54:24
five thousand people and
00:54:28
5000 families they come here we take
00:54:33
them to the freezer room
00:54:35
Where food is stored in every refrigerator
00:54:39
we have chicken pork beef eggs there
00:54:44
is plenty to choose from then they
00:54:47
come out here and we put food
00:54:50
for them in a box they choose what they want
00:54:59
[ music]
00:55:10
it's true that sometimes it's easier to be
00:55:13
unemployed than to work in a
00:55:14
low-paying job
00:55:19
[music]
00:55:23
there is a problem some people get
00:55:26
unemployment benefits that they don't
00:55:29
deserve they never even worked
00:55:32
and they get paid 8 thousand because
00:55:35
they claim that they used to work for
00:55:37
themselves or for some company that
00:55:40
is not a corporation
00:55:43
and they didn’t even work there enough
00:55:46
time because of the pandemic but they still
00:55:48
get money from
00:55:54
ordinary people who worked 40
00:55:57
hours a week all year round
00:56:05
homeless we mostly met in the
00:56:07
center of big cities or in places
00:56:09
like bus stations But in
00:56:11
small towns there were almost none of them.
00:56:13
We talked about this with the mayor of the town of
00:56:14
Blowing Rock in North Carolina.
00:56:20
Why are there so many homeless people in big cities? There are
00:56:25
many reasons:
00:56:28
firstly, they may have mental
00:56:30
disorders that do not allow them to
00:56:33
work,
00:56:34
unfortunately in our country there are many
00:56:36
combat veterans who
00:56:39
suffered greatly in the war, there are people who for
00:56:43
some reason did not receive an education,
00:56:47
in mostly large cities
00:56:56
they are practically invisible
00:57:05
Yes, the density in cities is higher I think
00:57:07
the reason is this
00:57:08
[music]
00:57:10
one and a half percent of people face
00:57:13
poverty, I would say the reasons
00:57:17
are possible in Rocky's blog there are
00:57:20
really few homeless people, but in the towns
00:57:21
around him they are,
00:57:23
we have a lot of homeless people where oblovin grog
00:57:29
Yes in the area it's
00:57:34
not in the city itself Yes because we haven't
00:57:37
seen a single homeless person here there is no
00:57:40
Krok But if you go to a place
00:57:43
called the wataga county health and hunger coalition
00:57:46
there they have what they
00:57:49
call a hospitality house
00:57:52
people who sleep in cars come to live there
00:58:19
at least 80 percent
00:58:23
80 yes 80 percent 80 percent of the
00:58:26
population of the entire county is that's
00:58:31
what support they get the
00:58:35
majority lives on a small
00:58:38
unemployment or disability benefit,
00:58:43
usually from 500 to 1000 dollars a
00:58:48
month
00:58:49
if you do not have your own house, renting a
00:58:53
house in the district is
00:58:55
very expensive to
00:58:58
rent. A house costs from 900 to 2000
00:59:04
dollars a month,
00:59:07
or even an apartment even for students
00:59:32
so that at least they have food received for free
00:59:37
What percentage of the population of the entire state
00:59:39
are poor
00:59:46
in the entire state I would say at
00:59:49
least
00:59:50
55-60 percent
00:59:52
55-60 percent of the entire state are poor
00:59:57
Maybe you know the official figures,
00:59:59
I can’t say the exact numbers,
01:00:03
but in just one district
01:00:10
[music]
01:00:15
maybe even 80 Let's go to the kitchen this is the
01:00:19
kitchen
01:00:21
this is practically a restaurant today there
01:00:24
is no cook this is
01:00:40
what a beautiful stream there is
01:00:43
yes it really
01:00:45
comes Poor people sit on the open
01:00:49
terrace on the bank of the stream Let me show
01:00:51
you the terrace there
01:00:53
will be some kind of beautiful terrace now
01:00:55
apparently
01:00:56
everything looks luxurious well probably
01:01:01
luxurious cute
01:01:02
It’s just such a nice house
01:01:07
amazing oak trees some incredible
01:01:11
stream lawns pine trees streams flowing into
01:01:15
each other
01:01:16
where do you get the money
01:01:17
[music]
01:01:19
himself goes to talk to people
01:01:22
encourages people to donate not so long ago
01:01:26
in July we had a music festival
01:01:28
which was arranged
01:01:31
later at we had a so-called swim
01:01:36
people bought rubber ducks for 5
01:01:39
dollars launched them into the creek and watched
01:01:43
who would win
01:01:45
it's very fun we also have a lot of
01:01:49
entertainment for children trampoline fire
01:01:53
trucks free food
01:01:58
Wow good choice
01:02:01
owls that robbed the supermarket no
01:02:09
pork ribs
01:02:11
sausages
01:02:15
not chopped
01:02:17
chicken wings
01:02:43
what else is there meat, more meat, that
01:02:48
is, there are
01:02:49
chicken legs, turkey, also ribs, that is, there is
01:02:55
still a full freezer of meat, there
01:02:58
is a refrigerator in which
01:03:02
grapes,
01:03:05
eggs, you
01:03:07
can see grapes, eggs,
01:03:10
salads, milk, by the way, as we can see, and
01:03:14
I just clarified that the majority the
01:03:17
majority of visitors who come are,
01:03:19
of course, elderly people, mostly
01:03:21
pensioners, but this is the place where the
01:03:24
poor people are the poor, the
01:03:27
needy, they can come here to take
01:03:29
such a large box and collect the
01:03:33
food that they need and the choice here is
01:03:35
really like in a good store, that
01:03:38
is refrigerator there are various cakes and
01:03:41
pastries and again here the selections I see
01:03:43
apple pies chocolate pies
01:03:46
with cream and cream fruit cupcakes
01:03:48
here we even see a snack for wine,
01:03:51
just so we understand if
01:03:54
someone needs a snack for wine for a picnic
01:03:58
then you can come and take it too a huge
01:04:02
amount of canned food peas pasta
01:04:05
corn
01:04:07
peaches apples But she says that they have already
01:04:09
sorted out part of what else was
01:04:12
apples seasonal pears
01:04:14
everything that is grown here, that is, they do
01:04:17
not take anything imported from vegetables
01:04:19
because
01:04:21
further It’s just a little shocking that
01:04:24
I was in similar organizations in Russia and
01:04:27
usually Well, when in Russia it is something
01:04:30
absolutely absolutely necessary, that is, such
01:04:32
butter, cereals, some canned food. There
01:04:36
should also be a firing bun
01:04:43
for the day so that a person
01:04:46
is well-fed during the day. Well, I have never seen any kind of
01:04:48
surplus, for example what -here are the
01:04:51
wine sets in the form of some additional sauces, that’s why
01:04:56
it’s so big here.
01:04:59
As they say, the choice here really
01:05:02
should be like in Okay, not the
01:05:05
best, but nevertheless a normal
01:05:06
supermarket so that a person can choose,
01:05:09
you see, we have some- then
01:05:12
lemonade, some candy bars, a huge
01:05:15
number of desserts
01:05:16
[music]
01:05:18
Why do you come here I come here for
01:05:21
extra food I'm retired I have a
01:05:24
limited income I don't get
01:05:27
food stamps so
01:05:34
can I ask What is your
01:05:37
monthly income you're 1200 a month 1200 a month
01:05:43
this is barely enough to live on you come for
01:05:47
groceries and all the money immediately disappears a
01:05:51
bottle of milk costs 5 dollars you
01:05:54
rent a house or you have your own house I have my
01:05:56
own house but I pay for the Earth
01:06:01
I see you have
01:06:04
my sister’s car my sister’s cars
01:06:57
[music ]
01:07:00
besides the homeless, poverty in America
01:07:03
has another face. This is the so-called
01:07:05
White Trash, white trash, that is, poor
01:07:08
Caucasian Americans who
01:07:10
mostly live somewhere in the
01:07:12
countryside, there is also the word Hill Billy, it
01:07:14
can be translated as hillbilly, but not
01:07:16
just a hillbilly. And from the mountain areas
01:07:19
such as in North Carolina
01:07:22
in general I was born in the Old Hospital and at the
01:07:26
Palachin State
01:07:27
University
01:07:29
we collect the opinions of people their views on
01:07:33
life
01:07:37
characterized the local population of people
01:07:40
living in the mountains
01:07:43
because in big cities those who
01:07:45
live in the mountains are often called
01:07:47
hillbillies, rednecks
01:07:52
and mountain dwellers or there is no difference,
01:08:17
but the people of the mountains, you know, I’ve been to big
01:08:22
cities
01:08:25
and the people there are not as friendly as the people
01:08:28
in the mountains,
01:08:30
you know that there is such a stereotypical
01:08:33
idea of ​​rednés as that they are
01:08:35
aggressive, that they eat zaposum soups,
01:08:40
that they have weapons We have weapons
01:08:44
We we believe in the second amendment to the institution, a
01:08:48
person has the right to be armed in the
01:08:53
mountains We believe in this,
01:08:56
we go hunting. My father, for example, was
01:09:00
a hunter and my grandfather, too,
01:09:03
we raised
01:09:06
and slaughtered them to have meat for the winter,
01:09:09
we kept cattle,
01:09:11
we killed cows,
01:09:16
but not with a machine gun. -16 no, of course,
01:09:20
with a 410 caliber gun or something like that,
01:09:25
but nothing that could be dangerous
01:09:28
for other people,
01:09:30
you consider yourself Rodnik Yes, I’m Rodnik
01:09:36
Yes, wait,
01:10:28
Yes, but you understand when I was growing up My
01:10:32
grandparents
01:10:35
raised me with my grandparents and us we
01:10:39
couldn’t just go buy meat in
01:10:41
the store, we didn’t have money,
01:10:45
we had a big garden and I worked all day
01:10:49
in the field, we grew corn,
01:10:53
beans, and potatoes, we had a big garden, and we
01:10:58
had meat either from the livestock
01:11:01
that my grandparents kept.
01:11:03
or the fact that they caught squirrels
01:11:07
rabbits while hunting But this used to be now how many
01:11:10
squirrels a day do you eat today
01:11:47
we also eat turtles
01:11:50
turtles Yes
01:11:53
turtles Yes turtles as a child I helped
01:11:57
my grandfather catch turtles we had a
01:12:00
hook that we lowered into the water
01:12:03
with bait with with a worm or something else and
01:12:06
on top such a float
01:12:09
can be made from a milk carton
01:12:12
and when the float starts to swing
01:12:14
up and down it means you have caught
01:12:17
a turtle and turtles are very aggressive and
01:12:22
I went home like this, holding the package with the
01:12:25
turtle at a distance so that it me
01:12:27
didn’t bite when I brought it home, my
01:12:31
grandfather took a cutting board and cut off the
01:12:34
turtle’s head,
01:12:36
butchered it, removed the shell, and my grandmother
01:12:41
soaked it then fried it.
01:13:08
Oh, so what do you think about them? To
01:13:11
each his own; to
01:13:13
each his own; the
01:13:16
unfair distribution of income leads to
01:13:19
another problem; this is the abundance of homeless people,
01:13:21
according to official data in the United States. 50 times
01:13:23
more than in Russia
01:13:25
so dear Stas while you are driving
01:13:27
I have the privilege of being able to use
01:13:29
the Internet I found interesting statistics
01:13:31
these are poverty indicators in Russia in
01:13:34
developed countries as a percentage of the total
01:13:36
population Sit down for 2016
01:13:39
now the situation has changed a little
01:13:41
especially after the look but still less
01:13:42
Here is data for 16 years and what is
01:13:45
interesting in comparison with the USA is
01:13:48
income poverty in Russia 15 percent and seven in the
01:13:52
USA 13.5 poverty by deprivation in Russia
01:13:56
25 percent USA 17.3 and chronic
01:14:00
poverty in Russia 10 percent USA 9.3
01:14:03
percent, that is, very similar, the indicators
01:14:07
in the USA are all a little less than
01:14:10
10 percent, but nevertheless there is some kind of really
01:14:14
critical difference that everything is thriving in
01:14:17
Russia, everything is fine. Moreover, if you and I go
01:14:20
ask people how they
01:14:22
feel and in general how they feel
01:14:24
feel rich or poor We are in
01:14:26
Russia in the USA We will see that people
01:14:29
see the problem of poverty much larger and more
01:14:33
seriously than statistics see,
01:14:35
tell me how you feel poverty in the
01:14:39
USA What is poverty for Americans
01:14:40
as a person who has lived here for a long time,
01:14:42
then we ask others
01:14:44
this you say, Look, I’m experiencing poverty on
01:14:48
my own, I don’t feel it here yet, I don’t plan to
01:14:51
feel it, despite the fact that I had moments
01:14:53
when I
01:14:54
wasn’t sure what I would have How to pay
01:14:58
for an apartment in, for example, 2-3 months
01:15:03
in any country So let’s take butang here
01:15:06
Ministry of Happiness Yes, and regular
01:15:09
measurements of the level of happiness are carried out.
01:15:12
Where is the percentage of people,
01:15:16
so again it all depends on
01:15:17
perception, let’s say I consider myself to be
01:15:21
middle class in terms of the things
01:15:24
that I can afford,
01:15:26
my neighbor will say that I mean middless, that
01:15:31
is, I belong to the upper middle class
01:15:33
specifically from the point of view of those things that I
01:15:34
can afford, that is, I can
01:15:37
afford to travel, rent a
01:15:39
car, I have a car, I drive it,
01:15:41
Yes, I have an apartment in which I live,
01:15:44
which I rent,
01:15:46
I can afford to go to stores
01:15:49
quite often to buy what - things
01:15:51
to travel abroad Well and so on That is,
01:15:54
approximately an indicator, but I
01:15:57
have a neighbor in a country house who
01:16:01
will say that I am rather below the middle class
01:16:04
because I do not have large savings
01:16:06
and there are situations when it is
01:16:07
not known what will happen tomorrow, so
01:16:10
here the concept of poverty is again very
01:16:13
individual I think that the majority of
01:16:15
Americans because a poor person is a
01:16:17
person who, again, is not sure of the
01:16:21
future, simply not sure of
01:16:23
the future, not sure that tomorrow he
01:16:25
will have something to live on, buy food, where to
01:16:29
live, what to get treatment for, this of course
01:16:32
applies to first of all, to
01:16:34
older people and who, in
01:16:38
principle, cannot afford to relax,
01:16:40
travel, who need to save a lot,
01:16:43
save, and so on. That
01:16:45
is, in principle, as elsewhere, it just
01:16:48
all depends on
01:16:50
what your needs are. Poverty in
01:16:52
Russia, in my opinion, is the
01:16:56
lack of
01:16:57
more- less normal housing that
01:17:00
complied with some minimum
01:17:02
sanitary standards and I saw when I was
01:17:07
filming about families whose children are taken away.
01:17:10
Yes, I saw problems, for example, when
01:17:13
guardianship takes a child from the mother in an
01:17:17
orphanage and makes demands on her
01:17:19
that you must put the apartment in
01:17:21
order, for example. repair the stove
01:17:23
because there is a threat of fire there is a stove
01:17:26
in the apartment. Yes, we have stove heating in many houses
01:17:28
in the province, so you
01:17:30
have to repair the stove and then we
01:17:33
will return the child to you, and to repair the stove you
01:17:35
need 20-50 thousand, some kind of
01:17:37
money in general funny ones that you can
01:17:39
take out of your pocket there and put it in,
01:17:41
especially by American standards, it’s
01:17:43
for dinner and she doesn’t have this money and she’s
01:17:47
like, well, now I’m going to look for a job. I
01:17:49
’m going to do something else there now, and
01:17:51
this stove must be repaired,
01:17:52
understand that it’s being postponed alcoholism is something
01:17:54
else and most likely she would like
01:17:57
to renovate it, she would find an opportunity
01:17:58
to renovate it, it’s huge, but
01:18:01
nevertheless, such a banal example, it’s scary
01:18:03
when your guardianship takes your child away
01:18:05
because you don’t have an apartment for 3 years to
01:18:07
live, uh, poverty, that’s when you
01:18:10
can’t buy basic products
01:18:11
when you go to a store and you
01:18:14
can’t buy all the products that If
01:18:17
you want to buy, you can’t buy
01:18:18
yourself meat, you can’t buy yourself vegetables
01:18:22
there, especially some fruits, especially out of
01:18:24
season, that are there something
01:18:28
Yes, and you actually live on
01:18:31
pasta bread and these are the
01:18:33
cheapest carbohydrates, I sometimes ask people
01:18:36
to show their refrigerators to poor people and
01:18:39
you open the refrigerator and you realize
01:18:41
you have a refrigerator with a pot of soup that
01:18:44
they cook there for the whole week from something a
01:18:47
very inexpensive soup set of bones
01:18:51
from fish, this is bread, this is eggs, this is pasta
01:18:55
there. Well, maybe some canned food here
01:18:57
would also rather be called
01:18:59
poverty,
01:19:00
such poverty is not bills, this is impossible,
01:19:02
by the way, getting a child ready for school recently
01:19:05
went there, again, we have statistics,
01:19:06
what’s that there On average in Russia, it
01:19:09
costs $300 to get a child to school with
01:19:11
your money, but many people don’t have the money to
01:19:14
get a child together
01:19:15
once a year, $300 It would seem that these are
01:19:18
not such serious stories either. And
01:19:21
in Russia, this is a really big
01:19:24
problem, especially in the regions, it’s huge a
01:19:26
number of people live in houses that are
01:19:29
unsuitable for living. In these
01:19:31
so-called wooden houses, a huge
01:19:33
number of people,
01:19:35
even in rich regions, do not have
01:19:38
basic water supply, sewerage,
01:19:40
toilets, there is a cesspool. This is
01:19:44
how it looks in Russia
01:19:46
[music]
01:19:49
Yes, poverty in Russia is a wooden
01:19:51
rickety toilet on on the street and poverty
01:19:53
in America is when you have no
01:19:55
savings for the future, such a contrast.
01:19:57
Will there be a difference when we talk about
01:19:59
freedom or propaganda, find out in the
01:20:01
next films of this series
01:20:03
[music]
01:20:21
[music]

Description:

Уголок спонсора Запишитесь на курс Нетологии «Графический дизайн и коммуникации» — https://netology.ru/programs/designer-communication . По промокоду ВАРЛАМОВ действует скидка 45% на платные курсы Нетологии. Как много бездомных живет в Америке, почему граждане США вынуждены ютиться в трейлер-парках и как выглядит средний дом пенсионеров? Мы со Станиславом Кучером отправились в длинное путешествие по Америке и взяли интервью у десятков местных жителей, чтобы выяснить всё про эту страну. В первой серии мы говорим про бедность и богатство США от Нью-Йорка до Лос-Анджелеса. Телеграм-канал Станислава Кучера: https://t.me/StanislavKucher Ютуб-канал Станислава Кучера: https://www.youtube.com/@stanislavkucher1652 Ютуб-канал Анатолия Власова: https://www.youtube.com/@StolitsaMira Вторая часть: Свобода в США: одобрение Путина и диктатура Цукерберга | Америка от Нью-Йорка до Калифорнии https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKXfa4nywhw Поддержать канал: Boosty (если вы в России): https://boosty.to/vrlmv Patreon (если вы не в России): https://www.patreon.com/IlyaVarlamov Спонсорство на Ютуб (если вы не в России): https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC101o-vQ2iOj9vr00JUlyKw/join Другие способы: https://donate.varlamov.me/ Сервис «Вместе»: https://vmeste.info Чат «Вместе» — США: https://t.me/+ZGH1MBgUzPZiZTE0 Чат «Вместе» — Лос-Анджелес: https://t.me/+iAYFPLUwW743NjA0 Закрытый телеграм-канал Varlamov +: https://t.me/tribute/app?startapp=smk Мой канал с интервью Varlamov Talks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChccvlH7O3ch8cfc221rAXA Мои ролики из путешествий по миру: Франция: страна, где помогают всем | Беженцы из Украины, мигранты из России и бездомные https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tzL9cIQyIs Вена: №1 среди всех городов мира. Как это получилось? | Социализм, экология, мусор https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLOhESzVXy4 Израиль: чем недовольны евреи | Митинги в Тель-Авиве, конфликты в Палестине, недружелюбные хасиды https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UQRoW-N-ro Нью-Йорк: во что превратились Манхэттен и Бруклин | США, урбанистика, промзоны https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WToQ51KV0_Q Стать спонсором канала: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC101o-vQ2iOj9vr00JUlyKw/join Кофе 1984: https://1984.coffee/ Мой лимитированный мерч: https://shop.varlamov.ru/ Поддержать фонд «Внимание»: https://fondvnimanie.ru/donate Купить книгу 100 советов мэру: https://shop.city4people.ru/ Если хотите сделать наши города лучше, присоединяйтесь к нашему общественному движению! Есть чаты по всей стране, регистрируйтесь в вашем городе: https://russia.city4people.ru/ Сайт: https://varlamov.ru/?cda= Телеграм-канал: https://t.me/varlamov Новостной телеграм-канал: https://t.me/varlamov_news Дзен: https://dzen.ru/varlamov Пульс: https://dzen.ru/?from=pulse Твиттер: https://vrlmv.com/BgrRI6 ВК: https://vrlmv.com/hU1rbp ТикТок: https://www.tiktok.com/@ivarlamov Вайбер: https://invite.viber.com/?g2=AQAG5IMG%2F6Ty7kqu6x%2FjKpubnkXGc9YsUx997%2FOaeqO9vJp2sifXk9%2BTAkGaQ0um%22 Вакансии: https://varlamov.ru/3974217.html?cda= Реклама: [email protected] Таймкоды: 00:00:00 США: цикл роликов о самой близкой для россиян стране 00:01:44 Варламов и Кучер едут по США! 00:06:18 Провинциалы про жизнь, доходы и труд 00:09:38 Что такое «средний класс» в США? 00:14:23 Культ работы: США vs Россия 00:16:40 Дома на колёсах: романтика или бедность? 00:20:24 Рум-тур американского автодома 00:23:53 Жизнь среди собак и мусора 00:27:54 Работа пожарным в США — огонь? 00:32:44 Путешествия на пенсии — миф или реальность? 00:37:27 Как в Арзамасе и Саранске видят США? 00:38:28 Бездомные Америки: от Вашингтона до Лос-Анджелеса 00:43:10 Самый жуткий район Лос-Анджелеса 00:47:20 Истории бездомных из столицы Пенсильвании 00:52:23 «Если вы просите еду — вы её получите» 00:55:05 Почему люди оказываются на улице? 00:57:17 Американка — об американском обществе 01:01:57 Стейки для нищих 01:07:04 Американские «деревенщины»: стереотипы, факты и «вкусные белки» 01:13:20 Бедность: статистика и реальность 01:19:50 Заключение Трек-лист: Decoded — Marten Moses There Are No Heroes — Philip Ayers Bodyguards — Experia The Unexplored — Philip Ayers Flamin’ Hot Lovin’ - The Best Ofs In the Danger Zone — Marten Moses I’d Like to Love You (Instrumental Version) — Psuche Dew — Da Sein The Local Police — Arc De Soleil You Oughta Know — Rockin’ For Decades Show Me How Good It Can Get — Sarah, the Illstrumentalist Last Question — Nylonia USDA (Instrumental Version) — Xavy Rusan Ain’t No Fool — Will Harrison No Hesitation — Matt Large Two Layers of Confusion — Matt Large Turning Away from You — At The End Of Times, Nothing New Moon (Instrumental Version) — Xavy Rusan

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