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On October 22 2014 11:25 Gamegene wrote:can anyone here confirm or deny this?
confirmed.
On October 22 2014 10:21 kushm4sta wrote: i hear crime is pretty bad. I knew someone from their and they were telling me about getting mugged/robbed like it was no big deal and happened all the time.
not confirmed.
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Bearded Elder29903 Posts
I was twice in Bulgaria. Once I've went there when I was still a youngster and I was visited by uT)Beast[BG] (TOP3WCG world), MYM.Enjoy and 3wD.Raider, ahh great times, had fun.
Bulgaria is awesome, kind of a cheap place and nice parties and nice people from across the europe. It's actually the same in all Slavic countries, like Ukraine, Bulgaria, Poland etc.
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better not let your wife read this
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On October 22 2014 21:22 Capped wrote: Lady at my workplace has boobs that hypnotize.
I see you are working for the PATRIARCHY.
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sick, I would love to go visist, I always wanted to go to slavic europe and not the typical england france italy.. anyone willing to let us couch surf my and my gf? would do the same here in colombia!
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It's easy to romaticise reality, but you shouldn't really envy people that they were born in Bulgaria, Romania or Ukraine - while these countries today may show a normal face in the better parts of the citites (thanks to their unbelievable talent to build scarily looking concrete blocks, there are districts that are just unsalvageable), the countryside is still heavily underdeveloped, infrastructure and services lacking, corruption present and some govermental activities at least dubious (and all of that not considering the war that happens to Ukraine right now) - and it was much worse just 10-15 years ago. I remember talking to locals in Romania in 2002, there were many people living for less than $200 per month (and those were the ones with the jobs), people in villages had to grow their own food on top of walking 8 hours a day and life was hard in general.
Hell even my country was significantly lacking behind the western Europe, but what we had seen in the East was a big wake up call. Yes, I had the pleasure of visiting the area repeatedly and seeing how things improve faster than I could ever expect and the gap closes every year, but you can't just pretend there are no issues.
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Foolishness
United States3044 Posts
On October 22 2014 15:35 fusefuse wrote: Lol, the comments to this are even better than the blog itself
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Had bedtime business negotiations with a few Balkan Slavs in the past. Can confirm sexiness. #HammurabisHarem
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 15:40 xtorn wrote:Show nested quote +On October 22 2014 09:29 MightyAtom wrote:I have spent 39 years not in Bulgaria, and I think if I came here when I was 26, I would have married one of these ultra amazing slender beautiful curvaceous long legged creatures and spent the rest of my daily dancing to the some of the best music I've hear in a long time by DJs who actually really care and enjoyed taxi rides across the city for 10 euros. All I have to say is, if you want to visit somewhere a bit off the grid, go to Bulgaria, and be amazed. And the people I met, save the taxi drivers (fuck you 10 euros for a 5 min taxi ride, do I look like I am on a holiday tour group?), were ultra friendly polite and authentic. I know there is a lot that goes on behind the scenes here, but since it's my first trip and it's only been 4 days and I'm flying out to Zurich tomorrow, what can I say, I'm happy to be ignorant of such things and just say, wow, what an amazing place. For all you lucky fucks who live in Bulgaria. You lucky fuckers. ^^ ![[image loading]](https://fbcdn-profile-a.akamaihd.net/hprofile-ak-xfp1/v/t1.0-1/c0.0.160.160/p160x160/1526611_628475577199554_1903462657_n.jpg?oh=a6db514c78897e9f5874824059b51729&oe=54B9D1DD&__gda__=1421163007_b51317e223b4b1fed94a4f694dbcb596) dont go to Ukraine in summer, or you'll have a heart attack
ready to die that way, but not by bullets!
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 10:32 Assault_1 wrote:Show nested quote +On October 22 2014 10:21 kushm4sta wrote: i hear crime is pretty bad. I knew someone from their and they were telling me about getting mugged/robbed like it was no big deal and happened all the time. agreed, OP is a trap
Grandmum and people who go home by 2am, stay away from bulgaria, it would be a waste for you.
But for those who can live a bit, if you wanna go somewhere a bit off the grid, and aren't expecting it to be Disneyland,
try it.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 11:24 y0su wrote: Funny you were just being talked about in another blog :D
Might have to visit Bulgaria some day (sounds like they have some good drugs there...)
^^ well I was told that bulgaria is not a country with the mafia, it is a country made by the mafia. while likely true, as a man who travels and able to enjoy himself where he is, it was a very wonderful experience.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 15:35 fusefuse wrote: Lol, the comments to this are even better than the blog itself
I agree, I figured the subject matter would speak for itself.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 17:50 Pandemona wrote:Lool. Did you go to strip club or whore house this time? I think one of the online casinos i use has bulgarian dealers on blackjack. I can confirm Bulgarians are hot  Next time MA try invest in a phone and take some pictures like a schoolboy in a candy shop :D Also more blogs 
I never go to whorehouses lol, and I never take photos ^^ but I did share a few dances with the ladies who wanted to take some pictures with a sumo lol.
More blogs, if and when I ever can make one business work properly lol.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 18:00 Boonbag wrote: no wonder you'd feel home in a country ran by some of the most dangerous mafias in the world ^^
^^ shhhh.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 19:57 Torte de Lini wrote: What about the food?
Honestly, not great to my palate. They use a type of spice that I dont' know, but it's not pleasant to me, but the potatoes and meats were great. ^^
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 20:14 herMan wrote: It feels like you visited the capital, Sofia. I don't really have good memories being in Bulgaria.
We visited in 2011 with a couple of friends in a tourist trap called Sunny Beach which is essentially a tourist town that dies down after the tourist season is over. We heard that the police were corrupt and another group of friends we knew had kind of deep trouble with shady people.
Bulgaria also has the infamous "fruit vendors": they stop you in the street, ask you where you're from and boom, throw a fruit in your hand. If you grab it they say "ok, 20 euros or we kill you".
I also got food poisoning there and my vacation was ruined after three days of boozing. So long story short, I have a different opinion of Bulgaria than the OP.
This can happen,
as a rule of thumb, I never go to a country that I don't have a local contact in. No exception, so because of that, I've never been to a country where I haven't done business in either. But it's worked out well that I haven't had that kind of experience yet.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 22 2014 22:34 c0ldfusion wrote: Why are you in Bulgaria?
Was in Sofia for business and creating an east european business network, met lots of Solovaks, Austrians, Russians.
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Korea (South)1897 Posts
On October 23 2014 06:35 opisska wrote: It's easy to romaticise reality, but you shouldn't really envy people that they were born in Bulgaria, Romania or Ukraine - while these countries today may show a normal face in the better parts of the citites (thanks to their unbelievable talent to build scarily looking concrete blocks, there are districts that are just unsalvageable), the countryside is still heavily underdeveloped, infrastructure and services lacking, corruption present and some govermental activities at least dubious (and all of that not considering the war that happens to Ukraine right now) - and it was much worse just 10-15 years ago. I remember talking to locals in Romania in 2002, there were many people living for less than $200 per month (and those were the ones with the jobs), people in villages had to grow their own food on top of walking 8 hours a day and life was hard in general.
Hell even my country was significantly lacking behind the western Europe, but what we had seen in the East was a big wake up call. Yes, I had the pleasure of visiting the area repeatedly and seeing how things improve faster than I could ever expect and the gap closes every year, but you can't just pretend there are no issues.
Well I don't pretend, but for the purpose of the post, I can say, that the women were 'power overwhelming'. ^^
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