#61209869 · 30 Apr 2024, 11:18 · · პროფილი · პირადი მიმოწერა · ჩატი
QUOTE (Hermyon @ 3 Apr 2024, 13:54 ) | სადგური 11 უდიდესი იმედგაცრუება უამრავი რივიუ ჰქონდა ამაზონზე და გუდრიდსზე მეგონა კარგი იქნებოდა და თურქულ-ვენესუელური სერიალის დონე გაიჩითა ქალებს და ბავშვებს გაუსწორდებათ |
დაახლოებით ეგ შთაბეჭდილება დამრჩა მეც.
გუდრიდსზე 3-ზე ემტი ვერ გავიმეტე. გადმოვაკოპირებ ჩემს რივიუს:
წავა, რა
This book presents a central issue concerning the "Georgian flu." I'd like to clarify that my concerns are not driven by any personal bias as a Georgian but rather pertain to the accuracy of the portrayal. It is entirely plausible for a major epidemic to originate from any country, and naming it after its place of origin is not problematic in itself.
But
arriving from Moscow, the introduction of the Georgian flu to America via a Moscow flight, and the subsequent spread of the Georgian flu by Georgian and Russian patients. While the book's plot is ostensibly set in modern times and may be accurate in many respects, the author's grasp of geopolitics leaves much to be desired.
The plot of the book clearly describes modern times and may be factually accurate in many aspects, but the author clearly does not understand geopolitics. It is a known fact that the problems of Eastern Europe (at least) are not well known in the 'West', but you should at least have a small idea about the main character of your book (Georgian flu is the main character). Notably, no one typically travels from Tbilisi to Moscow en route to America. Georgian-Russian relations have been strained for decades. In practice, travelers from Georgia to the United States usually make layovers in cities like Doha or Munich. Moscow does not feature in this route.
P.S. I am grateful that the author did not refer to Georgians as Russians. Thank God, she at least knows that the Soviet Union has collapsed..
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