Aeroflot (Russian) Stewardess: Bursar

Abishai100

VIP Member
Sep 22, 2013
4,957
250
85
Aeroflot – Russian Airlines, commonly known as Aeroflot, is the flag carrier and largest airline of the Russian Federation. The carrier operates domestic and international passenger services, mainly from its hub at Sheremetyevo International Airport (source of information: Wikipedia).

In the heyday of Moscow, the Soviet Union was perhaps the only land to rival the great modern empire --- America.

You can argue now that China and the European Union are making handsome stands in the international free market, but the Soviet Union was a focused effort to offer the global community a leadership face that was not American.

Well, considering all that, an Aeoroflot stewardess should remind us of the human flair or human value of the modern free market. Does consumerism make us feel better about geo-politics?

You take a flight on Aeroflot as a tourist, enjoy the in-flight entertainment and food and service, and you should gain an appreciation for Russia and/or Europe, even though the Soviet Union has disappeared. This is the boon of consumerism --- but does it work?

Ask an Aeroflot stewardess what her opinion on tourism is.





:arrow:

Aeroflot - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia


aeroflot-stewardess.jpg
 
Stewardess Abacus

Imagine that a Danish stewardess working for Scandinavian Airlines is involved in an international narcotics-smuggling operation.

Does our modern consumerism-catalyzed globalization culture (i.e., eTrade) motivate impressionable young women to become smugglers?

America's liberal distribution of vigilantism-themed comic book adapted media programs such as "Gotham" (Fox TV), which features a developing female eco-terrorist character, fosters 'radical' attitudes towards gender-focused division of labor. America has also elected its first ethnic minority First Lady (Michelle Obama), an African-American.

How do European countries such as Russia, which are struggling in the international free market, keep up in this new 'capitalism-driven neo-liberal couture?'

South Korea is making tremendous headway with its successes in the electronics industry (Samsung) and the airline industry (Korean Air).

Will Aeroflot be respected, or will its aspiring Russian stewardesses be viewed as 'token diplomats?'

Travel/tourism is a benchmark of modern age traffic.



:badgrin:
 
Market Hammock

In our world of consumerism, travel/tourism marketing can actually affect conversations between nations.

Such is the case with Korean Air (South Korea's airline) and Aer Lingus (Ireland's airline), airlines in areas where border talk has been rather complicated.

Russia's post-USSR street vending of American consumer products such as Pepsi cola and Disney merchandise places the country in a strange but intriguing communism-capitalism dialogue zone, and its national airline, Aeroflot, obviously carries with it a burden and a booty for human traffic chatter.

It does seem that the Aeroflot stewardess is something like a modern age Florence Nightingale. There's nothing wrong with using lifestyle watercolors to talk about industry in our era of 'exuberance economics.'




Florence Nightingale - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia


penguin.jpg
 

Forum List

Back
Top