Blogger earned well in Czechia, but left for Belarus overnight — hiding from LGBT
A Russian-speaking blogger moved from Czechia to Belarus and is making TikToks about it. Not everyone will understand her reasoning.

Screenshot: black_cherry_9 / TikTok
The blogger under the nickname black_cherry_9 captioned her TikTok account with the words "The one who left... for Belarus." The woman writes in her profile bio that she made herself such a New Year's gift — moving to our country overnight.
The TikToker reveals almost nothing about herself. It is known about her family that the woman has a husband and a daughter, and that they lived together in Czechia for four years. From there, the woman moved to Belarus at the end of December.
Before the move, the blogger worked as a cleaner for a few hours a day. Judging by her stories, the earnings were decent:
"Cleaning hotels in Czechia, girls earn more than at some factories, and you don't work 12 hours. While cleaning, I worked four hours, not 8, 12, or 14 hours."
But the most interesting part is the arguments the blogger uses to explain her decision to move.
The girl says it's not always about money:
"My family had more than enough [money]. We had normal incomes; my husband's salary was considered high for Czechia — $1450-$1650, mine was considered average. We had plenty. We drove a new car, paid for our desires, all our daughter's desires, and everything else.
But we left because we don't like the society, the people there. We chose adequacy for ourselves. Finances are not always the main thing."
In one of her first videos, the woman publishes footage of Belarusian food — cheese curds, a cheeseburger, national dishes, and even mineral water. She accompanies this with the following comment:
"When a cucumber and a tomato don't taste like plastic, when a tangerine has a smell, when food in an establishment is a delight for the taste buds, when you can find everything and even more in a store. This is not Europe for you."
One commentator parries the blogger, saying that if a country can boast about food and nothing else, it's not very good. The woman responds in another video — and here she reveals what she didn't like about Czech society:
"Perhaps one should boast about LGBT communities, drug addiction, which is simply promoted everywhere. In your opinion, should one boast, as in the EU, that gays or lesbians teach in schools? Is that what is needed, right?"
And this is only a small part of what excites the blogger in Belarus. She films store shelves — claiming that such a selection is unavailable in any EU country.
A separate story is how the woman speaks about the capital of Czechia. She did not live in Prague but in a smaller Czech city, but, she says, she also managed to see Prague:
"Let's take Minsk and Prague — how clean Minsk is and how dirty Prague is."
With her videos, the blogger has gained many haters. In one of her latest videos, she admits that her profile is constantly reported, especially for videos about "LGBT propaganda in the EU":
"What am I saying wrong? That LGBT teachers are in schools? That children in the EU have certain lessons where they are told — allegedly, you can choose who you will be, a boy or a girl, or simply 'it,' or a bus, for example — why not! For me, this is not the norm; I wouldn't want my child to study there."
«Nasha Niva» — the bastion of Belarus
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