Honorary Slavs

Are Central Asian countries honorary slavs?

I just got back from a working trip (visited Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan capitals) and everyone there speaks russian and behaves the same way. Outside of the major cities is just some villages every now and then.

Soviet russian influence is still seen heavily. However, unironically, their food was much better than the Russians have.

What are your thoughts on central asia?

Attached: centralasia.jpg (299x168, 13K)

you don't really hear too much about these countries

>Are Central Asian countries honorary slavs?
>Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan
>asians
>slavs
what the actual fuck, ameritard. Kill yourself.

Attached: hmm.jpg (1080x1080, 80K)

Uh the Finns, Hungarians, and Bulgarians have some distant roots there.

I always wanted to check out that part of the world.

They seemed to look like Eurasians for the most part. Makes sense given their Geographical location. Also saw a lot of Russians in the capitals. Intermixing is very high.

>However, unironically, their food was much better than the Russians have.
That doesn't say much.

Most of the people I met were very nice and welcoming. Some guy went out of his way to give me and my coworkers a lift to the other side of town and refused our money.

Maybe their niceness is what got them kek'd by the Russians

oh god
they are not slavs, not even remotely, you stupid shilling faggot. There are only few Russians living there, cause those lands were soviet once. Kazakhs/uzbeks/other central asian people have their own ethnoses.
get it?

Attached: photo.jpg (900x900, 51K)

What about white burgers mixing with slavs? We become "rodnoya" or whatever that word is?

I dunno man, I feel like Russians hate everyone that isn't Russian and they are generally angry for some reason