On Christmas night 1776 George Washington crossed the Delaware   with a column of Continentals just prior to their surprise attack on the morning   of December 26 against the Hessian mercenaries occupying Trenton.  The   Battle of Trenton was brief mostly because the unsuspecting Hessians were   surprised that the icy Delaware could actually be crossed (see painting above) –   two thirds of the Hessians were captured with very few American losses.    This first major victory of the Revolutionary War increased moral & as a   result many soldiers scheduled to be released from active duty on December 31   reenlisted in the Continental Army.
  Of course America was in the early stages of our   history.  We had gone through the bondage to spiritual faith & spiritual faith to great courage   stages.  We had moved to the courage, fighting for our liberty   stage.
Today the people of Ukraine are just about @   the same point in their fight for liberty that America was on Christmas   1776.  
  Starting with mostly students on   November 21 Ukrainian pro-liberty advocates have protested the government's   sudden lurch away from joining the EU in favor of returning to the tyranny &   repressiveness of Russian influence & corrupt control.  Hundreds of   thousands of freedom seeking Ukrainians have descended on Kiev's Independence   Square known locally as the Maidan (the Square).  Behind   barricades they have set up a self governing city within Kiev.  This is a   recurrence of similar demonstrations in 2004, known as the Orange Revolution,   that successfully overturned fraudulent election results.  Those   demonstrations were led by former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko who has spent   the last two years in jail on trumped up political charges by the current   regime.  For many this is a second tour of duty after having participated   in the Orange Revolution.  This time there is no single leader of the   movement – should sound very familiar to Tea Partiers.  These people are   fighting, with no sign of quit, for democracy, individual rights, & the rule   of law.  In brief – they are fighting for the freedoms Americans have known   for over 200 years & that they want to see in Ukraine for   themselves.
  My interest in Ukraine started about   two years ago when Google began providing statistics regarding RTE's   readership.  First, I was astonished @ the total readership.  Second,   I was equally surprised to see that Ukraine had the second biggest readership   after the U.S. – on one recent day more people in Ukraine had read RTE than any other   country in the world.  I know that many pro-liberty protesters in Ukraine   use Facebook posts & blogs to communicate with each other.  I am just   so humbled & honored to think that RTE has played even   an infinitesimal part in this revolution for freedom.
  So it is to Ukraine, & specifically   the libertarian people behind the barricades in the Maidan, that I dedicate this   Christmas & New Year's message – namely, it is the future   that they bring when tomorrow comes.
  
 
 
 
What a spirit filled message, Doug! My prayers for Ukraine's successful freedom from bondage....
ReplyDeleteI also wanted to say how much I loved reading the words to the Les Mis song....love that musical, but never could understand the powerful words.
Wishing you and Carol a very happy Christmas!
Thanks for all you do, no matter how infinitesimal...you are touching lives for the good.
Peace and all good to you both!
You did play a part, regardless of size, in the Ukrainian citizen’s quest for liberty. I also think you had a feeling something was going to break there eventually.
ReplyDeleteThere are many theories regarding Putin’s intentions. However, the Ukrainian’s hate the Russians.
“ The Holodomor (Ukrainian: Голодомор, "Extermination by hunger" or "Hunger-extermination";[2] derived from 'Морити голодом', "Killing by Starvation" [3][4][5]) was a man-made famine in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1932 and 1933 that killed up to 7.5 million Ukrainians.”
The 1932/33 genocide was engineered by Stalin.
Surprisingly, I have not heard this historical event reported on TV. The Ukrainians have a long memory - they will die fighting the Russians. (How to offend a Ukrainian -- call him a Russian.)
Also, the parallels between Hitler annexing Austria and Czechoslovakia have frightening similarities with Putin’s 2008 invasion of Georgia and now Ukraine. In the 1930’s the world leaders had no response to Hitler’s aggression and we all know how that ended.
Thank you Doug for making us aware. Another intention to add to my prayer list.
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