Flashback: Chrystia Freeland Whitewashing Nazi Collaborators in 2008

Ukraine rifles its history for heroes

But history may matter more to you if it has been rough, as Ukraine’s has. As Viktor Yushchenko, the president whose path to power included a disfiguring attempt on his life, told the Canadian parliament last month, Ukraine has declared independence six times in the past 90 years. His job, he said, was to make sure the most recent declaration, in 1991, was the last one. Even the national anthem takes a bleak view. Its first line is: “Ukraine has not yet died.”

Yaroslav the Wise, the 11th-century prince of Kievan Rus, was named the winner in a last-minute surge, edging out western Ukrainian partisan leader Stepan Bandera, who led a guerrilla war against the Nazis and the Soviets and was poisoned on orders from Moscow in 1959. When the programme’s editor cried foul, alleging that Yaroslav’s backers had flooded the show with computerised phone-in votes, the story suddenly became irresistible abroad. After all, stuffed ballot boxes have figured prominently in recent Ukrainian politics, sparking the 2004 orange revolution.

The contretemps is being framed as yet another example of the divide between western and eastern Ukraine, where the Soviet portrayal of Bandera as a traitor still lingers. That would be a mistake. The real story of Ukraine is the astonishing rapprochement between east and west, which began in 1991 and accelerated after 2004, when big business decided it paid to buy into independence.

Related:

Did Yushchenko Poison Himself?

Canada’s Secret Role in Ukraine (Orange Revolution)

Euromaidan 2014 – Orange Revolution – War in Donbass

LOL, Fakebook

I haven’t logged into Fakebook, in three days, and come back to this…lol. If I was hacked, no one noticed (my cousin was and the phishing link was still on my Fakebook wall)! I changed my password. Meanwhile, FB seem to think that my iPad Mini is a Mac when I login through Safari.

Venezuela’s Maduro orders foreign companies to leave Guyanese concessions

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro announced that foreign companies working in the disputed Guyanese county of Essequibo would have to withdraw within three months, asserting his right to do so after Venezuelan voters backed their nation’s control of the territory in a referendum Sunday, Bloomberg reported Tuesday night.

Venezuela’s Maduro orders foreign companies to leave Guyanese concessions

Related:

Venezuela: FANB Deployed in Territory Bordering Essequibo

Military personnel carry out the construction of bridges, repair roads, and provide medical care to the inhabitants of the community.

Peoples Temple, Guyana, and Essequibo

Ms. Cat

I got a little warning under my video…lol. Maybe Jim Jones was a CIA asset, after all?! [see below]* Anyway, feel free to click, on the pic, and watch the video (it only pertains to Peoples Temple and Guyana, BTW).

H/T: Jason Hunt

Related:

Peoples Temple and Jonestown in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge University Press (2022).

Rebecca Moore on Jonestown

*Update:

The Almost Classified Guide to CIA Front Companies, Proprietaries & Contractors

House Passes Bill That States ‘Anti-Zionism is Antisemitism’

Ms. Cat

The House on Tuesday passed a resolution that says “anti-Zionism is antisemitism,” the chamber’s latest piece of legislation conflating criticism of Israel with antisemitism.

House Passes Bill That States ‘Anti-Zionism is Antisemitism’

Related:

H.Res.894 – Strongly condemning and denouncing the drastic rise of antisemitism in the United States and around the world.

Whereas the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism is widely accepted and serves as a critical tool to help individuals comprehend and identify the various manifestations of antisemitism;

Whereas, since the massacre of innocent Israelis by Hamas, an Iran-backed terrorist organization, on October 7, 2023, antisemitic incidents of harassment, vandalism, and assault in the United States have spiked 388 percent over the same period last year, according to reports from the Anti-Defamation League‘s (ADL) Center on Extremism;

‘Labor’ camps, next?!