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The Meaning of Words; Standing with Ukraine
www.WilliamRussell.net ^ | 3/07/2014 | William Russell

Posted on 03/07/2014 4:46:21 AM PST by Bill Russell

Words have meaning. Sometimes even the small ones by their inclusion or omission can have a huge impact. Most readers in their first glance at the title of this article thought the word “the” was mistakenly dropped from in front of Ukraine. Over the last century, we have become used to referring the nation of Ukraine as “the Ukraine.” This writer has been guilty of the mistake, even in recent writings.

The inclusion or omission of an article of speech like “the” conveys the difference between a sovereign, independent nation of Ukraine and a region or territory claimed by Russia and the Soviet Union. Certainly, Vladamir Putin wants us to keep using “the” when referring to Ukraine, especially when he has invaded its sovereign territory.

But there are words Putin does not want us to use either. “Holodomor” is one of those words. The term Holodomor derives from Ukrainian words referring to death or execution by starvation. It is a word for the genocide of the Ukrainian people that has remained buried behind a massive wall of Soviet propaganda and western under-reporting for over 80 years.

During the years of Soviet domination of Russia and Eastern Europe, the Kremlin did its best to bury the truth of the Holodomor and its role in implementing it. Thanks to laudatory stories of Stalin’s Soviet Union written my New York Times reporter Walter Duranty during Stalin’s reign of terror, and the work of Soviet spies like Alger Hiss (a senior State Department official under President Franklin Roosevelt), the atrocities committed against the people of Ukraine by the Soviets have never been widely publicized in the west.

In 1932 -1933, during Stalin’s great “terror”, approximately 25% of the Ukrainian nation was starved to death on a grand scale. Through systematic Soviet theft of all the grain from the farmers, to include the seed grain stores, in an area known as “the bread basket of Europe,” resistance to the Soviet seizure of independent farms in Ukraine was crushed. Stalin’s point man in charge of the murder of over 8 million Ukrainians was the “Great Reformer” and Stalin’s successor, Nikita Khrushchev.

Khrushchev made extensive use of the NKVD (previously known as the Checka and OGPU, later known as the KGB, today referred to as the FSB ) in seizing grain stores and shooting any farmers who hid grain to plant or feed their families. Stalin’s proletarian socialist (Communist) genocide of the Holodomor and Gulag system was in full swing, and served as the model for Hitler’s Nationalist Socialist (Nazi) concentration camp system and “Final Solution” when it was just beginning. The very real Holocaust of the Holodomor in Ukraine was perpetrated by the same organization which gave birth to Vladimir Putin’s career.

The world turned a blind eye in witness to the Ukrainians who had their churches destroyed and many of their family members (often their entire families) starved to death on their farms, or executed if they tried to leave in search of food. The Soviets were all too happy to allow the horrific images of the Nazi death camps and testimonies of the Nuremberg Trials to obscure the suppressed truth of the Holodomor.

It is important for the world to recognize and stand with Ukrainian defiance against domination from post-Soviet Russia. The same organizations and philosophical rationalizations for domination which existed in Stalin’s Russia are alive and well in Putin’s; they just have different names. - In which case, perhaps, words have no meaning.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: crimea; putin; ukraine
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To: Sherman Logan

I agree with you that large nations do not have a moral right to control the small nations on their borders. But that is precisely what they all do in the real world, unfortunately. My argument is that we have no ability to defend an indefensible nation halfway around the world, and we should be careful about committing ourselves there.


21 posted on 03/07/2014 7:29:29 AM PST by Always A Marine
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To: Sherman Logan
It should be noted that Khrushchev was himself Ukrainian.

He was ethnically Russian, but grew up near the border with Ukraine. Stalin appointed him as Party Boss in Ukraine in 1937, so it stands to reason that over time he developed an affinity for the region.

22 posted on 03/07/2014 7:33:13 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Sherman Logan

Khrushchev was not an ethnic Ukrainian, he was one of those ethnic Russians settled on Ukrainian territory. In his memoirs he mentions this and how his internal passport was stamped “Russian”.

It was called the Ukraine, because the the Ukraina transplates as “ borderland”, the article incorporated in the word ending.

The Ukraine was in fact conquered, by the Soviets. There was an independent Ukrainian state during the Civil war. Of course there were Ukrainians on both sides as there were of every ethnic group in the Soviet Union. Nevertheless the Red Army under Trotsky made conquest of Ukraine a top priority.

Evidence of how much resistance there was to Soviet domination was plain when German troops invaded in 1941 and were largely greeted as liberators. Initially. Considering how terribly Ukraine suffered under Soviet domination, it’s not surprising.


23 posted on 03/07/2014 8:59:59 AM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Always A Marine

You are dead wrong. Ukrainian nationhood goes back longer then America. It’s no more artificial then Poland, which disappeared from the map of Europe for 2 centuries. Both the concept of Italy, and Germany are younger, arising in the 19th century. Prior to that they were collections of individual regions and states.

The Monroe Doctrine stated we would not allow foreign intervention in our hemisphere. It wasn’t a blank check to invade our independent neighbors.


24 posted on 03/07/2014 9:05:53 AM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Bill Russell

Khrushchev was an ethnic Russian born in the Eastern Ukraine.
He says so HIMSELF IN HIS MEMOIR. He notes his internal passport was marked “Russian”

“’I myself am a Russian and wouldn’t want to slight the Russian people, but 1 must attribute our success in the restoration of Ukrainian agriculture and the reconstruction of Ukrainian industry to the Ukrainian people themselves.”


25 posted on 03/07/2014 9:19:46 AM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Always A Marine

Really dude? Because you are talking to one now.
40 million people disagree with you.


26 posted on 03/07/2014 9:21:11 AM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Bill Russell

No problemo.

Looks like I screwed up my own self about K. being Ukrainian ethnically. Have read it many times, but it appears to be inaccurate.


27 posted on 03/07/2014 10:45:26 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Kozak
The Monroe Doctrine stated we would not allow foreign intervention in our hemisphere. It wasn’t a blank check to invade our independent neighbors.

Not the original Doctrine, no. Though it should be noted we didn't have the power to enforce it when issued, and in practice depended on the Royal Navy to do so.

However, in 1904 TR issued an expanded version, called the Roosevelt Corollary, in which he stated that since USA prohibited European powers from enforcing their legitimate claims against American states, USA would enforce those claims for the Europeans. And of course we'd enforce our own claims, too.

In practice this did indeed work out to mean "a blank check to invade our independent neighbors."

See Mexico, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cuba, Nicaragua, etc. All in the first 30 years of the last century.

28 posted on 03/07/2014 10:53:01 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: SampleMan
Four Corners is a region and certainly qualifies as starting with an adjective, but people, “visit Four Corners” they do not visit “the Four Corners”.

Well, yes, actually they do. Lived in the area for 15 years, and the formulation "the Four Corners" is much more common.

I don't recall "Four Corners," as such, being used at all except possibly to refer to the actual point where the states meet, as opposed to the region.

29 posted on 03/07/2014 10:56:33 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Kozak
Ukrainian nationhood goes back longer then America. It’s no more artificial then Poland, which disappeared from the map of Europe for 2 centuries.

Most or all of Ukraine was part of Poland (or Crimean Khanate/Ottoman Empire), then was added section by section to the Russian Empire. Never had an independent existence at all, except during brief and unsuccessful rebellions. This is as opposed to Poland, which had something like 7 centuries of independent existence as a state when it was finally partitioned.

That disappearance, BTW, took place in 1795, and Poland reappeared in 1918. So 123 years, which isn't exactly two centuries.

You are correct, however, about the very concept of nationalism. It didn't take root, at least in central and eastern Europe, till the 19th century. So talking about conflicts between the Russian, Polish and Ukrainian "nations" in earlier centuries is at best anachronistic.

Multiple "republics" existed in Ukraine for varying lengths of time between 1917 and 1919. None were ever stable or organized enough to really be considered independent by any logical standard.

30 posted on 03/07/2014 11:09:18 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

At one time, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the largest Kingdom in Europe.


31 posted on 03/07/2014 11:10:49 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Sherman Logan

Oh. So “Might Makes Right”.
We should apologize to Germany and Japan.


32 posted on 03/07/2014 11:20:22 AM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Kozak

Actually, Japan’s “aggression” in WWII wasn’t vastly different from European actions over the previous century in the region, or indeed our own in the Philippines around the turn of the century.

There were a good deal more violent, and they aggressively took land from European powers who had earlier taken it from the natives. The European powers, understandably, considered this wrong, though it’s difficult to make a logical case why the Dutch conquest of the East Indies was right and proper, but the Japanese conquest of the same areas was immoral and illegal. Or why the American conquest of the Philippines was ok, but not that by Japan.


33 posted on 03/07/2014 11:25:07 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: dfwgator

Yes. But Ukrainians were a subject people of that State, not equal members.


34 posted on 03/07/2014 11:26:27 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Kozak

Recently watched the movie Casablanca again.

Got a kick from the subtext of how naughty the Germans were for conquering the French, when the French themselves had only conquered Casablanca less than 35 years before.

IOW, what moral right did the French have to complain about conquest by the Germans when they’d spent the previous century or so building up a huge overseas empire of their own? Much of it based on a Master Race ideology differing primarily only in harshness from that of the Nazis.


35 posted on 03/07/2014 11:33:30 AM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Kozak

Khrushchev was born in Kalinovka, near the border but on the Russian side of it.


36 posted on 03/07/2014 1:18:16 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: Verginius Rufus

And the Russians are welcome to that prick.


37 posted on 03/07/2014 1:27:19 PM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Kozak

I am sympathetic to the Ukrainians who don’t want to fall back under Russia’s yoke, but it is not America’s fight and not worth going to war.


38 posted on 03/07/2014 2:07:11 PM PST by Always A Marine
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To: Always A Marine

I don’t think so either. I do believe we owe them some support since they

Gave up their nuclear arsenal based on promises we made

And have supported us with combat troops in the Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan. See my tag line.


39 posted on 03/07/2014 2:44:31 PM PST by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
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To: Sherman Logan

40 posted on 03/07/2014 2:51:07 PM PST by SampleMan (Feral Humans are the refuse of socialism.)
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