Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $25,797
31%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 31%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Articles Posted by annalex

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Dmytro Yarosh: We want Ukraine, Poland, Hungary and Romania to have very close relations

    03/28/2014 6:37:19 PM PDT · by annalex · 10 replies
    Pro Aris et Focis ^ | 3/28/2014 | Dmytro Yarosh/Falange Oriental
    Dmytro Yarosh: We want Ukraine, Poland, Hungary and Romania to have very close relations Autonomous Nationalists from Romania reaffirms once again its intention to strengthen the good relationship which has with Right Sector and continue discussions about the situation of the Romanian community in Ukraine. Romanians ethnics from Ukraine need to be like Ukrainians ethnics in Romania, with the same rights, who are necessary to preserve national identity and ethno-cultural development. 1. First thing, we have to congratulate you for the courage and determination wherewith you fight in Maidan. Even those who are not sympathize with your cause must be...
  • From the Inexhaustible Source

    03/23/2014 1:06:11 PM PDT · by annalex · 14 replies
    January 7, 1957 | Stepan Bandera
    Stepan Bandera From the Inexhaustible Source Written on the occasion of Christmas, January 7, 1957 The struggle with the Moscow version of the Communist doctrine is struggle to the death. It is so not only for those who knowingly chose to oppose it, but also for the entire people that got caught in its merciless vise. That is because the ruthless extermination of individuality, self-reliance, of any expression of love for freedom, the cold and methodical extermination of human beings, -- that is the essence of Moscow’s “national policy”. Every enslaved nation, all its strata and every individual man constantly...
  • Legality of the Crimean Referendum: Legal Analysis

    03/23/2014 11:43:14 AM PDT · by annalex · 161 replies
    Legality of the Crimean Referendum: Legal Analysis Venice, 21 March 2014 Opinion no. 762 / 2014 EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW (VENICE COMMISSION) OPINION ON “WHETHER THE DECISION TAKEN BY THE SUPREME COUNCIL OF THE AUTONOMOUS REPUBLIC OF CRIMEA IN UKRAINE TO ORGANISE A REFERENDUM ON BECOMING A CONSTITUENT TERRITORY OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION OR RESTORING CRIMEA’S 1992 CONSTITUTION IS COMPATIBLE WITH CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCIPLES” adopted by the Venice Commission at its 98th Plenary Session (Venice, 21-22 March 2014) on the basis of comments by Mr Peter PACZOLAY (Honorary President, Hungary) Ms Hanna SUCHOCKA (Member, Poland) Mr Evgeni TANCHEV...
  • Illarionov: "Putin's aim is Kiev and all the Ukraine"

    03/12/2014 5:17:17 AM PDT · by annalex · 27 replies
    Die Presse ^ | 03.10.2014 | 18:17 | Oliver Grimm
    Illarionov: "Putin's aim is Kiev and all the Ukraine" Andrei Illarionov / Image: (c) Michaela Seidler Andrei Illarionov has launched in 2002 when Vladimir Putin's economic adviser Russia in the G8. In the "Press" interview, he explains why sanctions come too late now.The Press: Had in 2002 meant the accession of Russia to the G8 that it would come to the brink of war with Ukraine within a few years?Andrei Illarionov: Certainly not.How could this happen? This is the result of the transformation of Russia from semi-free country it was in 2002, in the full autocracy of today. The political...
  • Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Working As Professor Again

    03/12/2014 4:54:51 AM PDT · by annalex · 12 replies
    In Serbia ^ | Fri, Sep 13th, 2013
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a man who has been one of the most powerful men in Iran in the last couple of years and gave the West headaches through his fiery rhetoric about Israel and the development of the Iran’s nuclear program, has returned to his original profession, teaching. After the expiry of his second term he decided to withdraw from political life and start working again as a professor and teach at the University of Science and Technology. A situation where the highest state official and a man who wielded enormous power subsequently returns to his humble position as a university...
  • Who Will Stop Putin's Aggression

    03/09/2014 12:24:55 PM PDT · by annalex · 72 replies
    3/9/2014 | Digest
    Who Will Stop Putin's Aggression I recently posted this article: Why Russia No Longer Fears the West. The author, one Ben Judah, made the point that the West lately projects an image of weakness, and Putin has been emboldened by it. I'd say that the author correctly identified one aspect of Putin's mentality: a thug's respect for another thug, the corollary of which is a thug's dismissal of civilized behavior as weakness. It is from that mental vantage point that Putin developed his recent moxie. The reality is that the West is responding calmly but also firmly. I think that...
  • Why Russia No Longer Fears the West

    03/03/2014 7:25:43 PM PST · by annalex · 107 replies
    Politico ^ | March 2, 2014 | Ben Judah
    Why Russia No Longer Fears the WestBy BEN JUDAH March 02, 2014 Western leaders are stunned because they haven’t realized Russia’s owners no longer respect Europeans the way they once did after the Cold War. Russia thinks the West is no longer a crusading alliance. Russia thinks the West is now all about the money.Putin’s henchmen know this personally. Russia’s rulers have been buying up Europe for years. They have mansions and luxury flats from London’s West End to France’s Cote d’Azure. Their children are safe at British boarding and Swiss finishing schools. And their money is squirrelled away in...
  • NATO warns Russia to cease and desist in Ukraine

    03/02/2014 3:10:12 PM PST · by annalex · 185 replies
    Euronews ^ | 02/03 14:09 CET
    NATO warns Russia to cease and desist in Ukraine The chorus of international voices urging caution in Ukraine, and above all urging Russia to refrain from military action, have been reinforced by NATO’s secretary general. “Russia must stop its military activities and its threats. We support Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty. We support the rights of the people of Ukraine to determine their own future without outside interference and we emphasise the need for Ukraine to continue to uphold the democratic rights of all people and ensure that minority rights are protected,” said Anders Fogh Rasmussen. An overnight phone call...
  • A Jewel in Two Crowns [Soviet Sevastopol]

    02/28/2014 7:52:21 PM PST · by annalex · 22 replies
    National Geographic ^ | April 2011 | Cathy Newman
    A Jewel in Two Crowns Russia’s paradise lost belongs to Ukraine—and that’s where the trouble begins. By Cathy Newman The past is never past in Sevastopol. It waves from flagpoles and drapes the parade stand on patriotic holidays. It finds sanctuary in war monuments and is posted on signs: Lenin Square, Heroes of Stalingrad Street, Cinema Moscow. It even simmers in a pot of borscht. Take Galina Onischenko's version of the eastern European staple. "This is Russian borscht," she said, setting down a porcelain bowl of "green" or summer borscht with its dill-flecked mosaic of beets, carrots, and potatoes. "No...
  • Ukrainian Major Archbishop appeals for solidarity and warns the danger of civil war is not over

    02/27/2014 1:10:03 PM PST · by annalex · 7 replies
    Vatican Radio ^ | 2014-02-25 | His Beatitude Sviatoslav Shevchuk
    (Vatican Radio) The Major Archbishop of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church has made a heartfelt appeal to European Nations for solidarity and support for the people of Ukraine. Speaking at a press conference held on Tuesday at Vatican Radio, His Beatitude Sviatoslav Shevchuk denounced the fact that the cry of the Maidan protesters went largely unheard and ignored until the explosion of violence last week that left some 100 people dead, and thousands more injured. listen... He said that Ukraine is now living through a dark time because nobody knows how the situation is going to evolve… But he also...
  • Sustaining Ukraine's breakthrough: EU expertise and markets are essential [Soros]

    02/27/2014 12:38:34 PM PST · by annalex · 30 replies
    The Guardian ^ | Thursday 27 February 2014 | George Soros
    Following a crescendo of terrifying violence, the Ukrainian uprising has had a surprisingly positive outcome. Contrary to all rational expectations, a group of citizens armed with not much more than sticks and shields made of cardboard boxes and metal garbage-can lids overwhelmed a police force firing live ammunition. There were many casualties, but the citizens prevailed. This was one of those historic moments that leave a lasting imprint on a society's collective memory. [...] I established the Renaissance Foundation in Ukraine in 1990 – before the country achieved independence. The foundation did not participate in the recent uprising, but it...
  • The Game Changed in Venezuela Last Night – and the International Media Is Asleep At the Switch

    02/27/2014 6:35:49 AM PST · by annalex · 45 replies
    Caracas Chronicles ^ | February 20 | Francisco Toro
    San Cristobal on Tuesday night Dear International Editor:Listen and understand. The game changed in Venezuela last night. What had been a slow-motion unravelling that had stretched out over many years went kinetic all of a sudden.What we have this morning is no longer the Venezuela story you thought you understood.Throughout last night, panicked people told their stories of state-sponsored paramilitaries on motorcycles roaming middle class neighborhoods, shooting at people and storming into apartment buildings, shooting at anyone who seemed like he might be protesting.People continue to be arrested merely for protesting, and a long established local Human Rights NGO...
  • Vladimir Bukovsky on political prisoners in the Russian Federation

    02/23/2014 2:13:41 PM PST · by annalex · 8 replies
    The Institute of Modern Russia ^ | February 20, 2014 | Olga Khvostunova/Vladimir Bukovsky
    Vladimir Bukovsky: “The more protests there are, the more likely political prisoners will be released.” Olga Khvostunova 20 February 2014 The Institute of Modern Russia continues its series of articles dedicated to Russia’s political prisoners.* Prominent writer, dissident, and former political prisoner Vladimir Bukovsky spoke with IMR Advisor Olga Khvostunova on the differences between the political prisoners of Soviet times and those of today’s Russia, and shared his insights on the methods of struggling against political repressions. Olga Khvostunova: What is the key difference between the Soviet political prisoners and the current ones?Vladimir Bukovsky: First of all, it’s important...
  • The Election of Tsar Michael I of All Russia

    02/21/2014 6:16:13 PM PST · by annalex · 11 replies
    The Election of Tsar Michael I of All Russia Note sent from Moscow Assembly of the Land To All Russian Cities In Order to Bring By It All Status and Title of People To the Oath of Loyalty To the Elected On the Throne of All Russia Monarch Michael Theodorovich 1613 in February I kiss this Holy and Life-Giving Cross of our Lord in oath to my monarch the Tsar and the Great Prince Michael Theodorovich of all Russia, and his Tsarina and Great Princess and their Royal children which God may give them, on that: I am to serve...
  • Address to Owners of Weapons (Ukraine)

    02/20/2014 5:51:32 PM PST · by annalex · 67 replies
    Address to Owners of Weapons Owners of weapons, We know that you are the most moderate and responsible part of the Ukrainian society, which so far did not participate in the standoff. Unfortunately, however the conflict transitioned to the armed stage. The control over the situation is effectively lost. Now each one of us bears personal responsibility for his own safety and the safety of his family, and in this difficult time, also for the safety of his fellow countrymen. Weaponry in the hands of responsible citizens has been in all times the bet peacemaker. We call you to act,...
  • Why communism didn’t have its own Nuremberg?

    02/16/2014 6:05:35 PM PST · by annalex · 51 replies
    interia.pl ^ | May 8, 2013 | prof. Andrzej Nowak
    Why communism didn’t have its own Nuremberg? translation: fb.com/SayNOtocommunismThe Nazis were trialed during the Nuremberg Trials, while communism, the most criminal system in the history of human kind still remains with impunity. Who is to be blamed? The Soviets? The Americans? Or maybe Western media and universities, dominated by leftist thinking? Prof. Andrzej Nowak replies to these and other questions.The efforts of realising the communist ideology ended up with annihilation of at least 100 million people/IstockphotoTony Judt, an American historian and a disappointed intellectual who died short time ago noticed in his last book (which was written as conversations run...
  • Two dead in shooting in Russian Orthodox cathedral

    A shooting at a Russian Orthodox cathedral has left a nun and a churchgoer dead. Six other people were injured. It happened in Yuznho-Sakhalinsk on an island off Russia’s eastern coast. The gunman was detained at the scene said officials adding that the suspect worked as a security guard in the city. There was no immediate motive behind the attack. The cathedral is on the island of Sakhalin almost 8,000 kilometres from Sochi. Security forces are on high alert over possible attacks on the Winter Games. Most of the people who were injured in the shooting – which happened in...
  • The demonstrations mobilized in Paris and Lyon grow in strength

    02/02/2014 7:06:26 PM PST · by annalex · 22 replies
    Les Echos ^ | February 2, 2014
    The demonstrations mobilized in Paris and Lyon grow in strengthBy Les Echos | 02/02 | 1:13 p.m. | updated at 18:29 LDCs, GPA, gender theory and "fiscal overkill families" were the menu demands of protesters. In Paris, the organizers speak of 500,000 demonstrators, the police 80,000. In Lyon, of 20,000 to 40,000 protesters marched. As the tradition requires, the battle of numbers looks tough at the parade held in Paris and Lyon on Sunday by the AKI group for all. "We were more than half a million" in Paris, jubilated the association, while the Parisian crowd was not dispersed by...
  • Escalation in Ukraine

    01/23/2014 6:47:09 PM PST · by annalex · 106 replies
    January 23, 2014 | Various
    Escalation in UkraineDigest by Annalex Two significant recent developments are: 1. First fatalities, apparently from live ammunition, among the demonstrators. Injuries, including serious injuries are in the hundreds if not in the thousands. The rubber bullet can gouge an eye and therefore, at a right angle can be itself fatal. The sun grenades reportedly rip through flesh if the explosion is next to it. Ironically, neither of the two confirmed fatalities are Ukrainian: one is an Armenian from Eastern Ukraine; the other is a Belorussian resident of Ukraine. One fatality (linked content here and below is rather graphic); I suspect...
  • Gay lobby scandal brewing in Russia

    01/18/2014 12:49:19 PM PST · by annalex · 34 replies
    This a collection of articles reflecting the developing news from Russia. The short of it is that a popular theologian, professor and thinker Deacon Kurayev decided to publicly condemn homosexuality and possibly pedophilia in his beloved Orthodox Church, to which he has every intention to remain faithful. The accusations take the form of a series of publications in Kuraev's blog; the accounts from the victims are published and the peculiar pattern of careers blocked or promoted based apparently on the intimacy of the candidate to a gay sponsor. The abuse itself is rarely criminal (other than grounds for a harassment...