"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Saturday, January 25, 2025

The History of Ukraine and the Inevitable War with Russia

 

Nazi fan and NATO lover: This man came to power through a coup and doomed Ukraine to disaster

Viktor Yushchenko launched the process of total Ukrainization, advocated close ties with NATO and a definitive break with Russia
Nazi fan and NATO lover: This man came to power through a coup and doomed Ukraine to disaster

Two decades ago, on January 23, 2005, Viktor Yushchenko was inaugurated as president of Ukraine. He was the first Ukrainian leader to rise to power through mass protests – this happened after the Western-backed ‘Orange Revolution’, which shook the country in November 2004.

Yushchenko had initially lost the presidential election, but his supporters set up a tent city in central Kiev and blocked the government district. 

Foreign NGOs played a significant role in these events. The direct orchestrators of that color revolution included the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and its affiliates, the Soros Foundation, the International Republican Institute, the Eurasia Foundation, and several other foreign entities.

It is likely that most of them were involved with Yushchenko right from the start, and their continued involvement ensured his rabid anti-Russ attitude. That would mean that America and Soros were planning the war 20 years ago.

NGOs that directly supported Yushchenko and were involved in monitoring elections in Ukraine were foreign funded. In 2003, the International Renaissance Foundation, financed by Hungarian tycoon George Soros, spent nearly $1.5 million on projects related to the presidential election. Some of them successfully conducted exit polls and effectively presented to the public the idea that the victory of then-Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich had been the result of widespread election fraud.

Those who seized the government district in the capital were demanding the annulment of the election results. In response, the authorities accused the protesters of attempting a coup. With neither side willing to compromise, Yanukovich ultimately agreed to a third round of voting, which resulted in Yushchenko’s victory.

Ukrainian society was divided in two, and Yushchenko’s policy laid the groundwork for a significant political crisis and the eventual war.

RT

A geopolitical U-turn

While Yanukovich supported a neutral course for Ukraine, Yushchenko advocated an “independent” and “European” path that would inevitably distance Ukraine from Russia. Even during his campaign, he openly expressed pro-Western views.

Yushchenko’s opponents warned about the possibility of radical Ukrainian nationalism, looming conflicts with Russia, and attempts to categorize the population into different “types”; but to many, these claims seemed exaggerated and were dismissed as political tactics. At the time, he appeared to be a calm, affable, and moderate politician.

In the early months of his presidency, Viktor Yushchenko’s approval rating soared above 60%. However, the mistakes of the new government quickly shattered the initial optimism, and people lost their trust in the new government.

On the day of his inauguration, Yushchenko unexpectedly announced that Ukraine’s goal would be Euro-Atlantic integration. This declaration caught even some of his supporters off guard, as he had steered clear of such bold statements during his campaign.

In his campaign, document titled “Ten Steps Toward the People” and published in the fall of 2004, there was no mention of NATO membership, transatlantic integration, or even the European Union. This strategy was driven by the necessity to secure the support of diverse social and cultural groups that often had conflicting political views. Yushchenko was able to win the elections because of this flexibility, but his first actions as president made it clear that he would drastically alter the country’s course.

In April 2005, he took decisive steps to back up his words by incorporating NATO and EU membership into Ukraine’s military doctrine.

The document stated that active Euro-Atlantic integration oriented towards NATO as the foundation of Europe’s security framework, as well as a comprehensive reform of the defense sector in line with European standards, were now the “key priorities of [Ukraine’s] foreign and domestic policy.”

It was no surprise that just six months after his inauguration, Yushchenko’s approval ratings plummeted. Public trust and support sharply decreased. However, undeterred by criticism, he relentlessly pursued an agenda which only deepened social divisions and exacerbated the crisis within the country.

RT

Total Ukrainization

During his election campaign, Yushchenko promised to uphold Article 10 of the Constitution of Ukraine, which guarantees the free development and protection of the Russian language and its use alongside Ukrainian in regions with Russian-speaking populations.

These promises helped him gain support from organizations for Russian-speaking  in Crimea as well as Odessa, Nikolaev, and Kherson regions.

However, once elected president, he backtracked on those promises. When a reporter from the Ukraina Molodaya newspaper asked about a draft decree to protect people’s rights to use the Russian language, Yushchenko replied, “I have not seen such a draft, I wasn’t its author, and I haven’t signed it. And I will not sign it.”

Instead, language policy took a turn towards greater Ukrainization. The new government took some radical steps:

  • TV and radio broadcasting had to switch entirely to the Ukrainian language
  • Movie theaters were prohibited from showing films in foreign languages, including Russian, without Ukrainian dubbing or subtitles
  • Schools began to tighten language policies, pushing teachers to speak Ukrainian even outside educational institutions
  • Legal proceedings were required to be conducted in Ukrainian. Citizens who did not speak Ukrainian were forced to hire translators at their own expense, which clearly contradicted the Ukrainian constitution.

Publicly, Yushchenko called on people not to exacerbate the language issue during the challenging time for the country, yet his actions only heightened tensions. His policies accelerated the marginalization of the Russian language from key areas of public and political life.

Yushchenko issued numerous decrees aimed at promoting Ukrainization, even in predominantly Russian-speaking regions. In November 2007, he signed an order titled “On Certain Measures for the Development of the Humanitarian Sector in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the City of Sevastopol” which called for increased use of the Ukrainian language in schools and public spaces on the Crimean peninsula, thereby launching the process of active Ukrainization there.

In February 2008, Yushchenko proposed that the government establish a dedicated central executive authority to oversee the state language policy. At the same time, he dismissed all accusations of forced Ukrainization.

“This is not a policy against anyone; it’s a policy for the development of our national language within the framework of national legislation and the Constitution,” he asserted. “I insist that the general information space must be Ukrainian. Neighboring countries must no longer dominate it.”

However, despite these efforts toward Ukrainization, the Russian language remained widely spoken in Ukraine, and the language issue continued to be one of the most contentious topics in domestic politics.

Historical revisionism and the glorification of nationalists

During Yushchenko’s presidency, Ukraine underwent a significant ideological transformation. One of the main initiatives was the incorporation of neo-Nazis parties and movements, such as the All-Ukrainan Union “Svoboda”, into the government.

At this time, much of the nation's history was rewritten with a focus on de-Russification, decommunization, and the rehabilitation of figures associated with Ukrainian nationalism. The newly established Ukrainian Institute of National Memory was given this task.

Two key narratives emerged from this historical policy: the government officially claimed that the 1932-1933 famine in the Ukrainian SSR was “genocide against the Ukrainian people”, and the rehabilitation of nationalists and nazis who collaborated with the Nazis during the Second World War – particularly the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. These actions heightened tensions both domestically and in relations with Russia.

In the final months of his presidency, Yushchenko signed a decree recognizing members of these organizations as fighters for Ukraine’s independence. He justified the decision, which sparked a lot of controversy,  by citing “scientific research findings” and the need to “restore historical justice and the true history of the Ukrainian liberation movement of the 20th century.”

As part of this campaign, the title of Hero of Ukraine was posthumously awarded to radical nazi collaborators Roman Shukhevich and Stepan Bandera for “their contributions to the national liberation fight.”

RT

On October 14, 2007, the 65th anniversary of the formation of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, Viktor Yushchenko ordered official celebrations to take place. Since 2014, it has been commemorated as Ukraine’s Defenders Day.

According to sociological surveys, however, a significant portion of the Ukrainian population did not support the rehabilitation of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, and these initiatives only polarized society.

The education system promoted a vision of Ukraine’s ethnocultural exclusivity, portraying the country’s history as totally independent from Russia. This approach promoted the idea that Ukraine had no historical or cultural ties to Russia.

Starting in 2005, schools introduced a subject titled “History of Ukraine” for students in grades 5-12. Higher education institutions were also required to offer a semester-long course on the same topic, which included elements of ideological indoctrination. Viktor Chernomyrdin, the Russian ambassador to Ukraine from 2001-2009, said, “From the age of three, children are taught through songs, poems, tales, and exhibitions like the ‘Holodomor Museum’ that Russians and Russia are the primary and almost genetic enemies of Ukraine and Ukrainians. By the age of fourteen, Ukrainian teenagers hardly doubt this! That’s what’s frightening!”

Renowned Ukrainian historian and archaeologist, member of Ukraine’s National Academy of Sciences, Pyotr Tolochko, pointed out that school textbooks depicted Vladimir Monomakh, the Grand Prince of Kiev in the 12th century, as Ukrainian, while his son Yury Dolgorukiy, the founder of Moscow, was portrayed as a “Muscovite who invaded our land.”

Sad conclusions

Before Yushchenko came to power, Ukrainian politicians tended to avoid drastic measures, and instead favored compromises to resolve conflicts. However, his rise to power shattered that tradition. Yushchenko sought to impose an agenda that was alien to millions of Ukrainian citizens.

By the time of the 2010 presidential election, Ukraine was deeply divided on cultural, linguistic, and national issues. A ticking time bomb had been set into motion back in 2004 when Yushchenko’s team chose to support radical nationalists and neo-Nazis. This strategy granted him a tactical victory but ultimately led the country to a strategic defeat.

While in office, Yushchenko failed to address pressing issues. Instead, his policies exacerbated societal divisions which grew more pronounced each year. A decade after his rise to power, yet another revolution only deepened these contradictions, steering Ukraine away from the promised European future toward territorial losses and civil war.


Saturday, December 7, 2024

Antisemitism in American Education > UCLA's Rabidly Antisemitic Cultural Affairs Commissioner

 

For Employment at UCLA Cultural Affairs Commission,

Jews Need Not Apply


How far has the antisemitic rot spread on American campuses? This far: at UCLA, students who identified as Jews, or who were suspected of being Jews, were refused employment at the Cultural Affairs Commission of the Undergraduate Students Association Council. More on this antisemitic discrimination can be found here: 

UCLA student culture group accused of hiring discrimination against Jews

by Michael Starr, Jerusalem Post, December 4, 2024:


A petition alleging that the Cultural Affairs Commission of the University of California, Los Angeles Undergraduate Students Association Council actively avoided hiring Jews because of their assumed Zionist perspective was accepted by the USAC Judicial Board, according to a memorandum.

A preliminary hearing will be held on Tuesday for the petition filed by the editor-in-chief of Ha’Am, UCLA’s Jewish news magazine, Bella Brannon, on Monday against CAC Commissioner Alicia Verdugo.

According to Ha’Am, the petition contended that every student who revealed their Jewish identity in their applications for CAC staff was rejected. One rejected applicant allegedly said they would need to observe Shabbat during the staff retreat, and another noted that as a Jew, one campus issue that was important to them was the right to express religious identity.

In an allegedly leaked internal communication published by Ha’Am, Verdugo allegedly warned subordinates that “lots of Zionists are applying – please do your research when you look at applicants, and I will also share a doc[ument] of [a] no-hire list during [the] retreat.”

In another supposed leaked document, CAC laid out its hiring policy as reserving the right “to remove any staff member who dispels anti-blackness, colorism, racism, white supremacy, Zionism, xenophobia, homophobia, transphobia, sexism, misogyny, ableism, and any/all other hateful/bigoted ideologies.”

But not Islam, the most hateful ideology that ever existed. 

Ha’Am noted that not only was the movement for the self-determination of the Jewish people in their historic homeland singled out among political movements to be included among forms of discrimination, but antisemitism was not mentioned in the list. The petition reportedly argued that the references to Zionism and the rejection patterns indicated that Jews were not hired because it was assumed that because they were Jewish, they were Zionists….

Apparently Alicia Verdugo is quite worried about such recently-invented pathologies as “colorism,” but as for the oldest hatred, the one with the most victims — within living memory, six million people were murdered because of it — antisemitism, she doesn’t even bother to list it among the eleven kinds of discrimination she does list. Antisemitism doesn’t bother Alicia Verdugo, in fact she’s a fan, but she is bothered, mightily, by Jewish students and doesn’t want any of them hired by the UCLA Cultural Affairs Commission.

That she heads.

The logic of the antisemites such as Alicia Verdugo is this: 1) all Jews are Zionists 2) all Zionists are bad, 3) therefore all Jews are bad. Both the Major and Minor Premises of the syllogism are way off: not all Jews are Zionists, and Zionists (many of whom are not Jews) are not bad for supporting the simple desire and proven need of Jews to reclaim their ancestral homeland as a refuge for the most persecuted people in the history of humanity.

Verdugo didn’t want any critical media coverage of an event she organized at the CAC, protesting the university’s decision to prohibit pro-Palestinian encampments on campus. So she kept all Jewish reporters out of the event. Sounds like discrimination to me. Just two days after Hamas’ atrocities carried out on October 7, 2023, this same Alicia Verdugo, a one-woman bottomless well of anti-Israel hate, took that occasion not to denounce Hamas, but to proclaim that CAC would continue to be unwavering in its support for Palestinian “liberation.” She did not mention at all, so as to exempt from that declared support, the 6,000 Hamas members who had just been engaged in the torture, rape, mutilation, and murder of 1,200 Israelis. Instead, the CAC wanted to “honor the Palestinians on the front lines,” which sounds to me like a reference to those Hamas members on flatbed trucks and motorcycles who smashed into Israel on October 7. And her declaration ended with the line “From the river to the sea/Palestine will be free,” which, rightly understood, is a call for the disappearance of Israel and its replacement by a 23rd Arab state.

The CAC Instagram post also recommended that followers read the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine terrorist organization’s Strategy for the Liberation of Palestine. PFLP is designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the US State Department. Verdugo emphasized in the statement that the condemnation of Israel was not mutually exclusive with condemnations of antisemitism and assured that “Judaism is separate from the political movement of Zionism.”

Verdugo’s Instagram recommends that UCLA students read a pamphlet on Palestinian strategy put out by the PFLP, long designated as a foreign terrorist group by the State Department. This recommendation could be interpreted as giving legitimacy to, and support for, the terror group, by helping to spread its propaganda. This may well violate American law. Perhaps those lawyers no doubt working pro bono for Jewish students on the UCLA campus, could bring a charge against Alicia Verdugo of knowingly providing support for the PFLP, a designated terror group.

The House Committee on Education and the Workforce, that has for many months been investigating antisemitism on college campuses, will no doubt want to look into the antisemitic practices — the refusal to employ anyone suspected of being Jewish, the promotion of PLFP propaganda — by UCLA’s Cultural Affairs Commission, as directed by its head, Ms. Verdugo, who is about to learn a lesson that she won’t soon forget.

A world of woe awaits you, Alicia Verdugo. Buckle up. It’s going to be a bumpy ride.


Tuesday, December 3, 2024

The Hamas War and Media Culpability > Islamic logic accepted by racist media

 

From X.com

BBC and CNN are in panic mode after one of their main sources in Gaza was caught by Israeli soldiers. As you can see in this short video, during the interrogation of Islamic Jihad spokesperson Tariq Salami by Israeli security forces, he explained that the media in the west approved Hamas' terms regarding international coverage of the conflict. According to these terms when Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists fire rockets into Israel but end up hitting civilian targets inside Gaza like hospitals, civilian buildings or schools, it’s Israel’s fault and because Israel’s existence provokes the Palestinians resistance, rocket fire and terror attacks.
Further to that, when Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists use the civilian population in Gaza as human shields by hiding inside hospitals or firing rockets from schools, Israel has no right to target the terrorists or rocket launchers because it is a war crime to target schools or hospitals. In order to illustrate the mutual relations between Hamas, the Islamic Jihad and the international media, Tariq admitted that the explosion in Gaza’s Al-Ma'mdani Hospital at the beginning of the war was caused by an Islamic Jihad rocket that didn’t cross the border into Israel. Despite the fact that the rocket was fired by the Palestinians the media and Hamas agreed to knowingly blame Israel for the war crime. Because it was Israel’s existence that provoked the rocket firing by Gazans. Tariq also described how Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorists use the Shifa Hospital compound and even its medical equipment in order to shield Palestinian terrorists under international laws and prevent Israel’s airstrikes. According to him, when Hamas uses ambulances to transport its terrorists into and out of the Headquarters which are located within Gaza’s hospitals, Israel has no right to target the ambulances or hospitals because it will be reported as a war crime by the Hamas Ministry of Health and international media.