Tag Archives: politics

When art preps the field for genocide

By Russell Working

A Soviet poster reads, “Rats of the Ku Klux Klan: American Democracy.”

My wife’s Christmas present for me last month was inspired. For years I have talked about taking a drawing class, so she signed me up for one at an art studio in our Chicago suburb.

The class is ongoing, and the teacher began the session by laying out the previous week’s artwork (white pencil or gouache on black paper) and asking for critiques.

Disturbingly, one student artist had sketched a rat in a red MAGA cap crawling out of a tipped-over trash can. The message wasn’t as original as he perhaps imagined. Portraying one’s adversaries as vermin has a long and venomous history in Nazi, Soviet, North Korean, and other totalitarian propaganda.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Chemodan II: 2 + 2 = 5: Stalin coins a slogan, and 500,000 ‘dirty swine’ applaud death sentences

This is part two in a series about a mysterious suitcase that once belonged to a young Briton who followed his father into a career as a diplomat in the USSR in the 1930s. Check out parts one and three.

A school rugby team photo with the future Captain W.R. Frecheville of the Royal Engineers, whom the Bolsheviks would capture and execute in 1920.

Even as young George Walton was at Sedbergh, studying French, passing the ball on the rugby field, and bowling on the cricket pitch, he must have avidly followed his father’s career abroad. The Civil War was raging from 1918-1920. The U.K. deployed troops from the White Sea to the Sea of Japan.

In the south, where W.S. was stationed after he left Murmansk, the Royal Air Force flew combat missions against the Red Army. British ground troops and heavy Mark V and light Whippet tanks joined in the White attacks, Lauri Kopisto writes in a dissertation titled “The British Intervention in South Russia 1918-1920” (University of Helsinki, 2011). British tank crews led a successful assault on the Bolshevik stronghold of Tsaritsyn, later renamed Stalingrad. The Bolsheviks made clear their hatred for the foreigners, threatening to castrate and crucify any British prisoner of war who fell into their hands.

[Check out the new edition of The Insurrectionist.]

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Russia

Chemodan I: A mysterious suitcase’s tale of war, revolution, and love in the time of Stalin

This is the first in a three-part series. Check here for parts two and three.

I knelt packing my bag on the floor of the London townhouse of Andrew Fox, a British businessman and friend from when we both lived in the Russian Pacific seaport of Vladivostok. I had come here to interview him for a memoir piece on the 1990s and early 2000s in Russia’s “Wild East.” This was a turbulent era when mob-linked political bosses kidnapped journalists, a shipping industry whistleblower was blown to bits by TNT planted under her bed, and the governor threatened to jail Andrew, who also happens to be the honorary British consul general to the city.

I was double-checking my passport, wallet, and other essentials (My hearing aids! Oh, in my ears) when Andrew came thumping downstairs with a leather suitcase. As scuffed as old shoes, it was peeling open and dusted with dried mold that rubbed off like chalk on one’s clothes.

Unidentified photograph found in the suitcase, likely of George Walton, his wife Natalia (Tata), and his Russian mother.

“Before you go, did you want to take a look at this?” he said.

That’s right; he had mentioned something about a suitcase full of old British documents concerning Russia. I was heading to St Pancras to catch a train back to Belgium. Yet who could resist this strange object? “Suitcase” translates as chemodan in Russian, a word as ordinary as its English equivalent. But when applied to this curiosity, it seemed to describe a magical object that might pop up in an Isaac Bashevis Singer story.

“Sure,” I said. “We have time.”

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

How El Salvador shed the title of world’s murder capital

The day Melissa Rivera turned 18, a friend of hers named Karen Guerrero sent the Salvadoran student a text wishing her happy birthday.

By 1 p.m. Guerrero, who was also 18, was missing, Rivera recalls. She was later discovered dead in a ditch, her limbs cut off. Her slain brother lay beside her.

“She was not involved in any drug or gang stuff,” says Rivera, who is studying at Universidad Francisco Gavidia. “She had a scholarship and was a very kind Christian girl.”

Such horrors were commonplace a few years ago in El Salvador, a nation riven for decades by civil war, death squads, and gang warfare. Now 21, Rivera remembers her mother walking her to school when she was a child. The older woman covered her daughter’s eyes when they passed the corpses of murder victims in the road.

Rivera serves Salvadoran coffee at a Santa Tecla café.

“When you grow up in a society that normalizes violence so much, you get used to it,” Rivera says. “It was very common to see every day a person that was found whose head was chopped off.”

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Crime, International, Salvador

Pardon the J6ers

For four years we have heard of the horrors—unique in American history, we’re told—of the January 6, 2021, “insurrection” and “attack on the Capitol.”

On the first anniversary, Veep Kamala Harris shuddered to recall “dates [that] echo throughout history … that occupy not only a place on our calendars, but a place in our collective memory: December 7, 1941, September 11, 2001, and January 6, 2021.”

During an address to a joint session of Congress, President Joe Biden cast his troubled gaze 160 years back in history, calling J6 “the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.”

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Trump Store on 34

My wife and I were cruising along Highway 34 in Illinois’ DeKalb County recently when a flurry of red, white, and blue signage caught our eye.

Fronting the road in Somonauk (2021 population: 1,776) is an array of Donald Trump flags and banners. There’s a life-sized cutout of the former president, a facsimile of the Second Amendment upon which the great man’s face is superimposed, and a sign that urges THANK YOU TRUMP, SAVE AMERICA AGAIN.

The shelves of the Trump Store—also known as The Patriot Store on 34—are overflowing with paraphernalia. Looking for Trump mugshot signs (OUTLAW PRESIDENT), fake Trump $20 bills to distribute to your nieces and nephews, or a JESUS IS MY SAVIOR TRUMP IS MY PRESIDENT garden flag to add an appropriate note of piety to your summer barbecues? Patriot, you’ve come to the right place.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

‘Your people shall be my people, and your God my God’

Or, why I support Israel and the Jewish people

The other day my Twitter friend @OliaonX expressed her gratitude for gentiles who support Israel and the Jewish people. She wrote:

In spite of all the brainwashing and propaganda being pushed by MSM and UN, in spite of all the anti-Israel protests all over the world, in spite of many country’s governments declaring their support for “Palestine”, and in spite of supporting Israel being unpopular, you all chose to stand on the right side of history – the side of light – I’m so grateful!!!

She asked for comments on why we are doing this. My reply has grown too long for X, so I am posting it here.

Dear Olia:

I have been thinking about this subject since you posed a similar question on X several months ago.

Luckily, brainwashing doesn’t work for those understand the Jewish people’s 4,000 year history in the land “between the river and the sea.” Only the ignorant regard Jews as interlopers. It is instructive to watch social media videos in which those pro-Hamas Ivy League geniuses can’t even identify which river and sea they are talking about, let along grasp the slogan’s genocidal meaning.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

The death of a protester—and of an unlawful prosecution

The dark-haired man—still youthful and trim at 37—lay in a coffin in a Pennsylvania funeral home’s viewing room, the texture of his face, in its mortuary makeup, oddly plastic.

It was early March 2022, and Matthew Perna, a protester who had participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol Hill chaos, had hanged himself in his garage five days earlier.

I had never met Matthew, but I was writing a novel about a family destroyed when a vindictive reporter pursues them because of their participation in J6. My wife Nonna and I wanted to pay our respects to Matthew. We drove seven hours from Illinois to join the viewing line, offer condolences to his distraught family, and attend the funeral.

Matthew’s death came to mind Friday as the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday, in Fischer v. United States, voted 6-3 to void a lower court’s decision allowing a charge of obstructing an official proceeding against defendant Joseph Fischer, a former police officer. The court held that the charge only applied where the defendant destroy records, documents or other relevant items.

The charge had been used to convict 350 J6 protesters, the Washington Post reports. Matthew was among them, according to his aunt, Geri Perna.

Encouragingly, liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson joined conservatives Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Chief Justice John Roberts in the decision.

Sadly, it was more than two years too late for Matthew. “It’s a pity he couldn’t have held out to see this day,” Nonna told me when the news broke.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized