My AT posts from last week.....
click to listen:
"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free." - President Ronald Reagan
"I want to say again that I had no intent on breaking any Russian laws. I had no intent. I did not conspire or plan to commit this crime," she added.
I'm glad that she did not mean to break any Russian law, but she did. Worse than that, she is getting a lesson on why she is so lucky to be an American citizen. Of course, this is the same Brittney who did not appreciate much about her country when she was bouncing the ball on the court. All of that woke stuff is not helping her one bit in Russia.
Let me tell Brittney a little story about the country where she sits in jail.
Russia used to be the USSR and the Warsaw Pact was a military alliance or their version of NATO to counter the West. Prague is now the capital of the Czech Republic and Slovakia is another country, or the Slovak Republic, in what used to be Czechoslovakia.
Armed resistance to the invasion was negligible, but protesters immediately took to the streets, tearing down streets signs in an effort to confuse the invaders. In Prague, Warsaw Pact troops moved to seize control of television and radio stations. At Radio Prague, journalists refused to give up the station and some 20 people were killed before it was captured. Other stations went underground and succeeded in broadcasting for several days before their locations were discovered.
Dubcek and other government leaders were detained and taken to Moscow. Meanwhile, widespread demonstrations continued on the street, and more than 100 protesters were shot to death by Warsaw Pact troops.
It was a dark day for freedom. Like the Hungarians in 1956, the people of Czechoslovakia were given a taste of Soviet “tolerance.” The “Prague Spring” was all about freedom and reforms but the Kremlin did not accept them, and responded by sending the tanks in.
It was a sad day for those of us who were watching from the West.
Of course, Brittney was not around in 1968, but I hope that her experience with the Russian judiciary teaches her a lesson and then she kisses the U.S. soil when she returns, and I hope that she returns soon.
Then I hope that she yells at her woke teammates and tells them that she is not criticizing the U.S. anymore.