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‘For Coach Barnhart,’ East High Thunderbirds rally to come-back victory after learning mid-game of coach’s death

There was not a dry eye in sight. Everyone was weeping, in the stands and on the field. Even the Bartlett team, a rival team for East Thunderbirds Post 34, was devastated at the Matson Invitational Tournament on Sunday, played at Bartlett High School.

As the game between Thunderbirds and the Fairbanks 49ers Post 11 commenced, Coach Jeff Barnhart was nowhere to be seen. This was unheard of — a coach not showing up for a game. Usually Barnhart shows up 90 minutes early to help the team warm up.

The game started without him as the other coach, Kurt Solberg, went to Barnhart’s house to check on him. He found him unresponsive. Coach Barnhart had died overnight.

Solberg returned to the game, still underway at Bartlett High, and pulled Barnhart’s son, Zack, out of the dugout to tell him his dad was gone. Zack’s mother had been called and she was there as Zack received the tragic news. Word spread. The whole team was in shock.

Don Winchester, Matson Tournament director and Kathleen Navarre for American Legion Baseball then explained to parents, grandparents, the Fairbanks team what had happened.

“Before Don even told the fans, all the kids were pulled onto the field, and the kids said we’re ready to play for him, but it was up to Zack if the game would continue. Zack decided, ‘Let’s play for coach,'” said one of the parents.

The Thunderbirds were still down. In fact, the East team had been perilously close to being “mercied out” at one point. But East rallied from being down eight runs, and pulled to a tie, ultimately winning, 16-15.

East Thunderbirds Post34 team after their win on Sunday.

Zack Barnhart, with the loss of his father fresh on his heart, batted leadoff to start the nine-run rally in the sixth inning with an RBI single. Then, Thunderbird Jacob Hulst hit a two-run home run in the fourth inning, scoring Zack, who had walked. Andrew Malone had two runs and that included the winning run.

Zack batted with bases loaded at the top of the sixth, and and got a single and drove in two runs, bringing the team within one, said Winchester.

“Especially for a kid who just lost his father, that is worth noting. He was named co-player of the game,” Winchester said. “It was a wonderful game. They were down and came back, and Zack was a huge part of that.”

“Fairbanks banged out 13 hits and got five RBIs from Shaun Conwell, who was 3-for-5. Tyler Moore tripled and scored four runs. Miles Fowler and Caden Davis each had two hits and combined for five runs and three RBIs,” said Van Williams, ALB Media Director.

There was no chance that the 49ers had thrown the game, Winchester said. “I know the coach and he’s a gentleman. Coach Rod Perdue is going to play to win. It would be a slap in the face to a team not to, and he is not that type of person.”

The 31 runs were the most for a game in the this year’s eighth annual Matson Invitational.

The tournament continues through Tuesday at Mulcahey Stadium. For information about the games, visit Alaska Legion’s web page at this link.

License to fish: Kelly Tshibaka participated in charitable fishing classic in 2019

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When U.S. Senate candidate Kelly Tshibaka returned to her home state of Alaska to become commissioner of Administration, she soon was attending events all over the state.

That included the Kenai River Classic, a fundraiser to help preserve the stocks of the mighty Kenai River. It’s a charitable event, invite-only intended to educate high-level policymakers and business leaders about the habit restoration and access projects that the Kenai River Sport Fishing Association undertakes every year.

The event has raised more than $18 million in 25 years, all for the use of fisheries conservation.

But Tshibaka, although she was issued a license to participate, was not eligible for the resident license yet, since she had just moved home after working for the U.S. Postal Service in the nation’s capitol. She received a resident license when she registered at the classic in August.

“Kelly attended the 2019 Kenai River Classic in her capacity as commissioner of the Alaska Department of Administration. Her confirmation hearings had been very public and it was well known that she had recently returned to the state to serve in the governor’s cabinet. The event organizers asked if she had a current fishing license, and when she said she didn’t, they issued her one,” said Tim Murtaugh, spokesperson for the Tshibaka campaign. “Lisa Murkowski’s allies are clearly worried about Kelly, if they are willing to attack her on this.”

Fishing licenses in Alaska require that the applicant live in the state for 12 consecutive months and state that they intend to remain residents before receiving the license. Tshibaka had been recruited to serve in the Dunleavy Administration in January. By March, the Democrats in the Alaska House were savaging her over her religious convictions in well-publicized and much-written-about hearings.

It’s the kind of thing that can trip a person up in Alaska, but the application for the license isn’t entirely clear. It asks how many years a person has been a resident. For Tshibaka, it was a literal question — she was born and raised in Alaska and lived here until she went to college at age 15. Then, after law school, she started working for the federal government until returning home with her husband and children to resume her life as an Alaskan. She has continuously owned a cabin in Nancy Lake area for decades.

“This is a race that will be decided on Lisa Murkowski’s record as a senator,” Murtaugh said. “That’s what Alaskans really care about.”

Suzanne Downing: Are Americans actually hoping our women’s soccer team will lose?

By SUZANNE DOWNING / FOR NEWSMAX

For the first time since 1972, the United States Olympic Team failed to win a medal of any color on the first day of competition. The team pulled about even with China on the second day in Tokyo.

Americans in the past would have been disappointed, or even alarmed at such a start to the Olympic Games. Instead, they were ambivalent. 

The truth is, many Americans don’t care about the Olympics this year. Instead of being joyful that after a year of pause, the world is ready for sports competitions again, they are tired. They’re weary of brainwashed athletes who have been given the greatest opportunity in the history of the world to achieve their athletic dreams, only to spoil it for the rest of America by disrespecting our country.

At a youth baseball game in South Anchorage on Saturday, parents agreed: They “don’t give a damn” about the Olympics anymore. The feeling was universal, from conservatives to moderates. They didn’t even bother with the always theatrical kickoff ceremonies, which saw a 36 percent decline from that opening ceremony back in 2016. Jusst 16.7 million Americans watched the opening ceremony, the smallest audience for the event in 33 years, if NBC numbers are correct.

Just as they are tired of hearing movie stars lecture them about immigration, American conservatives have tuned out Tokyo. The athletes – some of them, at least – bought into the currently faddish idea that merit doesn’t count and that everything is all about equity, or equal outcomes, as opposed to opportunity. So be it, Americans are saying: “What’s the point in competition, if it’s all about equity?”

It’s worse. Conservatives actually cheered last week when the U.S. Women’s Soccer Team lost to Sweden in the opening match. The memes on social media were brutal: “Get woke, go broke.” In fact, there is a wide swath of America that is now hoping the women’s soccer squad will go home empty handed, a well-deserved reward for their faux resistance, take-a-knee insistence. 

“Maybe if they would just focus on playing soccer and less on talking politics and espousing their personal opinions on many subjects. Dismal uninspired play. They’re acting like they don’t even want to be there,” wrote one Twitter user, echoing the sentiments of millions of Americans.

The men’s basketball team also spectacularly failed, suffering America’s first Olympic loss since 2004, and to France, of all countries, 83-76. 

“Must be really difficult to win a game when 80% of the players hate the country they are playing for,” wrote another critic.

Cheering for your country’s team to lose on the international stage is new territory for America’s big socio-political divide. We have never seen Americans turn on their own Olympic team. 

Sports lovers and those who appreciate athletic prowess far greater than their own can thank a handful of athletes who started the recent trend of lower spectator appreciation – Colin Kaepernick and Gwen Berry being among the most notorious for petulant behavior. Spectators walked with their TV channel changers over the past year.

The NFL and NBA have already suffered from Americans’ disgust. After two years of growth, in 2020 the audience for NFL games declined 7 percent, averaging the lowest average audience since 2017.  

As for the NBA, they were down more than 35 percent after players started becoming political experts. Meanwhile, hockey, which is still a sport and not a political statement, is seeing viewership up by 14 percent.

Last week, more than 150 academics, activists, and athletes signed a five-page letter demanding that the International Olympics Committee to not punish athletes who demonstrate political statements during the Summer Olympics. 

Berry, American hammer thrower, has already shown what we can expect if she is on the medals stand in Tokyo. She says she’ll use the Olympics platform to point out racial inequality in the United States.

How much of this will the International Olympics Committee tolerate? It has already made major changes to Rule 50, which bans political activism at the games. The new rule says demonstrations to occur so long as they happen before the start of competition. 

In any case, a lot of Americans are “done with it,” according to those informally polled by Must Read America. More is the pity, because by and large, the athletes representing our country are hard-working and outstanding ambassadors for the United States. They don’t deserve our scorn or being lumped in with the brat pack. 

Sadly, the ones who have spoiled the Olympics don’t seem to care. And America has returned the favor.

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read America and Must Read Alaska, and writes for NewsMax.

Dan Fagan: Media’s all-out blitz to demonize the unvaccinated

By DAN FAGAN

According to a study conducted by the prestigious, King’s College London, the number of symptomatic cases of Covid-19 in the United Kingdom grew more last week among the vaccinated than unvaccinated.

Don’t expect Anchorage Daily News owner Ryan Binkley and his Marxist minions running his fear-mongering newspaper to print that anytime soon. 

The study discovered 15,537 new symptomatic cases of Covid in vaccinated people in the UK. That’s a whopping 40% increase from the previous week where the number of infected vaccinated was 11,805.

The study also found 17,581 unvaccinated patients with symptomatic cases of Covid. But that was a drop of 22% from the previous week.  

“In the UK, new cases in vaccinated people are still going up and will soon outpace unvaccinated cases,” said Professor Tim Spector, Kings College London. 

This data does not prove you are better protected from Covid if you’re unvaccinated. Since more are taking the shots, fewer are unvaccinated. Mathematically speaking, the increase in unvaccinated Covid patients will grow, percentagewise, since they are fewer in number.  

But it also debunks the news media narrative that only the unvaccinated are getting Covid and that if you don’t get the poke, you are a grotesquely disgusting human being.  

Currently, the number of vaccinated in the hospital in the UK for Covid still outnumber the patients unvaccinated by a margin of 123,620 to 10,834, according to Public Health England. There’s no disputing getting the vaccine has lowered the transmission of Covid. 

But there’s more to the story. The vaccine is experimental and has not been approved by the Federal Drug Administration. We have no idea what the long-term impact and full extent of the side effects and possibly permanent ramifications of the hastily concocted shot. 

The Centers for Disease Control reports as of July 21, some 6,207 people have died after they received the Covid vaccine. Many have argued this number is low and underreported. 

Ryan Binkley and his Marxist minions at the Anchorage Daily News would never report the CDC discovered 26 Alaskans have died following a Covid vaccination. 

The CDC also reports more than 1,406 Alaskans suffered adverse reactions after receiving Covid vaccines.

Getting the vaccine does not prevent you from getting Covid or being hospitalized from the virus. It also doesn’t mean you are putting other lives at risk by refusing the experimental vaccine. What we are told is the shot allows us to better combat the impacts of the virus. 

The media has launched an all-out fear campaign designed to scare us and those around us if we chose not to take the experimental vaccine. 

Getting the vaccine is a personal choice and scaring or shaming people into a decision is wrong. 

Common sense would dictate one should get the vaccine if they are elderly or overweight. But to force the young and healthy to take the experimental poke is nothing more than bullying. 

An employee working at the Fred Meyer in Palmer last week was instructed to go home and not return after she refused to get the Covid vaccine or wear a mask. 

Other Alaska businesses, many run by Native corporations, have threatened the jobs of employees refusing to take the vaccine. 

Like most other issues facing America these days, the two warring factions in our nation’s cold civil war are mostly divided over whether to take the Covid vaccine. 

In the conservative Mat-Su Valley, vaccine rates are much lower than left-leaning Juneau. And yet the transmission rate for Covid in the Valley is much lower than Juneau, despite the capital city employing rigid lockdowns and the valley mandating practically none.  

You won’t read that in the Anchorage Daily News or hear it on KTUU.  

The national media has also ignored the disparity in conservative run states compared to ones with heavy lockdowns. 

In Leftist-run New York, the Covid death rate is close to twice as high per 100,000 than conservative-run Florida.  And yet Florida, more than any other state, has the highest percent of residents older than 65. And Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has kept his state’s schools open and employed few lockdowns. Democrat Gov. Andrew Cuomo has taken a different approach with harsh lockdowns and lengthy school closings.  

The pro-lockdown media has for the most part ignored the contrast between New York and Florida because it does not advance their false narrative. 

Have you ever seen the media so focused on any issue as they are currently when it comes to demonizing people choosing not to get the experimental vaccine? 

And then you add in Big Tech’s censorship of any news organization telling both sides of the story when it comes to the vaccine. 

Whether or whether not to get the poke is a personal choice. Our decision process should be free of shaming and over-the-top peer pressure from family, friends, or the fearmongering media. 

The truth is there are risks with taking the shot or refusing it. And the decision is different for everyone depending on their circumstance.  Choose wisely. 

Dan Fagan hosts the number one rated morning drive radio show in Alaska on Newsradio 650 KENI. 

Sec. of Defense Austin visits Eielson, Ft. Wainwright, talks about climate change

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Alaska is a strategic hotspot for defending the United States, the Indo-Pacific region and the Arctic, Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III said during his visit to Eielson Air Force Base on Saturday. But it is also literally getting hotter.

The secretary met with troops and leaders at Eielson and Fort Wainwright. He spoke about climate change during his visit.

“We are an Indo-Pacific nation, and we are an Arctic nation,” the Austin said. “And here in Alaska, those two critical regions intersect. This is where we can project power into both regions and where we must be able to defend ourselves from threats coming from both places. It’s also where we can better posture ourselves and prepare for climate changes that will impact our future.”

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, greeting troops during his visit to bases in Alaska.

Climate change is already altering the strategic picture in the north, Austin said. The ice pack is melting, and there is a viable Northwest Passage across the Canadian-U.S. Arctic coast for much of the year. Permafrost is not so permanent, Austin said. this change could lead to a scramble for resources in the region. He said this might mean the Arctic could become “a theater for resource competition and even instability, and we need to stay ahead of that.”

Austin, accompanied by Sen. Dan Sullivan for portions of his trip, also spoke with Army leaders at Fort Wainwright and came away impressed by the thinking on the issue and how the service — which has two brigades in Alaska — is applying operational concepts to the Arctic. 

On the way to Eielson in Army helicopters, local commanders gave Austin an aerial tour of the Clear Space Force Base and the missile fields that protect the homeland from rogue state missiles. 

Read more at this link.

Pam Bondi: If you care about the First Amendment, this class action is for you

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By PAM BONDI

Last week, White House press secretary Jen Psaki candidly stated that President Joe Biden’s administration was “making sure social media platforms are aware of the latest narratives…” of what the government deems to be “misinformation.”

This statement and accompanying comments from President Biden and Surgeon General Vivek Murthy underscore the very crux of the class action lawsuit former President Donald J. Trump and other censored Americans recently brought against Big Tech. Psaki also elaborated that the Biden administration works to “create robust enforcement strategies that bridge their [Big Tech] properties and provide transparency about rules.”

This acknowledgment of the government’s role and involvement in choosing which posts Big Tech should censor goes to the factual assertions President Trump has made in the class action lawsuit.

When I stood with President Trump to unveil the America First Policy Institute’s support of his class action lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, many on the left quickly dismissed the suit by saying these are private companies and not government actors.

They failed to understand that Big Tech’s actions and government involvement have evolved recently to the point where the government empowers Big Tech to violate our rights. As former President Trump stated upon filing the lawsuit, “If they can do it to me, they can do it to ANYONE — and in fact, that is exactly what is happening.”

It’s no wonder then that Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz has stated, “This is the most important First Amendment case of the 21st Century.”

Our government cannot sit idly by while Big Tech tramples on our freedoms.

Psaki’s statements further illustrate the Biden administration’s work with Facebook and the other platforms to jointly determine what constitutes misinformation and then censor individuals’ viewpoints. These coordinated actions undercut any remaining pretense that these companies are independent actors.

Again, to quote Psaki when she explained that the White House had “increased disinformation research and tracking within the Surgeon General’s office. We’re flagging problematic posts for Facebook that spread disinformation.” This is collusion, and these Big Tech giants can no longer be allowed to escape the First Amendment. Collaboration between the current administration and social media giants is further evidenced by Psaki’s comments if you are removed by one platform, you should be removed by all. Where is the “private company” in this statement?

And that should concern every American who values free speech. This isn’t a partisan issue. Americans of every political stripe should be gravely concerned about the precedent this sets for curtailing our freedoms.

The Constitution constrains Congress from passing laws that would abridge the First Amendment rights of Americans. And when Big Tech companies serve as state actors, an arm of the government, they must be treated as the government is. This means being bound to the same First Amendment restraints that the Constitution applies to the rest of government.

Unlike most other private corporations, Facebook and other tech giants are dependent on protections from the federal government. Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act gives Internet companies immunity from many types of lawsuits if they agree to moderate their content in a neutral manner. Initially passed into law in 1996 when these social media giants didn’t even exist, Congress intended Section 230 to protect children by allowing Internet companies to take down information that exploited them.

There is nothing “neutral” about Big Tech’s actions to censor Americans with whom the liberal elites disagree, especially when this censorship occurs at the direction of the government. Just ask the thousands of censored Americans who had their social media accounts flagged for misinformation when merely sharing news stories or expressing their opinions.

In the short two weeks since the America First Policy Institute launched TakeonBigTech.com, we have received over 50,000 stories from Americans eager to share their experiences about being arbitrarily canceled by Big Tech. For all Americans who believe in the First Amendment: This lawsuit is for YOU.

Pam Bondi serves as the Chairman of the Constitutional Litigation Partnership at the America First Policy Institute. She previously served as the 37th Florida attorney general from 2011 to 2019 and was the first woman elected to the office.

Assembly to hire a ‘shadow mayor’ to bypass Bronson and go direct to city staff

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On the agenda for Tuesday’s Anchorage Assembly meeting is an ordinance to hire yet another new position in the municipality that is controlled by the Assembly: A staff assistant to the Assembly who has unfettered access to all municipal employees and all municipal property, without having to go through the executive branch or its leaders, such as the mayor or city manager.

AO No. 2021-66 is on the agenda for the meeting that starts at 5 pm at the Loussac Library on July 27. The ordinance is in the “Public Hearing” section of the agenda.

The complete agenda is at this link.

The person hired by the Assembly will “have full, free and unrestricted access” to:

  1. All public records, as defined in section 3.90.020;
  2. All activities of the municipal government and its various departments;
  3. All municipal property;
  4. All municipal personnel;
  5. All policies, plans and procedures, and records pertaining to financial expenditures by municipal funds; and
  6. This subsection C. does not authorize public disclosure of confidential or privileged material under federal, state or local law, or of material the public disclosure of which constitutes anunwarranted invasion of personal privacy.

In practice, this means the staff to the assembly can engage in dialogue with and gather information from city employees who report to the mayor, no matter how deliberative or premature the information may be. Taken to its extreme, the ordinance allows the Assembly staff person to rifle through the desks of the executive branch, literally and figuratively.

“All activities of the municipal government and its various departments” means the Assembly’s shadow mayor can walk into staff meetings or planning meetings without receiving permission. He or she can demand all plans that are being worked on by the executive branch.

The ordinance is being offered by Assembly Chair Suzanne LaFrance and Vice Chair Chris Constant. It’s apparent that the two leaders on the Assembly have the votes to pass the ordinance, which is, in effect, will create someone who shadows every move of the Bronson Administration so that the liberal Assembly can get ahead of the executive branch.

The “Bypass Bronson” ordinance can be read in full at this link:

Read: Deep state at municipality: Mayor can’t get rid of equity position without permission from Assembly

Anchorage School District may reinstate the mask mandate this fall for students, staff

The Anchorage School Board and Superintendent Deena Bishop have received up to 50 letters in what appears to be a stealth campaign coordinated by the local teachers’ union, Anchorage Education Association, asking for a mask mandate for all students and staff when school resumes this fall.

Dave Donley, a member of the Anchorage school board, said on the Mike Porcaro Show on 650 KENI radio that the mask mandate could be imminent, if parents don’t get involved. He has not been able to get a commitment from the superintendent one way or the other, he said.

Many of the letters coming into the school board have similar wording to them, and the letter writers are teachers or people who say they are parents.

Sources say that Superintendent Bishop may make a decision within a few days about whether students will be required to wear masks.

Some of the letters are citing a new recommendation from the American Academy of Pediatrics, which says children over the age of 2 should be masked in school this fall, even if they are vaccinated. That is not the guidance from the Centers for Disease Control.

The pediatricians organization in its updated guidelines says that an added benefit to wearing masks is that masks will slow down the transmission of other respiratory illnesses such as colds and flu.

Those with opinions on the matter may write to Bishop at [email protected] or to the school board at [email protected].

Read: Kodiak pre-K through grade 5 may be forced into masks again.

Alexander Dolitsky: United we stand, divided we fall with race, ethnicity in America

By ALEXANDER DOLITSKY

In the past, many of my students at Alyeska Central School, the former state correspondence school based in Juneau, and my students at the University of Alaska Southeast, asked me three essential sociological questions: (1) How to define ethnicity and race? (2) How do the two concepts differ? and (3) How to define the term “minority?” 

(1) Ethnicity is a social, communal category we use to identify our heritage based on religion, geographic location or culture. It comes from shared values, shared upbringing, cultural norms, and learned behavior. Race is very much like ethnicity in that way; it is based also on shared beliefs and shared experiences. We tend to think of race as biological or genetic, but race is also a social and culturally created phenomenon. 

(2) Ethnicity is usually more difficult to trace because when we look at someone, we can’t immediately categorize them in a certain ethnic group. I had students who thought that because they are not African-American, Latino, or Asian, they have no ethnic identity. It’s wrong; we all do.

Ethnicity allows for more inclusion (it may consist of many biological races), and race for more exclusion (only one biological race). A classic example is Israel, where there are Ethiopian Jews, German Jews, Russian Jews, Polish Jews, and all kind of Jews. The issue there is ethnicity more than it is race. Ethnicity is the glue holding that society together.

The glue that holds us together in the United States is that we all perceive ourselves as Americans, though that may mean different things to different people. There is no longer a need to feel as though everyone has to go into this big stew and become one big mush. Now it’s OK to taste the individual flavors of the potatoes, the carrots, and the peas. But there is a new taste, too. 

(3) Historically, the term ”minority” refers to a people who constitute less than 50% of a broader population and are identified as a racial or ethnic group. Often, they have been the target of unfair treatment and have suffered disadvantages as a result. Thus, most Americans with ethnic ties to Europe would not be considered minorities, except for American Jews, and, for example, someone like myself, a foreign-born political refugee, who has suffered a history of persecution by a former totalitarian regime.

For decades, minority groups and foreign-born American citizens have faced poverty, discrimination, and the prejudices of people who have viewed them as different, less than equal and threatening. Despite the fact that the American nation is a nation of immigrants, and America has been nourished throughout its history by ideals and traditions of different ethnic groups, this treatment often continues to prevail in our everyday life by means of direct and indirect ignorance, prejudices, and stereotypes.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau statistics of 2019, a little under 40% of the total population was either non-white or Hispanic; and minorities and new immigrants comprised about 55% of the labor force and 45% of all elementary and secondary school students in the United States. Actually, these non-white minority groups will comprise a majority of our population in about 25 years.

Taking these demographic data into account, core cultural values, norms of traditional behavior, moral principles and beliefs, and the ethnic landscape of our society are changing rapidly. It is imperative, however, to maintain and protect a cohesiveness, integrity and Judeo-Christian core cultural values of our diverse nation — a required necessity for cultural survival of any complex society. 

Indeed, in the last several decades in our country, neo-Marxist and socialist ideology aims to quietly penetrate our political, educational, social and cultural systems. Eventually, unless it’s opposed and reversed, this radical development will cause a complete breakdown of our core cultural and morals values.

As a prominent American anthropologist Ruth Benedict once stated: “The purpose of anthropology is to make the world safe for human differences.” Thus, to apply Benedict’s vision and words to today’s reality in America, prejudiced behavior, radical Marxist ideology and divisive rhetoric of “white privilege” and “critical race” doctrines, with its outgrowth of “Black Lives Matter,” “systemic racism,” “structural racism” and today’s “ANTIFA,” should not have a place in our political, educational and socio-economic systems. Certainly, these so-called progressive narratives should not be used to advance political agendas. 

I have always been fascinated by the phrase “United We Stand” and its subsequent juxtaposition “Divided We Fall.” Or, in the words of Abraham Lincoln, “A house divided against itself cannot stand.”

We are dangerously close to toppling our house.

All Americans must stand up and unite for Freedom, Liberty and Truth.

Alexander B. Dolitsky was born and raised in Kiev in the former Soviet Union. He received an M.A. in history from Kiev Pedagogical Institute, Ukraine, in 1976; an M.A. in anthropology and archaeology from Brown University in 1983; and was enroled in the Ph.D. program in Anthropology at Bryn Mawr College from 1983 to 1985, where he was also a lecturer in the Russian Center. In the U.S.S.R., he was a social studies teacher for three years, and an archaeologist for five years for the Ukranian Academy of Sciences. In 1978, he settled in the United States. Dolitsky visited Alaska for the first time in 1981, while conducting field research for graduate school at Brown. He lived first in Sitka in 1985 and then settled in Juneau in 1986. From 1985 to 1987, he was a U.S. Forest Service archaeologist and social scientist. He was an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Russian Studies at the University of Alaska Southeast from 1985 to 1999; Social Studies Instructor at the Alyeska Central School, Alaska Department of Education from 1988 to 2006; and has been the Director of the Alaska-Siberia Research Center (see www.aksrc.homestead.com) from 1990 to present. He has conducted about 30 field studies in various areas of the former Soviet Union (including Siberia), Central Asia, South America, Eastern Europe and the United States (including Alaska). Dolitsky has been a lecturer on the World Discoverer, Spirit of Oceanus, andClipper Odyssey vessels in the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions. He was the Project Manager for the WWII Alaska-Siberia Lend Lease Memorial, which was erected in Fairbanks in 2006. He has published extensively in the fields of anthropology, history, archaeology, and ethnography. His more recent publications include Fairy Tales and Myths of the Bering Strait Chukchi, Ancient Tales of Kamchatka; Tales and Legends of the Yupik Eskimos of Siberia; Old Russia in Modern America: Russian Old Believers in Alaska; Allies in Wartime: The Alaska-Siberia Airway During WWII; Spirit of the Siberian Tiger: Folktales of the Russian Far East; Living Wisdom of the Far North: Tales and Legends from Chukotka and Alaska; Pipeline to Russia; The Alaska-Siberia Air Route in WWII; and Old Russia in Modern America: Living Traditions of the Russian Old Believers; Ancient Tales of Chukotka, and Ancient Tales of Kamchatka.

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