Yesterday, July 4th, was Independence Day in the United States — the 250th anniversary of the founding of a nation that would one day become the world’s model of what a democracy can be, and a welcoming refuge for victims of persecution from all corners of the world.

But this year’s celebrations were muted by the unmistakable signs of a growing threat of tyranny in our own house, even as we claim to oppose authoritarian regimes in other lands. And I ask myself how we can criticize those others when our own people are losing their jobs for opposing the official government line, or being locked up for appearing to be of the “wrong” ethnicity.
Still, we have not yet sunk to the level of totalitarianism; and as long as our courts continue to uphold the laws of the nation, and the majority of people continue to fight the evil forces that threaten to overtake us, there is hope that we will emerge from these times of trouble better, stronger, and wiser than before.
But it remains obvious that my country’s problems should in no way distract us from the suffering of the hostages of other blatantly corrupt systems. So, in solidarity with those prisoners of the Putin regime, I share the enduring spirit of this holiday — a day dedicated to freedom and independence — with the following political prisoners, and with all of the others whose names I do not know:
*. *. *
Prisoners of War:
The 20,000+ Kidnapped Ukrainian Children
The People of Ukraine
Immigrant Detainees in Russia:
Migrants from the Central Asian nations of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan
Endangered Exiles:
Pavel “Pasha” Talankin
Mikita Losik
Yulia Navalnaya
Oleg Orlov
Countless Journalists and Other Dissidents
Political Prisoners:
In Afghanistan:
Mahmoud Habibi (Afghan-American)
Paul Overby (American, missing since 2018)
In Azerbaijan:
The “Azerbaijan 7”:
– Farid Mehralizada
– Ulvi Hasanli
– Sevinj Abbasova (Vagifqiai)
– Mahammad Kekalov
– Hafiz Babali
– Nargiz Absalamova
– Elnara Gasimova
In Belarus:
Andrei Chapiuk
Uladzimir Labkovich
Andrzej Poczobut
Marfa Rabkova
Valiantsin Stafanovic
Yuras Zyankovich
In Georgia:
Mzia Amaglobeli
In Russia:
The “Crimea 8”:
– Oleg Antipov
– Artyom Azatyan
– Georgy Azatyan
– Aleksandr Bylin
– Roman Solomko
– Artur Terchanyan
– Dmitry Tyazhelykh
– Vladimir Zloba
James Scott Rhys Anderson (British)
Aleksandr Andreyev
David Barnes (American)
Yevgenia Berkovich
Gordon Black (American)
Hayden Davies (British)
Yury Dmitriyev
Anastasia Dyudyaeva
Antonina Favorskaya
Konstantin Gabov
Robert Gilman (American)
Stephen James Hubbard (American)
Sergey Karelin
Timur Kishukov
Vadim Kobzev
Darya Kozyreva
Artyom Kriger
Michael Travis Leake (American)
Aleksei Liptser
Mikhail Loshchinin
Grigory Melkonyants
Nika NovakSvetlana Petriichuk
Leonid Pshenychnov (in Russian-occupied Crimea)
Nadezhda Rossinskaya (a.k.a. Nadin Geisler)
Lev Schlossberg
Sofiane Sehili (French)
Igor Sergunin
Dmitry Shatresov
Robert Shonov
Grigory Skvortsov
Eugene Spector (American)
Joseph Tater (American, disappeared)Karina Tsurkan
Laurent Vinatier
Robert Romanov Woodland (American)
You have not been, and will not be, forgotten. Stay strong.

Just sayin’ . . .
Brendochka
7/5/26