Sunday, June 28, 2026

Pastor Carl Ruby highlights the severe trauma experienced by Haitian immigrants facing potential deportation


Pastor Carl Ruby of Springfield, Ohio, appeared on ⁠CNN to highlight the severe trauma experienced by Haitian immigrants facing potential deportation. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
He recounted a heartbreaking conversation with a 12-year-old Haitian child in his church's children's program. While discussing farm animals, the young boy very soberly detailed seeing "huge pigs" or feral hogs eating human bodies in his homeland. Other members of the community later confirmed that these are real horrors children have witnessed amid ongoing gang violence in Haiti. [1, 2, 3, 4]
Context of the CNN Appearance
  • The TPS Ruling: The pastor's remarks followed a Supreme Court decision allowing the removal of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) protections for roughly 350,000 Haitian immigrants. [1]
  • The Threat of Deportation: Pastor Ruby used the child’s story to illustrate the extreme danger and violence families are terrified of being sent back to. [1, 2]
  • Impact on Springfield: As senior pastor of Central Christian Church, Ruby has actively advocated for the large legal Haitian immigrant population that helped revitalize his community. [1, 2]
  • Re-traumatization: Ruby emphasized that forcing these deeply traumatized children out of the U.S. will permanently re-traumatize them. [1, 2]

The full segment and additional details on his community advocacy can be viewed via ⁠CNN's Video Coverage. [1]



More about the Venezuela earthquakes

The Venezuela tragedy is made worse by a shortage of cranes and other large equipment resulting from restrictions several years ago by an executive order by Trump in his first term.

Broad economic sanctions issued via executive orders by Donald Trump during his first term—specifically ⁠Executive Order 13884 in 2019—prohibited U.S. persons and companies from dealing with the Government of Venezuela, freezing its assets and cutting off access to crucial heavy industrial machinery and replacement parts. [1, 2, 3]
The systemic impact of these long-standing restrictions on heavy equipment has directly aggravated the logistical disaster unfolding after the massive back-to-back 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes that devastated Caracas and northern Venezuela. [1, 2, 3, 4]
How Sanctions Worsened the Equipment Shortage
  • Import Blockades: For nearly a decade, the ⁠strict embargo on Venezuela’s state-owned energy sector and government entities blocked the country from legally purchasing, servicing, or importing American-made industrial hardware. [1, 2, 3]
  • Maintenance Collapse: Specialized heavy-duty machinery—including industrial cranes, excavators, and heavy transport vehicles—sat broken for years due to a total block on importing proprietary spare parts. [1]
  • Underinvestment: Long-term restrictions choked off oil revenues, leaving the domestic power grid, roads, and emergency response infrastructure crumbling well before the disaster struck. [1, 2]
The On-the-Ground Disaster Context
  • Overwhelming Casualties: The back-to-back earthquakes leveled buildings and infrastructure across the capital region, leaving over 900 dead, thousands injured, and tens of thousands missing. [1, 2]
  • Hindered Rescue Efforts: Local humanitarians and observers note that the severe shortage of specialized cranes and excavation tools has forced citizens to conduct searches for trapped survivors by hand, drastically lowering survival chances. [1, 2]
  • U.S. Pivot to Emergency Aid: Amidst the devastation and the ongoing geopolitical shifts following the capture of Nicolás Maduro earlier in the year, the Trump administration has deployed a ⁠Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) and pledged $150 million in humanitarian aid to assist with search-and-rescue logistics. [1, 2, 3]



Saturday, June 27, 2026

How did the Nazi influence penetrate Ukraine?

 

Nazi influence entered Ukraine primarily through the catastrophic intersection of Soviet oppression and Nazi Germany’s military invasion in 1941. [1]
The penetration of Nazi influence was not a sudden ideological conversion, but a complex historical process driven by three main factors:
1. The Trap of "The Enemy of My Enemy"
  • Soviet Trauma: Having just survived the Holodomor (1932–1933) and Stalin's Great Purge (1937–1938), millions of Ukrainians deeply hated the Soviet regime.
  • False Liberators: When Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941 (Operation Barbarossa), some Ukrainians initially viewed the advancing German army as liberators from Soviet tyranny. [1, 2]
  • Misplaced Hope: Certain nationalist factions mistakenly believed the Germans would help them establish an independent Ukrainian state free from Moscow's rule. [1]
2. Radical Nationalist Factions
  • The OUN: The Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, particularly the radical wing led by Stepan Bandera (OUN-B), sought to exploit the German-Soviet war. [1]
  • Collusion and Betrayal: Hoping to secure independence, elements of the OUN initially collaborated with Nazi forces. However, when the OUN declared an independent Ukrainian state in June 1941, the Nazis immediately crushed the movement, arresting and imprisoning Bandera in a concentration camp. [1, 2]
  • Shifting Alliances: Following the Nazi betrayal, Ukrainian nationalist forces fractured. Some actively collaborated with the Nazis in horrific war crimes and the Holocaust, while others fought a brutal multi-front guerrilla war against both the Nazi occupiers and the returning Soviet Red Army.
3. Brutal Military Occupation
  • Total Subjugation: Nazi influence was ultimately forced upon Ukraine through the establishment of the Reichskommissariat Ukraine, a brutal colonial occupation regime. [1, 2]
  • The Holocaust by Bullets: Nazi death squads (Einsatzgruppen) penetrated deep into Ukrainian territory, brutally murdering more than one million Ukrainian Jews, often utilizing local auxiliary police units to carry out the genocide.
  • The "Ostarbeiter" Program: Nazi influence also took the form of economic enslavement, as the Germans forcibly deported over two million Ukrainians to Germany to work as forced laborers (Ostarbeiter). [1, 2]

What is the backstory of the Azov Brigade?

The Azov Brigade (formerly the Azov Battalion) evolved from a controversial, self-funded far-right volunteer militia into one of the most elite and highly decorated conventional units in the Ukrainian military. [1, 2]
Its backstory is defined by a distinct separation between its extremist origins and its subsequent military institutionalization. [1, 2]
1. 2014: Extremist Origins and the "Black Corps"
  • The Catalyst: Following the 2014 Euromaidan revolution, Russia annexed Crimea and instigated a separatist war in eastern Ukraine's Donbas region. The hollowed-out Ukrainian military was unprepared, leading to the rise of volunteer civilian militias. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • The Founders: Founded in May 2014 in Berdiansk, the unit was initially led by Andriy Biletsky. Biletsky was the leader of the ultra-nationalist and white supremacist organizations Patriot of Ukraine and the Social-National Assembly. [1, 2, 3]
  • The Ranks: The early group, often called the "Black Corps," drew its ranks from far-right radicals, football ultras, and nationalist activists. [1, 2]
  • The Imagery: The unit adopted symbols heavily linked to Nazi Germany, most notably the Wolfsangel (resembling a mirrored Nazi tactical symbol) and the Black Sun. Because of these ties and allegations of early civilian abuses, the group was widely designated by Western researchers as a neo-Nazi militia. [1, 2, 3]
2. 2014–2021: De-Radicalization and Military Integration
  • First Battle of Mariupol (2014): Despite their toxic ideology, the militia proved to be highly effective fighters. In June 2014, they played a pivotal role in recapturing the strategic port city of Mariupol from Russian-backed separatists. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
  • State Absorption: Recognizing their battlefield utility, the Ukrainian government officially integrated the battalion into the National Guard of Ukraine in November 2014, upgrading it to the "Azov Regiment." [1, 2]
  • The Cleansing of Politics: State integration forced a major shift. Military law prohibited active service members from political affiliation. The radical founders, including Biletsky, were forced out of the military unit entirely, leaving to form a separate far-right political group called the National Corps. [1, 2]
  • Professionalization: Under new military leadership appointed by Kyiv, the regiment went through a multi-year overhaul. Extremist leaders were filtered out, recruitment criteria became highly selective, and the unit became a professionalized, apolitical special operations force. [1, 2]
3. 2022–Present: The Siege of Azovstal and Modern Status
  • The Siege of Mariupol (2022): During Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Azov became a household name globally. Alongside other Ukrainian forces, they held out for nearly three months inside the subterranean tunnels of the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works. Their desperate, televised defense turned the remaining Azov troops into national symbols of resistance, completely overshadowing their early political history within Ukraine.
  • Expansion into a Brigade: In early 2023, the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs officially expanded the regiment into the 12th Special Forces Brigade Azov to lead counter-offensive operations.
  • Expansion to a Corps (2025–2026): Reflecting its combat status, the brigade expanded even further. By mid-2025, Azov's prominent veteran commanders were promoted to lead the newly formed 1st Azov Corps, which oversees multiple combat brigades and elite special forces units. [1, 3, 4, 5]
The Modern Narrative Conflict
The backstory of Azov remains a major focal point in the information war. For Russia, the unit’s 2014 neo-Nazi roots and original insignia are heavily leveraged in state propaganda to falsely justify the entire invasion as a "denazification" campaign. For Ukraine and its Western allies, the modern Azov Brigade is viewed strictly as a highly disciplined, conventional elite military unit whose rank-and-file are motivated by national defense rather than the fringe ideology of its 2014 founders.