AmericaFeaturedFilmIn Print Fall 2025

What Happened to America? | The American Spectator

Sunday
A typical Sunday morning. Dreadful pain from intestinal issues. For most of my life, I could address this nightmare with stomach meds, especially paregoric. Today, thanks to the draconian “War on Drugs,” which is really a “War on the Elderly,” I am immobilized for hours at a time and made to drink gallons of herbal tea. That last part was a tip from my super smart sister. 
Then off across to the east side to see a movie at the American Cinematheque in what was once a chic corner of LA. Now, not so much. Block after block is filled with empty storefronts. And why not? Why drive across town past this depressing landscape when I could go online to Amazon and buy whatever I want? Yes, it makes for a lonely life. But it also makes for saving time and money.
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When my pal and nurse and I got to the theater, we met up with my real estate agent, Anya, and settled in to watch a classic I first saw about forty-five years ago — Kanał — the Polish word for sewer. It is a black and white drama about Polish Resistance fighters who, on August 1, 1944, rose against their Nazi captors. At first, they drove out most of their German tormentors. Stalin’s Red Army was encamped just across the Vistula River from Warsaw, where most of the fighting took place. The insurgents and the Brits thought that Stalin would help the Polish Liberation Army to finish off the Nazis. They at least thought he would help the Poles by allowing them to receive large amounts of British and American arms and men. 
That did not happen.
Instead, Stalin allowed the Nazis to be reinforced and supported by the Luftwaffe, with Stukas used to divebomb Warsaw and the Poles.
In about six weeks, it was all over. The remaining Poles, numbering fewer than one hundred men, hid out in sewers. Despite the stunning courage of the Poles, it was a slaughter.
Depressing as hell. It tells us all too much about Stalin and Russia and c…

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