John Freivalds New Book  Ramblin' Man is here!!  Click here for more details

Latvian-born Minnesota businessman, long wary of Russia, says consume more Stoli

 

Dean Ramos, Minneapolis-based regional director of the Latvian American Chamber of Commerce; Latvian Prime Minister Kirsjanis Karins; and Latvian-born Minnesota executive John Freivalds met with Minnesota investors in St. Paul on June 29.

 

Published July 8th, 2022

By Neal St. Anthony

Minneapolis Star Tribune

Latvian-born John Freivalds, Minnesota marketer and honorary consulate to Latvia, urges one way to support Russian-besieged Ukraine: buy "Stoli" vodka.

Stolichnaya vodka was created around 1940 in the Soviet Union, and produced by a state-run company. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, it became a private company, and after a dispute with the Russian government over trademark rights, major shareholder Yuri Shefler sold it to one of his other entities and moved production to Latvia.

Over the years, Stolichnaya was shortened to Stoli, and the company made it official in March, announcing a major rebranding while also condemning Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine and other human rights abuses.

Fast-growing Stoli Group, whose global CEO is now Damian McKinney, a former officer in the British Royal Marines, has donated millions from sale of a commemorative blue and yellow bottled Stoli that benefits Ukrainian humanitarian relief.

McKinney may visit Minnesota for a seminar planned by Carlisle Ford Runge, University of Minnesota professor of international economics and law. Runge wrote recently in Foreign Affairs that America and allies could trump the Russian blockade of Ukrainian wheat exports through expansion of the 2022 Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act through the World Food Program and the U.S. Commodity Credit Corp.

Freivalds, an energetic 78-year-old, predicted years ago in a book that Russia would eventually attack Ukraine and use food as a weapon.

He led a career that ranged from commodity trading to representing a Russian tie maker in the short period of the Mikhail Gorbachev presidency. However, state assets were divvied up among oligarchs by Gorbachev successors Boris Yeltsin and Putin. Crony capitalism triumphed.

And Putin has proven an enemy of internal dissent, free press and democratic states. That includes neighboring Baltic states of Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia.

The people of these tiny countries, free of Russian occupation for more than three decades thanks to the breakup of the former Soviet Union, worry they may be the next Putin takeover targets. They also belong to NATO, the globe's most-powerful military alliance of democracies. And they are members of the European Union, an integrated economy of almost 450 million people.

Freivalds and Dean Ramos, president of the Latvian American Chamber of Commerce's Minnesota region, last week welcomed Latvian Prime Minister Kirsjanis Karins to meetings with business and state officials in St. Paul.

Ramos, an investment executive, noted the Baltic states in 2021 had per-capita economic output of $34,067, compared with $13,908 for the 12 remaining Russian republics. Russia has an economy built on oil, gas and mining — extraction. Latvia's increasingly is based on value-added foods, electronics, manufacturing and forest industries.

"Latvia is a safe place [for investment]," Karins asserted, noting that is protected by its own and other NATO troops, including swelling ranks of Americans forces in Europe. And little Latvia is a proportionately huge donor to Ukrainian relief.

"Latvians demonstrate ingenuity by necessity," Karins said. "It's second nature to us. We are agile and nimble. The same cultural gene that makes us singers."

Indeed, thousands of Latvians and Latvian Americans gathered in St. Paul last week for the 15th Latvian Song and Dance Festival USA.

"Latvia looks to us and their diaspora for opportunity," said Ramos, 58, the son of Latvian and Mexican immigrants from North Dakota. "They can't do big China-type deals by dropping in on Washington, D.C. They go state by state. Latvia is small and aggressive.''

There are discussions among Latvian and Minnesota business and trade officials to further commercial ties in microelectronics, renewable energy and more.

Latvia, with only 2 million citizens, ranked as Minnesota's 63rd largest trading partner in 2021, at $8.9 million. Latvia's No. 1 import? Vodka at $3.5 million. Minnesota shipped $4.4 million worth of machinery, electrical equipment and cereal to Latvia.

Freivalds is an optimist who arrived penniless with his parents in the United States in the early 1950s aboard the USS Mercy. Freivalds, whose father ran the Latvian section of the Voice of America, is a graduate of Georgetown University and proud veteran of the Peace Corps.

He moved his family to Minnesota nearly 50 years ago to market low-cost Minnesota farm byproducts, such as beet pulp pellets, a high-protein low-fat animal feed. Freivalds is an energetic promoter of Minnesota, Latvia, Ukraine and human rights.

"If there is one ironic benefit to making Latvia better known, it has been the war in Ukraine," Freivalds said. "It has brought attention to NATO, fear that the Baltics would be next and that we should never take freedom for granted.

"At least now when I tell people I am Latvian, they don't say 'what's that?' ''

 

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Fascism in America: It’s Time to Use the ‘F’ Word to Describe Trump?

 

People at the "Families Belong Together: Freedom for Immigrants" march on Saturday in Los Angeles. Marchers gathered across in major cities and tiny towns across America to protest President Donald Trump's immigration policies. (Willy Sanjuan / Invision / AP)

Published 7/4/2018

By Bill Blum

Truthdig.com

Is Donald Trump a fascist? With each passing news cycle, more people here and abroad are asking the question.

On a trip to Berlin in early June, my wife and I were pressed for answers in spontaneous encounters with cab drivers, waiters, hotel clerks and sundry others. Regardless of occupation, everyone closely followed U.S. politics, and most had come to the conclusion that the American president had long ago crossed a dark ideological line.

The Berliners we spoke with (all fluent in English) were social-democratic types. Among them there were no members of the Alternative for Deutschland, the ultranationalist group that is now the third largest political party in Germany.

None were alive during the Nazi era, although a tour guide disclosed that her 99-year-old grandfather was still ticking and remained very much an admirer of the Third Reich. Some, however, had lived on the east side of the city during the Soviet era, which they recalled as a period of austere, soul-crushing conformity. They weren’t fans of capitalism, they said, but they understood the dangers of autocracy, past and present. How was it, they wondered, so many Americans did not?

We assured them that some Americans were, in fact, very worried about Trump, and a solid majority disapproved of him and his policies. I told the tour guide that as a columnist I had been comparing Trump with Benito Mussolini since the early days of his presidential campaign. Still, we conceded that for the most part, whether out of ignorance, timidity or a naive belief in the myth of exceptionalism, Americans were reluctant to consider whether their head of state actually is a fascist.

No more.

The issue of Trump’s fascism has finally reached center stage in the U.S., sparked by the administration’s shameful treatment of Central American refugees and its Gestapo-like “zero tolerance” policy on unauthorized border crossings.

On June 17, protesters at a Mexican restaurant in Washington, D.C., heckled White House aide Stephen Miller, widely credited as the principal architect of Trump’s immigration crackdown, as a fascist. Two days later, another group hurled Fascsimilar epithets at Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen, who like Miller had cluelessly chosen to dine Mexican.

Even liberal media pundits are throwing down the “F” word. Michelle Goldberg, for example, referred to “Trump’s fascist instincts” in her June 21 New York Times column on the separation of immigrant families.

In a June 24 op-ed for the Duluth News, iconoclastic writer and entrepreneur John Freivalds, who was born in Latvia and now lives in Minnesota, went further, charging,

“[I]n every dictionary definition I have come across, the president is a fascist. This label is not so much a pejorative as a fact.”

It doesn’t get much more heartland than the Duluth News.

Not everyone agrees with Goldberg and Freivalds, of course. Trump’s approval rating among Republicans stands at 87 percent. By and large, Republicans still see him as a champion of grass-roots democracy and an antidote to predatory corporate globalism.

Ironically, the president also has a small number of occasional defenders on the progressive left, who continue to view him, as some did during the campaign, as more likely to steer the world away from nuclear Armageddon than his defeated Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton.

Because of the gravity of the issue, debates about Trump’s fascism invariably devolve into heated emotional affairs, cleaved along racial and politically tribal lines. You’re either a patriot and support Trump’s promise to “make America great again” or you’re the opposite for failing to condemn him.

It may be impossible to set emotions aside entirely, but it’s not impossible to arrive at the truth, or at least to search for it through honest discourse. Although fascism, historically, is a complex ideology, it is as real today as a mass movement and a theory of governance as it was when Mussolini popularized the term in 1919.

Any rational discussion has to begin with a definition, and when it comes to fascism, there are many to examine. Among the most instructive is the one proffered by political scientist Robert Paxton in his classic study “The Anatomy of Fascism” (Harvard University Press, 2004):

“Fascism may be defined as a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victimhood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal restraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion.”

Drawing on the work of Italian novelist and professor Umberto Eco, Cameron Climie, a Canadian economist, listed 14 fluid characteristics of fascism in an essay published last year by the website Medium.com. They are:

  • A cult of traditionalism.
  • A rejection of modernism (cultural, rather than technological).
  • A cult of action for its own sake and a distrust of intellectualism.
  • A framing of disagreement or opposition as treasonous.
  • A fear of difference.  … Fascism is racist by definition.
  • An appeal to a frustrated middle class—either due to economic or political pressures from both above and below.
  • An obsession with the plots and machinations of the movement’s identified enemies.
  • A requirement that said enemies be simultaneously seen as omnipotent and weak, conniving and cowardly.
  • A rejection of pacifism. Life is permanent warfare.
  • Contempt for weakness.
  • A cult of heroism.
  • Hypermasculinity.
  • A selective populism, relying on chauvinist definitions of “the people” that it claims to speak for.
  • A heavy usage of Newspeak—impoverished vocabulary, elementary syntax and a resistance to complex and critical reasoning.

Reasonable minds can differ about whether Trump, now in the middle of the second year of his presidency, is a full-blown fascist or, to be more precise, moving in a fascist direction.

In a May 2017 article in Harper’s Magazine, Paxton contended that Trump had even by then displayed numerous “fascist staples,” such as his “deploring national decline, which he blames on foreigners and despised minorities; disdaining legal norms; condoning violence against dissenters; and rejecting anything that smacks of internationalism, whether it be trade, institutions, or existing treaties.” Nonetheless, he concluded that Trump’s pursuit of “unchecked executive power indicates generic dictatorship” and “plutocracy” rather than fascism in particular.

Perhaps the best way of understanding Trump’s fascism is as a work in progress, or a form of “pre-fascism.” As journalist Fintan O’Toole asserted last week in an Irish Times column:

To grasp what is going on in the world right now, we need to reflect on two things. One is that we are in a phase of trial runs. The other is that what is being trialed is fascism—a word that should be used carefully but not shirked when it is so clearly on the horizon. Forget “post-fascist”—what we are living with is pre-fascism.

It is easy to dismiss Donald Trump as an ignoramus, not least because he is. But he has an acute understanding of one thing: test marketing. …

Fascism doesn’t arise suddenly in an existing democracy. It is not easy to get people to give up their ideas of freedom and civility. You have to do trial runs that, if they are done well, serve two purposes. They get people used to something they may initially recoil from; and they allow you to refine and calibrate. This is what is happening now and we would be fools not to see it.

I couldn’t agree more. It’s time to start talking about Trump’s fascism, and holding him fully accountable under that rubric.

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 Orono resident named honorary consul for Latvia  

Orono resident John Freivalds was recently named honorary consul for Latvia.

 

Published 3/18/2019

Laker Pioneer-Orono, Mound, Spring Park, Long, Lake , Maple Plains, Minnetrista

By Diana Stein

John Freivalds, a longtime resident of Orono, was recently named the honorary consul for the country of Latvia.

“I will be the honorary consul for Latvia in Minnesota and it’s my job to make Latvia real,” Freivalds says. “The good part and the bad part of being the consul for Latvia is: nobody knows anything about Latvia, and therefore I have a chance to fill the vacuum.”

As an honorary consul, Freivalds is not a professional diplomat, but he has been appointed by Latvia and sanctioned by the U.S. State Department to promote the country, its people and its culture in Minnesota. 

A native of Latvia, Freivalds’ family fled the country when he was just an infant in 1944 near the end of World War II when Soviet Union troops invaded the Baltics.

“All of our neighbors in Latvia were sent to Siberia and our farmstead was burned down. Our family’s choice to flee was a no brainer: my father was a journalist and wore glasses. Stalin sent people to the Gulag who wore glasses for that meant they read and are therefore a danger. My father later become the chief of the Latvian Service of the Voice of America and used an alias so that relatives back home would not be sent to Siberia or shot,” Freivalds recounted in a speech to the Minneapolis Area Foreign Relations Council.

In the U.S., Freivalds found success in business, and he has championed the country of Latvia and worked to promote business opportunities here and abroad.

When an ambassador mentioned to a mutual friend that Latvia was looking for a consul in Minnesota, Freivalds’ name came up and, “here I am,” he says.

“We’ve got a diplomatic corps in the Twin Cities of 32 countries, which is pretty wild,” he notes. 

Latvia is about 24,000 square miles or about 40 percent of the land area of Iowa with a population of about 2.5 million people. It borders the Baltic Sea and Estonia, Lithuania, Belarus and Russia.

To most Minnesotans, Latvia is a small, little-known country in Eastern Europe, but Freivalds says it has a thriving democracy and companies like 3M and Radisson hotels are already doing business there. Even Russian companies like the iconic vodka distiller Stolichnaya have moved their headquarters to Latvia and can be found in most restaurants and stores in Minnesota.

A reception will be held on March 28 at the American Swedish Institute to formally introduce the Latvian consulate in Minnesota. Freivalds will be joined by Ambassador Andris Teikmanis and Economic Counselor Arvils Zeltins.

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2 outlets have picked up on the Schmooze Bowl Story!!

Click below to read each version!!

   

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