
[N]othing has more distinguished and dignified our age than the struggle for human rights and freedom in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. It was a campaign conducted against tremendous, sometimes overwhelming odds; it demanded courage and conviction of the highest order….
When freedom triumphed, it was with astonishing speed. Five months ago, we were protesting at your arrest. Two months ago, we were celebrating your election as President. Today, we welcome you here as leader of your country. Rarely in history can the power of ideals have been more convincingly demonstrated.
Margaret Thatcher’s memorable address to the Polish government and President Lech Wałęsa, delivered in March of 1990, has a special significance today, as we await President Trump’s second inauguration.
On January 19, 2025, I arrived near the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., in the hope of attending Trump’s Victory Rally. I naively assumed that reaching my destination five hours before the start of the rally would be sufficiently early in order to enter the 20,000-seat stadium on time. Upon nearing the Arena around 10 AM, our group was directed to find the end of the line. We walked all the way from 7th to 3rd Street, then back to 4th, until we finally managed to locate what looked like the end of one of several, seemingly endless, queues.
I can easily tolerate even tropical heat but have never been a fan of sub-freezing temperatures. Never in my entire life had I seen such a lengthy line, although I grew up under communism where interminable queues were a daily occurrence. We met people from all over the United States, including numerous Californians. Tourists flocked from around the world, some of whom had made, and paid for, their trip especially for the occasion. After seven hours of standing outdoors, assaulted by intermittent sleet, winds, and snow, we approached the Arena at last, but the entrance was already closed since the venue had been filled to capacity. Despite not being able to attend in person, we walked away with an exhilarating sense of optimism, joy, and belonging to something momentous.
Yesterday’s experience closely reminded me of a rally I attended in 1990, on the eve of Bulgaria’s first free elections after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Sofia’s biggest highway was brimming with people from all over the country, whose entire beings radiated a contagious sense of freedom and hopefulness. Both yesterday and 35 years ago, I was astonished by the patience, kindness, and euphoria of the rally-goers, who smilingly made room for passers-by and greeted strangers as though they were beloved long-lost friends and brothers.
I can’t help but compare the 1990s in Eastern Europe with the American revival we are presently witnessing, especially after last November’s elections. In both cases, it was a matter of a civilizational choice and the survival of Western values. In both cases, it was a battle against an insidious, all-encompassing, and highly deceptive leftist indoctrination. And in both cases, the battle for the soul of the West is still raging. It is not going to be brief or easy. But it is absolutely worth it.
Like Thatcher’s prophetic words in Poland in 1990, Churchill’s 1950 speech, titled “This Is Freedom,” is equally meaningful today, when applied to the fateful choice American people have made—a choice favoring common sense, sanity, and liberty:
The ordinary Briton wants nothing so much as to be left to go his own way, to get on with his job in life, to enjoy himself according to his own lights, to spend his own money as he thinks fit, to give his children a good home and a rather better start in life than he had himself, and to do his duty as a citizen to the community. This is the sort of life that our people seek. This is what they mean by freedom. This is what Conservatives and Liberals mean by freedom, and it is the basis of all our policies. It is commonsense. How far removed from this is the Socialists’ regimented Utopia of which we have had a foretaste during these past five years!
However, we may rely on the good judgment and commonsense of the British people. Slowly, with great determination, they veer back into the natural way they want to go. It is only those societies in which the free way of life is predominant that have the will and the power to make sacrifices for the nation in the hour of danger…
It is no coincidence that today’s inauguration is going to be widely and warmly celebrated, despite the arctic freeze, both in America and in Eastern Europe. May it bring everything good that we voted for—both for America and the world at large!
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Nora D. Clinton was born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. She holds a PhD in Classics and has published extensively on ancient documents on stone. In 2020, she authored the popular memoir Quarantine Reflections Across Two Worlds. Nora is a co-founder of two partner charities dedicated to academic cooperation and American values. She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and son.

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Comments
History may not repeat itself, but it certainly rhymes.
The only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history.
Yes, this leader has the will and the strength to end the internationalist, pluto-democracy, and rid our nation of the vermin who have infected our heritage.
Thank you for sharing the spirit. Celebrate Freedom!
When I attended a Trump rally, the hours spent in line were in some ways more invigorating and entertaining than the actual event. A real sense of camaraderie and brotherhood.
“Rally”? Cue up Joy Reid bloviating about Nuremberg.
Ideally she’ll soon be doing her bloviating from a soapbox in a park somewhere while pigeons fly away from fear of the screeching sound.
She hasn’t even figured out Super Mario.
Thank you for sharing this, Nora. As the oldest guy in most rooms, I am surprised to find myself feeling the same way, as we appear as a country to have walked back from a precipice. It’s emotional.
Redhats have very short memories. It’s like 8 years ago never happened.No wall paid by Mexico, No health care plan,no deficit reduction, no 4 % GDP. .He’s such an asshole nobody can stand working for him, so this time he’s stacked his administration with like -minded ,unqualified assholes. MAGA flunkies.
It’s like you live in a different reality.
The wall was getting built (these things don’t just appear), and Mexico was paying for it. Not by writing a check, but by ‘remain in Mexico’ and trade concessions.
Weird how you vaxxies ignore operation warp speed when it’s convenient. But yes, there was a health plan, and it was being implemented, and then you people released a plague and staged a coup.
And why did you release that plague? Because things were going so well that Trump was going to walk to re-election. You people put endless articles out about how America needed a plague or a recession or a disaster of some type that could stop Trump from getting re-elected.
So you killed millions.
AGAIN.
And we have no idea what the GDP is. The damned thing gets recalibrated so often for political ends that the number is next to meaningless.
But we could buy eggs. And gas. And didn’t have stores with bizarrely empty shelves.
You lost. Popularly and electorally.
The people of the US said shut the hell up.
So why not do that, and go find a fire to f off and…..
That’s cult answer if ever there was one.Full of outright lies and kooky conspiracies. HAHAHA.
riiiiight GDP was actually 4 % but the ‘deep state ‘fudged the figures. (thought he supposed to rid of that deep state. What happened?
Trump didn’t cut back on illegal immigration either.
https://www.cato.org/blog/president-trump-reduced-legal-immigration-he-did-not-reduce-illegal-immigration
Here’s the comical irony. The one thing Trump could legitimately take credit for-operation warp speed- his goober cult followers wouldn’t get ‘the jab’.