By Peter Robinson, Nov. 5, 2014, The Intercollegiate Review - In retrospect, what event fails to suggest a certain inevitability about
itself, conveying the sense that because it happened it had to have
happened? Twenty-five years ago this week, the Berlin Wall finally fell.
Of course it did. How could it have remained in place a day longer? For
that matter, how could the Soviet Union itself have failed to fall? How
could the Cold War have ended any other way than in a victory for the
West? History preserves only the events that took place, permitting the
alternatives—the contingencies and near misses—to fade, disappearing
completely in the end.
....
No matter how it may seem in retrospect, there was nothing inevitable
about the event that took place twenty-five years ago this week. The
fall of the Berlin Wall took place because certain men and women—people
including Pope John Paul II, Margaret Thatcher, Lech Walesa, and Ronald
Reagan—took certain specific actions, demonstrating their capacity for
reason and courage. And that, really, is why we study history: to remind
ourselves that if those who went before us could do the right thing,
then we can do no less ourselves. (read more)
Comment: The fall of the Berlin wall was the most monumental positive things to have happened in my lifetime. The cold war did not have to end the way it did. We could still be fighting the cold war with a shrinking number of free nations and spreading totalitarianism, or worse yet the war could have ended in a nuclear holocaust. I know we have our difficulties now, but nothing compared to the dangers we faced when the Communist movement led by the Soviet Union was determined to conquer the world.

It's a great story. I hope everyone will read the full piece by Robinson, who wrote the speech. The book is excellent and a very touching memoir of his years working for Ronaldus Maximus.
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