Ukraine war victims glad Americans voted their conscience

“It’s just so inspiring and reassuring to see the pro-life vote out in force,” said Oksana Petrenko, a six-year-old from Mariupol.

 Kidnapped war orphansshattered parentsdeeply scarred veterans, and other victims of Russia’s horrifyingunprovokedimmoralunlawful invasion and occupation of Ukraine agreed this week that they are glad voters in key states in the U.S. election voted their conscience.

“It’s just so inspiring and reassuring to see the pro-life vote out in force,” said Oksana Petrenko, a six-year-old from Mariupol whose memories of her real parents and siblings fade more each day in her dark Siberian bedroom. 

“I am sure the new American President will honor the spirit of this movement by protecting the millions of innocent children still cowering in the face of Russia’s disgusting onslaught,” she added.

Oleksiy Shevchenko, whose wife and infant child were murdered in a targeted Russian strike, agreed, saying, “I’m glad I’m not the only one who would stop at nothing to halt the murder of innocents – wherever they are, and whether I know them or not.”

Others expressed deep gratitude for what they see as American voters’ clear ability to discern what issues matter most.

“I am so relieved that a small handful of Americans won’t have to suffer the injustice of watching their son or daughter lose a youth sports match to a transgender child — the real menace of our time,” said Capt. Dmytro Kovalenko as he inventoried his dwindling supply of U.S.-supplied ammunition and contemplated how he would stop his ruthless enemies from consuming more of his country.

“It’s also great to see that so many Americans understand how a tariff works,” agreed Kovalenko’s second-in-command, Lt. Olena Chernysh. “It’s good to know that they didn’t vote against themselves — and in so doing, satisfy Vladimir Putin, who J.D. Vance calls the worst since Hitler — just because they have too much hubris to admit that they don’t understand something,” she added while returning fire on a Russian human-wave attack.

It is evident across Ukraine that the American voter continues to command respect and reverence abroad.

“It’s obvious that voters in America are reading the history books,” said Andriy Melnyk, a professor who has been poisoned by Russians for speaking in favor of his country joining the European Union and NATO. 

“They seem to keenly understand that it is fine to have as President a man who bafflingly admires and flatters his country’s greatest adversary, whose deputy openly argues in favor of the same kind of appeasement the led up to the second world war, and whose closest advisors want to see the dissolution of the alliance that vanquished the Soviet Union and prevented global war for the better part of a century, as long as that man will own the libs.”