Volunteers in Ukraine Are Stepping Up Where the Government Is Failing
"It was learning by doing," says one ambulance driver. "Most things that happen here are done by volunteers, not government officials."

When Russia attacked Ukraine, "experts" said the country would fall within days.
It hasn't.
One reason is that the Russian military wasn't as effective as people thought.
Another is that Ukrainians surprised the world by courageously defending their country.
A third reason is that volunteers from everywhere stepped in to help.
People with combat experience joined Ukraine's Foreign Legion. Doctors, nurses, and others with medical experience are keeping the country's health care system going. Several thousand others do humanitarian work, like distributing food and medicine.
For my video this week, Stossel TV executive producer Maxim Lott went to Ukraine to record them at work.
He rode along with ambulance driver Didrik Gunnestad, a 27-year-old volunteer from Norway. Gunnestad delivered supplies, and then he drove sick people out of dangerous areas.
"It was learning by doing," he says. Ambulances were desperately needed. "Most things that happen here are done by volunteers, not government officials."
Tom Palmer, an American with the Atlas Network think tank, raised more than $1 million in aid for Ukraine. He flew it to Poland and then drove some of it into Ukraine himself. He worked with Ukrainian volunteers to find out where aid was most needed.
"It was just astonishing to see this network emerge," says Palmer. "It wasn't centrally directed….[Volunteers] solved a lot of micro problems that big hierarchies can't see."
The volunteers also reduce waste.
"There is a lot of loss [in big charities like the Red Cross]," says Gunnestad. "Not that someone is skimming off the top; it's just the cost of being a big organization."
Governments are even more bureaucratic.
Poland's government does want to help Ukraine, but its bureaucracy often makes it hard. When Gunnestad and Lott went to a depot where Gunnestad had previously picked up donated goods, they found that the bureaucracy had changed the rules. Now Gunnestad was supposed to write a letter to the Polish government to get supplies. Since they didn't have time to wait, they left empty-handed.
Even the Ukrainian government makes it needlessly hard for volunteers to deliver goods. They force most everyone to wait in long lines at the borders. When Lott and Gunnestad crossed this summer, there were still mile-long lines.
Ambulances, at least, are generally allowed to skip the line.
"But sometimes there's a guard who doesn't like it," says Gunnestad. "We have had patients almost dying because of guards like that."
As he drove past the long line of trucks, he sighed and said, "I feel so sorry for the drivers of the trucks. Some could be in line for days, or even a week!"
Many of those truckers are trying to bring in needed supplies, but "they were only allowing 400 Ukrainian trucks per day," says Palmer. "That's just nothing. Why couldn't they bring in more? If you need to inspect them, get more inspectors!"
The bureaucracy didn't.
"You have maybe seven checkpoints, but only two are open," complains Gunnestad. "They could at least open all seven."
Lott notes, "Volunteers can't do everything. They don't supply the military or provide fuel. But they are saving lives."
For example, Gunnestad's team picks up patients at overburdened hospitals and takes them to less busy facilities.
They also deliver supplies to neglected Ukrainian hospitals. Gunnestad says small hospitals often get nothing from the government or the Red Cross. "We have a chance to help places that's forgotten," he says.
You can help Gunnestad do this work by donating to his GoFundMe page. It's a way to help Ukrainians without taking the risks that Gunnestad does.
His ambulance has been hit with bullets. Fortunately, no volunteer has been hit.
"I always have been the person who runs into dangerous situations," he says. "I think this work is so meaningful that I'm willing to die for it."
COPYRIGHT 2022 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.
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The "news" emanating from Ukraine is 'war news' who ever is reporting it is biased in the extreme.
Suffice to say, regardless of supposed Ukrainian government 'neo-nazism', they did not invade Russia; the opposite happened.
Regardless of that germane issue, none of this is of interest to the US; perhaps the Euros might learn what the cost of defense means.
For "Euros" the cost of defense in two world wars has been borne by the US taxpayer and soldier.
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What do you mean government bureaucracy doesn't *create* human resources?? I'm reminded every 10-minutes here in the USA by Demonrats that all human resources can only be supplied by government bureaucracy and how those 'evil' people (i.e. creators) need to be shut-down, robbed and conquered to keep only the Gov-Gods of government bureaucracy in the ?supply? chain...
They still haven't figured out that *all* human resources aren't produced by Gov-Guns and that Gov-Guns only resource is ensuring Liberty and Justice.
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When Russia attacked Ukraine, "experts" said the country would fall within days.
It hasn't.
One reason is that the Russian military wasn't as effective as people thought.
Vacuous politicizing is vacuous. The heroes heroism should stand regardless of what experts think and how competent the Russian military is. I agree that the Russian military is incompetent but, again, the heroes should be heroes whether the bullets are flying at them are well-aimed or not. Any expert that thought Russia would effortlessly topple the Ukraine was a moron whether Russia invaded or not.
When Russia attacked Ukraine, "experts" said the country would fall within days.
What experts said that? It was my read that the experts said that Russia was doomed, it was stalled out on the road to Kyifffffuh, the plucky Ukrainians would have the Russians beaten back to Moscow within three months and the Ruble would be "Rubble".
Yeah this is sort of moving those goalposts. War doesn't move as fast as the internet. They don't end in weeks. Ask George Bush and his 'MISSION ACCOMPLISHED' banner.
Well, when Russia invaded Crimea plenty of people *completely* dismissed the Ukraine and were immediately concerned with Poland. But that's stretching even the figurative use of [quotes]experts[/quotes].
LOL
https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1559567600518053888?t=fTe5SNnr0H0-VsNNGKzMtg&s=19
Zelensky explains why government didn’t warn Ukrainians about Russian invasion.
In his interview with the Washington Post, President Volodymyr Zelensky said that if he had warned Ukrainians about the Russian invasion in advance, Russia would have captured Ukraine in 3 days.
Well, he prevented that by stopping people from leaving!
"Look, if I didn't have all these human shields to throw at the Russians and put up in hospitals or schools, this whole thing would've been over too quickly for the trillion dollar embezzlement scheme we came up with in Davos to work right. C'mon, covid and climate change can't do all the work!"