If you donât heed this warning and take specific actions with your money now â I fear youâll regret it for the rest of your life. [Web version]( | [Unsubscribe]( [Online Investing Daily]( At times, our affiliate partners reach out to the Editors at Online Investing Daily with special opportunities for our readers. The message below is one we think you should take a close, serious look at. Dear Reader, A looming financial event will soon devastate millions of hardworking Americans. Itâs an event I call ... the âMiddle-Class Massacre.â Because itâs the policeman and plumbers, engineers and electricians, firemen and farmers. The small business owners, teachers and contractors who will be hit the hardest. When it strikes, and all my research proves it will strike in 2023, I predict stocks will crash ... real estate will plummet ... and unemployment will surge to record highs. And the wealth of millions will be decimated as the biggest bubble in history bursts. If you donât [heed this warning]( and take specific actions with your money now â I fear youâll regret it for the rest of your life. Whether you have money in stocks, real estate or even stuffed under your mattress â itâs all at risk. [Video preview]( [Full details here.]( Regards, [Signature] Ian King
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If you would like to unsubscribe from receiving offers for Alpha Investor Report, please [click here.]( This offer is brought to you by Online Investing Daily. 221 W 9th St # Wilmington, DE 19801. If you would like to unsubscribe from receiving offers brought to you by Online Investing Daily [click here.]( © 2023 Online Investing Daily. All Rights Reserved. Keep up to date with the world of investing and finance by [whitelisting us](. [Privacy Policy]( | [Terms & Conditions]( | [Unsubscribe]( Her real name was Larysa Petrivna Kosach. âLesya Ukrainkaâ was a carefully considered pseudonym, one that spoke volumes about the Ukrainian authorâs dominant priority in both her personal and artistic endeavorsâthe preservation and evolution of her countryâs language and literature. Her noble face appears on the 200 Ukrainian Hryvnias banknote, a symbol of her triumph. She left behind a legacy of poems, plays, and essays that solidified her influence on anything and everything in printed form. Who Was Lesya Ukrainka? Ukrainka was born in 1871, in the town of Novohrad-Volynskyi, to a close-knit, intellectually accomplished, and patriotic family. Her mother, Otha Drahomanova-Kosach, was a respected literary figure, a composer of elegant poetry and childrenâs stories. Ukrainkaâs father, Petro Antonovych Kosach, was a landowner and activist of considerable means, which he used to campaign for Ukrainian nationalism, against the Russian tsarist autocracy that held control over his country at the time. The Kosach familyâs entire domestic life was dedicated to the cause. Ukrainka and her siblings were educated at home by their parents and a selection of private tutors, and were taught to read and write Ukrainian. This privilege would have been denied them had they been sent to a conventional elementary school, where Russian was the prevailing language of the education system. Secondary languages were not only excluded, but aggressively forbidden and tied to brutal consequences if spoken or written by students or their parents. Ukrainkaâs father, fearing the permanent erasure of Ukrainian in print, funded publications out of his own pocket. It was from her parents that Ukrainka would learn that literature and politics were tightly entwined and impossible to unravel; to commit oneself to books and learning was to also commit oneself to social-progressive enterprises. A writer had to wield their pen with purpose, and publishers had a moral obligation to produce works that made a difference. Ukrainkaâs mother also taught her children to draw inspiration and pride for their native soil outside of the classroom. Ukrainkaâs mother also taught her children to draw inspiration and pride for their native soil outside of the classroom. Ukrainkaâs biographer Constantine Bida claims that âshe [Otha] took them to the country so that they could hear the pure language of the people as well as the many folksongs of the region.â These childhood field trips, which combined educational value, political intent, exposure to local culture and history, and the astonishing beauty of rural landscapes, would form the essential elements of Ukrainkaâs adult writing style and favourite themes. She, whose education had been so thorough, would pursue a successful literary career, despite the tuberculosis that would ravage her health, and ultimately lead to her early death in 1913, at the age of 42. Ukrainkaâs Literary Accomplishments Ukrainkaâs portfolio contains an impressive array of poetry, drama, stories, literary criticism, and socio-political essays. She had a versatile pen, and could write about anything that fell within her sphere of interest. Her most famous work is âThe Forest Song,â a three-act poetic play, notable for being one of the earliest examples of fantasy fiction in the Ukrainian literary world. The work can be interpreted as a love letter to the natural wonders and folklore of Ukraine that added so much colour to her childhood. W. Besoushko in his biographical article on Ukrainka summarizes: âIn âThe Forest Songâ Lesya built a monument to her country, with its beautiful woods and lakes and superstitions. The work deserves a Mendelssohn composition for accompaniment.â