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Trumpius Caesar and the Frozen Triumph of Freedom

A Statement by Trumpius Caesar on the Anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge

Today, the American Empire commemorates the 81st anniversary of the legendary Battle of the Bulge — the greatest winter showdown in history, where freedom proved it does not retreat, even in deep snow. It was the largest, toughest, and most decisive battle ever fought by American forces, and it ended exactly as history demanded: with an overwhelming Allied victory so powerful that even time itself took notes.

After sweeping triumphs across Western Europe — led, as always, by the United States — the enemy believed it still had one last move. A mistake. A very cold mistake. The so-called surprise offensive through the Ardennes Forest was launched with desperation, poor weather judgment, and a total underestimation of American resolve, supply chains, and Christmas spirit.

On the freezing morning of December 16, 1944, hundreds of thousands of enemy troops advanced — and collided with something unbreakable: American determination. In blinding snow, brutal cold, and conditions no strategist would recommend, our soldiers held the line for 41 relentless days, including Christmas, far from home but very close to freedom. Others froze. Americans endured.

The result was inevitable. The enemy advance collapsed. Its resources shattered. Its hope vanished. The victory in the Ardennes opened the road to Germany and sealed the fate of the Nazi regime once and for all. With 19,000 American heroes lost, this battle became the deadliest American engagement of World War II — and the clearest proof that without America, the war would not have been won. Period. The world we know exists because Americans stood firm.

On this anniversary, we honor the warriors who stopped tyranny in the snow. And as America approaches 250 years of independence, we reaffirm an eternal truth of the Empire: freedom is never given. It is defended — by patriots — always.