WikiLeaks Damage Lives On: The Case of Marafa Hamidou Yaya – The Foreign Service Journal

Speaking Out

BY NIELS MARQUARDT

The U.K. government decision in June to extradite WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States to face prosecution for crimes related to the release in 2010 of hundreds of thousands of stolen confidential U.S. government documents brings him one step closer to justice. No doubt he will appeal that decision, but I deeply hope that he will lose again and soon find himself facing justice before an American court.

Only then will the world see and, perhaps, fully understand the enormous damage his crimes inflicted on innocent friends and allies around the globe. This may also give the lie to the remarkably widely held fiction that Assanges crimes had no victims and that his actions were somehow brave, harmless, or even worthy of admiration.

It is high time to start pushing back forcefully on the deeply mistaken notion that actions by Assange, perceived by many to be a sort of modern-day Robin Hood, advanced press freedom or brought welcome transparency to the workings of government. They did not. Instead, they illegally undermined the necessarily confidential basis of information sharing that makes diplomacy possible and advances Americas global interests in the process.

I write this column as a retired American diplomat whose normal embassy reporting, like that of many colleagues, was compromised by Assanges indiscriminate release of that infamous cache of stolen documents more than a decade ago. No one seems able to say how many people, including many of Americas close friends, were damaged worldwide by the WikiLeaks release.

But I know well of at least one case, where a good man has now spent more than a decade in prison for alleged crimes never proven in court. This happened in Cameroon, where I served as U.S. ambassador from 2004 to 2007.

There, shortly after the WikiLeaks release, Kansas University graduate Marafa Hamidou Yaya was jailed and subjected to a short kangaroo court proceeding that resulted in a 25-year prison sentence on entirely unproven corruption charges.

Before his arrest, Mr. Marafa had served in various high-level ministerial positions in Cameroon, including as secretary-general of the presidency, arguably the nations second-most powerful post. Our embassy, then led by Ambassador Robert Jackson, witnessed his trial and denounced it as the farce it was; no evidence was presented, yet he was found guilty on all charges.

Since then, the State Departments annual Human Rights Report to Congress has listed Mr. Marafa as a political prisoner in Cameroon. He is jailed in a military prison in a damp cell with no daylight. After his arrest, his loyal secretary of 20 years was savagely assassinated in her home, and his wife died without having a chance to visit her husband even once.

The United Nations has formally declared Mr. Marafas detention arbitrary and demanded his immediate release and compensation for the damages he has suffered. He has petitioned repeatedly for his own release on health-related grounds, and many outsiders have also weighed in on his behalf.

I and seven other former U.S. ambassadors to Cameroon have written to successive U.S. administrations for assistance in seeking Mr. Marafas release, so far without effect. Ambassadors (ret.) Frances Cook, Harriet Isom, Charles Twining, John Yates, George Staples, Janet Garvey, and Robert Jackson all know and respect him and have joined me in formally demanding his release. The Biden administration is fully aware of this situation but, to my knowledge, has not taken any strong action to secure Mr. Marafas release.

Because Mr. Marafas health has deteriorated significantly during his decade-plus in prison, the case for his release is ever more urgent. Now in old age, he survived COVID-19 (unvaccinated) while in detention last year. He has gone almost completely blind, suffers from a serious heart condition, and desperately needs medical treatment unavailable in Cameroon.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee has written many times lately, requesting the government of Cameroon to provide Mr. Marafa with immediate access to the adequate and specialised medical care that may be required to preserve his sight. So far, this call has not been heeded. Mr. Marafa has repeatedly said that he would be willing to go into exile abroad to obtain that treatment, implicitly abandoning any future political role at home.

While Mr. Marafa was accused of corruption, his only real crime was having told me, in confidence in 2006, that he might be interested in seeking Cameroons presidency one day, if ever the incumbent president, Paul Biya, were to leave office. My political section, then ably headed by current Ottawa Deputy Chief of Mission Katherine Brucker, naturally reported his comment in a periodic piece speculating on succession scenarios in a post-Biya era.

Once that cable to Washington was released by WikiLeaks in 2010, Mr. Marafas revelation immediately became frontpage news in Cameroon. This led directly to his arrest, and then to a classic show trial the following year. In Cameroon, where the near-nonagenarian Biya just marked 40 years in power, the whole succession question is sensitive enough that Mr. Marafas otherwise unremarkable comment about possible higher political ambition deeply rattled the countrys delicate tribal and political balance.

Evidently, Biyas coterie of mostly southern, Christian supporters from the Beti tribe felt sufficiently threatened by the prospect of Mr. Marafa becoming president that they decided to sideline him permanently, and manipulated the countrys judicial system to do just that.

Mr. Marafa is a northern Muslim, like the countrys only other president since independence, Ahmadou Ahidjo. After 40 years of political advantage under Biya, little bothers privileged southerners more than the thought of a northerner regaining power.

WikiLeaks happened on the Obama-Biden administrations watch. Many officials in the current administration were serving in senior government positions at the time and remain well aware of Mr. Marafas unjust incarceration. Thus, they should not need reminding of our governments enduring responsibility to protect those harmed by this massive failure to protect confidences shared with us in good faith.

Nonetheless, they have not taken action; nor have they even shown the intellectual curiosity to seek to find out how many other Marafas are out there, across the globe. Indeed, when I invited the Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) to help gather the facts around this issue, they declined on the basis that WikiLeaks was not an intel issue.

Speaking Out is the Journals opinion forum, a place for lively discussion of issues affecting the U.S. Foreign Service and American diplomacy. The views expressed are those of the author; their publication here does not imply endorsement by the American Foreign Service Association. Responses are welcome; send them to journal@afsa.org.

I continue to believe that basic American decency and a sense of loyalty and fair play compel us to pursue his case, and all others like it, until justice is truly served. Not only is it the right thing to do; it also would demonstrate to our friends and collaborators around the worldincluding many who were sufficiently shaken by WikiLeaks that they pointedly ceased even speaking to American diplomatsthat, even after something as stupidly tragic as WikiLeaks is allowed to occur, America will live up to our responsibilities to friends affected by our mistakes.

Additionally, I fear that the United States is losing the global public opinion battle around WikiLeaks. With Assanges impending extradition and prosecution, now is the time to launch a far stronger effort to explain why this case matters, and why we are taking it so seriously. Specious arguments positing that he is a legitimate journalist standing up for press freedom and transparency sadly resonate with far too many global citizens, few of whom have an inkling of the harm done to Marafa and others like him.

No doubt other friends who confided in the U.S. have met similar or worse fates; who is telling their stories? Absent an enhanced effort to explain why WikiLeaks matters, the U.S. will again appear in global public opinion to be nothing more than an overreaching bully.

But let me also ask: If the WikiLeaks theft and release of government secrets is worth extraditing Assange and pursuing in court over a decade later, shouldnt we demonstrate some real concern for the actual victims of that crime, by taking action to address circumstances like Mr. Marafas?

Meanwhile, Paul Biya rules a wobbly Cameroon in senescence, incompetently repressing a bloody Anglophone secession campaign, watching Boko Haram stream largely unchecked across its borders, and continuing to preside over a well-endowed country that has performed far short of its extraordinary potential under his rule. No one knows what will happen when he finally leaves the scene, but widespread violence is considered by many of us to be a likely element of the coming transition.

What a missed opportunity that the competent, U.S.-educated Mr. Marafa is no longer among the possible solutions to Cameroons coming political drama. However, there is still the possibility of his being released for medical treatment in exile, and thus for him to live out his remaining days in dignity and freedom. We must press for this outcome, making clear that the American government stands by him and recognizes our direct responsibility for his current circumstances.

Here are two things FSJ readers can do to help.

First, please write to your congressional representatives, especially if they sit on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee or House Foreign Affairs Committee, to demand action by the State Department and White House to secure Mr. Marafas release. A strong expression of congressional interest may help the State Department find the missing courage to take this on. (And please free to email me at nielsm@lclark.edu for a template message that can easily be pasted into an email to your senator.)

Second, if any reader has knowledge of other friends of the United States who were negatively affected by WikiLeaks and need our governments attention, please email me that information. I will then share it with States Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR), which I believe is the appropriate place in our government to compile comprehensive information on the full impact of WikiLeaks. I would hope that this information may then be used by others to strengthen a public affairs strategy to explain why prosecuting Assange is so important.

In my opinion, our governments approach to WikiLeaks over successive administrations has been myopic and inadequate, and our failure to vigorously stand up for its victims for the past decade has bordered on shameful.

It is not too late, however, for us to do far better. For that to happen, more of us need to speak up and demand better. Please help do so.

Niels Marquardt was a Foreign Service officer from 1980 to 2013. He led Secretary of State Colin Powells Diplomatic Readiness Initiative from 2001 to 2004, then served as ambassador to Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Madagascar, and the Comoros. His final assignment was as consul general in Sydney, where he stayed until 2017 as CEO of the American Chamber of Commerce in Australia. Ambassador (ret.) Marquardt currently volunteers as diplomat in residence at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon.

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WikiLeaks Damage Lives On: The Case of Marafa Hamidou Yaya - The Foreign Service Journal

Arundhati Roy on Things that Can and Cannot Be Said: The Dismantling of the World as We Know It – LiveWire

This is the full text of the Stuart Hall Memorial Lecture delivered by the author at the Conway Hall on September 30, 2022.

Thank you for inviting me to speak here today in memory of Stuart Hall.

Weve been trying to make this happen for what seems like years. I will never ever again take for granted the pleasure of being in a room together with so many fellow human beings. The pandemic has faded somewhat, but many of us are still struggling to get the measure of the trauma it has left in its wake. I can hardly believe that I never met Stuart. But reading his work makes me feel we would have spent a lot of time laughing together about things.

The main title of this lecture, Things That Can and Cannot Be Said, is the title of a little book I wrote along with the actor John Cusack. It was about a trip that he and I made to Russia in December, 2013 to meet Edward Snowden in Moscow. Our other companion was Daniel Ellsberg for those of you who are too young to remember, he was the Snowden of his time; the whistleblower who made public the Pentagon Papers on the Vietnam war.

Snowden, who warned us years ago that we were sleepwalking into a surveillance state, continues to live in exile in Moscow. And we have tumbled enthusiastically into the surveillance state he warned about, with our little phone-companions that have become as intimate and as indispensable as any vital organ in our bodies, spying on us, recording and transmitting our most personal information so that we can be tracked, controlled, standardised and domesticated. Not just by the state, but by each other too.

Imagine if your liver, or your gall bladder didnt have your best interests at heart, your doctor would tell you that you are terminally ill. Thats the sort of bind we find ourselves in. We cant do without it, but its doing us in.

The first section of my talk will be about things that can and cannot be said. The second, about the dismantling of the world as we knew it.

This has been a bad year for those who have said and done Things That Cannot Be Said. Or Done. In Iran, 22-year-old Mahsa Amini was killed while she was in the custody of Irans moral police for the sin of not wearing her headscarf in the way that is officially mandated. In the protests that followed and are ongoing, several people have been killed.

Meanwhile, in India, in the southern state of Karnataka, Muslim schoolgirls who wanted to assert their identity as Muslim women in their classrooms by wearing hijabs were physically intimidated by right-wing Hindu men. This in a place where Hindus and Muslims have lived together for centuries but have recently become dangerously polarised.

Both instances strict hijab in Iran and the prohibition of hijab in India and other countries may appear to be antagonistic, but they arent really. Forcing a woman into a hijab, or forcing her out of one, isnt about the hijab. Its about the coercion. Robe her. Disrobe her. The age-old preoccupation of controlling and policing women.

In August, Salman Rushdie was savagely attacked in upstate New York by an Islamist zealot for his book, The Satanic Verses; a book that was first published in 1988. In 1989, Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of the Iranian Revolution and the first leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, issued an edict calling for Rushdies death. All these years later, just when it had begun to seem that the anger and passions his book aroused had abated and Rushdie gradually came out of hiding, came the attack.

Also read: How Salman Rushdie Has Been a Scapegoat for Complex Historical Differences

After the initial news of the 75-year-old Rushdie having survived the attack and being in good cheer, there is no news at all. One can only hope that he is recovering and will return to the world of literature with all his powers intact. Heads of state in Europe and the US have come out robustly in Rushdies support, some saying, a little self-servingly, His fight is our fight.

Meanwhile, Julian Assange, who published and exposed some of the more terrible war crimes committed by soldiers of those countries, wars in which hundreds of thousands died, is in terrible health and remains locked up in Belmarsh prison, awaiting extradition to the US, where he may face a death sentence or several life sentences.

So, we must pause before casting this horrifying attack on Rushdie in cliched terms such as a Clash of Civilisations or Democracy versus Darkness. Because millions have been killed in invasions led by these so-called free-speech evangelists, and among those, millions have been writers, poets and artists, too.

As for the news from India, in June, Nupur Sharma, spokesperson of the BJP, Indias ruling Hindu nationalist party, once a permanent, bullying presence on TV talk shows, made several intemperate comments against Prophet Mohammed in a provocative performance whose very purpose appeared to be to cause offence. There was an international uproar, and several death threats later, she has retreated from public life. But two Hindu men who supported her comments were brutally beheaded. In the days that followed, throngs of Muslim zealots have gathered to chant tan se sar juda (separate the head from the body) and call for the state to pass a blasphemy law. It doesnt seem to occur to them that nothing would make the state happier.

Theyre not the only ones who conflate censorship and assassination. Earlier this month I was in Bangalore to speak on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the assassination of my friend Gauri Lankesh, the journalist who was shot down outside her home by Hindu fanatics. Hers was one in a series of assassinations that appear to be connected to the same shadowy group: Dr Narendra Dabholkar, the physician and well-known rationalist thinker, was shot in 2013; comrade Govind Pansare, a writer and member of the Communist Party of India, was shot in February 2015, and the Kannada scholar professor M.M. Kalburgi in August that same year.

Assassination is of course, not the only form of censorship we experience. In the year 2022, India ranks 150th out of 180 on the World Press Freedom Index, below Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. We are policed not just by the government, but by mobs on the streets, by social media trolls and, ironically, by the media itself.

On the hundreds of 247 TV news channels we often refer to as Radio Rwanda, our baying TV anchors rage against Muslims and anti-nationals, call for dissenters to be arrested, sacked, punished. They have ruined lives and reputations with absolute impunity and no accountability. Activists, poets, intellectuals, lawyers and students are being arrested almost every day. As for Kashmir the Valley from which No News Can Come it is a giant prison. Soon there could be more soldiers there than citizens.

Also read: Communal Virus Injected into Diaspora, and the Culture is Growing

Every communication by Kashmiris, private as well as public, even the very rhythm of their breathing, is supervised. In schools, under the guise of learning to love Gandhi, Muslim children are being taught to sing Hindu bhajans. When I think of Kashmir these days, for some reason I think of how, in some parts of the world, watermelons are being trained to grow in square moulds so that they are cube-shaped and easier to stack. In the Kashmir valley, it looks as though the Indian government is running that experiment on humans instead of melons. At gun-point.

Down in the Gangetic plains the cow belt of North India, mobs of sword-wielding Hindus led by godmen, who the media for some reason calls seers, call for the genocide of Muslims and the rape of Muslim women with complete impunity.

We have witnessed daylight lynchings, and the genocidal killing of more than a thousand Muslims (non-government figures put that number at closer to two thousand) in Gujarat in 2002 and in hundreds in Muzaffarnagar in Uttar Pradesh in 2013. Not surprisingly, both massacres took place just before crucial elections.

We have watched the man under whose chief ministership the Gujarat massacre took place, Narendra Modi, consolidate his position as Hindu Hriday Samrat (the Emperor of Hindu Hearts) and rise to assume the highest office in the country. He has never expressed regret or apologised for what happened. We have watched him continue to amass political capital from his dangerous, sneering anti-Muslim rhetoric. We have watched the highest court in the land absolve him of all responsibility, legal as well as moral. We have watched, nauseated, as leaders of the so-called Free World embrace him as a statesman and a democrat.

Last month, India celebrated the 75th anniversary of independence from British Rule. From his elevated lectern in the Red Fort in Delhi, Modi thundered about his dream of empowering women in India. He spoke with passion, clenched his fist. He wore a turban flecked with the colours of the national flag.

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi waves at the audience during the 75th Independence Day function at the historic Red Fort, in New Delhi, Sunday, August 15, 2021. (PTI Photo/Kamal Singh) (PTI08_15_2021_000025B)

Empowering women in a society built on the Hindu caste system where privileged-caste men have for centuries exercised what they believe to be their ordained right to the bodies of Dalit and Adivasi women, is not a matter of policy alone. Its about a socialisation, and a belief system.

There is a rising graph of crimes against women in India, putting it on the map of amongst the most unsafe places in the world for women. It surprises no one these days to see how often the criminals belong to or are related to members of the current ruling dispensation. In such cases, we have seen public rallies in favour of rapists. In the most recent case in which a 19-year-old girl was raped and murdered, a local leader blamed her father for spreading raw milk before hungry cats.

Even as Modi was delivering his Independence Day speech, the Bharatiya Janata Party government in the state of Gujarat announced special amnesty for 11 men who were serving life-sentences for the 2002 gang rape of 19-year-old Bilkis Bano and the murder of 14 members of her family, including her mother, her sisters, her baby brothers, her aunts, her uncle, her cousins, her cousins one-day-old infant, and Saleha, Bilkiss three-year-old daughter, whose head was smashed against a rock.

This grisly crime, only one of several similar ones, was a part of the 2002 anti-Muslim Gujarat pogrom I mentioned earlier. The panel that approved their release had several members from the BJP, one of them an elected legislator who went on record later to say that, since some of the convicts were Brahmins with good sanskar (good upbringing), it was unlikely they were guilty at all.

In cases investigated by the Central Bureau of Investigation, as this one was, it is legally mandated that any decision to give convicts amnesty has to be approved by the Central government, which is of course the government of Narendra Modi. So, we must assume that that permission was given.

When the convicts came out, they were greeted outside the prison walls as heroes they were garlanded with flowers, fed sweets and had their feet touched by members of Hindu groups loosely affiliated to the BJP (the looseness is to provide what is called plausible deniability) that make up the Sangh Parivar, the Joined Family. In a few months time, Gujarat goes to the polls.

In India, strange things happen just before our free and fair elections. Its always the most dangerous time.

As the rapist-mass murderers return to take their place as respected members of society, Teesta Setalvad, the activist whose organisation, Citizens for Justice and Peace, has meticulously compiled a tower of documentary evidence that points to the complicity of the Gujarat government in general and Narendra Modi in particular with the 2002 massacre, was arrested, accused of forgery, tutoring witnesses and attempting to keep the pot boiling.

These are the conditions in which we live and work. And say the things that cannot be said. In speech, as in everything else, the law is applied selectively depending on caste, religion, gender and class. A Muslim cannot say what Hindus can. A Kashmiri cannot say what everybody else can. Solidarity, speaking up for others is more important than ever. But that too has become a perilous activity.

In India as in other countries, the weaponisation of identity, in which identity is disaggregated and atomised into micro-categories, has turned the air itself into a sort of punitive heresy-hunting machine. Even these micro-identities have developed a power hierarchy. In his book Elite Capture, the philosopher Olufemi O. Taiwo describes how certain individuals then become elevated from among these groups, individuals usually located in powerful countries, in big cities, in big universities, those with social capital on the internet, and then are given platforms by foundations, by media, by corporations to speak for and decide on behalf of the rest of their communities.

Also read: Even After a Century, Water Is Still the Marker of Indias Caste Society

Its an understandable response to historic pain and humiliation. But its not a revolutionary response. Micro-Elite Capture cannot be the only answer to Macro-Elite Capture. As some empirical research has shown, when we buy into a culture of proscription and censorship, it is the Right that benefits disproportionately. A recent study by PEN America of banned school textbooks shows that the overwhelming majority of proscribed textbooks contain progressive texts on gender and race.

Sealing in communities, reducing and flattening their identities into silos can be perilous and precludes solidarity. Ironically, that was and is the ultimate goal of the caste system in India divide a people into a hierarchy of unbreachable silos, and no one community will be able to feel the pain of another because they are in constant conflict. It works like a self-operating, intricate administrative/surveillance machine in which society administers/surveils itself, and in the process ensures that the overarching structures of oppression remain in place. Everyone except those at the very top and the very bottom (and these categories are minutely graded too) is oppressed by someone and has someone to be oppressed by.

Once this maze of tripwires has been laid, almost nobody can pass the test of purity and correctness. Certainly, almost nothing that was once thought of as good or great literature. Not Shakespeare, for sure. Not Tolstoy imagine presuming he could understand the mind of a woman called Anna Karenina. Not Dostoevsky, who only refers to older women as crones. By his standards, Id qualify as a crone for sure. But Id still like people to read him. It goes without saying that by these standards, every sacred book of every religion would not pass muster.

Amidst the apparent noise in public discourse, we are swiftly approaching a sort of intellectual gridlock. Solidarity can never be pristine. It should be challenged, debated, argued about, corrected. By precluding it, we reinforce the very thing we claim to be fighting against.

And now Id like to turn to the subheading of my talk the dismantling of the world as we knew it. Id like to speak a little about queens and their funerals.

When the Queen died, some British newspapers asked me to write a piece about her passing. I was a little puzzled by the request. Perhaps because Ive never lived in England, Queen Elizabeth II barely existed even on the peripheries of my imagination. So, I said sure, but it wont be about the queen that youre thinking about.

The queen I was thinking about was my mother, who founded and ran a high school, who died earlier this month. For good or for bad, she was the most singular, most profound influence in my life. We were dangerous foes and desperately good friends. She was the obstacle race that I structured myself around from the time I was very young. And now that shes gone, and left me not heart-broken, but heart-smashed, my rather odd shape and structure doesnt seem to make sense to me anymore. I was tempted to make this lecture about the politics of two funerals. One on the worlds stage and the other in a small town in South India. But I will resist that temptation.

Perhaps, nows time for me to say the first Thing that Should Not Be Said, at least not here in London, not now.

I couldnt believe the pomp and pageantry and the days of endless television coverage of the rites and rituals of her funeral. I was transfixed by the obsequious, reverential paying of respects by those darker folks who hold high office in her former colonies, now known as the Commonwealth. There was nothing common about that wealth. It was extractive. And it flowed in one direction. We in the colonies paid for those costumes, those furs, those jewels, those gold sceptres.

Theres much to say about colonies and colonialism and the Monarchs who reigned over that barbarous period in history. Who better than Start Hall to tell us that story? But hows this just as a piece of graffiti as the somber cavalry rides past? The historian Mike Davis estimates that in the last quarter of the 19th century, between 30 and 60 million people died of hunger in the mostly man-made famines in colonial India, China and Brazil. He calls it the Great Victorian Holocaust.

Why do we love and admire those who humiliate us? That could be the most pertinent political, as well as personal, question of our times.

I apologise if this sounds like an unnuanced commentary on colonialism. That is not my position. I dont count myself among those Indian intellectuals who rage against colonialism but choose to remain silent about the wrongs in our own societies. The Hindu caste system, for example, is one of the most brutal systems of social hierarchy the world has ever known. Many would call it a form of colonialism that pre-dates British colonialism and is prevalent even today. Caste remains the engine that runs modern India. It is remarkable how many Indian writers and intellectuals manage to completely elide the question of caste. To unsee something that stares us in the face almost every moment of every single day, they have to assume the literary or academic version of a very elaborate, tortuous yoga asana.

All this is the subject of much of my writing, so for now Id like to return to my bemusement about the Queens funeral. What was it really about? Someone please help me out here, because I dont understand.

It cant have been about the passing of a 96-year-old monarch of a small island country, which is having trouble even holding on to the sum of its parts Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Was it only a harking back, a nostalgic invocation, a paean to the ghost of the Empire on which the Sun Never Set? Or was it something more than that? Was it about the past, or is it about the future?

As the war in the Ukraine unfolds and the modern world as we know it comes apart at the seams, was all that pageantry actually a pantomime rally, a posturing, a parading of friends and allies, for a battle that is still to come?

It reminded me of the opening chapter of Barbara Tuchmans The Guns of August about the lead up to World War I.

So gorgeous was the spectacle on the May morning of 1910 when nine kings rode in the funeral of Edward VII of England that the crowd, waiting in hushed and black-clad awe, could not keep back gasps of admiration. In scarlet and blue and green and purple, three by three the sovereigns rode through the palace gates, with plumed helmets, gold braid, crimson sashes, and jeweled sashes flashing in the sun. After them came five heirs apparent, forty more imperial or royal highnesses, seven queensand a scattering of special ambassadors from uncrowned countries. Together they represented seventy nations in the greatest assemblage of royalty and rank ever gathered in one place and, of its kind, the last. The muffled tongue of the Big Ben tolled nine by the clock as the cortege left the palace, but on historys clock it was sunset, and the sun of the old world was setting in a dying world of splendour never to be seen again

The dangerous brinkmanship being played out in the Ukraine is being somewhat obscured by the noise of propaganda on both sides. But historys clock could very well be racing towards sunset.

The various points of view on the war also involve some pretty tortuous yoga asanas some pretty drastic seeing and unseeing depending on where you have decided to place yourself. Many on the Left cannot find it in themselves to call out Russias invasion of the Ukraine. They believe that Ukrainian outrage against Russia has been entirely confected and cultivated by Western Imperialism. That the Ukrainian famine of the early 1930s never happened. They deny that millions of Ukrainians the historian Timothy Snyder estimates five million died in the famine of the early 1930s under Stalins policy of forced collectivisation.

They see Russias invasion of Ukraine as a defensive war against an existential threat to itself by NATO. Thats not untrue. The fact that Russia does face a very serious threat is hard to deny. The hitch is that that the defensive war is being fought offensively on Ukrainian soil and against the Ukrainian people.

When the Cold War ended, demilitarisation and nuclear disarmament should have begun. Instead, NATO did the opposite. It amassed more weapons, fought more wars and used the territory of its allies and proxies for the aggressive and provocative forward deployment of troops and missiles. If Russia had done through proxies in Europe or the US what NATO is doing to it, there is little doubt that we would be seeing the moral arguments and western media coverage turned inside out.

None of this makes Vladimir Putin a revolutionary anti-imperialist or a democrat of any kind. None of it alters the fact that he believes in an overtly fascist, anti-Semitic, anti-Homosexual, Christian nationalist ideology (which ironically, he calls de-Nazification) propounded by his two favourite ideologues, Alexander Dugin and Alexander Prokhanov.

His claim about Ukraine, Crimea and Belarus being inseparable territories that made up Ancient Rus, a theory based on the millennial myth of the Christian baptism of its leader Volodymyr/Valdemar in Crimea in AD 988, has been (correctly) met with hilarity.

But we must ask why then is there less amusement in the same quarters when it comes to talk of Israels treatment of Palestinians and its claims of being the ancient Promised Land for the Jewish people, which translates in modern legalese as the Nation-State of the Jewish people.

Or in India, when the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Hindu nationalist militia and cultural guild of which Prime Minister Modi is a member, calls for an Akhand Bharat, a sort of fantasy that is futuristic and ancient all at once a future ancient India that includes Pakistan and Bangladesh, which will be conquered and where all its people will be subjected to Hindu rule.

Ordinary people in Europe are gearing up to face the harsh winter that is nearly upon them, with very little or no heating, as Russia, in response to economic sanctions, threatens to shut off their gas supply. As Ukrainians fight on with relentless courage, and the chances of a negotiated settlement fade away, anxiety is building over the possibility of the war expanding and escalating. Putin has announced the partial mobilisation, whatever that means, of 300,000 military reservists. Perhaps for now the US is far away enough and safe enough, but all of Europe, Russia and much of Asia could become the theatre of a war unlike any the world has ever seen. A war in which there cant be a winner.

Isnt it time for everybody to step back? Isnt it time to begin a real conversation about complete nuclear disarmament?

God forbid, Russia resorts to using US logic for turning to nuclear weapons. In an article titled, If the Atomic Bomb Had Not Been Used, published in December 1946, Karl K. Compton, the physicist and former president of MIT, said that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki saved hundreds of thousands perhaps several millions of lives, both American and Japanese; that without its use the war would have continued for many months. His logic was that the Japanese, even though they had been defeated, would not have surrendered and, if not for the atomic bomb being dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing hundreds of thousands of people, they would have fought to the last man standing.

Was the use of the atomic bomb inhuman? Compton asks himself. All war is inhuman, was his reassuring reply (to himself.) It was published in The Atlantic. President Truman wrote in to endorse this argument.

Years later, General William Westmoreland carried that logic a little further during the Vietnam war: The Oriental doesnt put the same high price on life as does a Westerner. Life is plentiful. Life is cheap in the Orient. In other words, we Asians dont value our lives and so we force the White world to bear the burden of genocide.

And then theres Robert McNamara, of course, who had a successful career arc, first as the planner of the bombing of Tokyo in 1946, which killed more than 200,000 people in two separate raids, then as the president of Ford Motor Company, next as the US Secretary of Defense during the Vietnam war, in which US soldiers were ordered to Kill Anything That Moves, as a result of which 3 million Vietnamese lost their lives.

McNamaras last job was to take care of world poverty as President of the World Bank. Towards the end of his life, in an Erroll Morris documentary called The Fog of War, he asks an anguished question: How much evil must we do in order to do good?

As you must have gathered, Im a collector of these gems. Lets not forget that President Obama had a Kill List. And that Madeline Albright, who President Joe Biden recently described as a force for goodness, grace, and decency and for freedom, when she was asked about the estimated half-a-million Iraqi children dying because of US economic sanctions, famously said, I think that is a very hard choice, but the price, we think, the price is worth it.

Where are we headed? Even those of us who stand squarely with the Ukrainian people against the Russian invasion of their country cannot help but marvel at the difference in tone and tenor of the Western Medias coverage of the war in Ukraine and the breathless admiration with which it covered the US and NATOs invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, which killed hundreds of thousands of people. This January, Tony Blair, the most passionate purveyor of the fake news about Iraqs non-existent weapons of mass destruction, which was used to justify the invasion, and President George Bush Jr.s most enthusiastic ally in the invasion, was ordered Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, the senior most British order of chivalry.

Watching the funeral of the Queen the other day I nearly choked on whatever it was I was drinking as I heard one of the Bishops or Archbishops say that, unlike those who merely cling to wealth and power, Queen Elizabeth II would be loved and remembered for her life of service to the public. Her son, the new King of England, will inherit her wealth and station. His royal lifestyle will not be supported by his own private wealth, which reportedly amounts to about a billion dollars. It will be paid for with public money, by the British people, millions of whom, the Guardian reports, have begun to skip a meal every day just to keep the lights on.

Perhaps its hard for the rest of us to understand the mystery of the British peoples love and enthrallment with their monarchy. Perhaps it has to do with a national sense of identity and pride which cannot and certainly ought not to be reduced to vulgar economics. But allow me to indulge in some vulgarity for a minute or two.

A recent analysis in the Financial Times concludes that income inequality in the US and the UK is so great that they could be classed as poor societies with some very rich people. Theyre like us Third Worlders now, Banana Republics whose wealthy have seceded into outer space and whose poor are falling into the sea.

A 2022 Oxfam study says Indias 98 richest people own the equivalent of the combined wealth of the poorest 552 million people. For this impertinence, Oxfam offices in India have been raided by the Income Tax department and perhaps will soon be shut down, like Amnesty International and every other organisation that is critical of the Modi regime.

King Charles III, rich though he may be, is a pauper compared to Gautam Adani, the worlds third richest man, Gujarati corporate tycoon and friend to Narendra Modi. Adanis fortune is estimated to be $137 billion a sum that rapidly increased during the pandemic.

In 2014, when he was first elected Prime Minister of India, Modi made a point of flying from Ahmedabad, his home city in Gujarat, to Delhi in Adanis private jet his name and logo emblazoned across it. In the eight years of Modis rule, Adanis fortune has grown from $8 billion in 2014 to what it is now. Thats an accumulation of $129 billion. Im just saying. Please dont read deep meaning into it. Adanis money comes from coal mining and operating sea-ports and airports. Most recently, he was involved in the hostile takeover of NDTV, the only mainstream national TV news channel that dares to delicately criticise the Modi regime. Most of the rest of the media is already bought and paid for.

The corporations that are blasting mountain ranges, clear-felling forests and bleaching corral reefs also fund happiness conferences, sporting events, film and literature festivals. They provide courageous writers platforms on which to condemn attacks on Free Speech and make declarations about their commitment to peace, justice and human rights. And say Things Cannot Be Said, Done.

Capitalism is in its Endgame. Sadly, as it goes down, its taking our planet with it.

Between nuclear hawks and mining corporations, its a race to the bottom.

Meanwhile, for light entertainment, lets all fight about what gods to pray to, what flags to wave, what songs to sing. In case Ive left you feeling dejected, let me read you an email I wrote in response to a member of the audience who criticised me (gently) for sounding overly optimistic when I spoke in memory of Gauri Lankesh:

If we have no hope, lets all sit down and give up. There are millions of excellent reasons for us to be pessimistic. Thats why I suggested we should divorce Hope from Reason. Hope should be wild, irrational and unreasonable.

In every line I write, every word I speak, what Im really saying is, We are not Zero. You havent defeated us.

For millions in the world with their backs to the wall, these debates about hope and despair are a luxury. Even here, underneath the reek of wealth in the city of London, a visitor can sense a sort of tense, vibrating unease, like the rumble beneath your feet as a train approaches the platform.

None of this will matter in the event of a nuclear war. That will simply end us. Its time for the two sides to step back. And for the rest of the world to step in. Armageddon doesnt contain a clause for second chances.

Arundhati Royis a writer.

Featured image:From left to right: Edward Snowden, Vladimir Putin, Arundhati Roy, Narendra Modi and Teesta Setalvad. Photos: Reuters, PTI.

This article was first published on The Wire.

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Arundhati Roy on Things that Can and Cannot Be Said: The Dismantling of the World as We Know It - LiveWire

Billion Dollar Harvest: TikTok’s Threat to National and Personal Security MARIST CIRCLE – Marist College The Circle

TikTok needs no introduction; with a billion monthly active users, the short-form video app is ubiquitous in modern culture. What fewer of these users seem to be aware of is TikToks ability to harvest massive quantities of their information, from biometric data to every keystroke in the in-app browser. That information is then sent to Chinese data servers, contrary to the claims of the apps developer ByteDance. This makes TikToks tremendous popularity a constant threat to both the personal privacy of its users and the national security of the United States.

In June, BuzzFeed News obtained leaked audio from discussions between third-party auditors and ByteDance that revealed that employees have constant access to the private data of American users. The discovery was ironically made as the auditors were ensuring that the data was stored on American servers as part of a prospective acquisition of TikToks U.S. division by Oracle. The company claims this process was completed, but that it retains backups of the information.

BuzzFeed also notes that much of the information will be stored on a server in Virginia that is still accessible to ByteDance, which is consistent with a habit of Oracle to grant the company significant leniency in how it carried out the transition. This is despite the fact the purpose of the acquisition was to prevent China from harvesting oceans of American data to use for potentially hostile purposes. Oracles lack of responsibility is unsurprising given it has recently been sued for tracking the nonpublic data of five billion people.

Even before the BuzzFeed investigation was released, numerous findings regarding the extent of the information TikTok collects already made the label spyware a fair evaluation. Felix Krause, a security researcher, found that the app tracks all inputs, including taps and keystrokes, in the in-app browser on Apple devices. Not only that, TikTok updated its privacy policy and openly revealed it would start collecting biometric information such as fingerprints and faceprints. As with every other official statement, the company claimed it was safely stored in U.S. data centers and that the information was only used to optimize the user experience. The former claim would turn out to be an outright lie, and the latter can be evaluated similarly through an examination of Chinas espionage habits.

Chinas mass information harvest has long posed a national security threat through consumer technology, and several of the biggest incidents still occupy no space in the American consciousness. An investigation by Bloomberg discovered that during a security evaluation for a prospective acquisition of a smaller company in 2015, Amazon found that servers built by Supermicro had an extremely small chip on the motherboard not in the blueprints. Further examination showed that the chips were sending secrets from the largest American technology corporations to servers owned by the Chinese government in an operation directed by its military. A foreign power infiltrated the most covert secrets of the most powerful companies in the world, yet few people seem to know.

Not content with the theft of American corporate secrets, Chinas activities reveal a pattern of harnessing the power of big data and artificial intelligence to construct an oppressive society. TikTok is one tool of many, a small part of a growing surveillance network intended to structure society to the ruling partys liking. A New York Times investigation found that Chinese authorities are linking physical and digital activity to create comprehensive profiles of its citizens. China is likely utilizing the information from foreigners in a similar manner, collected through apps like TikTok and enabled by American officials and corporate leaders who do not care enough to take action against it.

Dismissing these threats as merely paranoia or conspiracy theories is naive as evidence of Chinese encroachment on the American digital landscape grows exponentially. This does not mean the United States is not conducting mass surveillance, particularly considering what was revealed by Edward Snowden in 2013. However, we do not use it for ethnic cleansing or constructing a totalitarian state with a backbone of technology as China does with its social credit system.

Despite this track record, U.S. officials remain oblivious to the threat. As of this month, the Biden administration has begun to draft a deal with ByteDance to resolve information security concerns without selling TikToks American division, according to The New York Times. The report outlines preliminary terms that fail to address the core issues: review by Oracle of TikToks servers and algorithms, and a security board to set policies. Given Oracles apathy towards the entire ordeal, this deal gives little hope that ByteDances violation of Americans privacy will be solved any time soon.

Taking action against TikTok is only one step toward securing personal and national security against Chinas flagrant data harvest. The U.S. government and its contractors must have the will to create holistic approaches that acknowledge the gravity of the threat or risk handing our adversaries the information they desire on a silver platter. If both the American public and the government feign ignorance of the dangers of foreign espionage, we are only enabling Chinas plans for technological oppression.

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Billion Dollar Harvest: TikTok's Threat to National and Personal Security MARIST CIRCLE - Marist College The Circle

Here Are the Favorites To Win the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize – TIME

The winner of the Nobel Peace Prize will be announced at 11am local time on Friday in Oslo, Norway.

The Peace Prize is one of six awards established by Swedish chemist (and inventor of dynamite) Alfred Nobel in 1895. The prize is considered the most expansive in its recognition, given that it awards people who have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind. The other five recognize contributions in literature, physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, and economic sciences.

The winner is selected by the five-person Norwegian Nobel Committee, which is appointed by Norways parliament.

According to a Reuters survey, Belarusian opposition politician Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, British nature broadcaster David Attenborough, the World Health Organization, environmental activist Greta Thunberg, Pope Francis, Tuvalus foreign minister Simon Kofe, and Myanmars National Unity government are among those who have been nominated by Norwegian lawmakers. The lawmakers have a track record of picking the eventual winner.

Below, a list of some of the favorites to win, based on nominations that were made public via Norwegian lawmakers, bookmakers odds, and a personal shortlist by the director of the Peace Research Institute Oslo.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who was on the 2022 TIME 100 list, is the bookmakers favorite to win the peace prize. After Russian President Vladimir Putins full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, Zelensky stood firm in Kyiv. He recorded a simple message, saying: We are here We are in Kyiv. We are protecting Ukraine.

Zelensky has since repeatedly spoken out against Russias actions on the global stage and urged international allies to punish the Kremlin for its aggression. He has had his share of close escapes; as the war first broke out, Russian troops were just minutes from finding him and his family. And more than seven months after the conflict broke outand after Russia annexed parts of UkraineZelensky continues to advocate for the country.

The People of Ukraine and the Kyiv Independent rank high up on the list of bookmakers odds.

Belarusian opposition politician Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya has been living in exile ever since running against Alexander Lukashenko in the countrys 2020 presidential election. Lukashenko claimed victory despite concerns that the election was unfair and a widespread belief that the results put Tsikhanouskaya ahead of him.

Tsikhanouskaya didnt always intend to enter politics. She was a full-time mother who had been considering restarting her career as an English teacher until May 2020 when Belarusian authorities arrested her husbandbringing his campaign to President to an end. Thats when she stepped in. Her candidacy galvanized many Belarusians and women in particular. After Lukashenko claimed victory two years ago, he ordered security forces to crack down violently on protests. Demonstrations against Lukashenkos regime have continued since and Tsikhanouskaya has continued to play a key role in challenging the President and authorities in calls for fair elections and an end to violence.

Tsikhanouskaya was on the 2021 TIME100 Next list, which honors emerging leaders shaping the future, and is a favorite among bookmakers.

Russias jailed opposition leader and anti-corruption activist Alexey Navalny has been a key figure in fighting for democratic reform. In 2011, Navalny created the Anti-Corruption Foundation to investigate high ranking Russian officials for corruption. For years, he has worked to hold Putins regimealong with its allied oligarchsaccountable.

Navalnys work has come at a high cost to his personal safety and freedom. He survived an assassination attempt in 2020, when he was poisoned by a nerve agent. Despite the danger to his life, he returned to Russia after living briefly in Germany during his recovery.

Navalny has some critics on the liberal side, too. Amnesty International stripped Navalny of his prisoner of conscience status after receiving many complaints about xenophobic comments he made that appeared to compare immigrants to cockroaches.

Navalny was recognized on the 2021 TIME100 list.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has been at the forefront of responding to crises in Ukraine and Afghanistan, providing cash assistance and relief items to those in need.

The war in Ukraine has led to more than 7.2 million refugees from Ukraine across Europe since Feb. 24 and more than 6.9 million Ukrainians have been internally displaced, according to the U.N. It amounts to Europes largest refugee crisis since the Second World War. In recent years, UNHCR has also led humanitarian responses to the Syrian war and the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean. The agency previously received the peace prize in 1954 and 1981.

For almost three years, the World Health Organization has been at the forefront of the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In that time, it has garnered praise for providing money, vaccines, and equipment to help contain the disease around the world. The WHO-backed COVAX program, which focuses on poorer countries, has so far delivered more than 1.7 billion vaccines to 146 countries.

But the United Nations agency has also been criticized for a series of missteps. Among them: a weeks delay in declaring the outbreak in China an international emergency, contradictory statements about asymptomatic spread, and a lack of urgency in advising people to wear masks to reduce transmission in the early phases of the outbreak.

The WHO was also considered a frontrunner to win the peace prize in both 2020 and 2021.

Tuvalus foreign minister Simon Kofe has made it a key part of his mission to address the climate crisis. Rising seas are a significant threat for sinking Pacific islands like Tuvalu, which is the fourth smallest country in the world and made up of nine small islands.

Kofe delivered his COP26 speech while knee-deep in the ocean to show just how much global warming and the sea level rise was impacting the island nation. Kofe pulled out of this years U.N. Ocean Conference to protest Chinas decision to block Taiwanese delegates.

David Attenborough, 95, is most beloved for his iconic voice and award-winning nature series, including Life on Earth and The Blue Planet. His works have intimately showcased wildlife and nature for many decades. More recently, Attenborough has spoken before the U.N. and World Economic Forum to advocate for addressing the climate crisis.

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunburg, TIMEs 2019 Person of the Year, has kept the pressure on global powers to do more to combat the climate crisis. Thunberg has long been vocal about a lack of action on climate change.

In 2021, she dismissed the COP26 climate summit as a failuresaying that it did not do enough to drastically cut CO2 emissions. More recently, she took aim at Swedish politicianssaying that they ignored the climate crisis ahead of Septembers national elections.

Thunberg first rose to fame in 2018 after starting a movement for students across the world to protest in favor of actions to combat the climate crisis. The 19-year-old has been considered a favorite to win the Peace Prize every year since 2019.

Indian activist Harsh Mander has long been vocal about the countrys crackdown on religious minoritieswhat he has described as a move away from its secular constitution. The Indian government charged Mander with inciting violence after he gave a speech at a peaceful anti-government protest in 2019. Today, when the Muslims of this country are being asked to prove their love and loyalty for this country, its important to note that this question is being asked by those who never participated in Indias freedom struggle and made no sacrifices, Mander had said.

Officials raided Manders home in 2021 after he went to Germany for a six-month fellowship programprompting backlash from hundreds of activists and academics.

Mander created the national initiative Karwan e Mohabbat (Caravan of Love) in 2017a collaborative movement that supports families who lost loved ones to hate violence and lynching.

Journalists Pratik Sinha and Mohammed Zubair, co-founders of Indian fact checking website AltNews, have relentlessly been battling misinformation in India, where the Hindu nationalist BJP party has been accused of frequently stoking discrimination against Muslims. Sinha and Zubair have methodologically debunked rumors and fake news circulating on social media and called out hate speech.

Indian authorities arrested Zubair in June for a meme he tweeted four years ago. Journalists around the world condemned the arrest and argued it was retribution for his fact-checking work. It is apparent that AltNews alert vigilance was resented by those who use disinformation as a tool to polarize the society and rake nationalist sentiments, said a June 28 statement from the Editors Guild of India. The Committee to Protect Journalists also called for Zubairs releasepointing to his arrest as another low for press freedom in India, where the government has created a hostile and unsafe environment for members of the press reporting on sectarian issues.

Uyghur activist Ilham Tohti was an economist and academic at Minzu University of Chinain Beijing before China charged Tohti with promoting separatism in 2014 and sentenced him to life in prison. He frequently used his position to shed light on the Chinese governments oppresion of the Muslim Uyghur community. Human rights groups have reported that Tohti has faced torture, including the denial of food and having his feet shackled, during his imprisonment. Tohtis daughter has repeatedly expressed concern for his lifesaying she doesnt know whether he is still alive.

Earlier this year, a set of essays and articles written by Tohti before his imprisonmentWe Uyghurs Have No Saywas released. The writings expand on his work unpacking Chinas treatment of Uyghurs and how the consequences of the countrys promotion of Han ethno-nationalism.

The Myanmar National Unity Government emerged as a shadow government after the countrys military detained Aung San Suu Kyi in a coup last February. The military charged her with violating COVID-19 rules and corruption. More than 1,000 people have been killed since her arrest. Thousands more have been arrested for protesting military rule.

The Myanmar National Unity Government is made up of elected officials who oppose military rule; many remain in exile. Myanmars military has ruled with a heavy handperpetuating a genocide against Rohingya Muslims and cracking down on nationwide protests calling for democratic reform.

The director of the Peace Research Institute Oslos personal shortlist includes Tsikhanouskaya and Navalny, Mander, and Tohti but also features: the International Court of Justice; Hong Kong activists Agnes Chow and Nathan Law; and the Human Rights Data Analysis Group Center (HRDAG) and the Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS).

Bookmakers also list the Committee to Protect Journalists.

According to the Reuters survey, the Arctic Council, aid group CARE, Chelsea Manning, Iranian human rights activist Masih Alinejad, the International Criminal Court, NATO, and WikiLeaks are also nominees that have been revealed by Norwegian lawmakers.

This is a developing story and has been updated on Oct. 5 and Oct. 6 to include additional names.

More Must-Read Stories From TIME

Write to Sanya Mansoor at sanya.mansoor@time.com.

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Here Are the Favorites To Win the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize - TIME

October 2022 Reads for the Rest of Us – Ms. Magazine

The Feminist Know-It-All: You know her. You cant stand her.Good thing shes not here!Instead, this column by gender and womens studies librarian Karla Strand will amplify stories of the creation, access, use and preservation of knowledge by women and girls around the world; share innovative projects and initiatives that focus on information, literacies, libraries and more; and, of course, talk about all of the books.

Each month, I provide Ms. readers with a list of new books being published by writers from historically excluded groups.

The aims of these lists are threefold:

Happy autumn (in the Northern hemisphere)!

As I write this, we are observing the autumnal equinox, where the daylight hours exactly equal the nighttime hours. So in the States, we are gearing up for fall, and in the Midwest where I am, we are sucking every last drop of sunlight out of the sky before it grows darker and colder.

I normally love seasonal changes; to me, they always signal renewal and transformation, grateful goodbyes and making way for new ventures. Wherever you are, I am hopeful you have time for reflection, gratitude and planning for whatever the future holds for you.

Just be sure to make some time to read one or two of these 30 new books, or whatever goes well with your pumpkin spice latte or hot apple cider!

By Derecka Purnell (@dereckapurnell). Astra House. 320 pages. Out Oct. 4.

Somehow I missed including this one when the hardcover came out in October of 2021. But heres the paperback, with new material, just when we need it!

Written by Gabriela Ponce and translated by Sarah Booker (@sarahkbooker). Restless Books. 192 pages. Out Oct. 4.

Now available in English, this sharp and singular stream of consciousness story of one womans experiences of divorce, embodiment, love, womanhood, power and freedom. Wicked in all the best ways.

Written by Igiaba Scego (@casamacombo). Translated by John Cullen and Gregory Conti. Other Press. 544 pages. Out Oct. 4.

An ode to Black migrants artistry, ambition and experiences as the other, The Color Line examines the unbreakable bond between two women living over a century apart.

By Emerald Garner with Etan Thomas and Monet Durham. Haymarket Books. 180 pages. Out Oct. 4.

This is the searing memoir of Emerald Garner, the daughter of Eric Garner, who was brutally murdered by police in 2014.

By Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha (@leahlashmiwrites). Arsenal Pulp Press. 272 pages. Out Oct. 4.

As only they can, Piepzna-Samarasinha has written a thoughtful volume of songs, letters, messages and stories for and about the life-sustaining work of disabled people during COVID (and always).

Edited by Joe Vallese (@joevallese). The Feminist Press at CUNY. 400 pages. Out Oct. 4.

Your nonfiction Halloween read is this fantastic anthology of writing about horror, all from deliciously queer perspectives. It includes contributions from Carmen Maria Machado, Prince Shakur, Tosha R. Taylor, Sarah Fonseca, and more, writing their takes on your favorite spooky flicks.

Edited by Charisse Burden-Stelly (@blackleftaf) and Jodi Dean (@jodi7768). Verso. 336 pages. Out Oct. 4.

In this groundbreaking collection, Burden-Stelly and Dean have compiled a treasure trove of historical, political and seminal writings about Communism from Black womens perspectives. Includes pieces by Claudia Jones, Charlotta Bass, Alice Childress, Dorothy Burnham and so many more.

By Jennifer Givhan (@GivhanJenn). Blackstone Publishing. 330 pages. Out Oct. 4.

Full of magick and mystery, Givhans latest explores tradition, power, creativity and connection in her signature lush, sensual prose.

By Ann Dvila Cardinal (@anndcardinal). Sourcebooks Landmark. 336 pages. Out Oct. 4.

If its mystical, masterful storytelling you crave this month, youll want to pick up award-winning writer Cardinals latest, which explores themes of loss, blessings, ancestry and mystery.

By Stephen Shames (@stephenshames)and Ericka Huggins. Acc Art Books. 192 pages. Out Oct. 10.

This stunning volume is an ode to the imperative, yet often unappreciated, roles of women of the Black Panther Party. Complementing Ericka Huggins superlative text are candid photos by Stephen Shames, many of which have never been published before.

By Marcie R. Rendon (White Earth Nation) (@MarcieRendon). Soho Crime. 240 pages. Out Oct. 11.

Thank goodness, Cash Blackbear is back! If you like a good mystery, this will be right up your alley.

By Vanessa A. Bee (@Vanessa_ABee). Astra House. 256 pages. Out Oct. 11.

This candid and compelling debut memoir examines identity, migration, status, tradition and family ties in intimate and evocative detail.

Written by Djaili Amadou Amal. Translated by Emma Ramadan (@EmKateRam). HarperVia. 176 pages. Out Oct. 11.

This powerful debut explores what happens when three Cameroonian women dare to challenge tradition, deconstruct taboos and fight for security and freedom.

By Charlayne Hunter-Gault (@charlaynehg). Harper. 368 pages. Out Oct. 11.

Pathblazing journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault has gifted us this collection of some of her most essential pieces, illustrating the beauty, variety and nuance of the Black experience over five decades.

By Tricia Hersey (@TheNapMinistry). Little, Brown Spark. 224 pages. Out Oct. 11.

If you dont follow The Nap Ministry, what are you even doing? Get on that, get the book and then read, nap, rest, relax and repeat. Its for the resistance, after all.

By Ruha Benjamin (@ruha9). Princeton University Press. 392 pages. Out Oct. 11.

Have the last few years been a veritable dumpster fire of crises in health and humanity? Yes! And theres no one better to light the way out and guide us in building a just future than Ruha Benjamin.

By April Ryan (@AprilDRyan). Amistad. 208 pages. Out Oct. 18.

As long-time White House correspondent, April Ryan, reflects on 2020, she reminds us of the Black women who have (always) led the way on paths to justice, well-being and truth.

Written by Kaoru Takamura, translated by Allison Markin Powell and Marie Iida. Soho Crime. 600 pages. Out Oct. 18.

Are as excited for Lady Joker 2 as I am? Well, okay, probably not. But if you havent given this brilliantly dark and mysterious crime saga a read yet, theres no time like the present!

Grand Central Publishing. 256 pages. Out Oct. 18.

This groundbreaking volume is the first collection of Afghan womens short fiction. The stories are reflective, surprising and candid, as the authors grapple with gender, tradition, relationships, violence, work and more.

By Luke Dani Blue (@LukeDaniBlue). Amethyst Editions. 256 pages. Out Oct. 18.

In their first collection of stories, Luke Dani Blue explores queerness, identity and meaning-making in new, intense and remarkable ways.

By Chelsea Manning (@xychelsea). Farrar, Strauss and Giroux. 272 pages. Out Oct. 18.

Its here! Its here! Those of you who read this column know how long Ive been awaiting Chelsea Mannings memoir. I havent gotten my hands on it yet, but Ive waited this long, so I can wait a little longer

By Chant Reid. Sarabande Books. 96 pages. Out Oct. 18.

Reids incisive debut is not for the faint of heart. Dont let the small size fool you, its full of experimental prose, poetics, photos, thoughts, secrets, depth and breadth. Stick with it and witness the brilliant vulnerability that it gently holds.

By Fatimah Asghar (@asgharthegrouch). One World. 352 pages. Out Oct. 18.

Longlisted for the National Book Award and the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize, this debut is not to be missed. Its an achingly lovely story of sisterhood, loss, violence and redemption.

By Nadia Shammas (@nadiashammas) and Marie Enger (@so_engery). Tor Nightfire. 128 pages. Out Oct. 18.

Heres your graphic novel for Halloween! Shammas and Enger have created a singularly compassionate and gorgeous look at mental health, horror and humanity.

By Lizzie Borden (@LizzieBordenLA). Seven Stories Press. 432 pages. Out Oct. 18.

In this candid and kaleidoscopic anthology, filmmaker Lizzie Borden presents a glorious, shocking and illuminating collection of autobiographical stories and interviews by and about strippers.

By Nghi Vo (@nghivowriting). Tordotcom. 112 pages. Out Oct. 25.

Nghi Vos last installment of the Singing Hills series continues the magical, mythical and memorable adventures of Chih, the wandering cleric. If you are late to the series, dont worry, they can be read in any orderand you dont want to miss them!

By Wanda A. Hendricks. University of Illinois Press. 344 pages. Out Oct. 25.

This is the long-overdue biography of Madie Hall Xuma, who took her social justice work in the Jim Crow U.S. South to South Africa during the height of apartheid.

Edited by Shane Burley (@shane_burley1). AK Press. 564 pages. Out Oct. 25.

With contributions by Margaret Killjoy, Mirna Wabi-Sabi, Shane Burley, Emily Gorcenski and many more, this remarkable collection focuses on anti-fascism and the fight against white supremacy and far-right hate.

By Shira Hassan. Haymarket Books. 408 pages. Out Oct. 25.

For decades, Shira Hassan has led the labor for liberatory harm reduction. Now she has compiled this groundbreaking anthology to share stories, successes and lessons.

By Sami Schalk (@DrSamiSchalk). Duke University Press. 224 pages. Out Oct. 31.

In their latest, Sami Schalk explores the histories and essential lessons of Black disabled labor, politics and movements. This is a long-overdue and essential volume.

U.S. democracy is at a dangerous inflection pointfrom the demise of abortion rights, to a lack of pay equity and parental leave, to skyrocketing maternal mortality, and attacks on trans health. Left unchecked, these crises will lead to wider gaps in political participation and representation. For 50 years, Ms. has been forging feminist journalismreporting, rebelling and truth-telling from the front-lines, championing the Equal Rights Amendment, and centering the stories of those most impacted. With all thats at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help, Support Ms. today with a donationany amount that is meaningful to you. For as little as $5 each month, youll receive the print magazine along with our e-newsletters, action alerts, and invitations to Ms. Studios events and podcasts. We are grateful for your loyalty and ferocity.

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October 2022 Reads for the Rest of Us - Ms. Magazine

CIA co-opts Harriet Tubman to boost its efforts to recruit spies and assassins – WSWS

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) made headlines last week after agency director William J. Burns cut the ribbon on a new statue of Harriet Tubman outside CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia.

The statue of Tubman (c. 1822-1913), the great abolitionist and political activist of the American Civil War, now stands next to two others: Nathan Hale, an American spy executed by the British during the Revolutionary War, and William J. Donovan, considered the founding father of the CIA.

The unveiling of the statue is the focal point of a broader CIA campaign around Tubmans legacy. A special tribute on the CIA website titled, Honoring Harriet Tubman: A Symbol of Freedom and an Intelligence Pioneer, attempts to rebrand Tubman as a 19th century version of a CIA spy. The piece is a carefully written, distorted history of Tubmans life and the historical significance of her work.

The piece couches Tubmans heroic work of rescuing slaves through the Underground Railroad in military garb, describing her as leading clandestine operations to gather vital intelligence as a spy.

A Twitter post by the CIA announcing the piece reads, Harriet Tubman was not only a conductor of the Underground Railroad, but also a spy for the Union.

One struggles to find the words to describe the level of absurdity surrounding the whole campaign. Commentary on the event reads like a skit showcasing the height of delusion and depravity in the ruling class.

It was awesome, CIA Museum Director Robert Byer told the Washington Post after the ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Byer went on to explain to NBC News that Tubmans legacy was an example of intelligence work, going behind enemy lines, using safe houses and signals intelligence to get people to freedom.

Tubman operated with ingenuity, stealth, courage and selflessness, Byer said. These are all traits we want our officers to embody.

At first blush, the Washington Post writes, Tubman, a civil rights activist who famously and repeatedly broke the law, might seem an unlikely inspiration for todays foreign intelligence officers. But Byer said there was a lot of overlap between the ethos of the CIA and Tubmans. Who do they think they are fooling?

Tubman was part of a whole generation of anti-slavery opponents such as Frederick Douglass, John Brown, Sojourner Truth, and Wendell Phillips who represented a profoundly egalitarian and democratic tradition.

When they supported the military struggle of the Union against the Confederacy, as Tubman did, not just in words but in deeds, they were fighting on side of that democratic tradition against the monster of slavocracy. Today, by contrast, the CIA defends countless reactionary, dictatorial regimes around the world, including some, like Saudi Arabia, where slavery is still practiced.

If one were to search for the modern-day equivalent of the oppressors against whom Tubman and her contemporaries fought, the plantation masters and their slave-catchers, those who today shackle, enslave and torture others, one would need look no further than the CIA itself.

The record of CIA torture and crimes against humanity is matched in modern history only by the Nazi Gestapo and the Stalinist GPU/KBD. The agency runs a world-wide network of criminality, deceit, and violence operating through hundreds of black sites in every corner of the globe, used to carry out the interests of American imperialism with the most inhumane and depraved means.

The Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture, issued in 2014 as a heavily redacted document, cited the regular use of tactics such as waterboarding, systematic beatings, forced chaining to a wall for up to 17 days, depriving prisoners of sleep for more than a week, threatening prisoners with death, mock burials, and hitherto unknown tortures such as rectal feeding.

One shudders to imagine what would be revealed in the unredacted report.

What are the real character traits of those able to carry out such extreme violence? If one were to ask Majid Khan, Chelsea Manning, or Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri what skills their torturers possessed, what would they say?

When former CIA director Gina Haspel was watching the torture of detainee Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, who was hooded and naked, at a US black site in Thailand in 2002, was she portraying the same Harriet Tubman-style selflessness that Byer hopes all their officers embody?

Of course, it is hardly necessary to argue that the guiding principles of equality and freedom that were the bedrock of Tubmans life stand as the complete antithesis to the entire basis of the CIA, which has organized the overthrow of democratically elected governments from Indonesia to Iran to Ukraine to Guatemala, Chile, and most of Latin America.

In fact, the real motivation behind the CIA campaign is quite plainly stated by the agency itself.

We need diversity in order to do our mission here, Byer said. If those slaves hadnt trusted Harriet Tubman, they wouldnt have given her information. That is, the co-opting of Harriet Tubman is a part of a broader campaign by the CIA to attract a more diverse workforce to the agency on the basis of identity politics imperialism.

This identity-based campaign initially garnered attention in 2021 with the launching of the Humans of CIA'' series. The campaign amounted to a series of videos highlighting the agencys commitment to racial and gender diversity.

The rebranding of Tubman is part-and-parcel of the same basic campaign. One of the things that this agency has in place is the idea that our workforce cannot work on worldwide missions without looking like the United States, without looking like the world, Janelle Neises, deputy director of the CIAs museum, explained in an interview.

The campaign has caused the usual backlash among the right-wing elements. Mike Pompeo, for example, tweeted in response to the unveiling of the statue, a woke military is a weak military. On the other hand, there has been no public backlash thus far from outlets claiming to be left.

Their silence is a reflection of an extreme nervousness. The seamless marriage of identity politics and US imperialism is a devastating exposure of the reactionary content of politics based on race, gender, and sexuality that almost all the so-called left organizations in the US have so ferociously promoted.

Identity politics and related ideologies such as intersectionality have become a fundamental part of the Democratic Partys efforts to divide workers and enrich a thin layer of the middle class which falsely presents itself as representative of the broad masses.

The fact that these left ideas'' are now proving an essential tool of the bourgeoisie to maintain its class domination over the working class by keeping workers divided along racial and gender lines stands to expose all those identity politicians who have made careers out of denigrating class identity, promoting the Democratic Party, and supporting so-called human rights imperialism.

Moreover, the CIA is carrying out this campaign against the backdrop of open and intense discussion within the ruling class about the possibility of nuclear war. The United States and NATO are in a reckless pursuit of global geopolitical objectives for which they are prepared to sacrifice an untold number of working class lives and livelihoods, regardless of skin color, gender or sexual identity.

However, there is immense opposition to war within the working class and especially among working class youth. The reemergence of a wave of working class struggles throughout the US and around the world is generating a powerful bulwark of working class solidarity against the divisive and toxic politics of identity.

Over the last several months, an explosive opposition of rail workers has developed against the efforts of the unions and the Biden administration to force through a sellout agreement. There are also developing strike movements among health care workers, educators, service workers and other sections of the working class.

It will only be on the basis of a unified struggle by workers in defense of their social and democratic rights that war can be stopped, and all of the institutions of class exploitation dismantled.

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The Socialist Equality Party is organizing the working class in the fight for socialism: the reorganization of all of economic life to serve social needs, not private profit.

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CIA co-opts Harriet Tubman to boost its efforts to recruit spies and assassins - WSWS

You Are Responsible For Introducing Those Around You To Bitcoin – Bitcoin Magazine

This is an opinion editorial by Holly Young, Ph.D., an active builder in the Portuguese Bitcoin community.

The number of people buying and using Bitcoin is on the rise. Jason Deane calculated that in the first six months of 2021, the number of Bitcoin users grew by about 165 people per minute. It sounds like a lot right?

But we need to get to a point where Bitcoin takes its place in common parlance and we all have a role to play.

If youre reading this, its probably because youve been through the personal epiphany which is the discovery of Bitcoin. Most of us can recognize the stages in others too. We tend to move from skepticism to a tentative trying out of Bitcoin and a small investment, a (usually brief) phase in which we think this or that altcoin is also a viable investment (be honest, you probably did too at some point and no, it wasnt just the state of the market at the time doing your own research also includes at least considering the other options before concluding that maximalism is the way forward). And then comes the fall for most of us precipitous and irreversible down the rabbit hole. In that phase, we cant get enough. Were hungry for real information about money. Most of us have been that person who sits for 30 minutes in a stationary car at their destination to listen to the last bit of the podcast as the penny drops. Not just one penny, but a shining cascade of them. I know I have.

Then comes the time when your life starts changing too. You start questioning everything because if what you knew before about money was untrue, what does that mean for health care? For diet? For family or dating? Even your relationship with God?

Theres no denying it finding Bitcoin is absolutely life changing, and once you have seen it, theres just no going back.

For many of us, this can bring some difficult life changes. We can find ourselves alienated from previous social circles, even from relationships and family. And then comes the sudden, wonderful realization that the Bitcoin community is already out there. For many of us, spending time with other Bitcoiners represents the first time that we have not been considered an outsider.

Then we want to tell everyone we know about it. We are just desperate to inform friends, family, colleagues hell, even that random stranger who happened to be standing next to us in the supermarket queue. For many of those people, that contact and learning process will be as life changing as it has been for you and I. But it does still happen on a regular basis that we fail to bring the message we intended to bring and that the learning opportunity which that supermarket queue provided is missed. Adoption is, frankly, nowhere near where we would expect it to be, considering the circumstances. So, where are we going wrong?

Lets face it, its hard to talk about money. According to this article, money is in the top three subjects which couples argue about, along with sex and children. (Incidentally, the Bitcoin community clears up those topics too.)

Being able to discuss money within your family is a really crucial skill. We should be able to hold fluid, relaxed conversations about money and the basis of these conversations must be about the real nature of money where it comes from, how it works and what we need it to do. In order to get to this point we need to educate friends and family about algebra (money) and trigonometry (banking and the financial system) before explaining calculus (bitcoin). Talking in extremely practical terms can be very helpful for this. What problem does bitcoin solve for you? What problem does bitcoin solve for friends and family? What problem does bitcoin solve for those who live in the global South or under repressive regimes?

We are also suffering from a dearth of good, accessible learning resources for this purpose. The Bitcoin Standard is a fantastic resource for those really willing to learn about money but still requires a significant time investment and may be a bit much to ask of anyone only just starting out. We need more resources for people to look at in the first half hour of their interest resources which will give a nutshell overview and pique interest in learning more. We need some good Bitcoin books for children because children are always the future, and our children in particular as those who will have learned at the earliest age about Bitcoin who will never have known a world before Bitcoin, in many cases. Quick shoutout here to the Bitcoin Rabbi, Michael Caras for writing one excellent one: Bitcoin Money: A Tale of Bitville Discovering Good Money.

Guys. We need to talk about Twitter.

Just as much as we all go through a phase of thinking this or that altcoin is the next great investment before we see sense and denounce altcoins for the scams they are, we also all go through a phase of telling ourselves and others that we are on Twitter to learn. As with all the most convincing excuses, there is a grain of truth there. Negotiating your way through the plethora of Bitcoin content, the good, the bad and the ugly, can be a tough call. Twitter can help you identify the people influencers, if you will who have the hottest word on Bitcoin, who have the sweetest soundbites, who can most succinctly tell you why they are a Bitcoin Maximalist this week.

It is also about who hates who right now, who we are canceling because they might have had the audacity to charge for a course, because they dared to suggest that maximalism is getting a little toxic around the edges or whomsoever currently has the dubious honor of being the focus of negative attention.

While Twitter has undeniably played a vital role in the development of the international Bitcoin community (and may I just take a moment to acknowledge that many Bitcoiners, very justifiably, love Jack Dorsey) it is also playing a destructive role, slurping up our time and our attention and wasting our energy on pointless infighting. Were never going to insult people into financial freedom. Encouraging people to do their own research is undermined by cancel culture.

We need solid, interesting, engaging materials for those who are starting out and learning about Bitcoin.

Heres a thought. Take a look at how much screen time you spend on Twitter each day and make a pledge: take half of that time and spend it explaining Bitcoin to someone new or developing something online which people can use as a learning resource instead.

If you want to scrap on Twitter, do it privately. Take it outside, into the virtual car park of direct messages.

Who have you orange pilled this week? We underestimate the power of community and joining a community as such is not necessarily a part of becoming a Bitcoiner just one of the beautiful things about the freedom it brings is that you get to choose how far into the experience you want to go. But once you have seen the ugly soul of the fiat system and the pristine alternative Bitcoin offers, you cant look away. It could even be argued that there is a moral and ethical duty there to help others towards a better system, too.

So here is my request. Take some of your time this week to make some positive contributions in the form of orange piling. We cant all be Jack Dorsey, Michael Saylor or Lyn Alden. But we can all make Bitcoin the subject for discussion around the kitchen table. We can all share the knowledge and information we have gleaned ourselves with those close to us yes, even in the supermarket.

Invest some of your time thinking about the message about Bitcoin that you share with others. Troubleshoot your approach. Are you doing something effectively? Where are you going wrong? And if you can, share these learning experiences, too.

This is a guest post by Holly Young. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.

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You Are Responsible For Introducing Those Around You To Bitcoin - Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoins Philosophy And Political Promise Of Borderlessnes And Solving Inefficiencies – Forbes

Bitcoin BTC is not just a decentralized peer-to-peer electronic cash system. Theres more. It is a new way of thinking about economics, philosophy, politics, human rights, and society.

Hungarian sculptors and creators Reka Gergely (L) and Tamas Gilly (R) pose next to the statue of ... [+] Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious inventor of the virtual currency bitcoin, after its unveiling at the Graphisoft Park in Budapest, on September 16, 2021. - Hungarian bitcoin enthusiasts unveiled a statue on September 16 in Budapest that they say is the first in the world to honour Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious inventor of the virtual currency. The bronze life-size sculpture depicts a hooded figure with stylised facial features, alluding to Nakamoto, a pseudonym credited as bitcoin's founder, but whose identity remains unknown. (Photo by ATTILA KISBENEDEK / AFP) (Photo by ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP via Getty Images)

Most of the literature I have read about bitcoin majorly focuses on it as a store of value, a medium of exchange, an investment vehicle, a shield against government overreach, and more. However, there is less literature about the philosophy of Bitcoin and the politics it represents.

Modern political systems have made it harder for individuals to focus on what they do. Besides working hard to create value and store that value for future use, the global citizen has to work twice as hard thinking about money and how it can be tweaked to preserve and/or grow value.

This is mainly because the political systems are anchored around the control of fiat money and cannot control the temptation to increase supply while the citizens bear the burden of increased inflation and cyclical recessions.

The average global citizen does not have complete freedom to do what they do best because they must divert their attention to the subject of money. They understand that inflation erodes their purchasing power over time and that they must devote a significant portion of their income to hiring money managers to invest their money.

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Alternatively, they actively invest their money in the markets, which is tedious and time-consuming. A larger proportion delegate the function by staking their money in financial institutions and financial instruments that rarely beat inflation.

What if there was an efficient store of value? Would this make the global citizen free to focus on value creation in whatever they do best?

In my opinion, Bitcoin's philosophy is based on freedom and borderlessness. If it eventually acts as a stable store of value, which it has achieved over a 4-year time horizon and failed under that time horizon, the global citizen will have more freedom to focus on what they do best without handing over control to a third party or spending significant time managing their store of value.

Bitcoin is borderless. It cruises through multiple jurisdictions and perhaps planets, well, if Elon Musk's mission succeeds. It presents a strong case for solving global inefficiencies associated with different states using different fiat currencies of varying quality.

For instance, the emigration problem, where people living in countries where there is bad money move to countries with perceived better money, can be evened out with bitcoin adoption. For people working in the digital space, cryptocurrency payments (not just bitcoin) have begun to solve the income inequality problem. Developers, content creators, artists, and other online workers have begun to close the pay gap regardless of where they are located.

In Bitcoins philosophy, an individuals country of birth or residence should not dictate their economic outcome. When they work hard to create value, they should be able to store and build value on a relatively fair playground. A truck driver in a country like Nigeria should have a similar level of financial outcome to a truck driver in, say, the UK. The value created should be borderless.

The inefficiencies resulting from the different quality of fiat currencies and government systems should be solved with wider bitcoin adoption. For instance, an investor looking to invest in a coffee shop in a busy city like New York or Nairobi should find it easier to allocate capital to either without worrying about the influence of the fiat currency used in the two jurisdictions or the governance systems that apply. Bitcoin makes it possible to invest borderlessly without the headwinds associated with traditional financial institutions and systems.

In Zimbabwe, annual inflation was over 250% in July, and the central bank raised interest rates to 200% to combat the high inflation. What type of business can thrive in such an environment? I am confident that there are great businesses in Zimbabwe that solve critical societal problems, and they deserve to be able to access finance at competitive rates. As a result, they would price their products more competitively, resulting in lower inflation.

The lack of political influence on bitcoins supply makes it the hardest asset on earth. This means that, as adoption grows, the value goes higher since supply is capped. This eliminates the possibility that political elites could print more like they do with fiat currencies leading to hyperinflation and later recessions. It also makes Bitcoin a trusted store of value and medium of exchange. Where am I going with this?

With wider institutional adoption, the political promise of Bitcoin is solving inefficiencies. For instance, according to the United Nations, the world produces sufficient food to feed all humanity. However, the wastage and inefficiencies in storage and distribution leave an estimated 800 million people hungry or malnourished.

For instance, with Bitcoins borderlessness, investments can be made in regions where there is excess food production at lower costs to improve standards, storage, and distribution channels. This would reduce food wastage and lower food costs across the world. However, the current financial systems make it harder due to taxation, currency devaluation, and poor access to financing.

This promise of borderlessness is already being experienced in energy production and distribution. Bitcoin miners are investing in regions that have excess power production at low costs and redistributing this value in other areas. In addition, some miners are acting as grid stabilizers where they consume excess energy when demand is low and switch off when demand is high thereby helping power producers earn value during both high-demand and low-demand grid cycles.

At a macro level, the capitalist Keynesian system that led to central banks printing trillions of cash during the pandemic led to the current high inflation environment that we are experiencing today. Though it helped people survive, to a degree, during the pandemic, the spillover effects have led to the poor people becoming poorer and the rich getting richer.

The Bitcoin plebs that understand its philosophy have been accumulating Satoshis at lower valuations since they understand the fundamentals. They are able to store value in peace while focusing on doing what they do best. They are not worried that the FED is going to reverse course and print more dollars thereby devaluing their stored value. They have become sovereign individuals.

In my article about how Bitcoin is helping people become sovereign individuals, I explained the issue of borderlessness when it comes to spending your value, storing, and achieving a level playing ground for everyone.

Disclosure: I own bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

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Bitcoins Philosophy And Political Promise Of Borderlessnes And Solving Inefficiencies - Forbes

What is Bitcoin hash rate and why does it matter? – Cointelegraph

The SHA-256 cryptographic hashing function, which converts any input data into a 256-bit string (the hash), is one of the technologies using which Bitcoin measures its hash rate. Due to the one-way nature of this function, it is simple to determine the hash from an input but not the other way around.

A hash rate, which can be expressed in billions, trillions, quadrillions and quintillions, is a measurement of how many calculations can be carried out each second. For instance, a hash rate of 1BH/s indicates that one billion estimates can be made each second. But, how is Bitcoin’s hash rate measured? Exahashes per second (EH/s) that are equivalent to one quintillion hashes are used to express the hash rate of BTC. By comparing the average time between mined blocks with the network difficulty at a particular time, the overall network hash rate may be roughly calculated.

So, what is mining difficulty? The mining challenge refers to how tough it is for miners to generate a hash lower than the desired hash, which is accomplished by lowering the hashed block header’s numerical value. On average, a new block (Bitcoin) is found every ten minutes. However, if BTC is discovered less frequently than the average time, the difficulty decreases or vice-versa.

Furthermore, it is essential to note that the Bitcoin network’s mining difficulty is automatically changed after 2,016 blocks have been mined. Therefore, depending on the number of miners and their total hashing power in the mining network, the difficulty can be adjusted either higher or downwards. So, what is Bitcoin’s current hash rate?

Although the precise hashing power of Bitcoin is unknown, it can be inferred from the number of blocks currently being mined and the level of block difficulty. So, how to monitor Bitcoin’s hash rate? Blockhain.com offers estimates about Bitcoin’s current hash rate, which is 224.383m TH/s as of September 25, 2022.

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What is Bitcoin hash rate and why does it matter? - Cointelegraph

EU Issues Bitcoin, Crypto Ban On Russia With New Sanctions – Bitcoin Magazine

The European Union (EU) doubled down on previous sanctions against Russia which limited bitcoin and cryptocurrency transactions resulting in an outright ban against all transactions, per a statement from the European Commission.

The Commission welcomes the Council's adoption of an eighth package of hard-hitting sanctions against Russia for its aggression against Ukraine, reads the statement.

All bitcoin and cryptocurrency wallets, accounts and custody services in Russia are hereby banned. Previously, transactions were limited to 10,000 ($9,900).

The ban comes on the heels of recent news from Russia, where its Ministry of Finance announced the countrys intentions to allow any industry to accept bitcoin and cryptocurrency for international trade. Last month, Russian Deputy Finance Minister Alexei Moiseev stated that "there is no way to do without cross-border settlements in cryptocurrency."

Russias need to transact in bitcoin and cryptocurrency has stemmed from a continuing dialogue between the Russian central bank and its Ministry of Finance as the two regulators determine how best to introduce this ability to the economy.

But while the two regulators debate on how to accomplish the task, the EU has stepped in prohibiting any and all cryptocurrency transactions and services with its most recent ban.

The new sanctions extend beyond cryptocurrency to also include restrictions on individuals and entities in the Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions. Each sanctioned individual is believed to be involved in the Russian occupation, illegal annexation and sham referenda in the previously mentioned territories.

Furthermore, export sanctions aiming at Russian military, industrial and technological access, as well as at its defense sector, were introduced. The EU also imposed a 7 billion import restriction and oil price caps.

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EU Issues Bitcoin, Crypto Ban On Russia With New Sanctions - Bitcoin Magazine