Crypto Industry Divided Over Introducing Circuit Breakers on Exchanges – Cointelegraph

Since the inception of Bitcoin, volatility has been a part of the cryptocurrency narrative even before exchanges and the current mainstream mentions. Now that traditional markets are showing volatility further exacerbated than anti-fragile cryptocurrency during the coronavirus pandemic, the community is seeing how traditional marketplaces like the New York Stock Exchange handle equity and commodity volatility through circuit breaker implementation.

In cryptocurrency and decentralized finance, liquidation auctions have been the answer for periods of market turbulence. The prominence of the traditional marketplaces triggering the circuit breakers has led some cryptocurrency exchanges to implement similar measures. So as the community debates the needs for mechanisms to protect investors versus decentralization, there are a few options and scenarios to consider.

When speaking on circuit markets and market volatility in a conversation with Cointelegraph, Vadym Kurylovych, the founder of STEX a regulated cryptocurrency exchange based in Estonia said:

Trading derivatives on the offshore exchanges looks similar to playing roulette in Madagascar casino. You knew you'd get busted the minute you joined but the potential payout entices you to take the risk.

While the popularity of derivatives and financial products continues to grow within the cryptocurrency ecosystem, educating investors is an important step that exchanges are now beginning to take. While this does not fully prepare non-sophisticated investors in advance for when strong solutions are developed, crypto is left borrowing protection mechanisms from the traditional space. For clarity, protection mechanisms in cryptocurrency will be broken down into circuit breakers at the exchange level as well as the token level.

Mimicking the traditional market, some cryptocurrency exchanges have implemented protection mechanisms in the form of circuit breakers to safeguard their users, while others are resistant to this level of control citing decentralization or other measures to meet demand during periods of high liquidation. So, should exchanges implement circuit breakers to protect users from plummeting prices?

The New York Stock Exchange implements three circuit breaker thresholds that measure a decrease against the prior days closing price of the S&P 500 Index -- 7% (Level 1), 13% (Level 2), and 20% (Level 3). When the first two levels are reached, a 15-minute suspension of trading occurs. At the level 3 threshold, daily trading ceases. In a conversation with Cointelegraph, Ryan Salame, head of OTC for Alameda Research which manages over $100 million in digital assets and trades $600 million to $1.5 billion per day stated:

[It] seems to me more like a philosophical debate than anything else, but I imagine you get a more stable market with circuit breakers thus a larger audience would be in favor of them. I personally love a 24/7 market with no circuit breakers and 100x leverage with high volatility, but can certainly see the argument against it.

The difference may be in the type of product being offered to the financial community. While Bitcoin is decentralized, other financial products in the cryptocurrency space may need circuit breakers to protect against black swan events just like the traditional market has experienced.

The cryptocurrency market has many large liquidation events to point to, but recently, the now-infamous Black Thursday on BitMex is a great example. The massive sell-off was reportedly triggered by two DDoS attacks causing a flash crash in the Bitcoin (BTC) price. This attack did major damage to investors, and it is being reported that Binance now tops BitMex for Bitcoin Futures. BitMex lacks circuit breakers and therefore benefits financially in times of market volatility. While the financial benefit may have been large for BitMex, the fallout from not protecting users may cost the platform in the long run.

Currently, Binance has not implemented any form of circuit breakers in their exchanges. In a recent interview with Cointelegraph, the exchanges CEO Changpeng Zhao touched upon circuit breakers, but did not give out any indication of future Binance plans for them. He did, however, remark that blockchain is much fairer in solving the fundamental problems of the old system, which means the fiat-based system. This lends credence to Binance upholding its decentralized philosophy and resisting the development and implementation of circuit breakers.

Jake Stott, the founder of blockchain think tank dGen, lent his insight in a conversation with Cointelegraph, saying, With circuit breakers, we start to see a cryptocurrency market that betrays some of the fundamental reasons for it to exist. He went on to add:

Without circuit breakers, we may never see products such as a Bitcoin ETF, due to the huge price variations that could occur between the 24 hour and traditional exchange-traded product. Im personally in favour of the circuit breakers because it appears much of the recent problems were caused by margin traders uncovered shorts and subsequent clogs in the Bitcoin and Ethereum networks. Price crashes were much more extreme for those reasons.

So what will cryptocurrency exchange circuit breakers look like? A circuit breaker introduced by the Huobi exchange may give some insight into how the industrys trends could traverse. The liquidation circuit breakers only allow partial liquidation of orders rather than full liquidation, which previously was the case. The circuit breaker acts differently than traditional market circuit breakers, which are used to curb panic-selling. The Huobi circuit breaker will terminate liquidation orders on positions where the margin ratio is 0% when abnormal price deviation between the market price and liquidation price is identified.

Related: What Is a Circuit Breaker and Why Do Exchanges Need Them?

While there have been calls to ban shorting, such a move could disrupt liquidity, while an approach like the one Huobi developed protects users funds first. While Huobi may be on the right path, Jens Willemen, a partner at Kairon Labs Market Making which provides liquidity to exchanges outlined implementation struggles for circuit breakers, saying that for the smaller tokens, the ones that are just getting listed a circuit breaker would be a good thing, adding that overall:

Circuit breakers do make sense for the larger, more liquid tokens to add in a bit more stability to the markets. In practice we believe this will be very hard to implement in the crypto space. Most tokens are listed on a number of different (unregulated) exchanges, getting all these exchanges to agree on when and how to implement these circuit breakers will be very difficult to say the least.

A similar sentiment was shared by Michael Creadon, a board advisor at Inveniam Capital Advisors a digital financial instruments tool for private capital markets told Cointelegraph that traders would be caught out either with or without circuit breakers in place:

Circuit breakers wont work because there are too many exchanges and no centralized rule-making body. If Coinbase freezes up but the market moves another 50% on Binance, you won't be able to get out. So youre damned if you do, damned if you dont. For long term hodlers, I think this is less important. For day traders, this is very important. Circuit breakers are a good thing, but hard to deploy when there are hundreds, if not thousands, of trading venues.

Understandably, competition and high trade volume is beneficial to exchanges, which lends itself to a future where not all will implement circuit breakers. Exchanges will continue to ensure they make money even if practices may harm investors and prevent wipeouts due to system overloading and attacks.

While exchange circuit breakers take the first step in protecting investors, the shortcomings appear to stem from the difficulty of widespread implementation and consensus on best practice. Additionally, individual tokens have the ability to implement governance circuit breakers and reserves in an effort to protect users.

While discussing the potential of seeing token-level circuit breakers in any upcoming projects and launches with Cointelegraph, Leslie Lei, listing director for Cointiger the first cryptocurrency exchange to introduce an equity mechanism through their native token remarked:

The decentralized goal of the cryptocurrency industry will not be left up to the exchanges alone and a project we are aware of is already implementing circuit breakers like investment downside protection. We see innovative projects developing and launching daily that strive to meet the needs for the whole ecosystem in a decentralized fashion. Most options exchanges implement present major centralization issues with everyone running on different APIs, so the token-level approach may be a preferred solution while keeping users interests first.

While DeFi companies seek an alternative to overarching exchange circuit breakers, the potential solution could also lie in non-correlating reserves. While this is possible and currently being implemented with DAI, Dmitri Laush, CEO of GetID an omnichannel Know Your Customer solution noted to Cointelegraph:

The Crypto industry is still in the Wild West zone in survival mode, with monopoly or duopoly on this market finally we can see those rules, but it will not in the near future. And as altcoins usually reflect BTC and ETH in their drops and raises, the circuit breakers can help traders dealing with altcoins and tokens as well.

The dependence on volatile assets such as Bitcoin and Ether (ETH) places strain on reserves and values of tokens. A recent example is Ethereums crash creating issues for DAI during Black Thursday. MakerDAO remedied the dependence on a volatile Ethereum and implemented another reserve that utilizes USD Coin (USDC), a fiat-pegged stablecoin. Liquidity through demand or reserves is necessary, yet only reserves can be legally controlled.

Eventually, cryptocurrencies may need to add their own circuit breakers to protect the baseline value of assets. For example, during the DAI Auction, a number of users won liquidation auctions for 0 DAI because of a bug. While the Ethereum used to create the DAI was not worth 0, the drop in price caused mass auctions to occur. These failures triggered a $28 million lawsuit against the Maker Foundation.

For this reason, reserves themselves may need to act as a circuit breaker. For example, Gemini Dollar does not see major exchange fluctuations because it is minted and burned at a 1:1 ratio to the fiat currency it tokenizes. Likewise, Bancor-based reserves produce slippage on available funds in a transparent way to disperse liquidations.

The community appears split on whether cryptocurrency and exchanges should implement circuit breakers and is even more divided on whether those circuit breakers should be at the exchange level or token level. However, one piece seemed clear throughout all the opinions and developmental research: Projects that focus on the success of investors and users will come out of this as winners.

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Crypto Industry Divided Over Introducing Circuit Breakers on Exchanges - Cointelegraph

XRP Investor Goes Viral, Says Hes Losing Confidence in Ripple and Third-Largest Cryptocurrency – The Daily Hodl

A fan of Ripple and long-time XRP investor is going viral on Reddit after saying hes concerned about the future ofthe third-biggest crypto asset on the market.

His post, entitled Long-term hodler losing confidence, shot to the top of the r/Ripple subreddit. The trader questions the level of XRP adoption among financial institutions and whether Ripples crypto-based payments product, called On Demand Liquidity (ODL), will boost the price of the cryptocurrency.

In particular, he says comments made by Ripples executives, including chief executive officer Brad Garlinghouse, stating that a significant number of banks would utilize XRP, have not yet come to fruition.

Garlinghouse and Schwartz mentioned dozens of banks would be using XRP, Ripple would be working with major household names, but two years have passed and very little has been made public Perhaps the developments continue to happen behind the screens, but so far the use case/ODL have not had any positive impact on price and XRP continues to move along with BTC.

The investor says he first bought XRP back in 2017 and says hes not planning on selling.

The top response to the investors criticisms indicates a more positive trend: rising volume for Ripples XRP-based liquidity product.

Ripple has publicly stated (XRP 2019 Q4 Markets Report) that they will be introducing a new market in Latin American, Asia-Pacific, and Europe in 2020 Crypto holders have been waaaayyyy out in front of their skiis for several years now. Being frank, XRP is the only asset that is delivering on its use case in Production on any scale today.

Ripple raised $200 million in a Series C funding round in December and says it will use the funds to grow its XRP-based remittance platform, boost development on the XRP Ledger, onboard new talent and better serve its customers.

XRP is outperforming traditional markets in 2020. It began the year at $0.1936, shot to $0.3372 during the crypto-wide bull run in February, and then returned to January levels. The digital asset is currently trading at $0.1938 at time of publishing.

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Tether Surpasses XRP to Become the Third-Largest Cryptocurrency – newsBTC

Tether has replaced XRP, the native token of the San Francisco-based blockchain payment firm Ripple Labs, to become the third-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization.

Top cryptocurrency tokens by market cap as on April 22 | Source: Messari.io

The dollar-pegged stablecoin, which protects traders from the extreme volatility associated with Bitcoin and similar crypto-assets, saw its reported valuation surpassing $7.5 billion on Wednesday. Meanwhile, the size of the XRP market squeezed under $5.5 billion as its prices fell into negative territory on a year-to-date timeframe.

The rise in Tethers market capitalization followed a voluminous flight to cash in the first quarter of 2020. Data aggregator Messari wrote in a client note that demand for stablecoins, especially USDT, was as high as it was in the entire 2019, indicating that traders anticipate wilder price volatility in the rest of the crypto market.

The sentiment takes cues from the ongoing macroeconomic crisis caused by the Coronavirus pandemic. As equities and commodities crashed to their record lows in mid-March, they also prompted bitcoin and other digital assets to pursue a similar downward trajectory.

The crypto market capitalization on whole fell by circa $60.25 billion in March 2020.

Crypto market cap is recovering following global central banks stimulus programs | Source: TradingView.com

XRP was one of the victims of the March crash, falling 24.32 percent to close the month at circa $0.17. On the other hand, traders appetite for Tether, the topmost stablecoin, surged, making it the top crypto beneficiary of the Coronavirus pandemic.

The largest beneficiary of the March volatility was Tether, said Ryan Watkins, research analyst at Messari. Its fitting that the top 3 crypto assets now feature the top 3 verticals in blockchain technology: Money, DeFi, and Stablecoins.

At the same time, Mr. Watkins anticipated the demand for stablecoins to head higher as the world comes face to face with a US dollar shortage. He said USDT, as well as its competitors, including USDC and BUSD, could quadruple their growth in 2020.

With the announcement of Libra and the growth of stablecoins last year, many consider 2019 as the year of stablecoins, said Ryan Watkins, research analyst at Messari. But if trends from the past quarter persist, 2020 could very well give 2019 a run for its money.

Photo by Maico Amorim on Unsplash

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Tether Surpasses XRP to Become the Third-Largest Cryptocurrency - newsBTC

TaxBit Simplifies Cryptocurrency Taxes with Innovative Reporting and Audit Tools – BTCMANAGER

Leading cryptocurrency tax software firm TaxBit simplifies the process of filing taxes to just a few clicks for cryptocurrency traders. TaxBit offers cryptocurrency holders and investors a slew of robust services including the easy calculation of profits, losses, tax liabilities, and generation of IRS-compliant tax forms, to make crypto trading a pleasant experience for traders.

Filing taxes doesnt particularly rank high in the list of tasks one would ideally want to do. Add to it the element of cryptocurrencies, and the process starts sounding all the more cumbersome. Fortunately, TaxBit is here to relieve crypto traders from this ordeal.

Headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah, TaxBits is the only cryptocurrency tax software founded developed by industry-leading blockchain CPAs and cryptocurrency tax attorneys. A leader in the cryptocurrency tax software space, TaxBit provides tax solutions for more than 4,200 cryptocurrencies, equities, commodities, and all fiat currencies.

TaxBit reduces the process of filing taxes to just a few clicks. TaxBit enables its users to connect their exchanges via its read-only API keys to the software in less than a minute. This rapid process allows TaxBit to pull the users entire cryptocurrency transaction history and feed the data into its tax engine.

Once the trading data has been fed into the engine, users can then see the real-time tax impact of their digital currency transactions. They can also download their yearly tax reporting forms to facilitate quick tax filing with the tax regulators.

As mentioned earlier, TaxBits innovative user interface has been carefully designed by top blockchain CPAs and cryptocurrency tax attorneys. TaxBits cryptocurrency tax engine holds the capacity to process millions of transactions with the highest accuracy.

Most notably, TaxBit takes immense pride in providing a fully immutable cryptocurrency tax audit trail to its users. This essentially means that during an audit, the users CPA or IRS investigator can narrow-down into any single transaction to determine how exactly their cost-basis and subsequent gains or losses were calculated.

The tax software provides its users with a suite of ready portfolio analytics tools that can help them track the performance of their crypto holdings throughout the year. Thanks to its dynamic tax-reporting mechanism, TaxBit displays users real-time portfolio metrics as and when they trade rather than producing a tax-form at the end of the financial year.

Additionally, TaxBit gives its users the option to calculate individual tax rates both federal and each state for their gains or losses so they can have a fair idea about the estimated total tax liability or refund.

Last but not the least, with TaxBit, users can generate one-click IRS 8949 cryptocurrency tax forms. TaxBit users are only required to connect their exchanges to the software to generate and download the IRS cryptocurrency tax forms in their account. Its Plus and Pro plans allow users to retrospectively amend prior years (up to 2014) tax forms for cryptocurrency transactions.

TaxBit treats user security and privacy with the utmost respect. This shows in its various security mechanisms reviews to date.

As TaxBit only gains access to read-only API keys, the platform, essentially, has access to view a users crypto transactions and not their actual digital assets. Basically, it means that TaxBit has absolutely zero access to view a users crypto portfolio or any data pertaining to their actual crypto holdings.

This privacy-preserving mechanism ensures that in the hypothetical event of a hack, the perpetrators would only be able to view a users transactions and not their total crypto holdings.

Its also worth highlighting that TaxBit stores no user personal information at all including their social security numbers or tax identification numbers.

TaxBit has cemented itself as a pioneer in the cryptocurrency tax filing space. Having partnered with various leading cryptocurrency exchanges, TaxBit enjoys goodwill in the rapidly growing cryptocurrency industry.

Backed by some of the most influential and reputable VC firms in the fintech and crypto space, including the likes of Peter Thiels Valar Ventures and Winklevoss Capital, TaxBit is playing a significant role in shaping the tax facet of the cryptocurrency industry as we know it.

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Clear Regulations Have A Positive Impact On Cryptocurrency Prices, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Reports – CryptoPotato

Cryptocurrency prices are quite susceptible to news, according to a recent paper. While, somewhat unsurprisingly, adverse announcements lead to immediate sharp declines, the establishment of clear regulations tends to mark serious market gains.

The report compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas initially questioned the efficiency of instituting actual regulations on cryptocurrencies. It argued that digital assets can function without institutional backing and are intrinsically borderless.

Thus, regulations, more specifically national, could not provide the necessary effect. Yet, upon completion of the study, the report informed that at the current juncture, authorities around the globe do have some scope to make regulation effective.

The paper examined what the consequences in terms of price developments following particular newsworthy announcements on the matter are:

News indicating possible novel legal frameworks tailored to cryptocurrencies and initial coin offerings (ICOs) coincide with strong market gains.

The document specified that the introduction of a non-security legal framework generates even more favorable returns. Most likely as those frameworks generally come with oversight rules that are milder than those under securities law, the paper reasoned.

Bitcoin, used as an example, sees serious gains in a one-day and ten-day period, as the graph above illustrates after news of clear regulations.

Although the cryptocurrency market operates under no formal legal homes and is available for international trading, it still relies on regulated institutions to convert regular currency into cryptocurrency. The papers conclusion estimated this to be the primary reason behind the price developments in light of regulations.

The report, rather expectedly, is quite clear on the matter. The cryptocurrency market marks a rapid adverse reaction on anything even remotely negative.

Besides general bans on [cryptocurrency] usage for financial transactions, news events related to their possible treatment under securities market law have strongly adverse impacts, as do events explicitly signaling that they will not be treated as a currency.

Regulatory news regarding anti-money laundering or combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) measures and limits on the interoperability of cryptocurrencies with the regulated financial system adversely impacts cryptocurrency markets. the paper explained.

For instance, back in 2019, when the Chinese government clarified that digital assets are (still) illegal, Bitcoins price dropped to a 6-month low almost immediately.

However, the document also informed that unspecific general warnings and news regarding central bank digital currency issuance and regulation have no outlining effect.

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Bitcoin (BTC) and Other Cryptocurrency Based Blockchain Privacy and Cryptography Course – The Cryptocurrency Analytics

There is a lot of talking going on about Bitcoin halving. The idea of Bitcoin becoming one of the successful payment systems is here to stay, and there are no signs of it fading away. Bankers are never going to agree to the Bitcoin superiority, and this is why they say dont ask a banker about the Bitcoin (BTC).

@CryptosBatman state: People who think the halving is priced in should take a look at the previous cycles. The halving is not priced in. But dont expect an immediate price increase after the halving. The increase may take some time.

The economy is falling and is in a confused to state due to the pandemic. Bitcoin seems like the only option per enthusiasts.

IVAN on Tech opined that hyperinflation is baked into the design of all fiat. He also stated that the gold and real estate might not protect. Further stated that Bitcoin is the only solution.

Of note, Ivan on Tech is running the biggest blockchain academy educating smart money.

@IvanOnTech recently tweeted about having launched a Monster Privacy Course. The course is all about cryptography and the privacy provided in Bitcoin, Monero, ZCash, Dash, Tari, Dandelion, MimbleWimble, Beam, Verge, Aztec, Incognito and others.

Ivan opined that the school systems are failing and that it is important to learn about the nature, creation, and distribution of the currency early in life. Without learning the basics of Blockchain, he stated that our wealth is being taken away from us without even us noticing.

Sydney Ifergan, the crypto expert, tweeted: Learning about #Bitcoin (BTC), cryptos and blockchain is very important @IvanOnTech is right when he says, when we do not learn these tech we will be losing money without noticing.

Bitcoin is proving itself to be crisis-proof. Bitcoin has been up since January when several other assets were significantly down. Despite all these, people are continuing the idea of Bitcoin being risky and irresponsible.

It is important to adopt a thought pattern that will help understand Bitcoin (BTC). And for those who are thinking if this is the right time to invest in the Bitcoin during the markets going crazy, the ideal answer will be to spend enough time studying the concepts and ideals in the blockchain space and to take a discretionary decision.

Enthusiasts opine that eventually, all roads will lead to Bitcoin.

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The dangers of the prosecution and attempted extradition of Julian Assange – The Intercept

The U.S. media has spent almost four full years loudly proclaiming its own devotion to defending press freedoms from any assaults by the Trump administration. And yet, with a few noble exceptions, they have largely ignored what is, by far, the single greatest attack on press freedoms by the U.S. Government in the last decade at least: the prosecution and attempted extradition of Julian Assange for alleged crimes arising out of WikiLeaks 2010 award-winning publication in conjunction with the worlds largest newspapers of the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and U.S diplomatic cables.

Assange is currently being held in the high-security Belmarsh prison in London where he faces no charges of any kind other than the attempt to extradite him by the U.S. Government for those 2010 publications. There are no charges pending against him in Sweden, nor does this prosecution have anything to do with WikiLeaks publications during the 2016 election. The indictmentpertains solelyto those widely celebrated 2010 disclosures that revealed rampant war crimes, systemic corruption and official deceit by numerous governments around the world.

Our new episode of SYSTEM UPDATE explores Assanges case the latest updates to it and the reasons it is so pernicious with two guests: the international human rights lawyer Jen Robinson, who has long represented Assange in this and other legal proceedings, and the Washington Posts media reporter Margaret Sullivan, who is one of the few major media figures to have denounced the Assange indictment. The show begins with my own comprehensivereporting on this case in order to document what did and did not happen, what is and is not in question, and why this attempted extradition should deeply anger anyone who cares about press freedom: not just in the U.S. but internationally.

I believe the issues raised by this program are of vital importance across the political spectrum. You can watchit on the Intercepts YouTube channel (to which you can subscribe to see all content when its broadcast), or on the player below. A transcript will be posted later today:

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The dangers of the prosecution and attempted extradition of Julian Assange - The Intercept

Julian Assange in bid to postpone court hearing – 9News

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will make a bid to postpone his US extradition hearing due to ongoing lack of access to his lawyers in London's locked-down Belmarsh prison.

The Australian met his lawyers in person for the first time in a month in the holding cells of Woolwich Crown Court earlier this week.

Assange directed them to ask District Court Judge Vanessa Baraitser to postpone his next hearing, which is set for May 18.

His lawyers will cite the ongoing lack of access to their client, the inability of key witnesses to attend and the lack of proper media scrutiny if the hearing continues amid lockdown.

WikiLeaks ambassador Joseph Farrell says it's clear the hearing can't go on in the current environment.

"Julian's lawyers cannot prepare adequately, witnesses will not be able to travel, and journalists and the public will not have free, adequate and safe access to the proceedings," he said in a statement on Friday.

"Justice will neither be done, nor seen to be done."

WikiLeaks also said Assange won't attend Monday's hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court in person or via videolink due to medical advice that "moving to, and using, the video link room in the prison is too great a risk".

Judge Baraitser has previously knocked back Assange's bid to sit with his lawyers in the courtroom, rather than the dock.

She also denied his bail application two weeks ago, when his lawyers argued Assange was in danger of contracting the coronavirus in prison.

Assange faces 17 charges of violating the US Espionage Act and one of conspiring to commit computer intrusion.

He's accused of publishing thousands of secret US diplomatic and military files, some which revealed alleged war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The charges carry a total of 175 years' imprisonment.

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Julian Assange in bid to postpone court hearing - 9News

Readers Write: Corporate farming, decisions amid disease, presidents and the press (and Julian Assange) – Minneapolis Star Tribune

An unintended consequence of the pandemic appears to be the revealing of the dark underbelly of our corporate farming system. I refer to Shift in egg demand shuts down a farm (Business, April 22).

The unfortunate farmer mentioned in the article has a contract to raise and care for 61,000 egg-producing chickens. Due to decreased demand, the entire flock of 61,000 chickens was euthanized all at one time. Why couldnt some of those chickens be given away to people that are experiencing food insecurity? The farmer is left with nothing, and since he is not an employee but rather only has a contract, he is eligible for nothing from his employer and that is exactly what he got. What a dehumanizing portrait this story paints of the large-scale food chain we have come to accept in our never-ending quest for cheap nutrition.

The next section of the story continues on down the supply chain, to the facility in Big Lake where all those eggs were previously processed for institutional use. The entire workforce of 300 people was laid off. The factory is owned by Cargill, one of the biggest food companies in the world. It doesnt answer to stockholders because its privately owned. Cargill has tried hard to promote a reputation of philanthropy and concern for the environment, but maybe keeping employees on the payroll for a few months instead of putting them on the public dole would also be a noble effort. Again, a very telling portrait of a corporation that has tried so hard to make itself look like it cares about people.

Catherine Fuller, Minneapolis

DECISIONS AMID DISEASE

Then, like now, intertwined events. Now, also: competing interests.

We learned a lesson of the 1918 flu pandemic at an early age (Let us learn from those who died in 1918, Opinion Exchange, April 22) as related by our mother who was 9 at that time. In horse and buggy, she and an aunt fled from their Kettle River home as fire raged from Moose Lake to Duluth in October of that year. More than 350 people perished. However, this environmental disaster also led to the death of many who survived the fire.

With soldiers returning home from the Great War bringing the disease with them, the flu virus spread throughout the area where survivors of the fire had crowded into the few remaining buildings, unable to heed the advice given by officials to remain apart. Many died in those buildings, including my mothers mother and uncle.

Today we have these deadly three intertwined types of events again plaguing us climate change, bringing fires and floods; armed conflicts, and pandemics. Comprehensive solutions are needed, as each affects the others.

Kathleen Laurila, Crystal, and Anita Kovic, Lakeville

Watching, reading and listening to stories about the demonstrations to #OpenMN, I just assumed that this is the second side of the story about our current situation. The first side is the need to stay at home and open businesses based on a plan that keeps our many front-line angels safe and prevents overloading our health care services. The second, but no less critical, side is the need to get people back to work so they can afford rent or mortgage, groceries, utilities, child care and other essentials of life.

Then I saw an open up the state clip on television (it wasnt local) that included a brief comment from a person participating in the demonstration. This person said that the businesses should be opened because we want to buy what we want to buy and go get our hair cut. This was my awakening to there being a third side to this story self-interest.

Rebecca Fuller, Woodbury

PRESIDENTS AND THE PRESS

Of classified information, espionage and Julian Assange

William Beyer (Obamas war on media was more harmful, counterpoint, April 22) criticizes the Obama administration for prosecuting 10 government employees and contractors for disclosing classified information to the press. Part of his argument is that the Espionage Act should not be used to prosecute U.S. citizens because it was enacted during World War I to protect the country against spies for foreign governments.

Elsewhere in the article, he talks about the odious and patently unconstitutional use of the Espionage Act to suppress free speech .

Stealing classified information from the government and making it public is espionage, not leaking. It is completely appropriate and not at all unconstitutional to prosecute people who do such activities. The issue is not free speech, it is the protection of government secrets.

Beyer says that the U.S. government has harassed Julian Assange. It appears that he regards Assange as a leaker or whistleblower who is merely exercising his right to free speech. Assange is accused of helping Chelsea Manning steal classified information, then publishing that information. Helping someone to steal classified information is espionage, not free speech.

James Brandt, New Brighton

Though their articles were positioned as point and counterpoint, both John Rash (A pointed report on Trump and the media, April 18) and Beyer actually wrote strong complementary defenses of the First Amendment. And thats a good thing, because the prognosis is not looking rosy, is it?

Our bellwether is the imperiled Julian Assange, founding publisher of WikiLeaks. Assange has been the target of a ferocious smear campaign over the past decade, such that arguing in his defense nowadays can feel like talking with 12-year-olds about Slenderman.

The Assange smears are rooted in the Swedish sex-crime allegations of August 2010. However, the investigation was upended last September by Nils Melzer (U.N. special rapporteur on torture) in a 19-page report (bit.ly/2NXUAEN).

Melzer revealed that the Swedish government shopped prosecutors, manipulated evidence, disregarded exculpatory evidence and refused to guarantee non-rendition. Bureaucratic procrastination was pervasive throughout, amid interference from British and U.S. security services. Sweden closed its Assange investigation shortly after Melzers authoritative report was published.

Whatever your imagined complaint against Assange (careless redaction, Russian agent, blood on his hands, not a journalist), please be skeptical of tainted information and dig deeper. Its time to let the sunshine in the reason, after all, that the First comes First.

Drew Hamre, Golden Valley

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Readers Write: Corporate farming, decisions amid disease, presidents and the press (and Julian Assange) - Minneapolis Star Tribune

UK slips down press freedom index, partly due to ongoing persecution of Julian Assange – The Canary

The UK has now fallen to 35th position in the latest World Press Freedom Index from Reporters Without Borders (RSF). One reason for scoring the UK behind 34 other countries was that Wikileaks founder Julian Assange received a disproportionate prison sentence of 50 weeks for breaking bail.

Regarding Assange, the latest report said:

The Home Secretary gave the green light to the court to consider the US extradition request, and Assange remained in custody at the high security Belmarsh Prison despite widespread international concern for his health and treatment, including by the UN Special Rapporteur for Torture.

The persecution and detention of Julian Assange has faced much criticism. Hip-hop artist Lowkey, for example, previously spoketoThe Canary about the importance of whistleblowers and media freedom. A statement from Veterans for Peace UK (VfP UK) in 2019, meanwhile, explainedhow theIraq War LogsandAfghan War DiariesfromWikiLeakshad:

revealed the true human cost of our wars in the Middle East. Wikileaks acted in the public interest by releasing these documents and Julian Assange, as a journalist, was right to publish in association with newspapers including The Guardian, The New York Times, Le Monde, and Der Spiegel.

RSF has long criticised Washingtons determination to hound Assange. Back in 2010, meanwhile, it called on the UK to guarantee respect for his defence rights despite the extreme tension surrounding this case; and it slammed the blocking, cyber-attacks and political pressure being directed at WikiLeaks. It also stressed:

WikiLeaks has played a useful role by publicising serious human rights violations that were committed in the name of the war against terror during the past decade.

RSF has criticised the UK governments treatment of Assange ever since. The last time the UK ranked above 30 in the index was 2013, when it came in 29th place.

RSF explained:

the UKs domestic press freedom record remained cause for concern throughout 2019. The killing of journalist Lyra McKee whilst observing rioting in Derry in April, and continued threats to journalists covering paramilitaries in Northern Ireland, underscored the need for urgent attention to the safety of journalists; however there was no apparent progress towards the establishment of a National Committee for the Safety of Journalists and a National Action Plan on Safety of Journalists as announced by the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport in July.

It also mentioned that:

Counter-terrorism and crime legislation adopted during the year contained worrying provisions that could restrict reporting and put journalists data at risk. The London Metropolitan Police pursued the publication of leaked information from diplomatic cables as a criminal matter. Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs) were used as a means to attempt to silence public interest reporting, such as in defamation cases brought by Arron Banks against journalist Carole Cadwalladr. During the general election campaign, the Conservative Party threatened to review the BBCs licence fee and Channel 4s public service broadcasting licence if the party returned to government.

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UK slips down press freedom index, partly due to ongoing persecution of Julian Assange - The Canary