Roan @ the Gates traces the consequences of whistleblowing – Chicago Reader

"You're a traitor to me." Everything about Roan @ the Gates, the magnificent show by playwright Christina Telesca Gorman, directed by Lexi Saunders, hangs on the way Nat (Jasmine Bracey) chooses to inflect that line.

Nat speaks it to Roan (Brenda Barrie), a dissident NSA whistleblower and Nat's wife. Much like Edward Snowden, Roan makes a series of revelations about American intelligence so damning that she has to secure emergency asylum in Russia. Nat, marooned stateside, communicating with Roan over glitchy encrypted video calls, could be saying: "You're a traitor to mejust like the news, the feds, and everybody else says you are."

But she isn't saying it like that. Nat, a public interest lawyer, believes in Roan's cause and wants nothing more than to help out. Her love is clumsy, all-assertive. Bracey crafts her role into a many-sided study in what intimacy means: she's a believer in touch, in deep private understanding between souls. She knows, for instance, that Roan only cries to one song ("The Star-Spangled Banner"). But Roan's selfless patriotismher "grand gesture," as Nat puts itcomes at the cost of shutting Nat out completely. Having never agreed to be anyone's sacrifice to the public good, Nat stakes everything on her refusal to let Roan's heroism drown out her hurt. "You're a traitor," she announces, fully aware of how self-righteous it sounds, "to me."

This American Blues Theater production thrives in that hopelessly messy space between public and private responsibility, and should be seen by anyone who's ever been trapped there, as we all have.v

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Roan @ the Gates traces the consequences of whistleblowing - Chicago Reader

Truth and justice have become strangers in Turkey – Amnesty International

In a scene that could have been lifted from a Hollywood thriller, dozens of police raid a hotel on a picturesque island near Istanbul, seize computers and phones and bundle 10 people into a van.

They and another man arrested earlier are arrested and are charged with terrorism offences.

But these 11 have committed no crime. They are prominent human rights activists and include my colleagues dil Eser and Taner Kl who, at that time, were the director and chair of Amnesty International Turkey.

That was back in the summer of 2017.

On Wednesday, after many months in jail and two-and-a-half years before the courts, a judge will pronounce a verdict. If convicted, they face jail terms of up to 15 years.

In a scene that could have been lifted from a Hollywood thriller, dozens of police raid a hotel seize computers and phones and bundle 10 people into a van

The prosecution alleges that the gathering in the hotel where they were arrested had been a secret meeting to organize a Gezi-type uprising in order to foment chaos in the country. In reality, it was a human rights workshop and it was anything but secret. Indeed, one of the participants had even posted aphotoof the hotel on her Instagram account. Where are you staying? a friend posted beneath the photo. At the Ascot Hotel she replied below.

And yet, it is no coincidence that when human rights are undermined in a country, the people who defend them come under attack. At times of greater repression, the job of human rights activists becomes more vital: and also more dangerous.

The activists in the dock this week, were aware of the risks. They had seen how standing up for human rights was being increasingly criminalized. And they knew that defending other peoples freedoms in Turkey could ultimately cost them their own.

From the moment they were charged back in 2017, it was clear that this was a prosecution aimed at silencing them and sending a powerful message to the rest of civil society: we can silence you too.

And so their ordeal began.

When human rights are undermined in a country, the people who defend them come under attack. At times of greater repression, the job of human rights activists becomes more vital: and also more dangerous

Over the course of 10 trial hearings, every aspect of the prosecutors case against them was been comprehensively disproven. The terrorism allegations have been repeatedly and categorically refuted, including by the states own evidence. The prosecutions attempt to present legitimate human rights activities as unlawful acts has failed absymally. And yet, despite the absence of credible evidence to substantiate the absurd charges, the judicial farce has continued.

The eleven are not alone. Indeed, the situation is emblematic of the wave of repression that has gripped Turkey for more than three years. On Tuesday, another landmark verdict is expected in the case of prominent civil society figure Osman Kavala and 15 others accused of conspiring to overthrow the government. Kavala has already spent almost 28 months in prison on pre-trial detention.

Despite failing to produce a shred of evidence to support their claim, the prosecution has nevertheless sought life imprisonment for three of the 16, including Osman Kavala. Even the European Court of Human Rights ruling that he must be released immediately in December has not been enough to secure his freedom.

It has been almost four years since the failed coup attempt, and the crackdown that followed it shows no sign of abating. Turkeys prisons are full, the courthouses flooded with cases and fear has become the new norm. The government has launched a sustained assault on civil society, closing down more than 1,300 non-governmental organizations and 180 media outlets. Independent journalism has been all but obliterated. An astonishing 130,000 public service workers have been arbitrarily dismissed.

It is easy to be overwhelmed by these numbers, but the experiences of these 11 human rights defenders offers a glimpse into the magnitude of the suffering wrought by this crackdown. Taner Kl spent more than 14 months in prison before his release on bail, and eight of the other defendants were jailed for almost four months each. For the last two-and-a-half years the threat of lengthy prison sentences has hung over all of them.

When it was a hard thing to do, Amnesty stood up for me. Now its time for us to stand up for them

One thing that has given them strength is the support that they have received from around the world. More than two million people have joined the call for justice for the 11, including politicians and renowned actors (Ben Stiller, Whoopi Goldberg, Catherine Deneuve, etc.), musicians (Sting, Peter Gabriel, Anglique Kidjo, Annie Lennox, etc.) and artists (Ai Weiwei, Anish Kapoor, etc.). When it was a hard thing to do, Amnesty stood up for me. Now its time for us to stand up for them, said US whistleblower Edward Snowden in a message for Taner, dil and their co-defendants recorded in 2017.

Next week the eyes of the world will be on the Istanbul central court for what is an acid test for the Turkish justice system. It is hoped that this prolonged saga of injustice will be ended with the acquittal of the 11 human rights defenders. But in Turkey, where truth and justice have become strangers, we will have to wait and see.

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Truth and justice have become strangers in Turkey - Amnesty International

Will US Force Indias Hand On Huawei Ban During Trump Visit? – Inc42 Media

Ahead of Donald Trumps visit to India, US alleges Huawei has installed backdoors in all telecom equipment

The US is likely to put pressure on India to cut ties with Huawei as it has done with other trade allies

With India stuck in global negotiations over 5G and digital tax, will Trump use a ban on Huawei as a bargaining chip?

Things are not looking great for China at the moment the US and President Donald Trumps administration refuses to budge from its trade tariff hike, which has impacted major companies such as Huawei, Apple, Tesla and others, and now the Covid-19 or coronavirus threat has taken centre-stage. Amid all this, the US has thrown another bucket of allegations on Chinese electronics and networking giant Huawei to go with its ban in the US, just as Donald Trump prepares to visit India.

That the US administration is against Huawei is clear from the ban on Huawei in the consumer market as well as in software Huawei has had to break away from the Google-controlled Android and developed its own smartphone operating system in 2019 to sustain its smartphone business.

Cut to February 2020, US is saying that Huawei has used its global telecom networking contracts to install backdoors and spy on foreigners on behalf of the Chinese government.

If that tactic sounds familiar to anyone, thats because its straight out the US playbook. When Edward Snowden released his cache of documents pertaining to the spying and surveillance infrastructure controlled by the National Security Agency, USAs national-level intelligence agency, it mentioned Upstream and PRISM.

Huawei hit back with a long response pointing to the surveillance history of the US.

As evidenced by the Snowden leaks, the United States has been covertly accessing telecom networks worldwide, spying on other countries for quite some time, Huawei said in its statement.

It also referenced a recent Washington Post report on how the CIA bought a company called Crypto AG to spy on communications, which incidentally also spied on Indian telecom networks.

So we catch up to Donald Trumps visit. As can be expected, Its going to be big and bombastic. We all know the US President is going to inaugurate the worlds largest cricket stadium in Ahmedabad and will perhaps appreciate the hugeness of the thing as he has been known to do. We might even see a 3 am tweet in Hindi.

But behind closed doors, Trump is likely to be pushing hard for India to back off its friendly stance on Huawei. While the US has been managed to sway many allies including Australia towards its corner in the fight against Huawei, things have been pretty good for Huawei in India. Theres been no ban on Huawei phones or telecom participation in India. Huawei is working with major telcos on 5G trials, even though the 5G launch is a fair distance away. However, a report earlier this year suggested that the government may review its position in allowing Huawei to participate in 5G experiments.

India is the worlds fastest-growing smartphone market it will likely be the worlds largest 5G market in about a decade if the pace of mass 4G adoption (estimated to be over 600 Mn 4G subscribers in four years) is any indication. Huawei would not want to miss out on this market through a ban, after it has been already banned in many other countries.

The US state department has discussed Huawei security risks with India in the past and has tried to convince many other governments to also ban Huawei. The US state departments Morgan Ortagus had said that while 5G networks will play a crucial role in the coming times, the stakes are too high to allow Chinese companies, which are under the control of authoritarian regimes, to provide this technology. Ortagus added, All countries should adopt national security policies in order to prevent untrusted companies from misusing any part of their future 5G network plans.

If Donald Trump indeed wants to bait his voter base in the US with more manufacturing and technology growth domestically, a win in India over Huawei would be a big deal. Yes, one cannot forget that Trump would be up for re-election towards the end of this year. A big part of his pitch is US manufacturing and made-in-USA technology. While in terms of major telecom networking players that can compete with Huawei, the US has no real contenders, Qualcomm has expressed interest whereas Ericsson and Nokia are the other big players in this arena.

Will India bite Donald Trumps bait? Ultimately, it is nothing but a bait as India needs to win a few brownie points to pass some of its own plans stuck on the global negotiation table.

The Indian telecom standards body Telecommunications Standards Development Society, India (TSDSI) proposed a radio interface technology (RIT) to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) as a new modification to the radio signal, which can enhance the signal transmission range of a base station. This suits Indias use-cases for rural connectivity and long-range transmission. Called Low Mobility Large Cell (LMLC), this tech could bring cheaper 5G access to the Indian market.

India wants this technology to be interoperable with global specifications set by the 3rd Generation Partnership Product, which is the basis of all chipsets, smartphones, base stations or modems manufactured. But within the 3GPP, some groups were not happy about TSDSIs new specification as it would involve revamping existing new 5G infrastructure.

The TSDSI is set to go back to the negotiation table in February after spending over two years doing the rounds and continuing to adapt its requirements. Will India push Trump to use the dominant position of the US in the telecom and 5G market to push through the TSDSI requirements in exchange for a Huawei ban?

Besides the 5G negotiations with the ITU, India is also at loggerheads with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) with its 134 member countries, over digital tax.

In the last meeting with the OECD in Paris, no consensus was found which could result in the delays in finalising the new digital tax structure on companies like Google, Netflix, Amazon, Facebook and Uber.

Among the issues raised by India in Paris were broadening the taxable scope of businesses, including the threshold for revenue generated globally as well as within the Indian jurisdiction in the taxable income and promoting the concept of a virtual company in case of no permanent establishment for certain tech giants within India.

In simpler words, India wants the whole business taxed and not just a single vertical, which is the case now, even though other verticals may be available in the form of products or services within India. This includes B2B and B2C versions of any product.

According to a Business Standard report, India also wanted residual profits distributed according to the value of users of each country and the demand for the tech product or service in the market.

While the OECD is a global organisation, the US is one of its 20 founding members. And for India, a bigger tax bill from the technology sector could be crucial in boosting its tax revenue and collections.

For the Narendra Modi government, another potential upside to ditching Huawei is the potential to develop an indigenous 5G technology network infrastructure, that can be geared towards Indias specific needs. But it needs investments, policy and technical expertise, which is lacking in the Indian context. Will Modi push Trump to back this project financially?

India has to think of another aspect as its data and tech economy has grown in the past half a decade so have incidents of cyberattacks, many of which have been known to be state-sponsored.

Of course, telecom infrastructure cannot grow in silos; it needs service providers as partners. In India, Airtel and Vodafone-Idea have partnered with Huawei, ZTE, Ericsson, and Nokia for 5G trials, while Reliance Jio has gone with Samsung. Among the private operators, Jio is best placed to capitalise on 5G due to its relatively better cash flow situation and the fact that Airtel and Vodafone-Idea are staring at a crippling tax bill. On the other hand, state-run Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited has signed a partnership with Nokia for 5G development.

Some might say that market leader Jio and the public sector company BSNL not siding with Huawei is a big indication of how things might play out for the Chinese telecom giant. Whether that means a ban on Huawei, we will find out in the next few days as Donald Trump becomes the centre of attention in India.

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Will US Force Indias Hand On Huawei Ban During Trump Visit? - Inc42 Media

Bill Barr Is Even Worse Than You Realize – The Nation

Attorney General William Barr in January. (Andrew Harnik / AP Photo)

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Attorney General William Barr promised he would do this. In a speech before the Federalist Society last November, Barr laid out his plans for a new, shockingly authoritarian form of governmentone he claimed wed actually been living under since the countrys founding. He recast the American Revolution as a desperate fight against parliamentary government and praised the framers for the miracle of creating a strong executive branch.Ad Policy

The Republicans in attendance, all members of a group which claims to honor the freedoms enshrined in our Constitution (unless youre black or a woman who desires medical care) did nothing. They didnt call the cops. They didnt call their congresspeople. They didnt rush home to their universities and raise the alarm about the despotic lunatic who had somehow cajoled his way into real legal power. They just sat there, politely clapping and probably daydreaming about new judges they could appoint. Everybody knew then what damage Barr was willing to do to the American rule of law, and nobody did anything to stop him.

Three months and one impeachment trial later, Barr is making good on his threats. While Donald Trump was declared king by the Republican Senate, its Barr who has been truly unleashed. Hes seemed to take acquittal as proof that his monarchal theory of executive power is right, or at the very least has correctly absorbed the information that there is no will in the Republican Party to stop him.

Since the end of impeachment, Barr has initiated a crackdown on sanctuary cities, filing three lawsuits trying to force the states to bow to Trumps xenophobia. Hes started the process of investigating Trumps political rivals (the presidents demand for an investigation into Hunter Biden, with the help of dirt dug up by Rudolph Giuliani, is now underway). And, over the past few days, he has intervened to try to spring Trumps cronies from punishments for crimes theyve already been convicted of.

Barr is the star of this newest low for the Trump regime, but the entire Republican Party, both inside and outside of government, owns this current assault on the rule of law. Every one of them. Including current darling Mitt Romney. They may furrow their brows and performatively despair, but every Republican is responsible for laying the infrastructure of bad faith and partisan hackery that is bringing the entire Department of Justice to its knees. Republicans crying about Barr now are the same ones who supported the legalized religious fanaticism of John Ashcroft, the legalized torture dreams of Alberto Gonzales, and the unwashed bigotry of Jeff Sessions. William Barr is not an outlier. He is the logical result of a Republican agenda decades in the making.Current Issue

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Republicans are gonna Republican. They will find a way to get to yes on any legal theory or assertion of power, anything at all, so long as the Federalist Society tells them that this is the one true way the founders intended for them to win. The Republicans have always used law and order merely as code for keeping women and minorities in check. So its not surprising to see a Republican administration discard the rule of law when they think doing so will advance their agenda. And nobody should be surprised that when Republicans lose power theyll go back to whining about the rules.

Republicans are to blame for this current abomination, but they had a lot of help. While Republicans have been working tirelessly to bring about one-party rule in this country, so-called institutionalists have stood by, clutched pearls, and myopically managed their little aisle of the store while the rest of the building burned. Now that their institutions are under attack, they wonder why theres nobody left to come to the rescue.

This week, four assistant US attorneys resigned, seemingly in protest of Barrs meddling in the Roger Stone prosecution. These people were veterans of the Robert Mueller investigation and dedicated public servants.

Their resignations are noted, but come too late in the game, with too little impact. The time to resign over William Barr was when William Barr was appointed. It was when Barr came into office on the wings of a 20-page memothe one in which he argued that the president of the United States could not be found guilty of obstruction of justicethat resignations might have shown real institutional resistance to this man. It was when Barr was allowed to put a stop to the Mueller investigation that the Mueller people should have spoken out. It was after the executive power speech in November that people of good faith and conscience should have publicly broken ranks with the man.

And youll note, its only the four guys who worked on this one Stone case who finally decided to quit rather than be part of the normalization of Barrs effort. There are around 5,300 assistant US Attorneys in this country, all under Barrs ultimate authority. Many of them understand that what Barr is doing is wrong. All of them could be employed with high-paying jobs at law firms, lobbying groups, or law schools by the time their next mortgage payment is due. En masse resignations from them might spark the public consciousness, or at least cripple the ability of their offices to do their work for a time.More from Mystal

But almost all of them are staying. Its the classic, useless, institutionalist response. Barr isnt directly threatening their work (today), so they shrug and stay and fiddle with their cases while the rest of the institution burns. Theyll tell themselves theyre the adults in the room. Theyll write books and give speeches (later) about all the really bad things they think theyre preventing from happening by staying. Oh, theyll take the lucrative job offer eventuallyputting kids through college is expensive, you knowjust not now, and not all at once, when their protest could mean something.

When Barr comes for one of their cases and undermines their work and Trump calls them out on Twitter, theyll find their courage. But not a moment before.

Its not just the lawyers. The Trump administration has exposed this kind of institutional rot throughout the government. Deep state, my ass. Our government is full of people who know better but choose to normalize this authoritarian regime.

It would be one thing if the people who stayed understood themselves to be saboteursdouble agents working behind the lines to actively destroy the regime at great personal risk.

But theyre not. And we know theyre not. We know because we havent seen any of the documents. Trumps tax returns remain a secret; Trumps conversations are apparently not recorded; Trumps internal machinations are never released unless Adam Schiff subpoenas them, and only then if the guy who has the texts isnt writing a book. Nobody wants to be the next Edward Snowden. Very few people even want to be Lt. Col. Alexander Vindmanespecially now.Barr Files

Opposition is what happens when you are willing to fight for something. Resistance is what happens when you are willing to die for something. Trump has faced near-constant opposition, but he has yet to face true resistance. The Republicans are complicit, the institutions are weak, and the Democrats we keep waiting for a savior (Barack! Bernie! Bloomberg!) who will swoop in and fix everything.

Barr knows this. He knows the only pushback hell receive will take the form of bitching and moaning. He knows the very institution he attacks will roll over for him. He knows that whenever his tenure is up, there will be a car waiting for him to take him to Fox News, not to jail.

Barr is happening because we let him happen. He is fueled by our slacktivism. I dont know how many thousands of protesters would have to demonstrate for how many weeks to grind the Justice Department to a halt and force Barr to resign and flee into exile in Ukraine. But I know our country is too decadent and weak to do that.

Barr knows it too.

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Bill Barr Is Even Worse Than You Realize - The Nation

Can the world’s second superpower rise from the ashes of twenty years of war? – NationofChange

February 15 marks the day, 17 years ago, when global demonstrations against the pending Iraq invasion were so massive that the New York Times called world public opinion the second superpower. But the U.S. ignored it and invaded Iraq anyway. So what has become of the momentous hopes of that day?

The U.S. military has not won a war since 1945, unless you count recovering the tiny colonial outposts of Grenada, Panama and Kuwait, but there is one threat it has consistently outmaneuvered without firing more than a few deadly rifle shots and some tear gas. Ironically, this existential threat is the very one that could peacefully cut it down to size and take away its most dangerous and expensive weapons: its own peace-loving citizens.

During the Vietnam war, young Americans facing a life-and-death draft lottery built a powerful anti-war movement. President Nixon proposed ending the draft as a way to undermine the peace movement, since he believed that young people would stop protesting the war once they were no longer obligated to fight. In 1973, the draft was ended, leaving a volunteer army that insulated the vast majority of Americans from the deadly impact of Americas wars.

Despite the lack of a draft, a new anti-war movementthis time with global reachsprung up in the period between the crimes of 9/11 and the illegal U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003. The February 15th, 2003, protests were the largest demonstrations in human history, uniting people around the world in opposition to the unthinkable prospect that the U.S. would actually launch its threatened shock and awe assault on Iraq. Some 30 million people in 800 cities took part on every continent, including Antarctica. This massive repudiation of war, memorialized in the documentary We Are Many, led New York Times journalist Patrick E. Tyler to comment that there were now two superpowers on the planet: the United States and world public opinion.

The U.S. war machine demonstrated total disdain for its upstart rival, and unleashed an illegal war based on lies that has now raged on through many phases of violence and chaos for 17 years. With no end in sight to U.S. and allied wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Libya, Syria, Palestine, Yemen and West Africa, and Trumps escalating diplomatic and economic warfare against Iran, Venezuela and North Korea threatening to explode into new wars, where is the second superpower now, when we need it more than ever?

Since the U.S. assassination of Irans General Soleimani in Iraq on January 2nd, the peace movement has reemerged onto the streets, including people who marched in February 2003 and new activists too young to remember a time when the U.S. was not at war. There have been three separate days of protest, one on January 4th, another on the 9th and a global day of action on the 25th. The rallies took place in hundreds of cities, but they did not attract nearly the numbers who came out to protest the pending war with Iraq in 2003, or even those of the smaller rallies and vigils that continued as the Iraq war spiraled out of control until at least 2007.

Our failure to stop the U.S. war on Iraq in 2003 was deeply discouraging. But the number of people active in the U.S. anti-war movement shrank even more after the 2008 election of Barack Obama. Many people did not want to protest the nations first black president, and many, including the Nobel Peace Prize Committee, really believed he would be a peace president.

While Obama reluctantly honored Bushs agreement with the Iraqi government to withdraw US troops from Iraq and he signed the Iran nuclear deal, he was far from a peace president. He oversaw a new doctrine of covert and proxy war that substantially reduced U.S. military casualties, but unleashed an escalation of the war in Afghanistan, a campaign against ISIS in Iraq and Syria that destroyed entire cities, a ten-fold increase in CIA drone strikes on Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia, and bloody proxy wars in Libya and Syria that rage on today. In the end, Obama spent more on the military and dropped more bombs on more countries than Bush did. He also refused to hold Bush and his cronies responsible for their war crimes.

Obamas wars were no more successful than Bushs in restoring peace or stability to any of those countries or improving the lives of their people. But Obamas disguised, quiet, media-free approach to war made the U.S. state of endless war much more politically sustainable. By reducing U.S. casualties and waging war with less fanfare, he moved Americas wars farther into the shadows and gave the American public an illusion of peace in the midst of endless war, effectively disarming and dividing the peace movement.

Obamas secretive war policy was backed up by a vicious campaign against any brave whistleblowers who tried to drag it out into the light. Jeffrey Sterling, Thomas Drake, Chelsea Manning, John Kiriakou, Edward Snowden and now Julian Assange have been prosecuted and jailed under unprecedented new interpretations of the WWI-era Espionage Act.

With Donald Trump in the White House, we hear Republicans making the same excuses for Trumpwho ran on an anti-war platformthat Democrats made for Obama. First, his supporters accept lip service about wanting to end wars and bring troops home as revealing what the president really wants to do, even as he keeps escalating the wars. Second, they ask us to be patient because, despite all the real world evidence, they are convinced he is working hard behind the scenes for peace. Third, in a final cop-out that undermines their other two arguments, they throw up their hands and say that he is only the president, and the Pentagon or deep state is too powerful for even him to tame.

Obama and Trump supporters alike have used this shaky tripod of political unaccountability to give the man behind the desk where the buck used to stop an entire deck of get out of jail free cards for endless war and war crimes.

Obama and Trumps disguised, quiet, media-free approach to war has inoculated Americas wars and militarism against the virus of democracy, but new social movements have grown up to tackle problems closer to home. The financial crisis led to the rise of the Occupy Movement, and now the climate crisis and Americas entrenched race and immigration problems have all provoked new grassroots movements. Peace advocates have been encouraging these movements to join the call for major Pentagon cuts, insisting that the hundreds of billions saved could help fund everything from Medicare for All to the Green New Deal to free college tuition.

A few sectors of the peace movement have been showing how to use creative tactics and build diverse movements. The movement for Palestinians human and civil rights includes students, Muslim and Jewish groups, as well as black and indigenous groups fighting similar struggles here at home. Also inspirational are campaigns for peace on the Korean peninsula led by Korean Americans, such as Women Cross the DMZ, which has brought together women from North Korea, South Korea and the United States to show the Trump administration what real diplomacy looks like.

There have also been successful popular efforts pushing a reluctant Congress to take anti-war positions. For decades, Congress has been only too happy to leave warmaking to the president, abrogating its constitutional role as the only power authorized to declare war. Thanks to public pressure, there has been a remarkable shift. In 2019, both houses of Congress voted to end U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen and to ban arms sales to Saudi Arabia for the war in Yemen, although President Trump vetoed both bills.

Now Congress is working on bills to explicitly prohibit an unauthorized war on Iran. These bills prove that public pressure can move Congress, including a Republican-dominated Senate, to reclaim its constitutional powers over war and peace from the executive branch.

Another bright light in Congress is the pioneering work of first-term Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, who recently laid out a series of bills called Pathway to PEACE that challenge our militaristic foreign policy. While her bills will be hard to get passed in Congress, they lay out a marker for where we should be headed. Omars office, unlike many others in Congress, actually works directly with grassroots organizations that can push this vision forward.

The presidential election offers an opportunity to push the anti-war agenda. The most effective and committed anti-war champion in the race is Bernie Sanders. The popularity of his call for getting the U.S. out of its imperial interventions and his votes against 84% of military spending bills since 2013 are reflected not only in his poll numbers but also in the way other Democratic candidates are rushing to take similar positions. All now say the U.S. should rejoin the Iran nuclear deal; all have criticized the bloated Pentagon budget, despite regularly voting for it ; and most have promised to bring U.S. troops home from the greater Middle East.

So, as we look to the future in this election year, what are our chances of reviving the worlds second superpower and ending Americas wars?

Absent a major new war, we are unlikely to see big demonstrations in the streets. But two decades of endless war have created a strong anti-war sentiment among the public. A 2019 Pew Research Center poll found that 62 percent of Americans said the war in Iraq was not worth fighting and 59 percent said the same for the war in Afghanistan.

On Iran, a September 2019 University of Maryland poll showed that a mere one-fifth of Americans said the U.S. should be prepared to go to war to achieve its goals in Iran, while three-quarters said that U.S. goals do not warrant military intervention. Along with the Pentagons assessment of how disastrous a war with Iran would be, this public sentiment fueled global protests and condemnation that have temporarily forced Trump to dial down his military escalation and threats against Iran.

So, while our governments war propaganda has convinced many Americans that we are powerless to stop its catastrophic wars, it has failed to convince most Americans that we are wrong to want to. As on other issues, activism has two main hurdles to overcome: first to convince people that something is wrong; and secondly to show them that, by working together to build a popular movement, we can do something about it.

The peace movements small victories demonstrate that we have more power to challenge U.S. militarism than most Americans realize. As more peace-loving people in the U.S. and across the world discover the power they really have, the second superpower we glimpsed briefly on February 15th, 2003 has the potential to rise stronger, more committed and more determined from the ashes of two decades of war.

A new president like Bernie Sanders in the White House would create a new opening for peace. But as on many domestic issues, that opening will only bear fruit and overcome the opposition of powerful vested interests if there is a mass movement behind it every step of the way. If there is a lesson for peace-loving Americans in the Obama and Trump presidencies, it is that we cannot just walk out of the voting booth and leave it to a champion in the White House to end our wars and bring us peace. In the final analysis, it really is up to us. Please join us!

FALL FUNDRAISER

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Can the world's second superpower rise from the ashes of twenty years of war? - NationofChange

Chinese researchers smash the record for realising two entangled quantum memories at maximum distance – www.computing.co.uk

Quantum entanglement is a phenomenon in which two particles become indistinguishably linked

A Chinese research team claims to have smashed the previous record for maintaining two quantum memories in an entangled state at maximum distance.

According to the researchers, they were able to realise entanglement of two quantum memories over 22 kilometres of field-deployed fibres via two-photon interference. With this feat, they smashed the 1.3-kilometre record achieved during previous quantum memory experiments.

The researchers said that they were also able to achieve entanglement over 50 kilometres of coiled fibres via single-photon interference.

The researchers used two quantum memories that were each made of about 100 million extremely cold rubidium atoms

Quantum entanglement is a phenomenon in which two particles become indistinguishably linked, and whatever happens to one particle instantly affects the other, irrespective of the distance between them.

According to the researchers, entanglement can be used to create encrypted communications channels that are secured against hacking by the laws of quantum physics.

Researchers earlier realised entanglement of individual photons across distances beyond 1,000 kilometres. But, entanglement becomes much harder to achieve for larger systems of particles.

In the current study, the researchers used two quantum memories that were each made of about 100 million extremely cold rubidium atoms.

The team entangled the quantum state of each system with the state of a single photon and then sent both photons through the fibre-optic cables

They encoded information onto the clouds of atoms and then extracted a photon from each cloud. The team entangled the quantum state of each system with the state of a single photon and then sent both photons through the fibre-optic cables.

When Bell measurement was performed simultaneously on two photons, the quantum memories with which the photons were paired became entangled to one another.

In this experiment, the entanglement of two quantum memories was maintained over 22 kilometres of fibre-optic cable, installed underground.

In another experiment, the team managed to entangle quantum memories across 50 kilometres using cables that were coiled up in the lab.

"Our experiment could be extended to nodes physically separated by similar distances, which would thus form a functional segment of the atomic quantum network, paving the way towards establishing atomic entanglement over many nodes and over much longer distances," the researchers said.

The study was jointly conducted by researchers from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology, and Jinan Institute of Quantum Technology.

The detailed findings of the study are published in journal Nature.

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Chinese researchers smash the record for realising two entangled quantum memories at maximum distance - http://www.computing.co.uk

Bitcoin Closing on Daily Golden Cross That Could Bring Boost to 2020 Price Rally – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

Bitcoin may see a move higher in coming weeks, courtesy of two major daily moving averages heading for a collision dubbed a golden cross.

The cross occurs when a short-term moving average (MA) crosses above a longer-term one, typically the 50-day and 200-day MAs, hinting at strong upward momentum in an assets price.

The last time such an instance occurred was back in April 2019, when the price of BTC rose 175 percent to create a yearly high of around $13,880 after a temporary pullback to $4,995, Bitstamp data shows.

Therefore, if history repeats, BTC could be in for a short-term drop before making its way to a new high for 2020.

The convergence of the two key MAs are an indication of strong buying pressure as BTC continues to post positive gains year to date. Bitcoin is up 43.5 percent since Jan. 1 and up 175 percent year on year from the Feb 14, 2019, close of $3,560.

However, the golden cross will need a sustained positive follow-through or the odds of a deeper pullback may rise.

Supporting the potential for short-term losses, the 14-day relative strength index (RSI) an indicator used to judge the momentum of a given trend is currently indicating near overbought conditions with a reading of 67.2. A value of 70 and above represents overbought, while 30 and below hints at an asset being oversold.

Additionally, yesterdays bearish engulfing candle opened the doors for another test of $10,000,. The temporary pullback could be extended if prices fall beneath the $10,000 psychological resistance, exposing $9,867, a region of former hourly resistances.

Overall, price action has been trending bullish, as demonstrated by a weekly price breakout on Jan. 20 from the almost 7-month descending channel, beginning late last July.

The 50-period MA on the weekly chart (yellow line) has been signaling bullish momentum when prices have remained above it as seen in 2017 and the first quarter of 2018. Prices remained bearish below throughout the latter half of 2018 and all of 2019, indicating weaker buyer demand.

Prices remain firmly above the 50 MA, hinting at greater buying power ahead of the expected bullish "halving" event in May 2020, a supply cut programmed into bitcoin's code that sees miners' rewards reduced by 50 percent.

The mid-term bullish view would be compromised should prices drop below $9,706, the level of a major bullish engulfing candle on Feb. 11. That could upset the prospects for the incoming daily golden cross and a continued rally to new 2020 highs.

Disclosure:The author holds no cryptocurrency at the time of writing

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

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Bitcoin Closing on Daily Golden Cross That Could Bring Boost to 2020 Price Rally - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Watch Spencer Bogart and Jacob Canfield Debate if Bitcoin Will Top $20,000 in 2020 – Cointelegraph

In this week's crypto market update, Spencer Bogart from Blockchain Capital and Jacob Canfield from Signal Profits debate whether Bitcoin will top it's all time high this year and if the halving is already priced in.

Will all this talk of the halving finally convince host Giovanni Pigni to buy his first Bitcoin?

Bogart explains the thinking behind Blockchain Capital's predictions that major exchanges will be forced to deslist privacy coins, and that most development will end up concentrated on just one to four major blockchains. "Most of the innovation will happen on the stack of those winning protocols," he says. I think we're already starting to see it.

Canfield reveals which altcoins he's investing in and why. He's bullish on the Bitcoin price but doesn't believe retail investors are behind the surging price. "I think we will have to break $20,000 before we see that psychological retail FOMO back in the markets," he says.

Other topics in this episode include which attributes crypto projects need to survive and where the market will go from here.

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Watch Spencer Bogart and Jacob Canfield Debate if Bitcoin Will Top $20,000 in 2020 - Cointelegraph

Is bitcoin’s 2020 rally another flash in the pan? – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Crypto analysts are split on whether bitcoins rise this year is driven by unique factors or is just its latest bout of volatility. But many agree on one factor: an upcoming cut to the supply of bitcoin.

Bitcoin has soared by almost half this year, to more than $10,000, for the first time since October. On Tuesday it hit its highest in five months.

The cryptocurrencys 11-year history is replete with fast ascents and equally rapid plunges. In late 2017, it rose three and a half times in just 35 days to reach almost $20,000. It then slumped 70% in seven weeks.

Such wild and often inexplicable swings are why bitcoin faces a struggle to become a functioning currency.

This time around, some market players point to a confluence of drivers not seen before. Arcane tech factors, expectations for mainstream acceptance and macroeconomic trends are leading markets to look again at bitcoins worth, they say.

You can argue that there is a fresh valuation going on, said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, a stockbroker that oversees assets worth $71 billion.

Most fundamentally, many cite growing demand for bitcoin before its latest halving a 50% cut in the production of the cryptocurrency due in May that is one of the few observable events known to materially impact price.

A rule written into bitcoins underlying code slashes the number of new coins awarded to the miners behind the global supply of bitcoin.

In the year after the two previous halvings, in November 2012 and July 2016, bitcoin rose around by 80 times and four times respectively. The exact proportion of the gains caused by the halving is unclear.

Its a rare observable factor - if you look at previous events, in each case there has been a quite clear and discernable spike in the value of bitcoin, said Windsor Holden, a payments consultant who tracks crypto and blockchain.

GRAPHIC - Bitcoin's Halving: here

But others doubt bitcoins latest rally is underpinned by anything more substantial than the previous booms.

The recent rally has been driven by the usual hype cycle that we have very reliably seen every two to three years, said Michel Rauchs, author of several Cambridge university studies on cryptocurrencies and blockchain tech.

We have these mini-bubbles, and the momentum that it creates - bitcoin first, then these other coins. Its a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Major cryptocurrencies that tend to move in correlation with bitcoin have also gained this year. Ethereum has more than doubled; Ripples XRP token is up over 75%.

Other factors cited for the rally, such as greater demand for assets uncorrelated to mainstream markets following the U.S. killing of an Iranian military commander last month, are also questionable.

Bitcoins safety characteristic is unclear. It has regularly fallen in times of geopolitical stress in recent years.

Looser central bank policy is also given as a reason bets on riskier assets. But that link is hard to prove, too. Bitcoin has fallen during previous spells of easy money.

Also widely cited are expectations that cryptocurrencies will go mainstream, as central banks step up their research into digital currencies after Facebooks push to offer its Libra coin. Some, such as Chinas, are getting closer to issuing their own coins.

And in comments that traders said stoked buying in bitcoin, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told U.S. lawmakers on Tuesday that the Fed was working hard on the issue, while it remained undecided on any digital dollar.

Central bank interest is also problematic as a reason for bitcoins rise, Rauchs said.

People tend to mix up and conflate these different concepts that are actually fundamentally different from one another, he said. This creates a bubble where you conflate everything together and everything appreciates.

Still, in the short term, crypto traders interviewed by Reuters said, the cut to the supply of bitcoin was likely to loom largest for investors.

Things are aligning, said Jamie Farquhar, portfolio manager at crypto firm NKB Group. But the real thing that people are looking at is the halving.

($1 = 0.7713 pounds)

Reporting by Tom Wilson, editing by Larry King

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Is bitcoin's 2020 rally another flash in the pan? - Reuters

This Bitcoin Metric Is Over 100% Higher in 2 Months, and Its Critical for Bulls – newsBTC

Over the past 60 days, Bitcoin has found itself rocketing higher, rallying from a low of $6,400 to a local top of $10,500 in the span of two months.

Over the past few years, as institutional traders and more serious players have entered the Bitcoin market, the demand for future derivatives for the cryptocurrency has exploded.

This was confirmed with a report from industry outlet The Block.

They reported that as of February 13th, the aggregated amount of open interest on Bitcoin futures contracts surpassed $5 billion, with traders on BitMEX, OKEx, Bakkt, CME, and other key platforms throwing billions of dollars at the asset.

This is far above the approximately $4 billion in open interest seen in January of the $2.5 billion in December.

The massive eruption in the open interest seen in Bitcoin futures contracts could have an extremely positive effect on the underlying market.

The below chart which shows what trends in an assets volume, open interest, and price means for said assets future trajectory indicates that the most optimistic scenario for any market is if the assets price, volume, and open interest for its futures market rise in tandem, suggesting strength, bullish price action, and an overall trend of prices rising.

As can be seen, the past few months have seen open interest in Bitcoin futures erupt higher. This, of course, comes on the back of an uptick in volume as investors re-enter the cryptocurrency markets and a decisive uptrend forming in the trading value of digital assets.

The simultaneous growth of these three metrics would suggest Bitcoin is on the verge of an even greater bull run than what was already seen.

This is far from the only thing that has Bitcoin bulls enthused.

Prominent trader Sawcruhteez recently noted that the three-day Ichimoku Cloud for Bitcoin is now fullybullish, with prices breaking through the cloud resistance and with the future cloud twisting positive. The indicator signaled a buy at $10,268, suggesting more upside is imminent.

Sawcruhteez called Bitcoins reversal at the start of the year, saying he expected for the asset to trade in the mid-$9,000s by the middle of the month (he was proven correct).

Also, Crypto Bull notedthat with BTCs latest price action, the price of the cryptocurrency has, for the first time ever, broken above a downtrend that has constrained prices since the $20,000 top seen in December 2017.

The fact that Bitcoin is now past this key resistance, the analyst who pointed it out wrote, is a sign that short liquidations are coming and a potential sign that the biggest weekly green candle in Bitcoins history is right on the horizon.

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This Bitcoin Metric Is Over 100% Higher in 2 Months, and Its Critical for Bulls - newsBTC