Letter: Don’t patronize me on the Second Amendment – NRToday.com

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Letter: Don't patronize me on the Second Amendment - NRToday.com

John G. Malcolm: On abortion, guns and speech, the Supreme Court respects text of Constitution – Madison.com

The three words that best describe the U.S. Supreme Courts decisions this term are "text," "history" and "tradition." If thats one word too many, try this: Originalism rules! And thats a good thing.

The court considered several important constitutional cases this term. The split in most of these cases was 6-3, with the conservative justices in the majority and the liberal justices in dissent.

In the biggest case, Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization, a five-justice majority ruled the Constitution has no right to obtain an abortion. This overturned Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992).

Nearly 50 years ago, Justice Byron White, in his Roe dissent, wrote that the errant ruling represented an exercise of raw judicial power. Similarly, John Hart Ely, an eminent scholar who supported abortion rights, stated that Roe was not constitutional law and g(ave) almost no sense of an obligation to try to be.

Those views were reflected in the majority opinion for Dobbs, written by Justice Samuel Alito. He noted that the right to an abortion is not in the Constitutions text, nor was it part of our nations history or traditions. Indeed, virtually every state outlawed abortion when the Constitution and the 14th Amendment were ratified.

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The court also decided an important Second Amendment case, New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen. Justice Clarence Thomas wrote the 6-3 majority opinion, striking down a New York law requiring law-abiding citizens who passed a background check to demonstrate a special need beyond a general desire to defend oneself before being permitted to carry a firearm outside the home.

The court said that such a restriction was not supported by drumroll, please either the amendments text or the nations historical traditions. The court further stated the amendment was the product of an interest balancing by the people and that it was improper for a court to engage in a judge-empowering interest-balancing inquiry once the protections of the amendment had been properly invoked.

In an important religious liberty case, Kennedy v. Bremerton School District, Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the six-justice majority opinion that a school violated the free exercise and free speech rights of a high school football coach when it fired him for offering a silent post-game prayer at midfield. The court relied on you guessed it historical practices and the original meaning of the First Amendments text.

The court also finally declared that the courts much-criticized three-part test for analyzing Establishment Clause cases, promulgated in Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) which Justice Antonin Scalia once described as some ghoul in a late-night horror movie that repeatedly sits up in its grave and shuffles abroad, after being repeatedly killed and buried was indeed dead.

The court also sided with religious adherents in other significant religious liberty and free speech cases, including Carson v. Makin, Shurtleff v. City of Boston, and Ramirez v. Collier. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, won a significant victory against the Federal Election Commission in which the court, again by a 6-3 vote, held that an FEC rule violated the First Amendment rights of candidates wishing to make personal loans to their own campaigns to engage in pure political speech.

And in NFIB v. OSHA, West Virginia v. EPA and Alabama Association of Realtors v. HHS, the court (via 6-3 votes) held that the separation of powers requires Congress to speak clearly before an administrative agency consisting of unaccountable bureaucrats can exercise nearly unlimited power over decisions of great economic and political significance.

In his dissenting opinion in the infamous case of Dred Scott v. Sandford, Justice Benjamin Curtis stated: When a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their views of what it ought to mean.

During this momentous term, the court made great strides toward interpreting the Constitution with fidelity and restoring the rights of all Americans to govern themselves with the exception of those few individual rights that are delineated in our Constitution or firmly rooted in our nations historical traditions. The people should debate, persuade and decide contentious issues directly or through their elected representatives.

In terms of interpreting and adhering to the Constitution, the court deserves an A+" for its latest term.

Malcolm is a Heritage Foundation vice president and the director of its Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies: http://www.heritage.org. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

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John G. Malcolm: On abortion, guns and speech, the Supreme Court respects text of Constitution - Madison.com

5 Monumental Cases That Highlighted the Supreme Court’s 2021-2022 Term – Heritage.org

TheSupreme Courthas just finished what will likely go down as one of the most momentous and memorable terms in history.

In addition to the court deciding many blockbuster cases from abortion to the limits of the power of the federal bureaucracy,Justice Stephen Breyerretired, now-Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in to replace him; there was an unprecedentedleakof a draft opinion,protestersshowed up at justices homes in several attempts to intimidate them, and an armed man made a serious threat to one of the justices lives basedin parton that leaked draft opinion.

This term saw major victories for religious liberty and Second Amendment rights. There were also important decisions about the powers possessed by administrative agencies.

What did the Supreme Court decide this term? How did each of the justices rule? And how is America impacted by the courts rulings?

Theres just too much information for one article (which is why you should watch The Heritage Foundations Scholars and Scribes event), but below is a summary of five major cases from this term.

Overturning Roe v. Wade: Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization

Thiscasearose from a challenge to Mississippis 2018 Gestational Age Act, which prohibits abortions after 15 weeks of gestation except in cases of medical emergency or severe fetal abnormality.

While the state claimed an interest in protecting the lives of innocent unborn children and their mothers, abortion provider Jackson Womens Health Organization sued the state for passing the law, alleging that the law violated Mississippians constitutional rights to access abortion.

Both the federal district court and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the abortion provider, ruling that the law violated the Supreme Courts framework established in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

In what became a historic victory for legal originalists and pro-life advocates alike, the court overruled both Roe and Casey to uphold the Mississippi law. The 6-3 majority opinion, authored by Justice Samuel Alito, held that because a right to abortion is neither found in the text of the Constitution nor deeply rooted in the nations history and tradition, the Constitution does not provide for such a right.

Accordingly, the authority to regulate abortion was returned to the people through their elected representatives in each states legislature, which is where it had resided for all of our nations history prior to the Roe ruling in 1973.

The court also found that a proper application of stare decisis, which is Latin for the thing decided, counseled in favor of overturning Roe and Casey.

First, as to the nature of the error, Roe was not just wrong from a legal perspective, it was egregiously wrong.

Second, the quality of reasoning in the Roe decision was poor, as it lacked any grounding in constitutional text, history, or precedent. Rather than stating what the law was, the Roe court established a detailed set of rules for pregnancy that looked more like it was writing a law than a judicial opinion, which is not the courts role.

Third, the workability of past abortion precedent was insufficient and unclear, making it difficult to apply and establish uniform enforcement in the real world.

Fourth, Roes and Caseys deleterious impact on other areas of law was tremendous, leading to the distortion of many important but unrelated legal doctrines.

And fifth and finally, reliance interests would not be upended by overturning Roe and Casey. In other words, contrary to claims by those in favor of keeping Roe and Casey, the court found that individuals had not relied on those court cases to make long-term decisions and order their affairs.

Because regulating abortion does not violate the Constitution and the Mississippi Legislature had legitimate state interests to support its Gestational Age Act, the court upheld it.

The Right to Carry a Gun for Self-defense: New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen

This case arose from a challenge to New Yorks strict standards for issuing a license to carry a concealed firearm. The state issued concealed carry licenses only to applicants who could show proper-cause for needing one, which did not include a generalized need for self-protection.

Two adult, law-abiding New York residents sued the state after being denied licenses for not meeting this standard. They only stated that they had a generalized need for self-protection and said that New Yorks refusal to issue them a permit violated their Second and 14th Amendment rights.

The court agreed and found that the proper-cause requirement violates both the Second and 14th Amendments. The 6-3 opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas rejected the use of the prevailing framework for evaluating Second Amendment claims, saying instead that the government must affirmatively prove that its firearms regulation is part of the historical tradition that delimits the outer bounds of the right to keep and bear arms.

The court said that text of the Second Amendment protects the right to carry handguns in public for self-defense, without a home/public distinction. Besides a few outliers in the late 1800s, American lawmakers have not broadly prohibited public carry of a commonly used firearm for self-defense, nor have they required a special need for self-protection distinguishable from that of the general community.

This means that in states and localities that have good cause requirements for issuing handgun permits over and above a generalized need for self-defense, those requirements likely do not survive this ruling.

Protecting Prayer by Government Employees in the Workplace: Kennedy v. Bremerton School District

This case arose from a challenge to the Bremerton, Washington, school districts decision to fire a high school football coach for kneeling on the football field after games to offer a personal silent prayer. Coach Joe Kennedy had prayed after each game since 2008. While some players joined him at different times, he never required nor encouraged them to do so.

The school district terminated Kennedy, claiming that allowing any overt actions that might appear to a reasonable observer to endorse prayer while he is on duty as a District-paid coach would violate the First Amendments establishment clause.

Kennedy sued the school district, alleging that it had violated his free exercise and free speech rights under the First Amendment.

The court sided with Kennedy, holding that both the free exercise and free speech clauses protect an individual engaging in personal religious observance from governmental reprisal. Moreover, the court said that the establishment clause neither requires nor permits the government to suppress such religious expression.

Under the courts ruling, the school district violated the free exercise clause because its policy was neither neutral nor generally applicable to everyone, but instead targeted Kennedys conduct because it was religious. It also violated the free speech clause because Kennedys prayers were private rather than government speechthe court said that they were not pursuant to his official duties.

The court found the schools establishment clause justification for firing Kennedy to be faulty because such a balancing test relies on Lemon v. Kurtzman, a case that, according to the majority opinion, the Court long ago abandoned due to its practical and historical shortcomings.

This observation effectively overruled Lemon and its endorsement test for determining whether a government had violated the Constitutions establishment clause with a requirement that the establishment clause must be interpreted by reference to historical practices and understandings.

Using School Choice Funds for Religious Education: Carson v. Makin

This case arose from a challenge to Maines prohibition against applying state funds from the states tuition assistance program toward secondary schools that, in addition to teaching academic subjects, provide religious instruction.

Two families challenged this practice, claiming that Maine violated the free exercise, establishment, and equal protection clauses by restricting their freedom of school choice.

The court sided with the challengers, holding that Maines nonsectarian requirement for otherwise generally available tuition assistance payments violates the free exercise clause.

A 6-3 decision written by Chief Justice John Roberts found that Maines requirement could not survive strict scrutiny, the most stringent level of review the court uses when determining whether a constitutional violation has occurred.

The states interest in avoiding the appearance of supporting a particular religion did not justify excluding members of the community from an otherwise generally available public benefit simply because of their religious exercise.

The court also noted that the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals attempt to distinguish between religious status prohibitions (prohibiting funding solely based on an institutions status as a religious organization) and religious use prohibitions (supposedly prohibiting funding regardless of an institutions religious status and instead prohibiting funding because it would be put to a religious use, such as teaching a religion course) was unpersuasive, and that the prohibition on status-based discrimination under the free exercise clause didnt justify use-based discrimination.

EPAs Overreach Regulating Greenhouse Gases: West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency

This case arose from a challenge to a cap-and-trade program that the Environmental Protection Agency created in 2016. The EPA launched this policy just after Congress failed to pass the American Clean Energy and Security Act.

The policy aimed to amend the Clean Air Act by establishing a cap-and-trade program for greenhouse gas emissions that was functionally identical to the one that couldnt get through Congress. The EPA claimed it possessed the authority to issue the policy due to a provision already found in the Clean Air Act.

West Virginia and several other challengers sued the EPA, alleging that the agency lacked the authority to issue such a rule.

The court sided with West Virginia, concluding that Congress did not grant the EPA the authority. In a 6-3 opinion written by the chief justice, the court held that the Clean Air Act does not authorize the EPA to force the fossil fuel energy sector of the economy to shift to so-called green or renewable sources of energy.

The Obama and Biden administrations had argued that the acts term system of pollution reduction actually authorized the EPA to shift from regulating pollution on a factory-by-factory basis (through the use of better pollution-reduction technologies) to demanding that the entire energy sector shift over time from fossil fuels to so-called green energy sources.

But the court judged that the Obama and Biden administrations interpretation of the act is precisely the type of judgment that falls under the major questions doctrine. Under that doctrine, it is necessary for Congress to include a clear statement in the law for a court to conclude that it intended to delegate authority of this breadth to regulate a fundamental sector of the economy. In this instance, Congress issued no such statement.

Honorable MentionMandating Private Employees Get Vaccinated Against COVID-19: National Federation of Independent Business v. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration

While we promised to distill the courts term to the five most important cases, we couldnt resist making one honorable mention.

This conglomerate of cases arose from dozens of challenges to the Occupational Safety and Health Administrations vaccine mandate that it issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The mandate required businesses with over 100 employees to have their employees get vaccinated against the novel coronavirus. Businesses would be charged a steep fee each day for each employee who did not comply. This mandate would have applied to over 84 million workers.

In a 6-3 per curiam (unsigned) opinion, the Supreme Court stayed (stopped) the implementation of the vaccination mandate. The majority concluded that the government was not likely to later prevail in its argument in court that OSHA possessed the authority to issue this mandate.

The majority noted that neither OSHA nor Congress had ever imposed such a requirement and that although Congress has enacted significant legislation addressing the COVID-19 pandemic, it has declined to enact any measure similar to what OSHA has promulgated here.

As its name suggests, the court explained, OSHA is tasked with ensuring occupational safetythat is, safe and healthful working conditions. The text of the statute empowers OSHA only to set workplace safety standards, not broad public health measures, and no provision of the Act addresses public health more generally, which falls outside of OSHAs sphere of expertise.

The courts majority rejected the governments argument that the risk of contracting COVID-19 at work empowers OSHA to issue its vaccination mandate on the grounds that the risk is not an occupational hazard, but is a universal risk that is no different from the day-to-day dangers that all face from crime, air pollution, or any number of communicable diseases.

The federal government has not pursued arguing the case further, and the stay remains in effect.

This term, the court heard, and decided, many momentous cases. It will likely go down as one of the most memorable and important terms in Supreme Court history.While the court didnt get every decision right, its decisions this term make clear that a majority of justices are committed to deciding cases on a more originalist and textualist basis than in the past.

Thats a good thing for the courtand a good thing for our country.

This piece originally appeared in The Daily Signal

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5 Monumental Cases That Highlighted the Supreme Court's 2021-2022 Term - Heritage.org

Right to Petition Legislature Right to a Legislative Hearing – Reason

Plaintiff sued, claiming he was entitled under the state constitution to have a hearing on his petitions, but the court disagreed:

Except for minor differences in punctuation, Part I, Article 32 provides now as it provided when it was first enacted:

The people have a right, in an orderly and peaceable manner, to assemble and consult upon the common good, give instructions to their representatives, and to request of the legislative body, by way of petition or remonstrance, redress of the wrongs done them, and of the grievances they suffer.

To the framers, the word "redress" in this context meant to remedy or repair. The noun "petition" referred to a written or formal request "to a legislative or other body, soliciting some favor, grant, right or mercy." A "grievance" was defined as "that which burdens, oppresses, or injures, implying a sense of wrong done, or a continued injury, and therefore applied only to the effects of human conduct; never to providential evils" as in, "The oppressed subject has the right to petition for a redress of grievances." A "remonstrance" as used in Part I, Article 32 was a "strong representation of reasons against a measure," which "when addressed to a public body may be accompanied with a petition or supplication for the removal or prevention of some evil or inconvenience," as in "[a] party aggrieved presents a remonstrance to the legislature." Thus, pursuant to its plain language, as understood by the framers, Part I, Article 32 grants citizens the right to request, by way of a formal petition or remonstrance, that the legislature right a wrong.

The United States Supreme Court has held that the analogous provision of the First Amendment does not include a right to a response. The First Amendment to the Federal Constitution provides, in pertinent part, that "Congress shall make no law abridging the right of the people to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." In Smith v. Arkansas State Highway Employees (1979), the Court ruled that the state highway commission had not violated the First Amendment by failing to respond to or consider grievances that employees had submitted through their union because "the First Amendment does not impose any affirmative obligation on the government to listen" or "respond" to such grievances.

Similarly, in Minnesota Board for Community Colleges v. Knight (1984), the Court held that a state law that required public employers to discuss certain matters exclusively with a union representative, instead of with employees directly, did not violate the First Amendment because "[n]othing in [that amendment] or in [the] Court's case law interpreting it suggests" that the right to petition requires "government policymakers to listen or respond to individuals' communications on public issues." The Court held that individuals "have no constitutional right as members of the public to a government audience for their policy views."

Some commentators have suggested that the Court in Smith and Knight "overlooked important historical information regarding the right to petition," and, therefore, erred by concluding that the federal right to petition does not include a right to a governmental response. "Those commentators point to the government practice of considering petitions in some quasi-formal fashion from the 13th century in England through American colonial timesa practice that continued in the early years of the American Republic." "Based on this historical practice, these commentators contend that the Petition Clause should be interpreted to incorporate a right to a response to or official consideration of petitions." See, e.g., Stephen A. Higginson, A Short History of the Right To Petition Government for the Redress of Grievances, 96 Yale L.J. 142, 155 (1986); James E. Pfander, Sovereign Immunity and the Right to Petition: Toward a First Amendment Right to Pursue Judicial Claims Against the Government, 91 Nw. U. L. Rev. 899, 905 & n. 22 (1997); Julie M. Spanbauer, The First Amendment Right to Petition Government for a Redress of Grievances: Cut From a Different Cloth, 21 Hastings Const. L.Q. 15, 33 (1993).

"Other scholars disagree, arguing based on the plain text of the First Amendment that the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances really is just a right to petition the government for a redress of grievances." "These scholars note that the Petition Clause by its terms refers only to a right 'to petition'; it does not also refer to a right to response or official consideration." see, e.g., Gary Lawson & Guy Seidman, Downsizing the Right to Petition, 93 Nw. U. L. Rev. 739, 759-62 (1999); Norman B. Smith, "Shall Make No Law Abridging ": An Analysis of the Neglected, but Nearly Absolute, Right of Petition, 54 U. Cin. L. Rev 1153, 1190-91 (1986).

We need not decide in this case whether Part I, Article 32 of the New Hampshire Constitution requires the legislature to respond to a remonstrance because the plaintiff did not seek a response; rather, he sought a legislative hearing. In his complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the Speaker acted unconstitutionally because he neglected "to call to assemble the legislative body as a whole, [so] as to provide [him] with redress of grievances." The plaintiff requested an order "compelling [the] Speaker (to assign to a committee for public hearing) to assemble the legislative body as a whole for a public hearing as stated in the Constitution for redress of grievances." Accordingly, in light of the plaintiff's allegations, the question we must answer is whether Part I, Article 32, alone or in conjunction with other constitutional provisions, obligates the legislature to assemble in order to hold a public hearing on a remonstrance.

Even those commentators who believe that, historically, the right to petition included the right to a response agree that it did not include a right to a hearing. As one commentator has noted, "[a] petitioner never possessed the right to a full legislative discussion or a debate of a particular petition, nor to a public forum to present testimony relevant to a petition." And, as another has stated with regard to the right to petition in the First Amendment, "the duty, if any, that the First Amendment imposes on government to respond to petitions likely is minimal" and does not include "giv[ing] petitioners the opportunity to personally appear and present their views." Carol Rice Andrews, A Right of Access to Court under the Petition Clause of the First Amendment: Defining the Right, 60 Ohio St. L.J. 557, 643-44 (1999).

Courts construing the right to petition in other state constitutions have ruled that the right to petition does not include a right to a legislative hearing. The plaintiff argues that, in contrast to other state constitutions, the New Hampshire Constitution "confers a right on a citizen to orally address the Senate and the House." He argues that Part I, Article 32 must be read together with Part I, Article 31 and Part I, Article 30, and that, collectively, these provisions establish that right. We disagree.

The plain language of Part I, Articles 31 and 30 of the State Constitution does not support the plaintiff's assertions. As originally enacted in 1784, Part I, Article 31 provided: "The legislature ought frequently to assemble for the redress of grievances, for correcting, strengthening and confirming the laws, and for making new ones, as the common good may require." As amended in 1792, Part I, Article 31 provided: "The legislature shall assemble for the redress of public grievances, and for making such laws as the public good may require." In Merrill v. Sherburne (1818), we clarified that the phrase "redress of public grievances" in Part I, Article 31 refers merely to the legislature's authority to enact laws for the public good. As such, Part I, Article 31 confers no particular rights upon individual citizens. Rather, it "describes the entire purpose of the legislature." David C. Steelman & John Cerullo, Judicial Accountability in a Time of Tumult: New Hampshire's Impeachment Crisis of 2000, 69 Rutgers L. Rev. 1357, 1392 n.158 (2017); see Lawrence Friedman, The New Hampshire State Constitution 100 (2d ed. 2015).

Part I, Article 30, the Speech and Debate Clause of the State Constitution, protects the legislature's right to free deliberation and debate. Part I, Article 30 provides: "The freedom of deliberation, speech, and debate, in either house of the legislature, is so essential to the rights of the people, that it cannot be the foundation of any action, complaint, or prosecution, in any other court or place whatsoever." The New Hampshire Speech and Debate Clause "is the equivalent of the speech or debate clause, article I, section 6 of the United States Constitution." As the Supreme Court has stated with regard to the federal Speech or Debate Clause, "[t]he central role of the Speech or Debate Clause [is] to prevent intimidation of legislators by the Executive and accountability before a possibly hostile judiciary." Thus, Part I, Article 30 protects the right of individual legislators and the legislature as a whole to freely deliberate and debate. While this right inures to the benefit of the public, Part I, Article 30 confers no right upon members of the public to participate in legislative debate or deliberation.

The plaintiff appears to maintain that he had a due process right to a legislative hearing on his remonstrances. The United States Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in Bi-Metallic Co. v. Colorado (1915), construing the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. We adopt the same reasoning [details omitted -EV] under our State Constitution.

As Chief Justice Doe explained in State v. Hayes (1881), ours is a representative democracy, not a "pure democracy." "It is inherent in a republican form of government that direct public participation in government policymaking is limited." "Not least among the reasons for refusing to recognize such a right is the impossibility of its judicial definition and enforcement," implicating separation-of-powers concerns. "However wise or practicable various levels of public participation in various kinds of policy decisions may be," nothing in the Due Process Clause of the State Constitution suggests that "government must provide for such participation."

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Right to Petition Legislature Right to a Legislative Hearing - Reason

Jayland Walker’s death sparked protests in Akron. What are your rights as a protester? – Akron Beacon Journal

Ongoing protests in Akron following the police shooting of Jayland Walker have led to the city renewing its curfew on Thursday night.

The curfew went into effect at 10 p.m. until 6 a.m., spanningdowntown Akron. It willl remain in effect until the city issues another order that lifts it.

Several protesters have already been arrested, including Breonna Taylors aunt and Jacob Blakes father. Violating the curfew entails a fourth-degree misdemeanor and either a fine up to $350 or up to 30 days in jail.

Heres what you need to know about the curfew and your protest rights in Ohio:

Yes, but theyre limited. Law enforcement, medical and fire personnel are exempt, in addition to the news media. Ohioans fleeing dangerous circumstances, seeking medical care or traveling between their home or work are also in the clear.

Yes the First Amendment guarantees the right to assemble and protest. However, there are some limitations. According to the Ohio American Civil Liberties Union, protesters may not block traffic. Certain locations, including but not limited to private properties and certain parks or plazas, may also require permits to protest on.

Impromptu protests are allowed within two days of an unfolding event, but organizers are still required to notify the Cleveland Division of Police at least eight hours in advance.

Violent, obscene or threatening speech is illegal under the First Amendment, and endangering others could result in arrest. Dont antagonize or touch law enforcement, and be mindful of drugs or weapons these could result in additional charges, if arrested.

You can, and police cannot search cell phones without a warrant. Keep in mind that whatever is said to the police can be used against an individual, and law enforcement can authorize an arrest if you fail to identify yourself, upon being asked. Additionally, you do not have to agree to an officer searching you or your car the Cleveland Legal Aid Society urges protesters to be vocal about their consent.

Law enforcement is still allowed to conduct pat downs (not searches) if they suspect an individual may be armed.

Being arrested and released on bail, from start to finish, can last up to 36 hours. The police will ask for basic information, followed by a court agency interview to determine bail you do not need to answer the agencys questions (you can request for an attorney), but doing so accurately will move the process faster.

The Ohio ACLU said that the main types of crimes a protester is charged with are minor misdemeanor, misdemeanor offense and a felony offense.

Officers may also detain, not arrest, protesters for suspected involvement in criminal activity.

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Jayland Walker's death sparked protests in Akron. What are your rights as a protester? - Akron Beacon Journal

Patrick Radden Keefe Is One of the Good Guys – New York Magazine

Photo: Caroline Tompkins/The New York Times

On a recent evening, journalist Patrick Radden Keefe was in his home office in Westchester County, toying with a story idea that involved the Russian mafia. Before calling it a day, he printed a trove of related documents and left them in a stack on his printer tray. When he returned the next morning, he found that someone had taken one of the pages a picture of a dead body inscribed with a threatening message in Cyrillic letters and placed it on his desk. The culprit had added a single word to the page: No.

As a staff writer at The New Yorker, Keefe has written about all kinds of disreputable figures an international arms broker, hackers, a dubious diamond dealer, a mass shooter, and the Mexican drug lord Joaqun El Chapo Guzman, to name just a few and this wasnt the first time someone had tried to get him to beg off a story. While working on Empire of Pain, his 2021 book about the Sackler familys role in the opioid epidemic, Keefe came to believe the family had hired an investigator to intimidate him by loitering outside his home. This time, however, the intimidation campaign was coming from inside the house.

Every time he tells me a new story idea, I feel like I have a miniheart attack. Oh jeez, another litigious asshole or murderous criminal? Cant you do a celebrity profile or something? says Keefes wife, Justyna Gudzowska, an attorney who specializes in international financial-crime policy. Patrick is intrigued by all of the bad guys.

Keefe insists that his predisposition toward bad guys is not a point of tension in his marriage, but his new book, Rogues: True Stories of Grifters, Killers, Rebels and Crooks (Doubleday), is proof of his nearly undivided focus on scoundrels. After the enormous success of Empire of Pain and 2018s Say Nothing, a murder procedural set against the backdrop of the Troubles in Ireland, Keefes latest is a collection of 12 stories drawn from his work at The New Yorker and a reminder of his command of the magazine thriller.

I need a story about people. I always start from the ground up. There may be some kind of particular 30,000-foot phenomenon thats interesting, but I have to find an anecdotal way into it, Keefe says, sitting on a bench in Tompkins Square Park on a recent sunny afternoon. Im often thinking about these kinds of questions of the specific and the universal and to what degree can we empathize with people even if theyve done awful things.

The appetite for stories about people who do awful things has never been higher. Magazines have embraced the era of true crime with cash-starved glossies selling the rights to 8,000-word, already fact-checked features to streaming services. There is peril in that bargain: Narratives sometimes read as if theyve been engineered for Netflix; vulnerable sources, who are often victims, can feel exploited; and lurid storytelling can romanticize, or absolve, criminals. But Keefes work is mindful of the havoc his subjects unleash on their victims, their families, and the institutions around them.

In his hands, an abyss becomes a mirror. You end up learning what is the vulnerability or the vanity of the culture that got taken in by this person or that allowed this criminal to triumph or prosper. Thats why I feel like his work, admittedly emerging during a time when there is a grifting-journalism economy, stands out as singular, says Daniel Zalewski, Keefes longtime editor at The New Yorker.

Keefe has a natural tendency to key in on his subjects family lives as a means of interrogating their motives. In Rogues, nowhere does that tendency serve a story better than in the case of Amy Bishop, a disgruntled former science professor at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, who killed three colleagues and injured three others in a 2010 mass shooting. Years before her rampage, when Bishop was 21, shed shot and killed her 18-year-old brother. Keefe tirelessly reported on that time period, making trips to Bishops hometown of Braintree, Massachusetts. His reporting pointed to a theory that Bishops parents had called their sons murder an accident instead of facing the horror of fratricide. Keefe landed a series of interviews with Bishops parents, Judy and Sam, and laid out his theory for them.

I was able to home in on some of the inconsistencies in Judys story. But, of course, I didnt feel any sense of triumph. Cruel is the wrong word. I felt great empathy, because I felt these were two people who, in order to survive, had constructed a universe of denial. And there I was poking holes in that edifice, Keefe says. They called me the night before the piece came out. It had been through fact-checking already. Sam said, We want you to know that whatever happens with the piece, were really glad that we told our story to you. Which meant the world to me. The next day, the piece came out, and they havent spoken to me since.

While Rogues represents 15 years of magazine writing, its Keefes relatively recent work that launched him to a level of success few journalists ever reach. Say Nothing was a New York Times best-seller and optioned as a limited series on FX. In the spring of 2020, as the U.S. went into lockdown, Keefe released Wind of Change, an eight-episode podcast in which he investigated the mysterious origins of the Cold Warera anthem of the same name by glam-metal band the Scorpions. It was picked up by Hulu. A year later, Keefe published Empire of Pain, which also quickly became a New York Times best-seller.

At 46, Keefe is tall and lean with a sharp nose and a trimmed thicket of salt-and-pepper hair. Hes painstakingly affable a manner that surely serves him well as a reporter. Were eating chicken sandwiches from a trendy Indian restaurant Keefe was eager to try. A self-described dedicated eater, he doesnt have much time to explore the citys culinary delights these days thanks to two young sons, work, and the promotional obligations that come with literary fame. He has just come from a podcast interview about Empire of Pain and, in 48 hours, hell be on a plane to the Maldives for the Jaipur Literature Festival, which is being held at a five-star resort there. His books have earned Keefe awards, a spot on late-night TV couches, shout-outs from A-list celebrities, and the chance to testify before Congress. Ive heard that he no longer fields blurb requests from fellow authors, because there are simply too many.

Its ridiculous, he says of the Maldives trip. Next month, Im going to Ireland and doing a bunch of speaking. I could never have imagined, until a few years ago, saying no to that kind of opportunity. But Ive had to start saying no to stuff, because the last thing I want to do is keep running a victory lap for work that came out over a year ago.

Keefe grew up in Dorchester, Massachusetts, the son of an urban planner and a professor of philosophy. After undergrad at Columbia, Keefe went to Cambridge and the London School of Economics. Even as he was collecting masters degrees unrelated to journalism, Keefe always knew where he wanted to end up.

Working at The New Yorker was always his dream job, says Gudzowska, who also studied at Cambridge and LSE. I found this incredibly pretentious when I met him, but we were living in the U.K. together and hed find the newsstands that got The New Yorker earlier than the other newsstands and insist on going there as soon as the issue came out.

After England, Keefe and Gudzowska enrolled at Yale Law School, where Keefe took a year off to write his first book, Chatter, about the U.S.-eavesdropping-surveillance network. In 2006, the same year Chatter was published, Keefe sold his first story to The New Yorker, about Sister Ping, a prolific human smuggler in Chinatown, which Keefe would expand into his second book, The Snakehead.

He sent in a pitch, and it was so strong that I immediately agreed to work with him, said Zalewski. What was clear was that he could see that it was a crime operation, but that he was most interested in the complex motivations that had led her to embark on this endeavor to both help and exploit her community. It was that awareness of the double edge that caught my eye.

If there is a cinematic quality to Keefes work, thats because he plainly admits to drawing inspiration from the structure, pacing, and reveals in movies. When Keefe flew to Paris to interview an HSBC computer technician hed pitched to his editors as the Edward Snowden of Swiss banking, he quickly realized he was sitting across from a compulsive liar. At first, Keefe thought he needed to scuttle the story, because he couldnt build a feature around such an unreliable subject. Then he remembered The Informant!, a 2009 Matt Damon film about a disastrous FBI source, and it inspired him to lean into the unreliability of his subject. While trying to make it as a magazine writer, Keefe briefly worked as a Hollywood screenwriter, adapting a Jo Nesb novel for Channing Tatum and writing a script about Somali pirates for Jerry Bruckheimer. (It is a mercy to the world that that didnt get made and Captain Phillips did, he says.)

Back at Tompkins Square Park, Keefe is finishing the last few bites of his sandwich before getting back to work on a story about a CIA hacker on trial for allegedly leaking a massive cache of files to WikiLeaks. Before leaving, I ask whether he regrets any part of his interviews with Bishops parents. I wouldnt change a thing, he says. Its a thing that I wrestle with not so much ethically but emotionally. Its the Janet Malcolm thing, right? When you sit down to write, if you are pulling punches on behalf of the people youre writing about, youre not doing your job. There may be a necessary and inescapable cruelty in that. Which emotionally is hard for me but, professionally, I feel fine with.

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Patrick Radden Keefe Is One of the Good Guys - New York Magazine

NFT Party Report: I Met a Spy Dressed as the Riddler – Gawker

Times Square has been worse than usual this week. Since Tuesday, the standard hordes of theater attendees and people in Tin Man costumes have been joined by thousands of NFT lovers in lanyards, descending upon New Yorks most-lit neighborhood for three days of panels about NFTs for the leading annual NFT event, NFT.NYC.

By now youve likely heard the spiel on what NFTs are (Its a receipt of digital ownership for a jpeg that looks like shit, someone has maybe told you in a bar). But the broader project of NFT culture is, reductively, to turn every aspect of human interaction into a commodity. There are NFTs for drinking coffee, playing football, skating and buying streetwear, doing feminism, joining private clubs, going to conferences, and, I assure you, much more. Fortunately, this isnt going well. NFTs, as you may know, are down bad. Per the Wall Street Journal, they are flatlining; in May, daily sales had fallen 92 percent from their peak last September. That makes it a very funny time to host what Insider called the Coachella of NFTs (in perhaps a tidy illustration of his poor marketing instincts, the conferences founder prefers the clunkier epithet, the South by Southwest of NYC).

Perhaps because the money-making side of NFTs isnt making that much money, the word on everyones lips at NFT.NYC was community. The conferences Twitter bio reads: NFT.NYC brings the NFT community together in NYC. There were countless talks on topics like The Power of NFT Investment Through Community, NFT Branding and Community Building, How to Build an NFT Market and Community, Security Measures for Community Building, 7 Ways To Optimize NFTs for Community, and the ominous, NFT Community Service Hour. As one Miami real estate developer told me: I dont see NFTs as an investment. I believe in the technology, and the community. Right on.

Wednesday night, I tried to get a sense for what that community is like. Specifically, my boss wanted me to do an NFT party report, so I took a look at the conferences list of satellite and community events (which, for an expo boasting over 1,000 speakers, was relatively short), and found the Eventbrite of something called the Flyfish Club Cocktail Party. Flyfish Club, as I learned from a fast Google, is the worlds first NFT restaurant. Technically, its not a restaurant yet. They dont have a storefront. But early next year, they plan to open an international seafood-focused dining venue somewhere in New York, where only the owners of their proprietary NFT, or others who lease those NFTs for a night, can eat. For now, the party would be at Scampi, an Italian spot in Flatiron.

Much like the hypothetical blockchain-enabled restaurant, the party was invite only. But thanks to a very kind doorman, a possibly-related high ratio of men to women in attendance, and the only name that came to mind when asked if I knew someone inside (Andrew Sullivan), the community let an NFTless loafer into their temporary home. I have to say I thought the community was nice, mostly the part involving an open bar, a spread of high-end crudit, and servers milling around offering some kind of tartar on a razor clam shell. The conversations were also better than I was expecting. I had precisely three of them, excluding the sweet doorman who checked in periodically to see if Andrew Sullivan had made it.

The first guy, who I met while trying to eat giant slices of hard salami in a minimally disgusting way, had also come alone. He was not a member of the club either, but a nice restaurateur who popped in to scope out the business model. He works for a restaurant company that owns a sushi place in New York and San Francisco, the latter of which has still not reopened after the pandemic. They were mulling the pivot to NFTs. I asked him how much money he had lost in crypto, and he said Its not great right now. We exchanged LinkedIns.

Back at the salami station, I met a Miami real estate developer who goes by Chichi, though it is not his real name. He came wearing a Moonbirds hat, so this was not his first blockchain-based private club rodeo. He had joined Flyfish Club at the behest of Resy co-founder Gary Vaynerchuk, or Gary Vee. I follow everything Gary Vee says, Chichi said. He had also lost a lot on crypto and NFTs. But as noted earlier, he does not think of them as an investment, so much as a community. He didnt plan to participate much in this particular community, being based in Miami. Instead he mostly planned to generate passive income by leasing his Flyfish Club membership to interested, but less committed community members. We also exchanged LinkedIns.

The grand finale was a 20-minute chat with a man wearing a Riddler jacket, a Hawaiian shirt, and a necklace of large titanium rings. He also had a glowing, neon-green, LED backpack, but he wasnt wearing it. The Riddler had come to promote his bio-authentication hospitality tech business. The gist, if Im remembering right, is that this tech would simplify the dining experience, by scanning your face at check-in to automatically find your reservation. The ordering and eating experience would proceed normally, but instead of paying at the end you could just leave. The face-scan would charge your card. He said they had a patent pending, and that Oracle was involved in some way.

Crucially, the Riddler wasnt always into face-scanning. He claimed he used to be a spy in Hawaii. I have no idea if this is true, but for approximately 10 minutes he detailed how, after joining the army, he had worked as a satellite imagery analyst for American intelligence. Specifically, he claimed to have worked on PRISM, the NSA data collection program from which Edward Snowden leaked classified documents in 2013. The Riddler had mixed feelings about his high-profile, alleged former colleague. Im concerned about the intelligence assets in Bulgaria, who had families, he said, but I do think the American public had a right to know what was going on.

The spy life sounded great he worked only six months of the year in Hawaii but eventually he had to go his own way. After working for a novelty political party, that I wont identify to protect his identity, he started an acne-preventing pillowcase company. He claims they pioneered the pillowcase technology, but that the business cratered when his partner embezzled all their money. I could not find more information about this online. But these days, hes in face-scan services. I think its going to change the world, he said. At the end, we exchanged LinkedIns.

All told, I did find a fairly pleasant community, if one that primarily took place on LinkedIn. At about 9:30, I slipped out the door sans Andrew Sullivan, and went downtown. Unfortunately, some of my real life friends were having their own NFT party. I guess the community was coming from inside the house.

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NFT Party Report: I Met a Spy Dressed as the Riddler - Gawker

Dozens of cryptography libraries vulnerable to private key theft – The Daily Swig

Ben Dickson28 June 2022 at 15:38 UTC Updated: 28 June 2022 at 17:20 UTC

Signing mechanism security shortcomings exposed

A poor implementation of Ed25519, a popular digital signature algorithm, has left dozens of cryptography libraries vulnerable to attacks.

According to Konstantinos Chalkias, a cryptographer at MystenLabs who discovered and reported the vulnerability, attackers could exploit the bug to steal private keys from cryptocurrency wallets.

Some but not yet all of the vulnerable technologies have been patched.

Ed25519 is often used as a modern replacement for the Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA). Ed25519 is more open, secure, and faster than ECDSA, which is why it has become very popular in many sectors, especially in blockchain and cryptocurrency platforms.

The main benefits against ECDSA is that EdDSA sig[nature]s are deterministic and users dont need [access to] a secure Random Number Generator [RNG] to sign a transaction, Chalkias told The Daily Swig. Why is this useful? because a users laptop or IoT device might not have a good source of entropy or support a weak RNG function.

Numerous security incidents have shown that poor random generation can result in private keys being leaked or stolen. One notable example was the private key leaks of PlayStation 3, whose technology relies on the ECDSA algorithm.

The standard specification of Ed25519 message signing involves providing the algorithm with a message and private key. The function will use the private key to compute the public key and sign the message. Some libraries provide a variant of the message signing function that also takes the pre-computed public key as an input parameter. There are some benefits to this implementation.

Recomputing the public key each time would result in a slower algorithm (it adds an extra scalar to elliptic curve point multiplication to derive the public key, which reduces the speed by almost 2x, potentially making it even slower than ECDSA), Chalkias said.

Read more of the latest hacking news from around the world

And generally, in cryptography, its good hygiene to avoid accessing the private key many times. If we allowed the public key derivation on each signing invocation, then this implies we need to access it twice, once to sign, and once to derive the public key.

However, the modification also creates a security loophole in the library.

Chalkias found that some libraries were allowing arbitrary public keys as inputs without checking if the input public key corresponds to the input private key. This shortcoming means that an attacker could use the signing function as an Oracle, perform crypto-analysis and ultimately get at secrets. For example, an attacker who cant access the private key but can access the signing mechanism through an API call could use several public keys and messages to gradually build up insights into private key parameters.

Chalkias initially found 26 libraries that were vulnerable to the attack. The list was later extended to 40 libraries. The security researcher also found several online services that were vulnerable to the same kind of attack, including a fintech API.

In some applications when keyGen fails or a clean-up process deletes the privKey for this user, then the app usually retries keyGen. But in the meantime and for a few sec[ond]s, the DB [database] still stored the old , and this allowed a narrow window for race condition attacks before the DB gets updated with the new pubKey (a scenario that, surprisingly, we managed to exploit with significant probability), Chalkias noted.

Since his report, several libraries have implemented fixes and workarounds, including ed25519-elisabeth, PASETO, and Trezor wallet.

A few libraries [have] already provided either fixes (if they were vulnerable) or proactively added extra checks that the stored pub key corresponds to the private keys, Chalkias concluded.

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Dozens of cryptography libraries vulnerable to private key theft - The Daily Swig

FACT SHEET: The United States Continues to Strengthen Cooperation with G7 on 21st Century Challenges, including those Posed by the People’s Republic…

Today President Biden met with G7 leaders tostrengthenour cooperation on economic issues, cyberspace and quantum, andother 21stcenturychallenges, including thoseposed by Chinato our workers, companies, and national security.The G7, representing over 50% of the world economy, is demonstrating that it is among the most potent institutions in the world today, with like-minded democracies solving problems.

Committing to a unified approach to confront Chinas unfair economic practices:The G7 will release collective, unprecedented language acknowledging the harms caused by the Peoples Republic of Chinas (PRC) non-transparent, market-distorting industrial directives. They will commit to working together to develop a coordinated approach to remedy the PRCs non-market policies and practices to ensure a level playing field for businesses and workers.

Elevating supply chain resilience:The G7 will share insights and best practices to identify, monitor, and minimize vulnerabilities and logistic bottlenecks in advance of supply chain shocks, as well as coordinate on long-term risk that undermine global security and stability. The G7 will make a commitment tointensifydevelopment ofresponsible, sustainable, and transparentcritical minerals supply chains and establish a forward strategy that takes into account processing, refining and recycling.

Cooperating on Cyber and QuantumTechnology:The G7 will make a commitment to intensify and elevate our cyber cooperation; working with our close partners to achieveaccountability and increasing stability and security in cyberspace. The G7 will also commit to new cooperation to deploy quantum resistant cryptography with the goal of ensuring secure interoperability between ICT systems and fostering growth in the digital economy.

AdvancingTrade and Technology Council standards for democratic, market-oriented approaches to trade:The G7 will include a commitment tostandards in technology, trade and innovationthat represent our values as G7 partners compete with China.Through fora, such as theU.S.-EUTrade and Technology Council, we will demonstrate to the world how democratic and market-oriented approaches to trade, technology, and innovation can improve the lives of our citizens and be a force for greater prosperity.

Improving the multilateral framework for debt restructuring:The G7 will underscore its commitment to successfully implementing the G20 Common Framework for Debt Treatments beyond the Debt Service Suspension Initiative. The G7 will urge all relevant creditors, including non-Paris Club countries such as China and private creditors, to contribute constructively to the necessary debt treatments as requested. The G7 will also reaffirm its commitment to promoting transparency across all debtors and creditors for improved debt sustainability.

Committing to tackle forcedlaborandupholdinghuman rights:The G7willcondemna range of human rights abuses occurring globally, including abuses linked toRussias further invasion of Ukraine,thePRCs repression in Xinjiang and Tibet,the military coup in Burma,andongoing suppression of freedom in Iran.The G7willalsocommitdtoaccelerate progress totackle forced labor,with the goal of removing all forms of forced labor from global supply chains, including state-sponsored forced labor, such as in Xinjiang. G7 countriescommittedto takefurthermeasures to strengthen cooperation, including through increased transparency and business risk advisories, and other measures to address forced labor globally.As one important example of action to combat forced labor in the PRC, the United States is implementing the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, which President Biden signed into law in December 2021.

Reaffirmingthe Importance of Democratic Resilience:TheG7 Leaders along with the leaders of Argentina, India, Indonesia, Senegal, and South Africa releasedastatementon Democratic Resilience,affirmingthe importance of strengthening resilience to authoritarian threats within our own democracies and around the world.ThisStatement will amplify the shared democratic values across G7 countries; condemn Russias invasion of Ukraine as an attack on democracy; affirm the importance of civil society and independent media; and outline how G7 members will strengthen actions in response to rising foreign threats related to illicit finance and corruption, foreign malign influence, and transnational repression.

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FACT SHEET: The United States Continues to Strengthen Cooperation with G7 on 21st Century Challenges, including those Posed by the People's Republic...

Can Crypto Still Save The World? – Forbes

Its been a nightmare couple months for cryptocurrency investors. Theyve watched their Bitcoin BTC holdings hemorrhage 70 percent of their value since the record high of $69,000 back in November. Overall, theyve suffered crypto losses totaling more than half (55%) of capitalization, or an estimated market loss of $2 trillion.

The days when crypto enthusiasts could talk about crypto as if Bitcoin were the new reserve currency, or the digital equivalent of the gold standard, or even a transformation of what it means to invest, are over. Crypto looks more like a classic boom and bust investment, like Dutch tulips, rather than the next best hope for humanity.

PARIS, FRANCE - FEBRUARY 06: In this photo illustration, a visual representation of the digital ... [+] Cryptocurrency, (Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images)

As I warned in an earlier Forbes column, the crypto boom was driven by systematic policy failures by major central banks. As long as they made bad decisions about monetary supply or failed to take on inflation, cryptocurrencies were going to look like solid investments. As soon as central banks shook off their inertia, crypto values started heading south. Meanwhile, the threat of regulation of the crypto marketregulations that might strangle the Bitcoin goosehas raised additional uncertainties about where the market is headed, and whether it pays to buy low nowor run for the hills.

Nonetheless, as Bloomberg reports, venture capitalists still want in the crypto game. Theyre being smart. They sense that despite the burst bubble since January, cryptocurrencies will be here to stay. They may not save humanity from itself, as some thought, but they remain a valuable speculative instrument but also a store of value when other investments look uncertain or too volatile to handle.

At the same time, Bitcoin and crypto do offer a deeper secret that is important to the rest of humanity. That secret isnt what they do, but how they do it. i.e. with Distributed Ledger Technology or blockchain.

An abstract digital structure showing the concept of blockchain technology with hexadecimal hash ... [+] data inside each block.

We can think of blockchain as an enormous spreadsheet thats reproduced thousands of times across a network of computers, that regularly updates the spreadsheet and its common database. The growing list of records in the ledger, called blocks, are linked or chained together to all previous blocks of transactions, using a cryptographic fingerprint known as a hash. Each transaction is independently verified and confirmed by peer-to-peer computer networks, time-stamped, and then added to the distributed ledger. Once recorded, the data cannot be alteredand its only shared with those who are part of the encrypted ledger.

Former SEC Chairman Jay Clayton has predicted that blockchain is the future of our financial markets, including digital currencies. High-tech guru George Gilder sums up the future of blockchain this way: Even though bitcoin may not, after all, represent the potential for a new gold standard, its underlying technology will unbundle the roles of money. Blockchain may even represent the future of the Internet.

There is, however, a cloud hovering over the DLT future, a quantum cloud.

This column pointed out back in 2018 that DLT was vulnerable to future quantum computer attack. Our latest report from the Quantum Alliance Initiative at the Hudson Institute, gives some idea of the cost of such a future quantum computer assault. Our econometric calculations indicate that such an attack would amount to $1.8 trillion in direct losses, with an additional loss of $1.4 trillion in indirect impacts. Taken together, a successful quantum computer decryption of cryptocurrencys most valuable assetits blockchain encryptionwould result in a $3.34 trillion hit on the U.S. economy, with negative ripple effects across the global economy for a long time to come.

Stablecoins doesnt fare any better in this scenario. Since these crypto instruments are pegged to 1:1 ratios with fiat currencies, the resulting liquidity crunch as margin calls come due and banks scramble to cover losses, means they too become quantum road kill.

Whats the answer? As weve mentioned in other columns, crypto companies need to adopt quantum-safe encryption to protect their future. That means either installing post-quantum cryptographic algorithms like the ones being standardized by the National Institute of Standards and Technology or turning to quantum-based cryptography, which uses quantum random number generators and quantum key distribution to create hack-proof communication links across the ledger.

There are even quantum security companies that offer both.

Likewise, it would make sense for a government regulatory crypto regime to require installing quantum-safe solutions for the entire industry. Making cryptocurrencies quantum secure could even set the next cryptographic standard for the rest of the financial sector, from banks to equity and credit markets.

Either way, the future of blockchain, like the future of crypto, hangs in the balance. So will the future of the U.S. economy, unless we start getting smart about the quantum threat to come.

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Can Crypto Still Save The World? - Forbes