Fox News motion for dismissal of Dominion Voting Systems defamation suit rejected in Delaware – MarketWatch

WASHINGTON (AP) A judge Thursday rejected a motion by Fox News to dismiss a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit brought against the cable news giant by Dominion Voting Systems over claims about the 2020 presidential election.

In the 52-page ruling Delaware Superior Court Judge Eric Davis said that the voting-machine company had shown that [a]t this stage, it is reasonably conceivable that Dominion has a claim for defamation per se.

Denver-based Dominion filed a lawsuit earlier this year against the media organization alleging that some Fox News employees elevated false charges that Dominion had changed votes in the 2020 election through algorithms in its voting machines that had been created in Venezuela to rig elections for the late dictator Hugo Chavez. On-air personalities brought on Trump allies who spread the claims, and then amplified those claims on Fox News social-media platforms.

There was no evidence of widespread fraud in the 2020 election, a fact that a range of election officials across the country and even Trumps attorney general, William Barr confirmed. An Associated Press review of every potential case of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by former President Donald Trump has found fewer than 475 a number that would have made no difference in the 2020 presidential election.

Key Words (March 2021): Trump defender Sidney Powell justifies her election-theft claims by conceding reasonable people dont believe them

Plus (March 2021): Fox News sued for $1.6 billion by Dominion Voting Systems over election claims

Also see (August 2021): Dominion Voting Systems sues Trump allies over election-fraud claims

In denying the motion to dismiss the lawsuit Davis said that Dominions complaint supports the reasonable inference that Fox either (i) knew its statements about Dominions role in election fraud were false or (ii) had a high degree of awareness that the statements were false.

Davis said that Fox possessed countervailing evidence of election fraud from the Department of Justice, election experts, and Dominion at the time it had been making its statements. The fact that, despite this evidence, Fox continued to publish its allegations against Dominion, suggests Fox knew the allegations were probably false.

The judge also wrote that despite emails from Dominion attempting to factually address Foxs fraud allegations, Fox and its news personnel continued to report Dominions purported connection to the election fraud claims without also reporting on Dominions emails.

Given that Fox apparently refused to report contrary evidence the Complaints allegations support the reasonable inference that Fox intended to keep Dominions side of the story out of the narrative.

Fox News Media said in a statement: As we have maintained, Fox News, along with every single news organization across the country, vigorously covered the breaking news surrounding the unprecedented 2020 election, providing full context of every story with in-depth reporting and clear-cut analysis. We remain committed to defending against this baseless lawsuit and its all-out assault on the First Amendment.

From the archives (December 2020): Fox News, Newsmax air statements debunking voter-fraud claims pushed on air

Fox News had sought to have the lawsuit dismissed arguing that its coverage is protected by the First Amendment and that a free press must be able to report both sides of a story involving claims that strike at the core of democracy.

Fox News parent Fox Corp. FOX, -0.29% FOXA, -0.14% and News Corp NWS, -0.51% NWSA, -0.37%, which owns MarketWatch publisher Dow Jones, share common corporate control.

Class A shares of Fox Corp. are up nearly 27% to date in 2021 and have gained more than 31% over the past 52 weeks.

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Fox News motion for dismissal of Dominion Voting Systems defamation suit rejected in Delaware - MarketWatch

An overview of the public-sector labor lawsuits tracked by Ballotpedia Ballotpedia News – Ballotpedia News

Note: The next edition of Union Station will be on Jan. 7, 2022. Until then, happy holidays!

Since late 2019, Ballotpedia has tracked 160 federal lawsuits related to public-sector labor policy. Today, well look at an overview of these cases. Well also highlight seven Supreme Court decisions that these cases commonly reference.

The majority of these lawsuits ask one or more of the following questions:

The map below shows the cases were tracking by the U.S. district court in which they originated. The three districts with the highest number of cases are the Central District of California (16 cases), the Middle District of Pennsylvania (16 cases), and the District of Oregon (13 cases).

Heres the breakdown by circuit:

And by case status (pending cases are divided by court level, and cases that have been dismissed, settled, or otherwise resolved are counted together):

Finally, this chart shows the cases weve tracked by the year they were filed. The earliest case weve tracked was filed in 2014.

The following Supreme Court decisions are commonly referenced in these types of cases. Heres a quick rundown of each decision, in chronological order:

To view a spreadsheet with information about all of the lawsuits were tracking, click here.

We are currently tracking 110 pieces of legislation dealing with public-sector employee union policy. On the map below, a darker shade of green indicates a greater number of relevant bills. Click here for a complete list of all the bills were tracking.

Below is a complete list of relevant legislative actions taken since our last issue.

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An overview of the public-sector labor lawsuits tracked by Ballotpedia Ballotpedia News - Ballotpedia News

NCLA Asks Fifth Circuit to End an SEC Lifetime Gag Order that Violates the First Amendment – StreetInsider.com

News and research before you hear about it on CNBC and others. Claim your 1-week free trial to StreetInsider Premium here.

Washington, D.C., Dec. 16, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- For decades, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has silenced people with lifetime speech bans enforced through threat of reopened prosecutions. The New Civil Liberties Alliance has filed an opening brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Christopher Novinger, et al., challenging a Gag Order included in Mr. Novingers settlement agreement with SEC, which violates not only his First Amendment rights, but also those of everyone who wants to learn more about his case.

On May 11, 2015, SEC filed a complaint against Mr. Novinger and ICAN Investment Group, where he formerly served as director. As a non-negotiable condition of settlement, SEC required Mr. Novinger and ICAN to sign a consent order that they would not question the merits of the Commissions action against them. Mr. Novinger and ICAN continue to be bound by the Gag Order provision, yet desire to engage in truthful public statements concerning the SEC enforcement proceeding.

Mr. Novinger does not want to violate a consent order or suffer the consequences, so he has refrained from making truthful statements that might indirectly creat[e] an impression that the complaint lacked a factual basis or was otherwise without merit. For those reasons, on June 17, 2021, he and ICAN moved for relief from judgment under Rule 60(b).

The district court denied relief in August, holding that Appellants consented willingly to the mandatory gag, and thus failed to meet their threshold burden to establish a due process violation. But the First Amendment of the Constitution provides that Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, so the First Amendment applies to this court action.

SEC published its Gag Rule in 1972, and for the next half-century, the agency has coerced the silence of hundreds of individuals, forever damaging reputations and livelihoods while securing settlements as the price of peace. But SEC lacked statutory authority to enact such a substantive rule. Furthermore, it did not follow the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act, which require prior publication, notice and comment before enacting any rule that binds regulated persons or entities.

SECs Gag Rule is a forbidden prior restraint, an unconstitutional content-based restriction on speech, and an unconstitutional condition that violates a hornbooks worth of First Amendment doctrines. The Gag Order also violates Appellants right to due process of law because it was never authorized by Congress, nor was it lawfully promulgated by SEC. It shields and encourages regulation by settlement, allowing SEC to pursue cases not well-founded in established law or rulesand the targets of those actions are forever silenced because the gag operates in perpetuity.

NCLA released the following statements:

It is long past time that courts fulfill their unflagging duty to keep government power within constitutional bounds. The gag rule was invalid from the moment SEC deceitfully slipped it into the Federal Register in violation of law five decades ago. Time has only enlarged the scope and depth of damage to the rule of law and the devastation imposed in perpetuity upon the lives, livelihoods, and reputations of SEC targets. Peggy Little, Senior Litigation Counsel, NCLA

SECs vision statement declares that the Commission seeks to be worthy of the publics trust and characterized by transparency[.] Ironically preferring its operations to remain in the shadows by demanding its targets silence, SECs gag rule subverts its vision. The unlawful silencing of individuals and businesses for decades has prevented important and transparent public discourse about how the Commission might better conduct its enforcement efforts. It is time for this punitive practice to stop. Kara Rollins, Litigation Counsel, NCLA

For more information visit the case page here.

ABOUT NCLA

NCLA is a nonpartisan, nonprofit civil rights group founded by prominent legal scholarPhilip Hamburger to protect constitutional freedoms from violations by the Administrative State. NCLAs public-interest litigation and other pro bono advocacy strive to tame the unlawful power of state and federal agencies and to foster a new civil liberties movement that will help restore Americans fundamental rights.

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NCLA Asks Fifth Circuit to End an SEC Lifetime Gag Order that Violates the First Amendment - StreetInsider.com

Yanking Books From School Libraries: What the Supreme Court Has Said, and Why It’s Murky – Education Week

The heading on a list of books that a politically conservative parents group found objectionable for school libraries was ominous.

DO NOT LET THIS MATERIAL FALL INTO THE HANDS OF OUR YOUNGSTERS, it said, regarding works that included literary-prize winners, minority perspectives on the American experience, and discussions of sexuality, as well as plenty of examples of vulgar language.

Three local school board members who attended the conservative groups conference took the list back to their community and worked to find out whether their school libraries had any of the books on the shelves. One board member was particularly agitated about books on the list that addressed racial issues.

It may sound like something happening today in Texas or any number of other areas around the country. But this was 1975 in Levittown, N.Y., the famous planned community on Long Island. The board members took action to remove a handful of the listed books, leading a few years later to an importantbut complicatedU.S. Supreme Court decision about the limitations on school authorities to remove books for political or ideological reasons.

That 1982 decision in Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School District v. Pico was so fractured that legal experts debate to this day the degree of legal guidance it provides for the newest wave of book challenges in schools.

Justice William J. Brennan Jr. wrote a sometimes-soaring opinion that said the First Amendment imposes limits on school boards authority to remove library books and that students have a right to receive information.

A school library, no less than any other public library, is a place dedicated to quiet, to knowledge, and to beauty, Brennan wrote, quoting an earlier high-court decision. We hold that local school boards may not remove books from school library shelves simply because they dislike the ideas contained in those books.

But Brennans opinion in Pico was for a three-justice plurality of the court, not a majority. Two other justices concurred in varying degrees with a bottom-line judgment in favor of the students in the Pico case. The complicated result left much to be interpreted by lower courts and legal experts.

Pico is a nebulous decision, but lower courts have understood it to say that there are some limitations on the ability of school authorities to ban and remove books from school libraries, said Justin Driver, a Yale University law professor who wrote about the case in The Schoolhouse Gate, his 2018 book about landmark student-rights cases in the Supreme Court.

Its definitely relevant today, Driver said in an interview.

Neal Ramee, a partner in a Raleigh, N.C., law firm with an education practice that advises school districts throughout North Carolina, has studied the finer points of the Pico case for years.

There are a lot of different opinions out there about how to interpret Pico, he said. At a minimum, we know that intent [of school officials] matters and there is not an untrammeled right to remove books.

Many educators would probably agree that now is a good time for dusting off a nearly 40-year-old Supreme Court decision if it offers any assistance in fending off the latest wave of book challenges. Across the country, some parents and lawmakers have called for the removal of long lists of objectionable books touching on race, sex, gender identity, and sexual orientation, among other topics.

In November, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, issued a directive to the Texas Education Agency and other state officials to develop standards to prevent pornography and other obscene content in school materials. Abbott cited two books with LGBTQ themes, Gender Queer: a Memoir by Maia Kobabe, and In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado, both of which the governor said depict pornographic or sexual acts.

Meanwhile, a Republican Texas state representative, Matt Krause, has launched a legislative-committee inquiry into education content in the states schools. He released a list of some 850 books, many with race or LGBTQ themes, and has asked school districts to determine whether they have copies in their school libraries or classroom collections.

Krause, who is running for state attorney general, includes on his list The Confessions of Nat Turner, a 1967 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by William Styron; Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates; LGBT Families by Leanne K. Currie-McGhee; The Letter Q: Queer Writers Notes to their Younger Selves, edited by Sarah Moon; and Michael J. Bassos The Underground Guide to Teenage Sexuality: An Essential Handbook for Todays Teens and Parents.

Krause also asked in his letter that districts identify any other books that might make students feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress because of their race or sex.

And it isnt just in Texas. In North Carolina, Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson in October called for the removal from school library shelves three books the Republican claimed were sexually explicit: Gender Queer; Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison; and George by Alex Gino. A group of parents this month filed a criminal complaint related to those books against the Wake County school system, alleging the books content may violate obscenity laws.

These are organized efforts by groups that have developed playbooks on how to challenge books in schools, said April Dawkins, an assistant professor of library and information science in the School of Education at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro. My concern is that all these challenges will lead to a chilling effect on the collections and the collection-development decisions of school librarians.

The Pico case began in September 1975, when the three members of the Island Trees school board attended a conference of Parents of New York United, a politically conservative group focused on state education policy. Thats where they got the list of books deemed objectionable by the group.

One of the board members, Frank Martin, took it upon himself to slip into a high school library one evening (with the aid of a janitor), where he found card catalogue entries for nine books from the conservative groups list. Two other books from the list were found elsewhere in the school system.

Martin was particularly agitated that one of the booksA Hero Aint Nothin But A Sandwich by Alice Childress highlighted George Washingtons ownership of enslaved people.

Among the other books from the list found in the Island Trees library were Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.; Best Short Stories of Negro Writers, edited by Langston Hughes; Go Ask Alice by an anonymous author; Black Boy by Richard Wright; and Soul On Ice by Eldridge Cleaver.

In early 1976, the school board directed administrators to remove the books from library shelves and deliver them to the central office for review. The board justified its action in a press release by calling the books anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-Sem[i]tic, and just plain filthy, adding that it was our duty, our moral obligation, to protect the children in our schools from this moral danger as surely as from physical and medical dangers.

A review committee made up of four parents and four school staff members made a range of recommendations about the books, including that five be retained and two be removed because of vulgarities. (The panel could not agree about the others.) But the Island Trees school board largely rejected the committees work and ordered nine of the 12 books removed from school libraries or the curriculum.

A group of students, including Steven Pico, a student council president, sued the school board under the First Amendment. They lost in a federal district court, but a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, in New York City, reinstated the students suit. One judge in a 2-1 majority said a trial was necessary on whether the school board had been motivated justifiably by a desire to remove vulgar and sexually explicit works or by an impermissible intent to suppress ideas.

The case reached the Supreme Court in the spring of 1982. The archives of several of the justices papers from that time show that the court struggled with both the substantive issues and procedural peculiarities of the case.

The students attracted five votes in the justices initial internal deliberation. Brennan, as senior justice in that potential majority, assigned the opinion to himself.

He soon circulated a draft opinion that said, Local school boards have broad discretion in the management of school affairs, but such discretion must be exercised in a manner that comports with the transcendent imperatives of the First Amendment.

Brennan emphasized that the case involved not the regular curriculum or a school systems acquisition of library books but their removal. He stressed that school libraries were a place for students to engage in self-education and individual enrichment, and that the books there were optional reading. Brennans opinion further suggested it would be permissible for school boards to remove books based on pervasive vulgarity or educational unsuitability.

Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., a former state and local school board member in Virginia, was lined up in support of the Island Trees school board, and he was not swayed to change his view by Brennans draft opinion.

As reflected in his papers at Washington and Lee University, Powell underlined transcendent imperatives in Brennans draft and wrote in the margin: nonsense.

Brennan had a bigger problem. Justice Byron R. White, who was one of the five who had voted tentatively for the students, had issues with Brennans opinion.

As your draft is currently written, I doubt that I could join it, White wrote in a memo to Brennan.

You propose as the constitutional benchmark the intention to suppress constitutionally protected ideas with which the school board disagrees, or the intention to impose a political or ideological orthodoxy upon secondary school students, White added in the May 10, 1982, memo. I am frank to say that I scarcely know what a political or ideological orthodoxy is, and it would take years to find out. The removal of any book based on its content could be challenged on this basis.

Brennans opinion, in the end, would be signed in full by Justices Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens, and in part by Justice Harry A. Blackmun.

White wrote an opinion concurring in the judgment, which meant the 2nd Circuits opinion was affirmed, and White called for a trial and further development of the factual record of the case. He wrote that he saw no necessity for the court to go further and issue a dissertation on the extent to which the First Amendment limits the discretion of the school board to remove books from the school library.

Chief Justice Warren E. Burger wrote the main dissent, joined by Powell, William H. Rehnquist, and Sandra Day OConnor. Burger worried that essentially all decisions concerning the retention of school library books will become the responsibility of federal courts.

Powell, in a separate dissent, expressed concern about the erosion of the authority of local school boards to make educational decisions.

In different contexts and in different times, the destruction of written materials has been the symbol of despotism and intolerance, Powell wrote. But the removal of nine vulgar or racist books from a high school library by a concerned local school board does not raise this specter.

He attached an appendix with excerpts highlighting vulgarities and sexual and racial references in the removed books. Rehnquist and OConnor also wrote separate dissents.

(After the decision, the challenged books were returned to the shelves in the Island Trees district, but there was never a trial about the school boards motivations. In 1983, the school board voted 4-3 to settle the case.)

Charles R. Waggoner, a professor of education administration at Eastern New Mexico University in Portales, N.M., says that when he teaches the Pico case (typically to educators seeking graduate degrees), they divide sharply on whether it stands for the idea that school boards may remove books from school libraries.

I tell my students that, at the very least, when they get into a principalship, they need to have procedures in place to handle book-removal requests, said Waggoner, a former longtime principal.

Yales Driver says that while there is no clear First Amendment holding in Pico, I view Justice White as providing the crucial fifth vote for the idea that there are some limitations on what school officials may do with the [school library] volumes they have already acquired.

Ramee, the North Carolina education lawyer, said lower courts have interpreted Pico in multiple ways. One federal appeals court, ruling in 2009 in a challenge to a book about Cuba in the Miami-Dade County, Fla., school system, held that Pico is of no precedential value to the First Amendment issues in the case.

But other courts have construed Pico to stand for the idea that school boards may not remove books because they dislike the ideas contained in them. For example, lower courts have overruled the removal of the Harry Potter books in an Arkansas district and a lesbian romance, Annie on My Mind by Nancy Garden, by a Kansas school board.

Despite the absence of a clean First Amendment holding, Picos bottom line has enjoyed considerable vitality in lower courts, Driver wrote in his book.

The court did something in Pico, said Ramee. There arent five votes for the right for students to receive ideas. But there are five votes for a remand [for trial]. Justice White at least thinks the state of mind and the motivation of the school board was relevant. So the logical inference is that school boards dont have unlimited authority to remove books. Intent matters.

Its frustrating that there isnt more to Pico, Ramee added. But you cant ignore it.

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Yanking Books From School Libraries: What the Supreme Court Has Said, and Why It's Murky - Education Week

Supreme Court denies appeal by Wisconsin conservative think tank over press access | TheHill – The Hill

The Supreme Court on Monday turned away an appeal from a Wisconsin-based conservative think tank that sued the states Democratic governor for denying the group access to press events.

The courts rejection of the appeal, which was issued without comment, brings an end to the MacIver Institute's unsuccessful years-long First Amendment suit against Wisconsin Gov. Tony EversTony EversWisconsin Democrat attorney general says he won't enforce potential abortion bans Supreme Court denies appeal by Wisconsin conservative think tank over press access It's more than midterms next year: State fights that matter MORE (D).

Former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) had urged the justices to take up the groups appeal.

The case arose in 2019 after Evers did not invite members of the MacIver Institute to a background briefing on budgetary matters that was attended by some two dozen members of the press who cover the governor.

The MacIver Institute filed a federal lawsuit alleging the group had been denied press access due to their conservative viewpoint, in violation of the First Amendment.

Evers countered that the law permits reasonable restrictions on access to official events, and that his offices denial of press credentials to the think tank was not done because of the groups viewpoint.

In March 2020, a federal judge in Wisconsin sided with Evers, finding that the governor had reasonably concluded that MacIver is not a bona fide news organization.

MacIver publicly brands itself as a think tank committed to ideological principles. It engages in policy-driven political advocacy, including advocating for specific initiatives and policy approaches, wrote U.S. District Judge James D. Peterson, an Obama appointee. It has a news tab on its website, but it does not maintain a news-gathering organization separate from its overall ideological mission.

The Chicago-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit affirmed the district court ruling in April, prompting the think tanks ultimately unsuccessful appeal to the Supreme Court.

Attorneys for Evers office and MacIver Institute did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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Supreme Court denies appeal by Wisconsin conservative think tank over press access | TheHill - The Hill

Boeing joins other federal contractors in dropping its vaccine mandate. – The New York Times

SAN JOSE, Calif. For more than three months, the defendant has donned a medical mask, clutched arms with her mother and entered the Robert F. Peckham Federal Building in San Jose, Calif., where executives, scientists and investors have accused her of fraud.

Now a jury of strangers will decide on her guilt.

A jury of eight men and four women were handed the case late Friday of Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos. Lawyers for both sides finished their closing arguments earlier in the day in the nearly four-month-long trial and Judge Edward J. Davila of U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California read detailed instructions to the jury. Jurors will meet to deliberate on Monday morning.

In the courtroom on Friday morning, Kevin Downey, a lawyer for Ms. Holmes, spent nearly three hours attempting to discredit each of the governments witnesses and raise doubt in jurors minds. As he flipped through slides meant to dismantle the prosecutions evidence with headings including Not every potential issue is an actual issue, a few jurors scribbled notes.

Mr. Downey concluded by saying Ms. Holmes was not a criminal. She believed she was building a technology that would change the world, he said, raising his voice and gesturing dramatically.

Ms. Holmes faces 11 charges of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud for claims she made to investors and patients about Theranoss technology and business dealings. She has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in prison.

The trial, which has alternated between media spectacle and business-school cautionary tale, has come to represent a moment of truth in Silicon Valley, where executives have rarely faced consequences for their inflated claims. If Ms. Holmes is found guilty, prosecutors could begin to more aggressively dig into the wildly optimistic tales of rocket ship growth at more start-ups.

Even if she is acquitted, some executives may still tread more carefully in their optimistic pitches. Start-ups have been riding a wave of investor exuberance for nearly a decade, despite repeated warnings of bubble-like behavior that could lead to more disasters like Theranos.

I would suspect that C.E.O.s of similar companies will be more careful when they talk, said Andrey Spektor, a lawyer at Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner and a former federal prosecutor in New Yorks Eastern District. He said recordings of Ms. Holmes pitching her company to investors and on TV were among the most incriminating evidence in the case.

Prosecutors used dozens of witnesses and hundreds of documents to argue that Ms. Holmes, 37, knowingly lied to investors about Theranos. She said the company had military contracts when it did not, that its technology was comprehensively validated by pharmaceutical companies when it had not been, and that its machines could do hundreds of tests when it could only do a dozen.

On Thursday, Jeff Schenk, an assistant U.S. attorney and one of the lead prosecutors, summarized the governments case simply: When Theranos was almost out of money, Ms. Holmes could have let it fail. But she chose to defraud investors instead, he said.

That choice was not only callous, it was criminal, Mr. Schenk said.

Ms. Holmess lawyers countered with a range of responses: She had been told by her colleagues that the technology worked, she had hid information to protect trade secrets, she had moved to fix the problems once she learned of them, and the broader narrative about Theranos was more complicated than the prosecution had made it seem.

The government is showing an event that looks bad, but at the end of the day, when all the evidence flows together, it isnt so bad, said Mr. Downey. He showed slides illustrating the steep burden of the government to prove beyond reasonable doubt that Ms. Holmes had knowingly lied to get money.

Ms. Holmess defense primarily relied on her own testimony, which lasted seven days and upended the narrative of the case. It was the first time that Ms. Holmes had told her version of the events leading to Theranoss collapse, which has been widely documented in podcasts, books, documentaries and news reports.

On the stand, Ms. Holmes painted herself as a hardworking and ambitious entrepreneur who believed in her companys technology and potential. Any exaggerations or misleading statements were merely her projecting grand plans for the future, she implied.

She further said Ramesh Balwani, her former longtime boyfriend and business partner, who is known as Sunny, had berated her and controlled every aspect of her life. She also accused him of sexual abuse, which he has denied. Their relationship had been kept a secret at the time.

But in court, every aspect of the relationship text messages, emails, conversations, infidelities and the limited liability company through which they owned a home was picked apart. Prosecutors dug in to try to show the pair conspired to commit fraud. Ms. Holmess lawyers tried to show she was a victim.

It is rare for defendants in white-collar criminal trials to take the stand, and it is even rarer for them to introduce testimony of abuse. Ms. Holmess lawyers were expected to call an expert witness to tie her claims of intimate partner abuse to the alleged fraud, but they did not.

On Friday, John Bostic, a prosecutor, elaborated on statements made by Mr. Schenk the day before about the abuse allegations, telling the jury they did not need to come to any conclusion about Ms. Holmes and Mr. Balwanis relationship to issue a verdict. He also attempted to separate the abuse from the fraud charges.

There is no evidence regarding a link between what their relationship was like and the conduct she is charged with committing, he said.

Ms. Holmess testimony added to the spectacle of the trial, drawing large crowds of onlookers who often waited more than five hours outside the courtroom for one of its limited seats. One man yelled that Ms. Holmes was a girl boss as she entered the building, and a trio of attendees pretended to sell black turtlenecks Ms. Holmess business uniform during Theranoss rise as part of a performance art piece.

On Friday, Mr. Downey closed his argument by saying that Ms. Holmes did not intentionally defraud anyone. When Theranos got into trouble, he said, Ms. Holmes did not try to cover up, cash out or flee like a criminal would.

She went down with that ship, he said.

Mr. Bostic rebutted Mr. Downey by reiterating the governments argument against Ms. Holmes.

The disease that plagued Theranos wasnt a lack of effort, he said. It was a lack of honesty.

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Boeing joins other federal contractors in dropping its vaccine mandate. - The New York Times

The Bipartisan Attacks On The Internet Are Easily Understood If You Realize They Just Want To Control Speech Online – Techdirt

from the that's-all-it-is dept

Understanding the "bipartisan" approach to internet regulations over the last couple of years really boils down to "both parties want to control the internet" and twist it to their own advantage. Almost everything you hear about "harms" from the internet are disingenuous nonsense from grandstanding politicians. That's not to say there aren't real problems with things on the internet or how it's structured -- but there is almost no realistic exploration of those issues by those in various legislatures. It's all about grabbing control over the internet. Two recent articles highlight pretty clearly how both Republicans and Democrats are clearly salivating to control speech online for their own benefit -- and not for the actual good of society or the internet.

First up, we have The Spectator. To be honest, this publication has been a garbage publication recently, pushing out all sorts of nonsense, but apparently there are still a few people there who can publish something good. Taylor Millard has written a short and to the point article noting, accurately, that so much of the bipartisan attacks on the internet lately are really about one thing: how both parties want to control your speech online. We've discussed how the policy plans of Republicans and Democrats often feel at odds, with Republicans complaining about too much moderation, and Democrats complaining about too little, but the truth is slightly more nuanced, and both are really just looking to have control over speech online -- control that is simply not allowed under the 1st Amendment.

The Democrats' attacks on free speech are pretty straightforward:

Congressional Democrats are hoping to enact rules due to their concerns over so-called misinformation and harmful content. Their anger over the 2016 election of Donald Trump and the bogeyman of Russian interference fueled the original push for new regulations. The coronavirus pandemic and 2020 presidential election fallout poured rocket fuel on the ideological pyre, as did the QAnon conspiracy and discussions around alternate Covid treatments, masks and vaccine efficacy.

Vermont congressman Peter Welch promoteda new five-member commission with civil penalty power making sure Big Tech is unbiased and doesnt promote harmful content. The Democrat used the infamous for the children crusade as reasoning. Minnesota senator Amy Klobuchar desiresHealth and Human Services control over the internet where public health is involved. She believes more lives would be saved if Section 230 protections for Big Tech were removed. New Mexico senator Ben Ray Lujan took it a step further, sayingthat the spread of misinformation ended up fueling distrust in public health officials, promoting conspiracy theories and putting lives at risk. To paraphrase Frank Herbert: he who controls the information, controls the world.

The Republican side is just slightly more nefarious in that they falsely claim that their efforts are in support of free speech, though as rulings in Texas and Florida have shown, they're equally as problematic under the 1st Amendment.

Republicans are just as censorious but they shroud their urge to regulate Big Tech under the guise of protecting free speech. The Florida and Texas legislatures passed rules requiring large social media companies not to remove users from their platforms if they express dissident viewpoints.

We see this elsewhere too -- not just in the states. Nearly all of Josh Hawley's policy proposals regarding the internet are about controlling how internet companies present speech. And Republicans are just as prone as Democrats to roll out "for the children!" legislation that is designed to simply give government more control over speech.

The second article is by Adam Thierer, and published over at The Hill and makes a very similar point:

The only thing unifying both sides is a desire for greater regulatory control of media. In todays hyper-partisan world, tech platforms have become just another plaything to be dominated by politics and regulation. When the ends justify the means, principles that transcend the battles of the day like property rights, free speech and editorial independence become disposable. These are things we take for granted until theyve been chipped away at and lost.

Is there any way to make both sides happy without undermining the digital economy, which has been dominated globally by American firms for over a quarter century?

Thats unlikely, but it hasnt stopped lawmakers from introducing a flurry of bills to weaken or eliminate protections afforded bySection 230, which limits liability for platforms that host user-generated content. Implemented in 1996, it has served asthe cornerstone of Americas ascendancyin the digital world andhelped spur an avalanche of innovation. Gutting it would put all that at risk.

As Thierer rightly notes, this is entirely about attacking free speech and the 1st Amendment, by both parties, in order to control a medium they haven't been able to control for the past few decades:

Without admitting it, both sides are really at war against the First Amendment, which protects the editorial decisions made by private companies. To be sure, there is problematic content to be found on digital media platforms, and there aresome legitimate complaintsabout overzealous takedown policies and lack of transparent standards. That does not mean there is an easy policy fix to those problems, however. Butcourts have held repeatedlythat the First Amendment protects efforts by private media firms to devise their own approaches.Just last week, a Texas judge blocked a law that sought to limit social media platforms editorial freedoms. That followed a court in Floridaenjoining a similar lawthis summer.

Critics like to paint large tech companies as nefarious overlords out to destroy civilization. In reality, the problems we see and hear on modern platforms reflect deeper problems in our society. If these companies are to be blamed for anything, its making human communication so frictionless that every person now has a soapbox to speak to the world. Thats both a blessing and a curse. With unbounded speech comes many wonders but also many problems.

The battles here are not about making a better internet. Or "protecting children." It's very much about each of the political parties wanting control over the key tool that has enabled people to communicate with each other, without having that speech first filtered through an "official" source.

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Filed Under: controlling speech, democrats, free speech, republicans, section 230, social media, speech

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The Bipartisan Attacks On The Internet Are Easily Understood If You Realize They Just Want To Control Speech Online - Techdirt

New Hampshire teachers’ union suing over state’s anti-critical race theory bill – Fox News

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The New Hampshire chapter of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT-NH) is asking a federal court to block the implementation of a state law intended to prohibit the teaching of divisive concepts associated with critical race theory (CRT).

Passed this summer, HB2 prohibits public employees from teaching that individuals are inferior, superior, should be discriminated against, or are inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive as a result of various aspects of their identity (race, sex, creed, marital status, etc).

WHAT IS CRITICAL RACE THEORY?

AFT-NH's lawsuit, announced on Monday, alleges that the statute violates teachers' First Amendment right to free speech.

Deb Howes, who serves as AFT-NH president, said in a statement: "This law has created fear among teachers who are not actually violating any New Hampshire law, but fear they could be targeted without evidence by people with a political agenda. Educators are terrified of losing their teaching license over simply trying to teach. This is something I never thought would happen in America."

AFT President Randi Weingarten suggested that the law would hinder teaching of issues, like Japanese internment during WWII.

Republican Gov. Chris Sununu announces that he is seeking a fourth term as governor of New Hampshire, instead of running for the U.S. Senate seat held by Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan, during a news conference, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021, in Concord, New Hampshire. (AP Photo/Holly Ramer)

"We must teach both our triumphs and our mistakes, whether its enslavement, Japanese internment or the treatment of those with disabilities," she said in the group's press release.

CRITICAL RACE THEORY: THESE STATES ARE ALREADY CRACKING DOWN ON THE CONTROVERSIAL CONCEPT

But in a statement provided to Fox News, Gov. Chris Sununu, R-N.H., denied the law would prevent teaching about American history.

"Nothing in this language prevents schools from teaching any aspect of American history, such as teaching about racism, sexism, or slavery it simply ensures that children will not be discriminated against on the basis of race, gender, sexual identity, or religion," he said.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, along with members of Congress, parents and caregiving advocates hold a press conference supporting Build Back Better investments in home care, childcare, paid leave and expanded CTC payments in front of the U.S. Capitol Building on Oct. 21, 2021 in Washington, D.C. (Paul Morigi/Getty Images for MomsRising Together)

AFT-NH alleges, however, that the state law is "unconstitutionally" and "hopelessly vague" and subsequent state guidance has failed to clarify its effects.

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It pointed to a document from the Department of Education, Commission for Human Rights and Department of Justice. That document answered a list of "Frequently Asked Questions" such as "Are schools allowed to teach students historical concepts related to discrimination?"

When outlining which ideas teachers are prohibited from teaching, it reads, in part: "In short, do not teach that a person or a group is inherently oppressive, superior, inferior, racist, or sexist. Teach and treat all equally and without discrimination."

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New Hampshire teachers' union suing over state's anti-critical race theory bill - Fox News

WikiLeaks And Bitcoin: A Crypto Love Story? – NewsBTC

The story of WikiLeaks and its move to Bitcoin is a popular one amongst crypto investors. When WikiLeaks had first come out, it quickly gained popularity for publicizing news leaks and classified information on its site. Founded in 2006, the not-for-profit organization has had an interesting history, one of those being its founder, Julian Assange, being sent to prison.

Even more interesting is the organizations history with leading cryptocurrency bitcoin. The anonymous whistleblower platform had gotten on the governments bad side over leaked documents that contained sensitive and classified military information. The organization which depended largely on donations had suffered greatly from this as payments processors like Visa and Mastercard had distanced themselves from the entity.

After being cut off from traditional methods of payment, WikiLeaks had turned to the next best thing. At this point, the organization needed something that could not be tracked or controlled by the government and it turned to bitcoin donations for this. Julian Assange had accused the U.S. government of endorsing what he referred to as an illegal banking blockade against WikiLeaks, forcing entities like AmEx, Visa, PayPal, etc, to stop supporting the organization.

Related Reading | Could An Elon Musk Time Magazine Cover Predict The Crypto Cycle Peak?

According to Assange, this had spurred the entitys move into bitcoin. Bitcoin was still relatively new at this point. In 2010, when the blockade went into effect, BTC was only a year old and still trading relatively low. That same year, WikiLeaks had begun receiving cryptocurrency donations, which was just bitcoin at first but has since expanded to include other cryptocurrencies.

WikiLeaks has done well in terms of donations. Bitcoin was only trading at a low six cents when the organization began receiving it as donations in 2010. The digital asset has since grown over the following decade to a high of $69,000 in 2021.

In 2017, founder Julian Assange tweeted saying that WikiLeaks investments had grown over 50,000% from when they began accepting the digital asset. Assange went further to thank the U.S. government for being the push behind this move. Bitcoin has since grown a further $50,000 since the founder made this tweet.

Presently, WikiLeaks now accepts donations in six cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash, Monero, Litecoin, and ZCash. This report from CryptoPotato analyzed the history of the various wallets and concluded that WikiLeaks has received over $2.2 million in donations using cryptocurrencies.

Related Reading | Why The Dark Nets Most Active Market Ditched Bitcoin For Monero

However, this excluded Monero donations as the report stated that donations using the privacy coin could not be tracked. Additionally, WikiLeaks also received a donation of 1 CryptoKitties.

Julian Assange is currently being remanded in Belmarsh Prison in London after reportedly suffering a stroke due to stress. The transient ischemic stroke was said to have occurred after the High Court overruled a judgment that prevented the Australian national from being extradited to the U.S.

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WikiLeaks And Bitcoin: A Crypto Love Story? - NewsBTC

Fuuast organises Math-To-Industry boot camp – The News International

The Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science and Technology (Fuuast) organised the second session on the role of mathematical models and geographic information systems in achieving the sustainable development goals (SDGs).

The second online and hybrid training session of the 12-week boot camp titled Math-To-Industry was held under the varsitys Laboratory of Applied Mathematics and Data Analysis Research Mathematical Sciences Centre.

Dr Ali Asad Naqvi of the GC University, Faisalabad spoke about the role of mathematical models and geographic information systems in achieving the SDGs. He discussed the urban system and industrial development through drone mapping and cryptography techniques.

Acting director of the Fuuast research centre, Dr Shaheen Abbas, highlighted the importance of conducting Math-to-Industry boot camp, saying that Applied Mathematics, related Sciences, geographic information systems, machine learning, Data Science and artificial neural networking skills were essential for the SDGs.

If the young generation wanted to compete with the developed nations, they would have to prove their abilities in these fields.

The chief organiser of the session, Dr Muhammad Ilyas, said the boot camp was aimed at making the youth aware of their potential and various mathematics-related fields used in the industry so that they could pursue their careers accordingly.

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Fuuast organises Math-To-Industry boot camp - The News International