Daily Archives: January 23, 2021

Blinken Sails Through Queries on Iran, China, Russia, NATO, and More in Confirmation Hearing – Just Security

Posted: January 23, 2021 at 6:14 am

Newly inaugurated President Joe Bidens nominee for secretary of state, Antony Blinken, received a largely warm welcome from Democrats and Republicans in his confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday, aided by his pledge to work in sincere cooperation with Congress.

Both the President-elect and I believe we must restore Congresss traditional role as a partner in our foreign policy making, Blinken said. As a former staff director for the committee before he joined the Obama administration, Blinken is in a good position to work with members on both sides of the aisle, and he seized on that connection in his remarks and responses to questions. Chairman Jim Risch of Idaho and Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina were among the Republicans who made clear their support for Blinken, with Graham saying he expects a big bipartisan vote for Blinkens confirmation and declaring, You deserve it.

Over more than four hours, the hearing was a world tour of trouble spots, starting with Iran but with equal concern over the challenges the United States faces from China, Russia, North Korea, and even NATO ally Turkey. On China, Blinken provided serious answers to a range of rigorous questions, from its economic coercion around the world, to suppression of dissent in Hong Kong and of its minority Uyghur population in Xinjiang Province, to its aggression toward Taiwan.

Senators also focused questions on the conflict in Ethiopia and the extremist threat in several parts of Africa, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the ongoing turmoil in Venezuela. On immigration, Blinken said the administration will seek continued aid for the Northern Triangle countries of Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador to help them tackle issues such as corruption and lack of education and health care that spur emigration to the United States. With respect to asylum in particular, Blinken said the United States has a legal and moral obligation to allow people to make asylum claims and to deal with those claims expeditiously.

Biden has been very clear, Blinken said, that our charge will be to put democracy and human rights back at the center of American foreign policy. Bidens plan to hold a Summit for Democracy likely will materialize toward the end of this year, Blinken said. Our ability to be a stronger leader for and defender of democracy and human rights largely depends on the strength of our own democracy here at home.

Blinken said the key will be to engage vigorously across the globe and bring on board the expertise needed to address current and future foreign policy and national security challenges, noting in particular the need for increased expertise in global health, climate, and technology issues. Blinken noted that rising to these challenges will require focus, commitment, and resources, and committee members expressed a readiness to provide such resources.

Well show up again, day-in, day-out, whenever and wherever the safety and wellbeing ofAmericans is at stake, Blinken said. Well engage the world not as it was, but as it is: A world of rising nationalism, receding democracy, growing rivalry with China, Russia, and other authoritarian states, mounting threats to a stable and open international system, and a technological revolution that is reshaping every aspect of our lives, especially in cyberspace.

In addition to turning the page on substantive foreign policy matters, Blinkens hearing showcased a clear shift in tone from former Secretary of State Mike Pompeos quips about bringing swagger to the department.

Humility and confidence should be the flip sides of Americas leadership coin, Blinken said in his opening statement. Humility because we have a great deal of work to do at home to enhance our standing abroad. And humility because most of the worlds problems are not about us, even as they affect us. Not one of the big challenges we face can be met by one country acting alone even one as powerful as the U.S.

Risch and Menendez agreed to try to expedite Blinkens confirmation. I think all of us have a very strong interest in seeing that the president has in place, as rapidly as possible, his national security team, Risch said.

Just Security consulted a range of leading experts and former senior State Department officials for their views on Blinkens confirmation hearing and what may come ahead:

Brian Egan, Partner at Steptoe & Johnson LLP, former National Security Legal Adviser and Deputy White House Counsel, and former Legal Adviser at the Department of State under the Obama administration, Just Security Board of Editors.

Blinkens nearly five-hour confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) was a homecoming of sorts for the nominee, who served as the Democratic staff director for the panel from 2002 to 2008.Blinken struck a largely conciliatory note with Republican members of the committee, even while identifying several areas where the Biden administrations approach to foreign policy would differ from the Trump administration.Blinken repeatedly committed to rebuilding and reinvigorating the State Department, with diversity in hiring as one of his major priorities.Blinken emphasized the importance of revitalizing the U.S. role in multilateral institutions and diplomacy.He also committed to returning to regular order on conferring with and notifying the SFRC of foreign arms sales.

Blinken characterized China as posing the most significant challenges of any country and described the Trump administrations policy towards the Indo-Pacific region as getting some questions right while getting the answers wrong.He noted the need to distinguish more clearly areas where the United States is adversarial to China from those where the United States should compete or cooperate with China.

On Iran, Blinken confirmed that the administration would seek to renew diplomatic discussions with Iran and the other parties to the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear framework, while acknowledging the importance of addressing Irans support for terrorism and its ballistic missile capabilities.Blinken would not commit to introducing any new nuclear-related deal with Iran as an advice-and-consent treaty instead he promised to engage with Congress in the course of any Iran-related negotiations.

When asked whether the existing Authorizations for the Use of Military Force (AUMFs) would authorize military strikes against Iran, Blinken said he believed that they would not, and that the executive branch should consult with Congress before conducting such strikes regardless.Blinken also committed to working on a bipartisan basis to repeal and replace the existing AUMFs from 2001 and 2002.He said the Biden administration would immediately seek to work with Russia on an extension to the New START arms control agreement, which is due to expire next month.

Blinken also acknowledged several foreign policy achievements of the Trump administration, including its efforts to normalize relations between Israel and other states in the region through the Trump administrations Abraham Accords, and he indicated that he had no intention to move the U.S. embassy out of Jerusalem.He strongly endorsed the Global Magnitsky human rights sanctions framework that had been created by Congress and implemented by the Trump administration.He also agreed with outgoing Secretary Pompeos statement yesterday that Chinas actions against its Uyghur minority amounted to genocide.

Ambassador Thomas Graham, Jr., Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors of Lightbridge Corporation, served for nearly three decades at the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, including 15 years as its General Counsel.

Blinkens opening statement was excellent, particularly some comments on his and his familys background. [Blinken told the story of his late stepfather, Samuel Pisar, who escaped from a death march after four years in a concentration camp, was rescued by an American GI, and found refuge in America after enduring the horrors of the Holocaust.]

The series of questions on the merits or lack thereof of the policies of the Trump administration permitted him to display the great depth of his knowledge and understanding of foreign policy. It also demonstrated his ability to communicate effectively with members of the Senate on the complexity of foreign policy issues, which reflects his years as the chief Democratic staffer of the Foreign Relations Committee.

He will be an excellent Secretary of State backed up by an outstanding staff.

Beth Van Schaack, Leah Kaplan Visiting Professor of Human Rights at Stanford Law School, former Deputy to the Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues in the Office of Global Criminal Justice of the U.S. Department of State, Just Security Executive Editor.

It is notable that Blinken agreed with the Trump administrations determination the same day that China had committed genocide in its treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang, a position that is consistent withan earlier condemnation from the Biden-Harris campaign.

From a doctrinal perspective, this is important. In addition to decrying the use of concentration camps to detain Uyghurs, the statement from Pompeo reflects an understanding that there can be a genocide without mass killing. This is consistent with the main treaty devoted to genocide, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, which prohibits the imposition of conditions of life calculated to destroy the target group as well as forced sterilization and the transfer of children, as we have seen in Xinjiang.

Crimes against humanity, one of the core crimes prosecuted at Nuremberg, captures this harm as well and can be prosecuted even without firm evidence that the perpetrators are acting with the intent to destroy the group, in whole or in part the hallmark of genocide.

The timing of Pompeos statement coming as it did on the eve of the inauguration is, of course, curious when this course of conduct has been underway since at least 2017, as noted by the statement. It will now fall to the Biden-Harris administration to identify additional measures to mitigate the harm to the victims and promote accountability for those responsible for this campaign of ethno-religious persecution.

Rob Berschinski, Senior Vice President for Policy at Human Rights First, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.

Blinkens confirmation hearing today was noteworthy both for what it was and for what it wasnt. Unsurprisingly, from his prepared remarks forward, Blinken evinced a tone and perspective concerning U.S. foreign policy at deep odds with that of his immediate predecessor. As Mike Pompeo hurled culture warnapalmfrom the sidelines, Blinken made clear that swagger and bombast are soon to be replaced as Americas diplomatic lodestars by humility and confidence, which he aptly described as the flip sides of Americas leadership coin.

On substance, Blinken ably reaffirmed what Ive come to think of as the 3 Rs of President-elect Bidens stated priorities when it comes to U.S. foreign policy: revitalizing reeling workforces at the State Department and other agencies; returning to multilateralism and a commitment to defend democracy and human rights; and realizing gains for the American people. A fourth R, Blinken made clear, would be the reestablishment of constructive relationships torched during the Trump era. The list of those in need of repair is long, but Blinken made clear that hell extend the principle not just to Americas traditional European allies, but also to members of Congress on both sides of the political aisle.

The message seemed well received by most members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Joining Democrats, several Republicans went out of their way to praise Blinkens deep knowledge, thoughtfulness, and willingness to learn from past mistakes in what could accurately be described as a multi-hour sub-tweet of the past four years. For one day, at least, a sense of shared national interest in solving exceptionally difficult questions prevailed. It was a breath of fresh air. Let us hope that more such days are to come.

Luke Hartig, Fellow in New Americas International Security program, former Senior Director for Counterterrorism at the National Security Council, Just Security Board of Editors.

Of the many exchanges Blinken had with senators during his four-hour confirmation hearing for Secretary of State, one of the most interesting was his collegial dialogue with Senator Lindsey Graham. Graham, of course, has largely been a fierce Trump defender while also being a friend of the late Senator John McCain, who opposed Blinkens nomination as deputy secretary of state. But Graham was warm and gracious and, even before asking a question, affirmed his support for Blinken he called the nominee an outstanding choice and predicted a big, bipartisan vote for his confirmation and declared you deserve it.

Among a long list of foreign policy concerns, Graham focused on the counterterrorism campaigns of the past 20 years since 9/11, stating his view that the United States had only been spared a major attack by al-Qaeda and ISIS because the country has kept its foot on their throat. Graham was critical of the Afghanistan drawdown and cautioned against trusting the Taliban in negotiations around the future of Afghanistan. Blinken largely agreed with Graham on most of this, noting the importance of staying vigilant on terrorism and expressing wariness about the Taliban.

But while Graham and Blinken may have agreed on foundational principles, in other parts of the nominees testimony, differences appeared around implementation. Although Graham reaffirmed his support for soft power to go with aggressive responses and sustained military operations, Blinken outlined a vision of a robust and distinctly civilian-led response to these threats. He called for a reinvigorated State Department, a strengthened civil service and Foreign Service workforce, and a diplomatic corps that could effectively and safely operate in some of the worlds most challenging environments. Blinken acknowledged the mistakes the Obama administration had made in Libya, particularly in overestimating the capacity of Libyas institutions to take control post-Qaddafi. He spoke with nuance about the tricky diplomacy the department would have to utilize to address the dynamic situations in Yemen, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Horn of Africa, places with immense challenges and where terrorist groups have often thrived. Blinken applauded the Development Finance Corporation, Global Fragility Act, and Middle East Partnership for Peace Fund. And he committed to multilateral approaches to terrorism and more.

This is the approach that many of us have called for over the past four years, as the Trump administration gutted the State Department, slashed the foreign affairs budget, shredded alliances, undermined its own diplomacy, and carried out a series of aggressive but often haphazard military operations. The challenge for Blinken, however, will not just be turning back the Trump approach but turning the ship of U.S. counterterrorism from the militarized approach that has prevailed across three administrations. The U.S. has built a machine that has kept America safe, as Graham rightly notes, but at the cost of creating a sense of perpetual war, a view that every overseas terrorist threat, no matter how small, must be neutralized with military force, and a belief that we must spend whatever it takes to carry out that mission. As Blinken notes, we cant take our eye off the ball of terrorism, but the hard work now is building and securing congressional support for the civilian institutions, processes, and capabilities necessary for them, rather than the military, to take the lead on the effort.

Rita Simeon, Director of National Security Advocacy at Human Rights First, Just Security Board of Editors.

There was much of note in Blinkens confirmation hearing today, but one important issue worth highlighting is the need to address the outdated war authorizations that remain not only on the books but in use far beyond what Congress originally authorized. As Blinken rightly noted, it is long past time we revisit and review them. In many instances, they have been cited and used in countries and against groups that were not part of the original authorization.

As Blinken acknowledged, getting agreement on the path forward on authorizations for the use of military force (AUMF) has proven a challenge: We did try to do this a few years ago, and its not easy to get to yes. For some, the porridge is too hot and for others its too coldbut I would be committed and determined to working on that. The president-elect feels very strongly about this.

As the incoming administration considers the appropriate path forward, it should take heed of the lessons learned from how the existing AUMFs have been stretched beyond recognition, and ensure that any new authorities it seeks from Congress containminimum essential safeguards.

But, if military force is to be used only as a last resort, as Blinken testified it should be, then the administration must also first carefully consider the full array of available tools for addressing current security challenges before seeking new or additional authorization to use force.

Laura Rozen, foreign policy reporter and founder of the Diplomatic newsletter, formerly at Politico and Foreign Policy, where she launched The Cable newsletter, Just Security Board of Editors.

Blinken pledged to make a sharp break with his predecessor in cutting partisan politics out of the State Department, in working to restore Americas alliances especially with European democracies, and in committing to recruit, retain, and promote a more diverse and inclusivediplomatic corps. The latter particularly was a sharp contrast to outgoing Secretary Pompeos reactionary tweet ahead of the nomination hearing that woke-ism, multiculturalism, all the isms theyre not who America is.

He offered some continuity in taking a tougher approach to China, saying he was interested in crafting a bipartisan policy on China that would seek to forge an alliance with other democracies.In response to questions, Blinken said he agreed with Pompeos declaration the same day that Chinas abuses against its Uyghur Muslim minority constituted genocide.

I think were very much in agreement, Blinken said. The forcing of men, women, and children into concentration camps; trying to, in effect, re-educate them to be adherents to the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party, all of that speaks to an effort to commit genocide.

Blinken sought to leave room for Biden to return to the Iran nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, if Iran agrees to return to its full commitments, as a starting point. The administration would then seek to negotiate, in concert with partners and allies, a longer and broader deal, and to address issues left out of the pact, such as Irans support for militant groups in the region, its development of ballistic missiles, and its human rights record.

Biden believes that if Iran comes back into compliance, we would too, Blinken said. But we would use that as a platform with our allies and partners, who would once again be on the same side with us, to seek a longer and stronger agreement,

Having said that, I think were a long way from there, Blinken added.

Blinken said Biden was inclined to extend the new START strategic arms reduction pact with Russia, which expires next month, but hedged on the details, noting that Biden transition officials had studiously avoided consultations with foreign governments while another president was in office.

Blinken also said the Biden administration would halt military support to the Saudi-led war in Yemen, though he said officials would have to examine the details of U.S. backing to gauge how and when to shift gears, and that it would review U.S. policy toward the Saudi kingdom more broadly. He also said the Biden administration would immediately review a controversial 11th-hour Pompeo designation of Yemens Houthi rebels as a terrorist organization, which humanitarian groups, the United Nations, and a bipartisan group of Senators fear could worsen an already catastrophic humanitarian situation while, at least on its surface, it seems to achieve nothing particularly practical in advancing the efforts against the Houthis and to bring them back to the negotiating table.

Read more:
Blinken Sails Through Queries on Iran, China, Russia, NATO, and More in Confirmation Hearing - Just Security

Posted in NATO | Comments Off on Blinken Sails Through Queries on Iran, China, Russia, NATO, and More in Confirmation Hearing – Just Security

"Looking Forward To Working With Joe Biden," Says NATO Chief – NDTV

Posted: at 6:14 am

Jens Stoltenberg has invited Joe Biden to participate in a NATO summit at a date to be set (File)

NATO and the European Union are looking forward to working with US President-elect Joe Biden to strengthen transatlantic ties, the military alliance's chief said on Tuesday.

"We look forward to working with President-elect @JoeBiden to further strengthen ties between the #UnitedStates & #Europe, as we face global challenges none of us can tackle alone," NATO's Jens Stoltenberg wrote on Twitter after meeting European Council President Charles Michel.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also took part in the working dinner on the eve of Biden's swearing in.

Traditional US allies in the European Union and NATO were often shunned by outgoing US President Donald Trump throughout his divisive four years in office.

Biden has signalled he intends to repair those relationships and return to multilateralism, underscored by his nomination of seasoned diplomat Antony Blinken for secretary of state.

Stoltenberg has invited Biden to participate in a NATO summit at a date to be set, while Michel has proposed organising a special meeting with the incoming president and EU leaders.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Waiting for response to load...

Continued here:
"Looking Forward To Working With Joe Biden," Says NATO Chief - NDTV

Posted in NATO | Comments Off on "Looking Forward To Working With Joe Biden," Says NATO Chief – NDTV

National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Tax Treatment of 2020 Distributions – Business Wire

Posted: at 6:13 am

GREENWOOD VILLAGE, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--National Storage Affiliates Trust (NSA or the Company) (NYSE: NSA) today announced the tax treatment of its 2020 distributions on its Common Shares of Beneficial Interest (CUSIP Number 637870106) and its 6.000% Series A Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Shares (CUSIP Number 637870205).

For the tax year ended December 31, 2020, distributions to NSAs common shareholders were classified as follows:

Declaration Date

Record Date

Payment Date

Total Distribution

Per Share

Ordinary

DividendsPer Share

Non-dividendDistributionsPer Share

2/20/2020

3/13/2020

3/31/2020

$ 0.33

$ 0.242315

$ 0.087685

5/21/2020

6/15/2020

6/30/2020

$ 0.33

$ 0.242315

$ 0.087685

8/20/2020

9/15/2020

9/30/2020

$ 0.34

$ 0.249658

$ 0.090342

11/12/2020

12/15/2020

12/31/2020

$ 0.35

$ 0.257000

$ 0.093000

Totals for 2020

$ 1.35

$ 0.991288

$ 0.358712

For the tax year ended December 31, 2020, distributions to NSAs preferred shareholders were classified as follows:

Declaration Date

Record Date

Payment Date

Total Distribution

Per Share

Ordinary

DividendsPer Share

Non-dividendDistributionsPer Share

2/20/2020

3/13/2020

3/31/2020

$ 0.375

$ 0.375

$ 0.00

5/21/2020

6/15/2020

6/30/2020

$ 0.375

$ 0.375

$ 0.00

8/20/2020

9/15/2020

9/30/2020

$ 0.375

$ 0.375

$ 0.00

11/12/2020

12/15/2020

12/31/2020

$ 0.375

$ 0.375

$ 0.00

Totals for 2020

$ 1.50

$ 1.50

$ 0.00

The ordinary dividends in the tables above are qualified REIT dividends for purposes of Internal Revenue Code section 199A, reported in Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV.

NSA recommends its shareholders consult their individual tax advisors should there be any related questions regarding the above tables.

Upcoming Industry Conference

NSA management is scheduled to participate in Citis 2021 Virtual Global Property CEO Conference, March 8 11, 2021.

About National Storage Affiliates Trust

National Storage Affiliates Trust is a real estate investment trust headquartered in Denver, Colorado, focused on the ownership, operation and acquisition of self storage properties located within the top 100 metropolitan statistical areas throughout the United States. As of September 30, 2020, the Company held ownership interests in and operated 788 self storage properties located in 35 states and Puerto Rico with approximately 49.5 million rentable square feet. NSA is one of the largest owners and operators of self storage properties among public and private companies in the United States. For more information, please visit the Companys website at http://www.nationalstorageaffiliates.com. NSA is included in the MSCI US REIT Index (RMS/RMZ), the Russell 2000 Index of Companies and the S&P SmallCap 600 Index.

See the rest here:
National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Tax Treatment of 2020 Distributions - Business Wire

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Tax Treatment of 2020 Distributions – Business Wire

National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Date of its Fourth Quarter 2020 Earnings Release and Conference Call – Business Wire

Posted: at 6:13 am

GREENWOOD VILLAGE, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--National Storage Affiliates Trust (NSA or the Company) (NYSE: NSA) today announced the Company will release financial results for the three months ended December 31, 2020 after market close on Monday, February 22, 2021. NSA will host a conference call to discuss its financial results, current market conditions and future outlook at 12:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesday, February 23, 2021. Following prepared remarks, management will accept questions from registered financial analysts. All other participants are encouraged to listen to the call via webcast using the link found on the Companys website.

Conference Call and Webcast:Date/Time: Tuesday, February 23, 2021 at 12:00 p.m. ETWebcast link available at: http://www.nationalstorageaffiliates.com Domestic (toll free): 877-407-9711International: 412-902-1014

Replay Information:Domestic (toll free): 877-660-6853International: 201-612-7415Conference ID: 13692161

A replay of the webcast will be available for 30 days on NSAs website at http://www.nationalstorageaffiliates.com. Any transcription, recording or retransmission of the Companys conference call and webcast in any way are strictly prohibited without the prior written consent of NSA.

Supplemental materials will be posted to the investor relations section of the companys website prior to the conference call.

Upcoming Industry Conference

NSA management is scheduled to participate in Citis 2021 Virtual Global Property CEO Conference, March 8 11, 2021.

About National Storage Affiliates Trust

National Storage Affiliates Trust is a real estate investment trust headquartered in Denver, Colorado, focused on the ownership, operation and acquisition of self storage properties located within the top 100 metropolitan statistical areas throughout the United States. As of September 30, 2020, the Company held ownership interests in and operated 788 self storage properties located in 35 states and Puerto Rico with approximately 49.5 million rentable square feet. NSA is one of the largest owners and operators of self storage properties among public and private companies in the United States. For more information, please visit the Companys website at http://www.nationalstorageaffiliates.com. NSA is included in the MSCI US REIT Index (RMS/RMZ), the Russell 2000 Index of Companies and the S&P SmallCap 600 Index.

Link:
National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Date of its Fourth Quarter 2020 Earnings Release and Conference Call - Business Wire

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on National Storage Affiliates Trust Announces Date of its Fourth Quarter 2020 Earnings Release and Conference Call – Business Wire

SCA girls get second win – The Suffolk News-Herald – Suffolk News-Herald

Posted: at 6:13 am

Suffolk Christian Academys girls basketball team picked up its second win of the season Jan. 15, defeating Denbigh Baptist Christian of Newport News 29-26.

The Knights trailed by two, 9-7 after the first quarter, but led 17-14 at the half. Denbigh Christan cut the lead to two points at the end of the third quarter, but they held on for the victory.

Jadyn Patton led SCA with 14 points on 6-for-11 shooting, while Laura Cornette had eight points. Patton added four assists and had eight steals, while Cornette also had five rebounds, five steals and three assists.

In the girls 41-27 loss to Bethel Assembly Christian Academy of Windsor, N.C., SCA had a strong third quarter in outscoring Bethel Assembly Christian 15-10, but it couldnt overcome a first half in which it was outscored 23-9.

In the loss, Cornette scored 18 points on 7-for-13 shooting and had nine steals, five rebounds and two assists. Though Patton had just four points, she added nine rebounds, four steals and three assists. Kennedy Oparaji had seven rebounds in the loss.

Nansemond-Suffolk Academys girls basketball team dropped a pair of games to Catholic, falling 59-34 in the first matchup Jan. 12 and 61-31 Jan. 15.

During the first of the two games against Catholic, NSA actually led 12-11 after the first quarter, but it was held to five points in each of the next two quarters as it was outscored 33-10, allowing the Crusaders to pull away.

In the second matchup, NSA trailed 23-7 after the first quarter and was down 41-15 at the half. The Saints played the Crusaders closer in the second half, only being outscored in the final two quarters 20-17.

The Nansemond-Suffolk Academy boys basketball team gave Catholic High School a good run in a pair of recent games, but dropped both to extend its losing streak to six games.

In the first matchup Jan. 12, Catholic took the win 53-41. Though they worked to stay with the Crusaders of Virginia Beach, the Saints (1-6) led just once, trailing 11-6 after one quarter and 33-21 at the half as Catholic made 70% of its first-half shots.

NSA cut the lead to six points after the third quarter, but it wasnt able to fully close the gap.

The Saints, who were 14-for-38 from the field, made eight 3-pointers. Grant Lopez, who led them in scoring with 13 points, had three of them. Isaiah Fuhrmann had eight points on 3-for-5 shooting while Riley DeCandido and Kemauri Spencer each had seven points, with DeCandido adding five rebounds.We got a lot of good shots, but our margin for error is just very small with what we have for our roster, said NSA coach Chris Fuhrmann. We just dont have a dominant big guy this year. We dont have the guard play that we had the last couple of years with (George) Pettaway and Kaleb Brown to where, if stuff gets a little hectic, those guys were so talented they were able to create something for themselves or somebody else. We have to do a whole lot now together and really execute, and weve been doing a much better job at that.

In the second matchup against Catholic Jan. 15 on Senior Night parents of the seniors were allowed to attend NSA was tied at the half and trailed by three after three quarters before falling 41-35.

Brady Canfield led the Saints with 13 points and 10 rebounds, while Spencer had 12 points on 4-for-5 shooting. Isaiah Fuhrmann added seven points, going a perfect 3-for-3 from the field.

NSAs boys came even closer to picking up a win Jan. 7 against Peninsula Catholic, losing 53-52. The Saints had a chance for a dramatic win, but the inbounds pass to an open player with just two seconds on the clock clanged off the rim as time expired.

I was really pleased with our effort, Chris Fuhrmann said of the loss to Peninsula Catholic. Peninsula Catholic, theyve been playing a whole lot more than we have. Even over the summer, they did a lot of things that we werent able to do.

The Saints have had to play since Jan. 5 without Jaden Freeman, who injured an ankle in the second matchup against Cape Henry Collegiate and is out for the season.

Chris Fuhrmann said Lopez, at guard, and Spencer, as a forward, have been big contributors to the teams this season.

Lopez, at 5-foot-9-inches, is expected to play at Division III Randolph College next year, though his coach didnt necessarily see it early on in his high school career, but he cites the players work ethic and notes that he has to go up against every teams best player.

Were really excited and proud of him for that, and hes worked extremely hard these last two years to get himself in the position he is, Chris Fuhrmann said. When I first came over, if you had told me that hed be able to go and play on a Division III roster, or get on a Division III roster, I probably would have been like, Yeah, I dont really see it. But he has really worked extremely hard. Hes a very, very good shooter.

Spencer, according to his coach, is the ultimate workhorse and does anything asked of him.

Hes typically our leading rebounder, Chris Fuhrmann said, and this year, hes had to expand in scoring a little bit. Hes now the first or second option. Hes had to get used to that because hes a very selfless player. He was passing the ball, getting other people involved, so to try to tell him you have to score now is a little bit against his nature because of how he is and how he plays, and being that guy that does all the dirty work and who still ends up getting his.

NSA has been helped by two transfers, the 6-foot-5-inch Canfield from California, and then the coachs cousin, freshman Isaiah Fuhrmann.

But Chris Fuhrmann said it has been DeCandido, who is a verbal commit to the University of Maryland for baseball, who has had to make the biggest adjustment this season in having to start at point guard. As a freshman, he played as an off-guard and did not have any big responsibility, but he has shown improvement as the season has progressed.

Its just been difficult making that adjustment, Chris Fuhrmann said.

Meanwhile, SCAs boys basketball team got off to a slow start in its 52-25 loss Jan. 15 to Franklins Rock Church, as the Knights were outscored 20-2 in the first quarter. It followed a 69-30 loss to Bethel Assembly Christian Academy.

Knights coach DJ Daniels said this season has been a growing experience for his team. He stresses the importance of learning from what they do wrong while also focusing on what they have been able to accomplish.

Weve had about two or three games where I felt like we werent really in it, Daniels said.Weve played a few teams that had mostly seniors, way bigger, way better and stronger than us. And we still tried our best to work on certain things but weve had a couple of games that we had competitive moments and we put it all together.

SCA is playing in a new conference this season the North Carolina Christian Athletic Association that Daniels said gives the school a better opportunity to compete than its previous one, the Hampton Roads Athletic Conference. NCCAA schools include North Carolina schools Victory Christian and New Life Academy in Elizabeth City, Bethel Assembly in Windsor, Ahoskie Christian Academy and Trinity Christian School in Greenville.

Daniels said sophomore forward Joshua Peacock has been growing as a player and has potential through the roof and freshman Isaac Smith, at shooting guard, has shown a lot of improvement and could be a force before hes done playing. Another freshman, Landon Patton, has been playing point guard and has been showing good ball-handling skills.

The Knights (0-9) are to play Ahoskie Christian Academy Jan. 19 and play at TEACH Basketball of Virginia Beach Jan. 22.

Its been a tough season, Daniels said. We have one senior on the roster and one junior on the roster, so it was going to be a rough season in terms of the won and loss record. But I cant stress enough how thankful we all are that we can get a season in and were starting to grow as a team. We may be taking our lumps this year and next year, but as those guys start to age, well really start to have some gelling and have a pretty experienced team on the varsity level.

Read more here:
SCA girls get second win - The Suffolk News-Herald - Suffolk News-Herald

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on SCA girls get second win – The Suffolk News-Herald – Suffolk News-Herald

Newly re-elected NSA Scotland chairperson looking to the future – JohnOGroat Journal

Posted: at 6:13 am

NSA Scotland chairperson Jen Craig.

Newly re-elected NSA Scotland chairperson Jen Craig says she is looking forward to working with others in the organisation for the good of the Scottish sheep sector in 2021 and beyond.

NSA Scotland is the Scottish region of the National Sheep Association, which represents the views and interests of sheep producers throughout the UK. The annual regional members' meeting (ARMM) was held via Zoom and the virtual format allowed a much larger audience than in previous years.

Those attending voted to re-elect the regional committee comprising Jen Craig (chairperson), Maimie Paterson (vice-chair), Mary Dunlop (treasurer) and Aileen McFadzean and Peter Myles (regional trustees). John Fyall was also re-elected as the Scottish representative on the NSA's UK policy and technical committee.

Scotland's rural economy secretary Fergus Ewing gave an update on issues affecting the sheep sector with the information that a deal had been struck with the European Union. This provided some clarity and direction on the next steps to be made by the Scottish Government.

Those in attendance were given the opportunity to ask Mr Ewing questions about the Scottish sheep sector. Topics raised included the continuation of farm support, the impact of predators, rewilding, farmer-led groups, Farm Animal Welfare Committee consultation, new entrants and the importance of research to the agricultural industry.

NSA chief executive Phil Stocker joined the meeting to give an update on recent activity relating to policy work.

Jen Craig said: Thank you to all those who attended this years ARMM. I am very privileged and grateful to be re-elected to serve another two years as chair of NSA Scotland.

"The support from the committee and our members has been tremendous I cant thank them enough and look forward to continuing to work together for the Scottish sheep sector in 2021 and beyond.

Sign up today and get 50% off a six-month subscription with promo code '50OFF'.

Excerpt from:
Newly re-elected NSA Scotland chairperson looking to the future - JohnOGroat Journal

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on Newly re-elected NSA Scotland chairperson looking to the future – JohnOGroat Journal

How Social Media Monopolies Broke the Public Sphere – Foreign Policy

Posted: at 6:11 am

After the storming of the U.S. Capitol by an insurgent lynch mob driven by far-right social media conspiracy theories and stirred on by then President Donald Trump, at least 10 market-dominating tech companies took action through content moderation and account suspension. Chief among those removed was Trump himself, banned from Twitter, and Parler, an alternative social media platform that markets itself to far-right extremists, which was ejected from its host, Amazon Web Services.

The ban had an immediate effect on internet discourse: Within a week, researchers tracked a 73 percent reduction in disinformation about election fraud on Twitter and other platforms. Amazons filing against Parler documents months of futile work to convince the platform to suppress users explicit calls for violence in accordance with their terms of service. While some argue that tech companies should take similar action against other world leaders who use populism to stir up mass violence, critics of the decision are alarmed at the supposed restriction on free speech by tech companies.

This debate is overwrought, but also raises bigger questions. In 2021, losing a Twitter account meaningfully limits the presidents influence, as it would any other figure. That shouldnt be confused with his freedom of speech, which remains unshackled by the government. But it does point to the way in which big tech has come to dominate and shatter the public sphere. Yet, thanks to the failure of politicians to meaningfully act through legislation, tech firms are policing themselves through inconsistently enforced terms of service.

When leaders call for violence through social media, their influence is especially pernicious. As far back as 2015, Trumps dehumanizing rhetoric was viewed by many hate groups as a tacit permission slip to engage in hate crimes. Subsequent studies showed violent metaphors by political leaders dramatically increase support for political violence, and is fuel for moral disengagement, serving to designate certain people or groups as fundamentally unworthy of protection, and as legitimate targets for violence. Violent rhetoric is also contagious: A 2017 National Academy of Sciences study likened hate speech to a pathogen. That pathogen manifested at the White House on Jan. 6.

Stopping hateful speech is thus vital to maintaining the public space that non-violent, deliberative democracy needs. Completely unmoderated speech endorsing lies and violence, as Parler cultivated and which has threatened to overwhelm mainstream social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter, risks fragmenting that public space. But navigating the tension between moderation and openness means reexamining basic political commitments.

The American philosopher John Dewey defined a public as a community of all those who are affected by the indirect consequences of transactions to such an extent that it is deemed necessary to have those consequences systematically cared for. In a single, unified public, actions affect strangers, which creates an ethical obligation to think about the ripples of behavior. But in a fragmented society, with smaller publics, people are less attuned to how their behavior affects others (see the mask debate).

The United States lacks a single public. Exacerbated urban-rural divides, class differences, and prolonged exposure on the right to a closed media ecology have shrunk the so-called mainstream, while the legacy of apartheid has always meant the exclusion of Black communities from anything resembling a single, universal public. Even within the parochial and breakaway political right there are pronounced fractures that produce a proliferation of mini-publics, with a divisionalbeit a shrinking onebetween supposedly moderate Republicans and those who consume and represent the views advanced in extremist media spaces like Breitbart or One America News Network. Meanwhile, an increasingly revolutionary far-left public has emerged that agitates against Democrats as often as it does Republicans, and on the sidelines are various fringe communities driven by often-violent conspiracies like QAnon and anti-vaccine groups.

Publics are formed and maintained through a public spherea space to discuss social problems, debate solutions, and form agreements about collective ideals and goals. German philosopher Jurgen Habermas famously studied how a vibrant, if limited, public sphere formed in the coffee shops and salons of 18th-century Europe, only to collapse in the 19th century as mass printed media rose to prominence. A public sphere, he argued, exists on the basis of inclusivity, a commitment to good faith argument, and a collective willingness to cooperate in the search for meaningful agreement on how the world is and should be. Journalistic elites arguing in op-ed pages are no substitute.

But at least when popular media consumption was restricted to a smaller range of outlets and run according to consistent editorial standards, something like a public sphere could exist. Citizens could broadly be on the same page, so to speak, about which facts and principles were under debate and which were not. This was not an especially egalitarian or inclusive discourse, but it was transparent and coherent enough to allow for some cross-sections of the population to meaningfully engage with one another (though this was not the case for many marginalized groups).

Social media might have offered a solution, as an open digital space where anyone could join, contribute, share information, and learn new ideas and skills. This was the utopian argument of American poet John Perry Barlows 1996 manifesto, A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace, which claimed that the non-material nature of cyberspace exempted it from considerations of place, money, property, and identity. But, as the mass deplatforming of Trump and his insurrectionists demonstrated, cyberspace has never been separate from material concerns, and it is certainly not above politics.

Social media platforms are not like coffee shops or salons. Facebook and Twitter are not a public sphere in any sense of the term. They are ostensibly inclusiveat least until individual members are driven away by threatsbut not dedicated to good faith argumentation; they make no commitment toward constructive discussion. This is an intentional design choice, as shown by the domination of outrage content, or the campaigns of harassment that target women and minorities with particular ferocity. Privately owned and in command of vast powers of surveillance and control over what and how users communicate, they are even now reluctant to use those powers to create a healthy public sphere.

The problem is that they also monopolize expression on the internet. The current choice between social media or nothing has led dissidents like Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny to call Twitters ban on Donald Trump a form of censorship on par with government suppression of speech. World leaders expressed alarm as well, from Andres Manuel Lpez Obrador vowing to fight Twitters policies to German Chancellor Angela Merkel suggesting that the only actor authorized to make decisions about bans should be the government itselfthe implication being that Twitter should not be allowed to determine who is allowed to use its platform.

If that sounds absurd, blame social media companies themselves for producing this crisis. Their lame and inconsistent regulations of content are driven not by a commitment to clear principles, and certainly not to the values of the public sphere or a commitment to free speech. Rather, their self-regulation is driven entirely by the need to monetize data, deliver targeted ads, and evade serious legal liability, with even billion-dollar fines barely amounting to quarterly rounding errors.

Instead of creating a new public sphere, a small number of monopolistic social media companies colonized the existing one, and then shattered it into jagged pieces. They have accelerated and exacerbated the erosion and fracturing of the American public, while facilitating mass right-wing violence.

There is no easy solution to this problem, but there are a few principles that might help us devise one. First, social media companies must regulate and manage their platforms to better secure the conditions for a public sphere: inclusivity, fact-checking, and safety from violence. These alone cannot produce the utopia of Habermass private dinner discourse ethics, but without them, no public can survive. Policymakers should incentivize this through legislation that holds these companies liable for failure and imposes meaningful financial consequences. They should set a clear set of standards for when content crosses the line into threats of violence or hate speech, and they should establish independent review of social media firms enforcement, to ensure that it is neither lax nor arbitrary. There is a difficult balance to be struck here between First Amendment rights and the obligation to enforce existing laws prohibiting threats and harassment, but the current approach is simply refusing to tryand repealing Section 230, as some have suggested, would not address the problem of radicalization and violence anyway.

Second, social media monopolies must be broken through more effective antitrust legislation. Imagine if every 18th-century coffee house had been a Starbucks! If social media spaces are the only place a public sphere can form in the 21st century, then they must be meaningfully diverse. The old blogosphere had many attributes of a public sphere, just as the earliest days of social media did. But blogs died as the big names became digital magazine columns, and as competition from social media drew more users in. The only plausible competition to social media has come from other social media, and this is where the antitrust case against Facebook becomes salientthink of Mark Zuckerbergs private dinner with Trump right before Trump announced a ban on TikTok. In their current monopolistic state, social media resembles a government in its absolute power to exclude (and surveil), and produces the same dynamics of power and censorship that have led commentators to now conflate content moderation with institutional repression.

Third, and most broadly, the internet needs to be treated as a social good, as scholars like Ethan Zuckerman argue. This may sound aspirational, although in other countries access to broadband may soon become a public service. People in the developed world are inescapably onlinea social transformation that is permanent and should be addressed through more than liberal management or utopian transhumanism. Our first act as a public should be to come up with digital equivalents of parks, community centers, local watering holes, and other places where earlier generations were able to gather and coexist outside of pervasive governmental or corporate control. If we dont, the institutions of liberal democracy will not survive long enough for us to come up with another solution.

Read more:
How Social Media Monopolies Broke the Public Sphere - Foreign Policy

Posted in Transhuman | Comments Off on How Social Media Monopolies Broke the Public Sphere – Foreign Policy