Daily Archives: April 20, 2022

New text messages reveal Mike Lees efforts to overturn the 2020 election in Trumps favor – TownLift

Posted: April 20, 2022 at 10:49 am

WASHINGTON Newly revealed text messages published by CNN show a timely dialogue between Utah Sen. Mike Lee and former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows following President Bidens election victory in November 2020.

On November 7, the day Biden was officially declared the winner, Lee sent Meadows a message that he wanted former President Donald Trump to see:

Dear Mr. President, We the undersigned offer our unequivocal support for you to exhaust every legal and constitutional remedy at your disposal to restore Americans faith in our elections. This fight is about much more than just this election. This fight is about the fundamental fairness and integrity of our election system. The nation is depending upon your continued resolve. Stay strong and keep fighting Mr. President.

The statement was cosigned by several prominent conservative groups.

In separate messages that day, Lee said they were not issuing it as a press release but added use it however you deem appropriate.

In addition, he said, if its helpful to you for you to leak it, feel free to do so.

To which Meadows replied ??

Lee then began a lobbying effort to get attorney Sidney Powell in front of Trump. Lee called Powell a straight shooter.

Powell gained national prominence following a Nov. 19 press conference with other members of Trumps legal team, chiefly Rudy Giuliani.

Hours after the news conference, Lee texted Meadows saying he was worried about the Powell press conference. Adding that the potential defamation liability for the president is significant here and that the president should probably disassociate.

Meadows replied that he was also very concerned.

In late November, Lee then began a campaign to promote right-wing lawyer John Eastman, who had a plan that involved sending different electors in states that Biden won.

Lee previously told Washington Post veterans Bob Woodward and Robert Costa that he didnt know of the Eastman plan until January.

In a Dec. 8 text, he shot Meadows an idea:If a very small handful of states were to have their legislatures appoint alternative slates of delegates, there could be a plan.

Eastman recently invoked his Fifth Amendment rights when questioned about communications by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

On Dec. 16, Lee appeared to ease on the idea of overturning the election results, saying in messages to Meadows:If you want senators to object, we need to hear from you on that ideally getting some guidance on what arguments to raise. I think were now passed the point where we can expect anyone will do it without some direction and a strong evidentiary argument.

On Jan 3., Lee said he had grave concerns about how aggressive Texas Sen. Ted Cruz was being in the fight over the results.

He told Meadows that Trump has a legit shot at 2024, and warned of the developments harming his future prospects.

At a rally on Jan. 4, Trump told the crowd that he was a little angry at Lee after the Utah senator officially came out against the efforts.

Lee later vented to Meadows:Ive been spending 14 hours a day for the last week trying to unravel this for him. To have him take a shot at me like that in such a public setting without even asking me about it is pretty discouraging.

Two days later:

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New text messages reveal Mike Lees efforts to overturn the 2020 election in Trumps favor - TownLift

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What is the temperature on Mars? | Space

Posted: at 10:47 am

The temperature on Mars is much colder than on Earth. But then, the planet is also farther from the sun. The small, barren planet also has a thin atmosphere that is 95 percent carbon dioxide.

This combination of factors makes Mars a harsh and cold world whose temperature can drop to as low as minus 200 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 128 degrees Celsius). As a point of comparison, the lowest recorded temperature on Earth is minus 128.6 degrees F (minus 88 degrees C) in Antarctica according to Arizona State University.

Meanwhile, the highest temperature on Mars is 70 degrees F (21 degrees C), significantly below the highest temperature recorded on Earth, which Arizona State University places at 134 degrees F (56 degrees C) in Inyo County, California, USA.

Related: How long does it take to get to Mars?

Mars's atmosphere is about 100 times thinner than Earth's. Without a "thermal blanket," Mars can't retain any heat energy. On average, the temperature on Mars is about minus 80 degrees F (minus 60 degrees Celsius) according to NASA. In winter, near the poles, temperatures can get down to minus 195 degrees F (minus 125 degrees C). A summer day on Mars may get up to 70 degrees F (20 degrees C) near the equator, but at night the temperature can plummet to about minus 100 degrees F (minus 73 degrees C).

NASA's Mars Curiosity rover is giving us new insight into the environment on Mars all the time. For instance, it measured air temperatures as high as 43 degrees F (6 degrees C) in the afternoon, with temperatures climbing above freezing for a significant number of days. Meanwhile, the Perseverance rover recorded a high of 8 degrees F and a low of -112 degrees F on January 29, 2022.

"That we are seeing temperatures this warm already during the day is a surprise and very interesting," Felipe Gmez, of the Centro de Astrobiologia in Madrid, said in a statement.

Frost forms on the rocks at night, but as dawn approaches and the air gets warmer, the frost turns to vapor, and there is 100 percent humidity until it evaporates. The high humidity could help make Mars more habitable, if the water condenses to form short-term puddles in the early morning hours.

"The conditions on Mars, where the relative humidity is high and the available water vapor is approximately 100 precipitable microns, is the equivalent of the drier parts of the Atacama Desert in Chile," John Rummel, of East Carolina University, told Space.com by email.

According to Rummel, the humidity of Mars is tied to temperature fluctuations. At night, relative humidity levels can rise to 80 to 100 percent, with the air sometimes reaching atmospheric saturation. The daytime air is far drier, due to warmer temperatures.

"At present, the temperatures and atmospheric pressures on Mars are too low for liquid water to exist stably," wrote William Sheehan and Jim Bell in "Discovering Mars: A History of Observation and Exploration of the Red Planet" (University of Arizona Press, 2021).

On Earth, some forms of life are able to survive in parched regions by poaching water from the humid air. Among these, lichens dominate, surviving in arid climates without succumbing to the dry spells that frequently occur. Some lichens in super-dry areas have been found to photosynthesize at relative humidity levels as low as 70 percent. Other research has demonstrated that a form of Antarctic lichen can adapt to life under simulated Martian conditions.

"Such short-term wet periods might be long enough and warm enough to allow for Earth organisms to metabolize and even reproduce," said Rummel.

Like Earth, Mars has four seasons because the planet tilts on its axis. "On Earth, the seasons of spring, summer, autumn and winter are all of similar length. On Mars, because of the marked eccentricity of its orbit, the seasons differ much more in length," wrote Sheehan and Bell. In the northern hemisphere, spring is the longest season at seven months. Summer and fall are both about six months long. Winter is only four months long.

During a Martian summer, the polar ice cap, composed mainly of carbon dioxide ice, shrinks and may disappear altogether. When winter comes, the ice cap grows back. There may be some liquid water trapped beneath the carbon dioxide ice sheets, scientists say.

In the past, Mars may have been warmer and wetter, with an average global temperature of 50 degrees F (10 degrees C).

"We've learned that Mars is a dynamic planet," Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars exploration program, told reporters in 2011. "We've learned that it has a history where it was warm and wet at the same time that life started here on Earth."

Other research suggests that the Red Planet may have once been white, an icy wasteland with an average temperature of minus 54 degrees F (minus 48 degrees C). According to Robin Wordsworth, a researcher at Harvard, a colder scenario is more straightforward to model because Mars only gets 43 percent of the solar energy of Earth, and early Mars was lit by a younger sun believed to have been 25 percent dimmer than it is today.

"That makes it very likely early Mars was cold and icy," he said in a statement.

And the planet continues to change today. Recent research found that the planet is emerging from an ice age involving shrinking polar caps and growing glaciers at midlatitudes.

"All around the ice cap, there is evidence for a climate change from ice age to interglacial period," planetary scientist Isaac Smith told Space.com. Smith studied the shrinking ice caps while at the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado.

"Layered ice deposits at the poles of Mars record a detailed history of accumulation and erosion related to climate processes. Radar investigations measure these layers and provide evidence for climate changes such as ice advance and retreat," wrote Smith for "Science," the

American Association for the Advancement of Science journal.

We're learning new things about Mars all the time, such as that water may have been flowing on Mars for a lot longer than initially thought. Or there's a giant impact crater that looks like a tree stump that was recently identified on the surface of Mars. Definitely worth learning more about.

"How Far Away is Mars?" Space.com

"World: Lowest Temperature" Arizona State University

"World: Highest Temperature" Arizona State University

"Mars Facts" NASA

"Temperatures measured at Gale Crater higher than expected" Phys.org

"Discovering Mars: A History of Observation and Exploration of the Red Planet," by William Sheehan and Jim Bell (University of Arizona Press, 2021)

"Unveiling the ancient climate of Mars" Harvard

"NASA Radar Finds Ice Age Record in Mars' Polar Cap" NASA JPL

"An ice age recorded in the polar deposits of Mars" "Science"

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What is the temperature on Mars? | Space

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Per Aspera expands ocean terraforming with Blue Mars expansion – PC Gamer

Posted: at 10:47 am

Terraforming management simulator Per Aspera has a new expansion on the way, arriving May 2nd 2022, that will deepen the game around that all-important source of life: Water. New buildings will allow transport over your newly-made Martian oceans, as well as exploitation of underwater resources andperhaps most importantlyfisheries to harvest the life you've seeded in those oceans.

Other buildings shown off in the annoucement trailer look to include floating power stations, ports, shipyards, research outposts, and perhaps floating algae and fish farms. Developer Tln Industries said in a press release that new outposts will allow the research of underwater special sites, and that the update will also improve the Per Aspera's simulation of Mars' water cycle.

I'm pretty positive on Per Aspera, a game that I gave an 85 in initial review and which has improved a lot since launch. The first expansion, Green Mars, was completely free, adding more fauna, delineated biomes, and outdoor gardening as well as landscaping. It's a neat game, and one I'm glad is getting more materialbecause it's not just a sim game, it's also a narrative one that encourages you to think and behave like an AI.

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Teburu could be the future of board games that gamers actually want – TechRadar

Posted: at 10:47 am

Board games are enjoying their time in the spotlight right now, but I'm not just talking about stuff like Monopoly or Cluedo. There's been a boom in titles that vary in playstyle, complexity and design, appealing to a wide range of demographics.

Given board games are still mostly entirely physical (with some popular titles getting digital board game adaptations and ports on Tabletop Simulator) it's pretty hard to imagine what the future of board games will look like without picturing the Hologame Table from Star Wars. But a bridge connecting us to this holographic fantasy setup might finally have appeared.

Teburu is a platform created by Xplored that can be best described as a console for your games. It allows tabletop games to take advantage of digital assets and features, all while retaining the physical and social aspects that make them great. The platform itself simply folds out and must be placed underneath the physical game pieces (provided you're playing a title supported by Teburu).

Part of its appeal is its simplicity. The system uses a combination of sensors built into the board, a series of electronic identification tags that must be placed on miniatures and tokens, and the official Teburu companion app.

The board can also track individual tiles, and even comes with physical dice packed with fancy tech that allows the app to read and log your scores. Most of the marketing material I've seen focuses on Teburu's own game The Bad Karmas and the Curse of the Zodiac but other Teburu-compatible games are also being developed in collaboration with Vampire: The Masquerade and Sword & Sorcery.

This gets into the other major appeal of Teburu for nerds like me: it's still a physical system. I'm a big fan of board games and tabletop RPGs, and while I do like to play titles like Terraforming Mars or Scythe on Steam, the video game versions can't replace the feeling of sitting down with friends, in person, around a table, with snacks.

It was something that was sorely missed during the lockdowns of the Covid-19 pandemic. Playing online certainly scratched the itch, but it can't replace the real deal for me.

The board game community contains a lot of collectors who have an appreciation for physical hardware, myself included, and I'm not prepared for tablets and computers to make my growing pile of RPG rulebooks and games irrelevant just yet.

The Bad Karmas does a great job of showcasing Teburu's capabilities. This is a boss-battle style game where players will move character miniatures around a board while fighting huge monsters inspired by the twelve zodiac signs.

While you still have to physically move your models around the board, you're able to view important information on your smartphone, which acts almost like a controller. A separate tablet, such as an iPad, will display all the essential game information, including player turn order, enemy health, and a general overview of what's going on with the game.

While you'll have to move enemy miniatures around the board, Teburu will control their actions and movement. It feels like you're fighting an AI video game enemy rather than one that's usually dictated by random dice rolls. Teburu's base has other features, too, with different light-up sections that indicate the direction of incoming enemy attacks. Thanks to those sensors in the base of your player models, the enemy AI knows exactly where you are on the board.

At the end of each match, you're even handed a video game-like scoreboard to browse. The companion app awards titles for player achievements, such as match MVP or taking the most damage. It really does feel like a hybrid system rather than a true analog or digital board game, so while it's no hologram, the goblin part of my brain that loves flashing lights and graphics definitely feels appeased.

I'm not just excited for The Bad Karmas though, as fun as that title looks, but for what Teburu could offer more mainstream titles in the future if it proves to be successful. Yes, there are some official collaborations in the works, but if Teburu can be expanded for use across other established games then I'm completely sold on the idea.

That's going to require a lot of development within the companion app, but having the ability to enjoy your favorite games without any of the boring or frustrating admin sounds like a blessing. One of the biggest issues we have when buying a new game is learning the ropes and trying to remember a complex new set of rules. People who aren't swift learners, like myself, have to treat the initial set up and playthrough like a pancake the first one never comes out right.

Teburu is capable of correcting players if they're trying to perform an action or move that's against the rules. While physical rulebooks collect all the information you need to play a game, pausing to swot up can be a nuisance, and often 'illegal' moves won't be detected until many moves after they've already occurred.

Naturally, this isn't going to be something that appeals to all board game fans so it falls under a slightly niche demographic, but it certainly feels like this is a halfway point between traditional board game systems and something being entirely online or even VR-based.

It also isn't the first time we've seen board games dipping their toes into the world of digital, with the likes of One Night Ultimate Werewolf and Gloomhaven both having an official app that can be used alongside the game. Descent Legends in the Dark also made some waves last year when it was released thanks to integrating a mobile app to manage enemy movements, story content and the general numerical game admin.

Supporting a crowdfunding project comes with its risks so we can't advise you to pledge, but if this is something you're interested in supporting then there's still some time left on Teburus Kickstarter. The 170 (around $185 / 140 / AU$250) price is steep, but far from outlandish in the world of tabletop games, where Warhammer miniatures can cost a small fortune and many of the best board games cost as much as a full-priced triple-A video game.

I really hope Teburu delivers on its promise, and thankfully Xplored founder Davide Garofalo confirmed that Teburu will be an open platform, with hopes to provide developer kits to companies of any size who want to bring their games to the platform. That will allow players to use existing board games in their collection (including the figurines and tokens from those games) with Teburu in the future.

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Putin has launched the first economic world war, and the EU and the West are his targets – MarketWatch

Posted: at 10:46 am

As momentous as Russias invasion of Ukraine is, the most strategically important event in recent weeks was the global economic war between Russia and the U.S. and its allies. Russia, however, has been preparing to confront the West and challenge the Western socio-economic model for a long time.

Russias strategic interests in Ukraine are well-known. The geography and history of Russia compel its leaders to create and preserve a buffer between Moscow and the major powers in Western Europe, and to ensure access to the Black Sea. Ukraine is crucial to both goals. But beyond Ukraine, the Kremlin perceives the eastward expansion of Western influence, including into Russia, to be a modern invasion by stealth that threatens the Russian regime.

It is not Western organizations such as NATO and the European Union that challenge the Kremlin, but the socio-economic model that enabled the West to win the Cold War and that enticed Eastern Europeans to want to join the West. When he became president of Russia in 2000, in the wake of the Soviet Unions collapse and the economic crisis of the 1990s, Vladimir Putin inherited a broken country. Many Russians contemplated joining the European Union, hoping that alignment with the West would bring a better life.

The priority for the Russian establishment was to stabilize and rebuild the country. Putin just wanted to survive politically. Following the example of past successful Russian leaders, he centralized power. Knowing he needed stability and growth to slow the rate of emigration and address Russias poor demographics, Putin sought to make Europe economically dependent on Moscow. Looking back at history and the current power balance, he identified Germany as the lynchpin of his strategy of dependence.

Russian ties to Germany were key to establishing ties to the European Union more broadly, but this was only the beginning of Russias strategy in Europe.

Russian ties to Germany were key to establishing ties to the European Union more broadly, but this was only the beginning of Russias strategy in Europe. Russia opened up its economy to Western investment, established links throughout the Continent and tried to understand the inner workings of EU bureaucracy. It established close business ties with Italy, France and later Hungary, and built a political network that would help expand its influence in Europe. For Moscow, learning about European vulnerabilities was just as important as building up its economy and growing Russia into a stable economic power.

The Kremlin also campaigned to join the World Trade Organization to establish deeper relationships with the worlds biggest economic players. In the process, it benefited from foreign investments in Russia and learned how the global economy works, building partnerships with not just Western economies but also other economic powers. The only problem was that China, its major ally against the West, was not seeing the accelerated growth it hoped for and was still very much dependent on the U.S. market, giving Beijing limited ability to counter U.S. interests in the world and forcing Russia to keep its focus on Europe.

Average Russians saw improvements in their standard of living under Putin. In major Russian cities, life was similar to that in the West. However, when it became a major player in the energy market, Russia also increased its exposure to global economic cycles. The European economic crisis of the 2010s sent shivers through Moscow. Russias economy remained fragile overall, and the gap between urban and rural areas remained dangerously high, potentially threatening Putins control.

At the same time, the West offered an attractive model to rival Russias. It wasnt so much the growing Western influence in Russias buffer zone that bothered the Kremlin, but the fact that ordinary Russians might look at Eastern Europe and see a better model for political organization and economic growth.

Then the pandemic hit. The Russian president apparently feared that the economic insecurity wrought by COVID-19 could threaten his countrys economic security and stability. As the worst socio-economic effects of the pandemic faded, action against the West became urgent. From the Kremlins point of view, this was a unique moment. The U.S. has been trying to reduce its presence in Europe and instead focus on the Indo-Pacific and domestic problems. In other words, from the Kremlins point of view, the trans-Atlantic alliance and the European Union appear weak. Most important, Russias leaders believe they have gained sufficient knowledge of the way the West works and can fight it effectively.

Russia has been preparing to confront the West since at least the early 2000s. Besides stockpiling foreign reserves, Moscow constructed trade blocs and deepened relations with projects like the Eurasian Economic Union. In Europe, it enticed Germany to become dependent on Russian natural gas, which as is clear today made it extremely difficult for Europe to cut off Russian energy imports. Shifting from gas would require Europe to build new infrastructure a costly, time-consuming process.

The close German-Russian partnership also benefited the Kremlins Europe strategy in other ways. To give a practical example, the EU had plans to make the Danube River fully navigable through the establishment of additional canals, increasing Central Europes connection with the Black Sea. This would have given Europe more leverage against Russia at the moment, when the war in Ukraine has forced the rerouting of commercial flows from the Black Sea to much more expensive land routes. Instead, positive relations with Moscow made the project seem unnecessary, and it faded away.

It is no coincidence that after 2012, the first full year that Nord Stream 1 was operational, Europe became much more reluctant to adopt policies that could be seen as anti-Russian.

It is no coincidence that after 2012, the first full year that Nord Stream 1 was operational, Europe became much more reluctant to adopt policies that could be seen as anti-Russian. There was simply no interest in Germany to carry them out. It is also no coincidence that relations between the U.S. and Germany have cooled over that time. The U.S. needed Germany to lead Europe, or at least maintain neutrality, to prevent Russia from expanding its influence in Europe as the U.S. drew back. The fact that Russia joined the World Trade Organization in 2012 gave it even more leverage in the world economy.

It is also worth noting that the Kremlin used personal relationships to shore up its influence. Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was tapped to lead Nord Stream 1. Nord Stream AG also hired former Finnish Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen as a consultant to speed up the permit process in Finland. Former Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi served on the board of Delimobil, a Russian car-sharing service. Former Finnish Prime Minister Esko Aho was on the board of Russias largest bank, Sberbank. Former Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern resigned from the board of Russias state-owned railway company in the early days of the war in Ukraine, while another ex-chancellor, Wolfgang Schussel, remained on the board of Russias Lukoil.

This is just a short list of top politicians, all of whom had at least some influence over their countrys foreign policy discussions. They have certainly been useful to Russian economic growth and the advance of Russias economic strategy in Europe.

Working closely with Europeans for the past two decades has enabled Russia to learn what is important for the stability of their countries. It has also helped the Kremlin better understand their political agendas and support causes that work to its advantage. For example, Russia enthusiastically supported many green policies, like Germanys decision to give up nuclear power which translated into greater reliance on Russian gas. And Russia has openly supported populist parties throughout Europe and effectively used information warfare, all in an attempt to destabilize and ultimately divide Europe.

Globally, Russia has maintained close relations with traditional enemies and competitors of the West. Joining the WTO gave it a stronger position on the global stage, which is used to advance the influence and interests of emerging global players, including the BRICS countries, which also include Brazil, India, China and South Africa. Though the results were modest, Russia promoted the group as an alternative to the West and continued to focus on building ties to China and India, establishing links that it hoped would withstand in a potential confrontation with the West, which were seeing play out today.

To counter the current sanctions, it has looked to China for help. The Eurasian Economic Union gives it proxies for continuing to do business with the world. At the same time, Russias presence in the Middle East and parts of Africa helps it keep the price of oil high high enough that it can keep paying its bills. Influence in the Middle East and the Sahel, two highly unstable but resource-rich areas, also gives Russia more leverage over the world economy.

Russian strategy certainly has its weaknesses, but Russia has options in countering the West.

In building its network, Russia has tried to focus on economics and enhancing weaknesses in the global network. It expanded its influence abroad, making sure the dependencies it was encouraging were strong enough to give it leverage but lose enough to allow its withdrawal when necessary. Russian strategy certainly has its weaknesses, but Russia has options in countering the West during the current global economic war. Supporting EU fragmentation through its economic ties in Europe and using the knowledge of European politics that its gained over the years are likely the most important elements of its strategy. The moment European citizens feel the repercussion of Western sanctions is when the bloc will become more fragile, which will allow Russia to exploit the EUs weaknesses.

The world is witnessing its first economic world war of the modern era. The rules are undefined, and the global economy is complex, meaning collateral damage is unavoidable and frequently unpredictable. Slowly, we are becoming aware of the repercussions the sanctions on Russia are having on the global economy. Less clear are the instruments that Russia can employ against the West. How this will change the world is a mystery. All we can do is look back at what Russia has prepared for and guess what could come next. This is only the beginning.

Antonia Colibasanuis chief operating officer of Geopolitical Futures.

More: This global-conflict expert sees a bleak end for the Ukraine war and for Putin

Also read: American foreign policy needs radical surgery

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Putin has launched the first economic world war, and the EU and the West are his targets - MarketWatch

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New Phase in Dalit Politics: Crisis or Regeneration? – Outlook India

Posted: at 10:46 am

An analysis of the Dalit movement in the country today reveals a paradox. On the one hand, Dalit parties are in electoral decline as sections of the Dalits have moved away to non-Dalit parties, impacting the unity and strength of the Dalit movement. On the other hand, Dalit assertion remains strong, as seen from the strident reaction to atrocities in recent years and emergence of organizations/movements led by new Dalit leaders, such as the Bhim Army in Uttar Pradesh (UP) by Chandrasekhar Azad or Ravan; the Una Dalit Aytachar Ladat Samiti (Una Dalit Atrocity Fight Committee) by Jignesh Mevani in Gujarat; and the Vanchit Bahujan Aaghadi (Coalition of Exploited Bahujans) by Prakash Ambedkar in Maharashtra. These organizations appeal to both the younger educated generation and the rural smaller Dalit groups who, disappointed with older Dalit parties, are moving away to non-Dalit parties. While these changes are manifest in parties such as the Republican Party of India in Maharashtra and the Liberation Panthers in Tamil Nadu, UP provides the best example of this phenomenon as it is the state where Dalit assertion over the last few decades has determined national politics.

The 1980s and 1990s witnessed the rise of political consciousness and strong movements among the Dalits in UP, leading to a dominance of lower-caste parties and identity politics that drove both electoral and mass politics in the Hindi heartland. National parties like the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Indian National Congress (INC), traditionally viewed as Manuwadi (upper-caste) parties, went into decline, and the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), institutionalized as a party espousing social justice, self-respect and dignity, was able to capture state power. The 2000s, in contrast, have witnessed the collapse of the BSP and the revival and strengthening of the BJP. The BSP, which gained a majority in the 2007 assembly elections, failed to win even a single seat in the Lok Sabha election in 2014, nineteen seats in the 2017 assembly elections4 and ten seats in the 2019 Lok Sabha election, though it managed to gain around 20 per cent of the votes each time. While there have been defections from the BSP since 2014, in January 2020, a large number of party workers in eastern UP joined the Samajwadi Party (SP). These developments have led commentators to point to the collapse of the BSP, arguing that Mayawati no longer commands the loyalty of Dalit voters.

However, such analyses merely focus on the electoral fortunes of a significant Dalit party. In the 2000s, the Dalit movement in the country entered a new phase and acquired a more complex character. In contrast to the 1990s, it is experiencing internal fragmentation, which has created uncertainty and ambiguity over both ideology and action. Two significant developments have been responsible for this. First, the waning of identity politics and a shift from the desire for social justice to aspiration impacted by the twin forces of globalization and cultural modernization, creating a divide between the better-off middle class and the poorer, marginalized section of the Dalits. Second, the revival of the BJP under a new-generation leadership, and its promise of economic development and cultural inclusion within the saffron fold, has attracted the lower jatis (sub-castes) and created an ideological divide between the Ambedkarite or pro-BSP and Hindutvawadi or pro-BJP Dalits. The lack of cohesion within the Dalit movement in Uttar Pradesh is also visible in the shifting modes of political action: support to the BJP in the 2014 national elections, but in more recent years, disillusionment, antagonism and strident opposition to the BJP.

In this situation, the earlier ideology and forms of mobilization used by the older Dalit leaders no longer seem to be of appeal. Having achieved a modicum of political empowerment, identity and self-respect in the 1990s, the Dalits today are in search of a political party/movement that can offer them economic betterment. It is on these twin developments, of decline and regeneration, and how they are shaping the future of Dalit politics in the country, that this essay focuses.

In the 1990s, India witnessed the gradual emergence of a small, but influential, young, educated and politically conscious Dalit middle class. This new class reached a critical mass precisely when the Indian polity experienced globalization, moving towards a market-oriented economy, and it represents a different strand in the Dalit movement as it has evolved over the last two decades. While Dalit movements and parties such as the BSP mobilized on issues of socio-political empowerment, such as identity, dignity and self-respect, the rising middle-class Dalit intellectuals have emphasized the need for economic empowerment through a variety of new means, representing the rise of middle-class activism among Dalits. These new aspirations are best exemplified in the Dalit Agenda formulated at the Bhopal Conference in January 2002, which advocated new policies such as Supplier Diversity to create Dalit entrepreneurs. The authors of the Dalit Agenda argued that under the traditional policies of affirmative action and state welfarism, the Dalits have remained mere recipients of welfare, have remained landless/asset-less, below the line of poverty, without a share in the capital in the economy and unable to improve their socio-economic status. Only a tiny elite section of the community or creamy layer has been able to improve their educational attainments and economic status, as well as enter into high-paying jobs in the government, various professions, the media, arts and, increasingly, the private sector.

Arguably, even the extension of reservation of jobs to the private sector would help only this small elite, which is why the Dalit Agenda argued for the need for the democratization of control over capital and a strong Dalit business/industrial class, which could participate equally in the national economy.

The setting up of a Dalit Chamber of Commerce, too, has been the work of this new class. It is also visible in a spate of academic writings an attempt to reinterpret Dalit history and politics by a new generation of Dalit scholars, examples being Suraj Yengde, Chinnaiah Jangam and Sambaiah Gundimeda.Simultaneously, the smaller and poorer Dalits, also aspiring for upward mobility, have moved away from traditional parties. There is considerable disillusionment over the failure of the BSP to put forward a socio-economic vision or agenda to address the specific problems of deprivation faced by the Dalits. After the capture of power by the BSP in UP, with a majority in the 2007 assembly election, the Dalits had expected not only self- respect but also improvement in their material situation. While there was some improvement in their socio-economic situation, it did not meet their enhanced expectations. Mayawati is no longer respected as before. Her shift from a Dalit-oriented to a sarvajan policy was viewed to have primarily helped the Jatavs (the dominant sub-caste among the Dalits) and the upper castes who had helped her gain power in 2007. Furthermore, the BSP, since the mid-1990s, because of its preoccupation with gaining state power, has not been a democratizing force as before, when it had moved downwards to mobilize the smaller, poorer Dalit groups, particularly in the backward regions in UP, who have recently entered the mainstream. Consequently, large sections today view it as a purely Jatav party.

The process of modernization often tends to proceed unevenly, benefiting some sections more than others, leading to conflict and competition for political power, economic benefits and social status among social groups both within and across different ethnic categories. Today, the poorer and marginalized Dalit sub-castes who are undergoing a process of cultural modernization influenced by the Hindutva ideology aspire to be part of the larger Hindu identity. BJPRSS leaders have worked silently among these groups, which began to enter the democratic arena, unearthing local histories and myths by which they could link them to Hindutva. For example, the attempt to link three Dalit communities in eastern UP, the Pasis, Musahars and Nishads, with the Ramayana. In a recent study, Badri Narayan has comprehensively shown and provided rich insights into how the Sangh and its vast network of cultural and social outfits have been refashioning its modes of mobilization, thereby assimilating the Dalits, OBCs, tribals and other marginalized communities. The RSS has made the Hindutva meta-narrative appeal to a large section of Indians, particularly the lower castes. Hence, what we are witnessing in UP is politically induced cultural change, the process by which political elites select some aspects of a groups culture, attach new value and meaning to them, and use them as symbols to mobilize the group.It is this fragmentation within the Dalit community and the highly divisive strategies of mobilization used by the BJP that led to as much as 45 per cent, 38.9 per cent and 48 per cent of the non-Jatavs voting for the BJP, in the 2014, 2017 assembly and 2019 Lok Sabha elections respectively. This division helped the BJP obtain high seat and vote percentages at the Centre and in UP, while the BSP lost considerable Dalit support.

Excerpted from The Dalit Truth (Rethinking India series): The Battles for Realizing Ambedkars Vision, Edited by K. Raju, with permission from Penguin Random House India.

(Sudha Pai is a well-known political scientist, author and columnist. Views expressed are personal)

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Crikey Worm: Following the leaders? – Crikey

Posted: at 10:46 am

WAR OF WORDS

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet is reportedly backing Liberal candidate for Warringah Katherine Deves, who is under fire for anti-trans rhetoric including a claim that half of all males with trans identities are sex offenders. The Australian ($) reports this morning that Perrottet sent Prime Minister Scott Morrison a text at the weekend saying he supported Deves campaign to bar trans women from womens sport reportedly calling it the right approach. Deves has apologised in recent days after claiming that transgender children were surgically mutilated and comparing the treatment of anti-trans spokespeople to Nazi trials.

Perrottets reported support is somewhat at odds with his Treasurer Matt Kean, who called for Deves disendorsement over her bigotry, and federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who slammed Deves comments as insensitive, inappropriate, and unacceptable. Interestingly, NSW Labor Leader Chris Minns told 2BG yesterday he thinks young male adolescents have a competitive advantage because of testosterone, The Daily Telegraph ($) reports. But is that true? Transgender athlete and researcher Joanna Harper says the equal playing field is a myth: every elite athlete has advantages (thats why theyre elite), and besides, many trans athletes suppress their testosterone for 12 months before competing, SBS reports.

It comes as the Australian Christian Lobby is targeting Liberals like Trent Zimmerman, Dave Sharma, and Bridget Archer who crossed the floor over Morrisons religious discrimination bill, Guardian Australia reports. The Lobby is papering electorates with a graphic of MPs driving a wrecking ball into religious schools, and some constituents say theyve received automated calls about it. To jog your memory, the trio plus Katie Allen and Fiona Martin voted against the bill, which made it lawful to expel trans students from school.

Choose what you pay and your level of coverage.

About two-thirds of all COVID-19 deaths in Australia have occurred this year, Guardian Australia reports. That means, in four months, our death toll from COVID-19 is already more than double what it was in 2020 and 2021 combined. OK to the figures: so far 6786 people in Australia have died of COVID-19 since March 2020 when the pandemic began and 4547 of them happened in 2022, according to government data. In WA, most of the COVID-related deaths are happening in aged care homes and palliative care, WA Today reports. Of more than 300,000 WA cases and 96 deaths since the start of the year, only 28 people were in intensive care. A spokesperson for WA Health says the average age of a person dying from COVID was 75 years old.

On Tuesday, aged care workers in WA joined their colleagues in Queensland and South Australia in voting to take industrial action including strikes over pay and conditions, The West ($) continues.Wages in aged care are around $23-$25 an hour Labor Leader Anthony Albanese used his budget reply to promise a $2.5 billion aged-care package that would include a submission to get staff a pay rise, whereas Prime Minister Scott Morrison says he will back a pay rise if ordered to by the Fair Work Commission. Speaking of Albo hes officially kicking off Labors election campaign in Perth, the first time any party has launched a campaign in the west, The West ($) reports.

The government is deeply disappointed that the Solomon Islands signed a security pact with China that could see a Chinese naval base less than 2000km off our coast, ABC reports. Minister for the Pacific Zed Seselja met withPrime Minister Manasseh Sogavare last week to convince him it was a dangerous idea and urge him not to sign to no avail.Foreign Minister Marise Payne says the deal is murky and puts the stability of the region at risk.

China is telling us to butt out and stop creating drama, and the Solomon Islands says it wont let China build a military base there but the US Department says the signed pact doesnt rule PRC military deployment out, and Australia says the deal was negotiated and signed in secret, Guardian Australia continues. Indeed US Indo-Pacific chief Kurt Campbell will soon touch down in Honiara to lobby against the deal, the SMH continues. Stay tuned I guess.

In 2015, American man Tom Turcich left his house for a walk a walk hes still on today, along with his furry companion, Savannah. The pairs epic walking journey has crossed six continents, 37 countries and some 45,000km, making him one of just 10 people to have walked quite literally around the world (Savannah is the first dog to do so). Tom was 26 when he set off on his journey with just a sleeping bag, an extra pair of shoes, and a few essentials he met Savannah, his rescue pooch, at a Texan shelter shortly after. Ever since, Tom and Savannah have been held up at knife-point in Panama, stuck for months under lockdown in Azerbaijan, and attended a wedding of new friends in Uzbekistan.

Utterly exhausted just outside a border town in Argentina, Tom says his legs suddenly gave out from beneath him. Savannah promptly came and sat next to him, and rather than panic, he had a sudden moment of gratitude for the journey. And he says the kindness of strangers has moved him too truckers have stopped to give the pair oranges and water, and so many strangers have offered them accommodation. Its been an incredible experience, filled with a crazy amount of kindness, Tom says. Now, he is just 885km from his hometown, where he and Savannah will end their trip. Shes been a terrific companion, he says, trotting along for the 38.6 kilometres they walk eight hours a day, without complaint. And, he adds, her tail is always held high. Shes a true professional.

Wishing you some adventure during your Wednesday, big or small.

Im not going to allow her to be silenced, Im not going to allow her to be pushed aside as the pile on comes in to try and silence her. I will stand up with her, my team is standing up with her and we will make sure that she wont be silenced.

Scott Morrison

The prime minister is standing by his captains pick for Warringah, Katherine Deves, despite her resurfaced claims that transgender children are surgically mutilated and sterilised and (incorrect) claims half of the men who transitioned were sex offenders. She has since apologised. Morrison says he will not allow her to be silenced, but one might argue that Deves views seek to sideline and silence the entire trans community.

For country comparisons, economists use annual GDP growth, which is recorded for all advanced economies four times a year. We have the numbers for the 2021 December quarter for the 59 very highly developed countries listed bythe UNs Development Program(UNDP). These include allOECDmembers and mostInternational Monetary Fundadvanced economies. Australias modest 4.2% annual GDP growthranks43rd out of those 59 economies. Nowhere near leading the world.

The UK, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, Singapore, Estonia, Poland, Hungary and Greece are all above 6%. Ireland, Israel, Malta, Chile, Slovenia, Croatia, Turkey and others are above 9%. The fine print in the Liberal chart says Dec 2019 to Dec 2021. Hmmm. So it picked an odd two-year time interval for which there is no readily available global database. Why?

Last week I wrote a story about JobSeeker. It was an attempt to analyse some data, but now I realise it was a bad take. I apologise for that and am writing this as a clarification High socio-economic areas saw a rise in JobSeeker recipients equal to low socio-economic areas.

I found this to be surprising because the socio-economic data measures disadvantage. The rules that made getting on JobSeeker during the pandemic easier have expired. So discovering that JobSeeker payments remain elevated in areas of socio-economic advantage was unexpected. An unexpected fact usually contains a grain of insight. My job was to find the insight. I failed.

Russian forces seize Kreminna in eastern Ukraine, says governor (Al Jazeera)

Myanmars health system is in collapse, obliterated by the regime (The New York Times)

Catalan president calls for investigation as spyware targets pro-independence leaders (The Guardian)

Sweden riots over Quran burning: What is happening? (Al Jazeera)

Auckland young people out of control as ram-raids ramp up across city (Stuff)

US judge throws out Biden mask mandate for planes and trains (BBC)

Macron allies warn victory not certain as poll lead over Le Pen grows (The Guardian)

At least one killed as police open fire at Sri Lanka protesters (Al Jazeera)

Crypto stocks perform worse than cryptocurrencies (The Wall Street Journal) ($)

Anti-trans rhetoric is nothing but a shameless grab for relevance Dale Sheridan (The SMH): The sad reality is that on most occasions when a trans person obtains a public platform, it has to be used to call out hate and fear. I feel sick to my stomach as I write these words as I brace for the onslaught of more hate as a result of my visibility. How do I even participate in a conversation where my mere existence is framed in so much prejudice? Saving womens sport from the dangerous and disgusting trans woman how do I even respond to this with any sort of logic?

A question Im often asked is: why are people attacking the trans community? I wish I knew. I often wonder how insecure someone must be for the existence of another person to trigger such discomfort and outrage. I struggle to rationalise the tirade of abuse Ive received on occasions once just walking to work and another occasion shopping at my local supermarket. This discomfort could explain the attempts of various laws and policies around the world seeking to ban the trans community from a range of daily settings: bathrooms, healthcare, sports and schools. Theyre a blatant tool to limit and prevent our participation in the community.

This economic model tipped the last 2 elections and its now pointing to a Coalition win Peter Martin (The Conversation): In the latest edition of theAustralian Economic Review, University of Queensland economist Hamish Greenop-Roberts applied the Cameron and Crosby model to the past four elections, the one Labor won in 2010 and the ones the Coalition won in 2013, 2016 and 2019. He found it picked the result three times out of four, putting it on a par with the polls and betting odds, which also got the result right three times out of four.

The crucial difference is the economic model got the results right in each of the past two elections something the others conspicuously failed to do. Asked this week what the economic model would predict for the current election, Greenop-Roberts notes that on one hand, unemployment is much lower than it was at start of this governments term (and far lower than was expected), which the model says should help it get re-elected. On the other hand, inflation is unusually high, which the model says would hurt.

Online

Labor spokesperson for Cities, Urban Infrastructure and Multicultural Affairs Andrew Giles will speak to the Property Councils Ken Morrison about opening borders, attracting skilled migrants, and rejuvenating CBDs in a webinar.

Rescheduled from yesterday, Guardian Australias Katharine Murphy and Essential Medias Pete Lewis will unpack the fortnights political news in a webinar for The Australia Institute.

Yuggera Country (also known as Brisbane)

Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese will face off in the first leaders debate of the 2022 federal election.

Author Lison Mage will speak about her book, Act Before You overThink. Catch this one online too.

Kulin Nation Country (also known as Melbourne)

Crikey is an independent Australian-owned and run outfit. It doesnt enjoy the vast resources of the countrys main media organisations. We take seriously our responsibility to bear witness.

I hope you appreciate our reporting and consider supporting Crikeys work. Join now for your chance at election themed merch.

Peter FrayEditor-in-chief

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Security Implications of ASUU Strikes, by Hassan Gimba – The Source

Posted: at 10:46 am

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) was founded in 1978. Its predecessor, the Nigerian Association of University Teachers (NAUT), was formed in 1965 covering academic staff at the University of Ibadan, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, University of Ife and University of Lagos.

According to its founders, ASUU is a trade union whose objectives include regulation of relations between academic staff and employers, encouraging the participation of its members in the affairs of the university system and the nation, and protecting and advancing the socio-economic and cultural interests of the nation.

It is supposed to be a union of intellectuals seeking not only the socio-political and economic welfare interest of its members within the framework of promoting the cause of university education in Nigeria but the entire good of Nigerians and Nigeria.

The union came into prominence when it staged its first-ever strike and was proscribed by the military government of President Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida on 7th August 1988, and all its property seized. This was because of the national strike it organised that year to get fair wages and university autonomy. Though the union was allowed to resume activities in 1990, it was again banned on 23rd August 1992, after another strike. An agreement was, however, reached on 3rd September 1992, that met several of the unions demands, including the right of workers to collective bargaining.

ASUU organized further strikes in 1994 and 1996 to protest against the dismissal of university teachers by the Sani Abacha military regime (Wikipedia, 2016).

If its first industrial action was in 1988, its longest was in 2020 when it downed tools for nine months. The lecturers, based on their unions aims and objectives to secure adequate funding, improved salary package, autonomy and academic freedom to curb brain drain and ensure the survival of the university system hinged their action on the lack of funding of universities and functionality of the Integrated Payment Portal System, arguing that IPPIS negates autonomy for universities.

On December 17, 2013, ASUU declared a strike that lasted six months over the non-implementation of a 2009 agreement between it and the federal government, which was eventually called off after the latter agreed to some of its demands.

Yet a year after, the union still embarked on a one-week warning strike over the failure of the government to implement the 2009 Agreement and a 2013 MoU. According to the union, Many aspects of the 2013 MoU and the 2009 agreement with the federal government have either been unimplemented or despairingly handled. The agreements are payments of staff entitlements since December 2015, funding of universities for revitalisation, pension, TSA and university autonomy and renegotiation of the 2009 agreement.

But what are the October 2009 agreements reached between the federal government and ASUU after two years of negotiation between the lecturers and a government team appointed by the then education minister, Obiageli Ezekwesili? The government team was led by the then pro-chancellor, University of Ibadan, Gamaliel Onosode while ASUUs team was led by its then-president, Abdullahi Sule-Kano. The agreements reached included conditions of service for university lecturers, funding of universities, university autonomy and academic freedom, and other issues that required legislation to implement.

ASUU has frequently complained that agreeing with the federal government has often been a frustrating journey for our union. Protests and strikes often mark it and require a conscious and focused engagement. The 2001 agreement, which gave birth to the 2009 agreement, was not an exemption. The exception here is the personality leading the government negotiation team.

And so, after strikes in 2017 and 2018, and a period of calm from 2019, ASUU on Monday, November 17th, 2021, announced its plan to embark on another strike in three weeks if the federal government continued to renege on its agreement with it. The union had accused the federal government of failing to implement the agreement after it called off its nine-month strike in December 2020.

Even though, according to an article inDataphytemagazine, ASUU has spent one in every four days on strike in the past six years, it went for another one again on February 14, 2022, and since then, our students are still at home.

Naturally, students have been at the receiving end, and the worse hit is our educational system, of course. However, apart from the disastrous implications on our education system, ASUU strikes negatively impact our economy and may cause a lot of minor and serious crimes to be perpetrated by the fainthearted and those desperate for survival. I will take Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, and its economic importance as a case in point.

ABU Zaria has about 100,000 students. Assuming each student on the average spends N1,000 daily, that is N1 billion injected into the economy of Zaria and its environs. Markets will bubble, the transportation system will be fully engaged, social services will be on full throttle, production will increase, and employment opportunities will grow.

Without this capital injection into the economy of the environment, a lot of businesses and jobs, indirect and direct, that depended on primary services patronised by the students will collapse and many people will be at their wits end to make ends meet. Someone can easily tempt the fainthearted into crime and other vices to survive.

Where there is nothing to do to get by, and with a lack of education and vocational skills, it will not be far-fetched to see some youths joining the crime enterprise just to get paid. Even many educated ones with no means of livelihood can easily fall into that temptation.

This is not even considering the students; able-bodied youth, strong with vibrant brains and impressionable character; any long idleness can easily turn their minds into the proverbial devils workshop.

There are also serious implications of the governments policy of no work, no pay on the community. Perhaps statisticians, criminologists and psychologists may look at the numbers in terms of the rise and fall of crime during ASUU strikes and when schools are in full swing. This is because even during holidays you find students in school unlike when there is a strike.

Most likely,t he governments minders do not look at strikes, especially ASUU strikes, from this perspective. But the government needs to look at the security implications of whatever it does.

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Rationalism, Pluralism, and Fear in the Speech Debate – Liberal Currents

Posted: at 10:44 am

There are many factors in a free society which conspire to make the public sphere an unseemly terrain. Citizen sovereignty increases the stakes of public persuasion by distributing voting power so broadly that personal persuasion alone cannot suffice to keep elected officials in office. Consumer sovereignty leaves political media constrained by the tastes of audiences, who display a remarkably consistent preference to have their politics provided as a genre of sports coverage. Both together create opportunities for individuals seeking either office or audience to do so by adversarial means.

A free media is a rancorous media. Some have deluded themselves that it might be otherwise, believing that the bland mid-century mass media might be, or become again, the norm. But even in the era of the big three networks, there were audiences for New York Post-style political bloodsport. Nostalgia for that bygone media environment forgets much of its rancor. Either way, that time is gone, an anomaly in media history rather than something we might aspire to again, given current technological realities.

The topic of our rancorous public sphere is itself the subject of a great deal of rancor. Central in this particular drama is the specific, recurrent debate over free speech in America, through the lens of what is called cancel culture. This one follows the cyclical rituals of political media more strictly than most; the same concerns are raised in the same way by more or less the same actors or outlets, prompting the same responses issued in the same way in previous outbreaks of hostility, also largely by the same actors and outlets. The matter fizzles for a time, until it is predictably reignited by some new media event or simply some new opinion article which breaks the fragile ceasefire.

Why so much rancor over rancor? Its not just a matter of tone or civility, or of unpleasant rudeness. Its not just the frustration of the criticized. Nor is it simply a matter of selectively supporting some speech over othersof believing in the freedom to say you are wrong but not the freedom to say shut your mouth. None of this gets at the heart of the matter.

For years one side has claimed that certain incidents were infringements of freedom of speech, of association, or even of rule of law. These incidents were less shut your mouth and more fire this person immediately, or, further, join me in calling for this person to be fired. They involve using speech to call for social sanctions, the manner of which can take many forms. A business can be boycotted, an employeerather than facing terminationmay be subject to an embarrassing internal investigation, or reprimand, or on the harsher end, demoted or transferred to a position with fewer prospects for career growth. Publishers can retract articles or papers, or terminate book deals. Brands can terminate sponsorship deals and advertisers can withdraw their buys. Invitations to events can be rescinded or never sent in the first place. Friendships can end. The very mechanisms which sustain and fulfill us in commercial and civil society, and indeed in private life, are also the very mechanisms that can be used to influence our actionsor simply to hurt us.

This of course is to cast it all in a negative light, but the entire problem is that its not possible to characterize these things as illiberal or immoral or even undesirable in general terms. Ending an abusive relationship isnt immoral. Ending a friendship with someone who unpleasantly dominates all conversations with QAnon conspiracy theories is not illiberal. Firing an employee who pressures their direct reports to donate to particular political causes or campaigns is not undesirable. One side calls the demand for and delivering of social sanctions illiberal, or infringements of the liberty of the sanctioned, while others respond by pointing out, correctly, that freedom of speech, of association, and of contract, are all that has been exercised by the sanctioners in these cases.

There is no coherent formulation of rights which renders any of these illiberal. But there are coherent characterizations of the social system as a whole which can.

Jacob Levy describes John Stuart Mills vision of the liberal order as follows:

The idea that persons are free and equal does not categorically distinguish between state and non-state denials of freedom and equality. The moral interests protected by liberal freedom and equality must be defended against associations and groups as well as against the state: for example, racial discrimination by private employers and schools and in private housing markets can maintain a racial caste system, and the extension of civil rights norms into the private sphere has been a major liberal triumph. Liberty, no less than equality, demands protection against non-state actors.[1]

Levy refers to this as the theory of congruence, the idea that every aspect of liberal democracy must share the character of a proper liberal state. Ernest Gellner, in his discussion of civil society, also focused on the overall character of the system. He expressed dissatisfaction with the traditional definition of civil society as that set of diverse non-governmental institutions which is strong enough to counterbalance the state and, while not preventing the state from fulfilling its role of keeper of the peace and arbitrator between major interests, can nevertheless prevent it from dominating and atomizing the rest of society. Many examples from history which fit that definition imposed a most demanding culture, one which modern man would find intolerably stifling.[2]

He suggested that the civil society that we liberal democrats really desire and really have is modular, allowing the forging of links which are effective even though they are flexible, specific, instrumental.

Modular man is capable of combining into effective associations and institutions, without these being total, many-stranded, underwritten by ritual and made stable through being linked to a whole inside set of relationships, all of these being tied in with each other and so immobilized. He can combine into specific-purpose, ad hoc, limited association, without binding himself by some blood ritual. He can leave an association when he comes to disagree with its policy, without being open to an accusation of treason. (. . .)Yet these highly specific, unsanctified, instrumental, revocable links or bonds are effective! The associations of modular man can be effective without being rigid![3]

But this character is a sociological development that cannot simply be constructed to spec. And the congruence theory, on its own, is anyway unworkable, as Levy himself immediately notes:

[I]t does not make sense for the liberal state to tell churches that they must respect the religious freedom of their current and ongoing members in the sense that they must treat any or all religious beliefs as compatible with membership, the way that the liberal state must treat any or all religious beliefs as compatible with citizenship. (. . .) A church that is unable to insist on adherence to its own religious tenets as a condition of membership is unable to be a church. (. . .)When the church calls the police to evict dissenters as trespassers, the state is not infringing on religious liberty; it is respecting the rights of the church qua property owner and thereby the associational freedom of the churchs members.[4]

For simple logical reasons a liberal democracy cannot be congruent through and through, because to make it so would be an incongruence itself: to force churches to allow freedom of worship of any kind from its members and on its premises would be to effectively abolish freedom of worship and association at all, in practice.

The congruence theory is a reduction of the type of liberalism which Levy calls rationalism: the attempt to impose liberalism from a powerful center. Its opposite is pluralism, which Levy reduces to the pure liberal theory of freedom of association.

The pure theory holds that, what individual persons are free to do singly, they ought to be free to do in association with one another; and rights that they are free to waive, they ought to be free to waive as against groups of which they are members. (. . .)[P]ersons should be free to form any associations or institutions that they wish, to structure and govern them however they wish, and to live according to the rules and norms that the associations generate. Their freedom to create associations and institutions means that the associations and institutions then take on a moral and legal existence of their own, which in effect means that associations ought to have complete freedom to govern themselves by whatever procedures and rules they wish, and to admit or refuse whomever they wish.[5]

But this, too, is not satisfactory.

A world of pure freedom of association (. . .) could be a world in which one generations persons all give or bequeath their land to their associations, leaving no physical space outside the control of one or another group for their successors. That means that the succeeding generations might have, literally, no place to go if they wish to exit the groups into which they are born, no resources of space in which they could assemble their own dissident, hybrid, or rival associations.[6]

From a pure theory perspective, there is nothing wrong with firing someone for their political views or their religion. There is nothing wrong with a coworker, or even an outsider, calling for someone to be fired, or demoted, or publicly reprimanded. There is nothing wrong with a churchs leadership announcing before their congregation that they are investigating statements madeon any topic, in any settingby one of the congregants. Outside of the realm of theory, things can, and have, gone much further than this:

In the early twentieth century, the Ford Motor Company established a Sociological Department, dedicated to inspecting employees homes unannounced, to ensure that they were leading orderly lives. Workers were eligible for Fords famous $5 daily wage only if they kept their homes clean, ate diets deemed healthy, abstained from drinking, used the bathtub appropriately, did not take in boarders, avoided spending too much on foreign relatives, and were assimilated to American cultural norms.[7]

The pure theory does not suffer from logical defects the way that congruence does, but instead suffers from all too easily producing an utterly illiberal system. For their part, the early liberals were not especially interested in pure logical consistency. Though they valued property rights very highly, they outlawed primogeniture and entail, the traditional English approach to inheritance.

A free, democratic, commercial society was thought of as more than simply a state that respected rights of various kinds. It was a society of a particular kind, one characterized by mobility, the rise and fall of elites based on achievement, and a certain fluidity. (. . .)[T]here is an important liberal argument against entail that is concerned (. . .)with the stagnating effect on society of a system that prevents the division, sale, and circulation of land.[8]

Neither congruence nor the pure theory of free association provide a formula by which we can arrive at a truly liberal democratic system. Indeed, no such formula is possible. Instead, the organization of society is largely left to how people persuade one another and are persuaded to associate, transact, [and] contract[.] The dynamism that is unleashed by liberty must then be checked by cautious liberals keeping the character of the overall system, as it develops and changes, in view. If it becomes too rigid, too stifling, too incongruent with the ideal of liberal democracy, we ought to consider what can be done to make it more accommodating, more flexible, and more modular. A completely congruent system is impossible, but piecemeal reforms towards congruence are essential.

This tense balance between pluralism and rationalism requires constant adjustment and readjustment. The process never ends, and some of the rationalist interventions may be quite historically contingent indeed. Will Wilkinson captures the spirit of this when he writes:

[T]here is no reason to think that it is possible or desirable to assign one and only [one] jurisdictional level to each type of public good or domain of regulation. Sometimes a good is best provided at a lower level, but providing it involves solving a collective action the lower-level jurisdiction cant handle without a higher-level assist. Similarly, regulation at any level can be captured by special interests. Sometimes the best solution is to shift or share regulatory authority to/with a level of government that has not been captured.

Sometimes what seems like a good liberal idea in theory has, in practice, been exploited for illiberal ends. Rationalist interventions can be strategic, of course, implemented with a view to fostering a liberal democratic character over the long run. But they can also be quite tactical, as Wilkinson suggests.

From the perspective of Levys pure theory, America has the most expansive free speech regime in the world. Elsewhere, rationalist interventions are enacted in order to create greater congruence in the exercise of speech and association. Hate speech laws, and banning certain types of illiberal or anti-democratic political parties, are the most typical examples. Though many who begin from the pure logic of rights consider these illiberal, Levys framework suggests we should not, at least in the abstract. They are clearly aimed at reducing social inequality and avoiding the takeover of the political system by totalitarians; in other words, they are rationalist attempts to keep the character of the system congruent with liberal values.

Now, I do not think that real world regimes that implement hate speech regulations in particular have a very good track record applying them in good faith or in a way that does more good than harm. In France, for example, they punished the comedian Dieudonne Mbala Mbala for making a joke about the terrorist attack on Charlie Hebdo, but had never punished, well, Charlie Hebdo in the years before the attack for its many jokes aimed at minorities. And while I think theres merit to the Germans banning neo-Nazi parties, in general I think it is ill-advised to allow the parties in power to choose which of their potential rivals to take out of the running.

As Levy pointed out, it would be illiberal in the extreme to force a church to allow believers and nonbelievers alike to attend and speak as freely as they desire. To attempt to enforce bonds of friendship or personal closeness would be totalitarian, plain and simple. But regulating employment relations in order to make them more congruent is perfectly justifiable. And of course, much of the energy of cancel culture debates center on the threat of having your employment terminated because of something you have said or something you believe.

Here in America, we have protected classes against whom it is illegal for employers to discriminate. In Europe they extend protections of this kind to religion or belief, political or any other opinion, among others. Unlike America, they also do not have at-will employment, meaning that the employer has the burden of showing cause for termination, and it is illegal for religion or belief, political or any other opinion to be that cause. Fords paternalistic scheme is straightforwardly illegal in the European model.

The European approach to employment and belief-based discrimination could go a long way towards addressing worries over the politicization of the workplace. Of course, it would not go all the way, as nothing, in a free society, can. And if one is criticized or insulted by, and in front of, ones coworkers in a way that one finds humiliating, especially if this is a regular occurrence, it can become psychologically difficult to stick with the job, even if your employer cannot fire you. Some speech of this kind could be construed as harassment, or creating a hostile work environment, and might therefore be legally actionable. But theres a very high threshold of speech that could create psychological harms that would fall below what was legally actionable, or below what was certain enough to be legally actionable to consider engaging our expensive legal system.

Another concern of the cancel culture debate is that there has been a chilling effect, that fewer viewpoints can be expressed publicly than before. But here I believe pluralism has actually done its work. As Jamelle Bouie has noted, when Alexis de Tocqueville came to America in the 1830s, he found its public sphere profoundly conformist. The reason? Unlike the mixed constitutions of the old world, which provide multiple potential social perches from which to speak, Americas unmixed republic produced an intellectual monoculture:

There is no religious or political theory that cannot be preached freely in the constitutional states of Europe and that does not penetrate the others; for there is no country in Europe so subject to one single power that he who wants to speak the truth does not find support capable of assuring him against the consequences of his independence. If he has the misfortune to live under an absolute government, he often has the people for him; if he inhabits a free country, he can take shelter behind the royal authority if need be. The aristocratic fraction of the society sustains him in democratic regions, and the democracy in the others. But in the heart of a democracy organized as that of the United States, one encounters only one single power, a single element of force and success, and nothing outside it.[9]

Today, however, the combination of partisan polarization of media funding and audiences, on the one hand, crowdfunding platforms such as Patreon and Substack, on the other, and the enormous long tail of content, have all conspired to create more perspectives represented and accessible in public than ever before in history. Beyond these there is also access to the ideas expressed in the past, and also ideas being expressed today in other countries in which different political conditions currently apply.

The problem is not getting more points of view into the public sphere, for that has never been accomplished more effectively than it is today. I do not think that the now quite consistent findings that people feel less free to speak their minds can be dismissed, but I dont think the end result has been a monoculture in the public sphere, because it does not take a large number of people in relative terms to produce an enormous array of views accessible to the public. I do think it suggests a problem with our current communicative environment that so many people feel on guard about what they can say.

I believe it is more likely that there were stricter boundaries around what one could say fifty or sixty years ago without serious social repercussions, but if many fewer people felt those boundaries as constraining, that is worth noting. And its worth thinking about what might be done to lower the overall pressure perceived by the typical person. I do think that an important part of what pushes this pressure up are the very articles, produced at an industrial scale, sounding the alarm about a speech crisis. This is exactly the sort of effect that has led some, such as myself, to question whether the coverage has been proportional to the problem. But I am not suggesting that disproportionate coverage is the sole or main explanation for the survey results, by any means.

Levys rationalism is chiefly focused on how strong central states can intervene to create a more liberal society. I do not think that the state provides the correct tools for addressing the feeling evoked by these surveys. But rationalism can be extended to include the use of any means to promote a society that is more congruent with liberal democratic ideals overall.

It is my belief that many of the troubles of our dayincluding concerns over how free people feel to express themselvesstem from the punitiveness of our culture. One of the means employed to improve the situation should therefore simply be persuasion.

For the rancorousness of our free press very often reflects the deepest desires of its audiences to inflict punishment upon evildoers. Hysterical front pages from Jack the Ripper to the Central Park Five stand in historical testimony to this persistent fact. The public sphere in a free society is the venue for the public to whip itself up into a frenzy, and in so doing, put pressure on agents of the statepolice, prosecutors, and legislators. But it also puts pressure on employers, community leaders, business partners, and even friends. This pressure is not to solve some problem, to, say, more effectively fight crime or racism. Instead, it is a pressure to vent the publics fears and visceral desires to inflict punishment upon the wicked.

I do not believe this can be done away with. It is far too persistent a feature of free media, and empowered rather than discouraged by 21st century developments in media technology and business. But I believe we can move it in a better direction, on the margins. And one way I think we can do this is by insisting that people take seriously the harms we visit upon one another, for good reasons and for bad, knowingly or not.

A 2020 Pew survey found a quarter of adult Americans experienced severe forms of online harassment, with eleven percent experiencing sustained harassment. Most alarming is the finding that nearly half of adults under 30 had experienced severe online harassment, with sixty-four percent experiencing online harassment of some kind. Its hard to understand precisely what the respondents mean by some of these categories, but Pew did ask how upsetting the incidents were, with ten percent of all adults calling the incidents extremely upsetting and a further fourteen percent calling them very upsetting. Among women these numbers go up to fifteen and eighteen percent respectively, meaning fully a third of adult women have experienced online harassment that is either extremely or very upsetting.

Half of those who had been harassed believed that they were harassed because of their political views. These experiences alone may explain the results of the surveys discussed above in which Americans state they feel less free to talk about politics than they did in the past.

Pews severe forms of online harassment include physical threats, stalking, and sexual harassment. No one considers threatening to rape and murder people to be protected speech, much less the carrying out of the threat. But the dynamics of public speech arent so neat and tidy that we can leave these out of our account. An incisive but polished polemic which goes viral and draws enormous amounts of attention and ire onto its target runs the risk of creating a cascadethe sort of Internet stampede I assume all readers are quite familiar with. Even when the polemic is aimed at the most deserving of targets, even when it is very carefully written, even when the author specifically demands that the target not be subject to harassmenteven if the lions share of the stampede is made up of messages that are perfectly civilstill, the end result may amount to overkill.

It takes very few death or rape threats to ruin ones day, to put it lightly. Even if most of the messages on social mediaor wherever they may bemake a defensible criticism in respectable language, if a few such threats get swept into the mix, it will very likely color how the person experiencing it views the entire incident. And even without threats, one merited criticism is experienced very differently than one hundred, or one thousand, all arriving within a matter of hours or even minutes.

Moving beyond our hypothetical respectful polemic with its by and large respectful social media follow ups, in the real world the lions share of messages will not be as nice as all that. Pews two less severe forms of online harassment are offensive name-calling and purposeful embarrassment. In small doses it may seem silly to mention these things at all, but even those with the thickest of skins can stagger under the weight of dozens or hundreds of people characterizing you in the worst terms imaginable and actively seeking to show how simultaneously idiotic, pathetic, and evil you are. Even if the typical such incident isnt an unbearable burden, we can surely agree, as fellow human beings, that it likely does not feel wonderful, and can leave a person shell-shocked, heightening any anxieties or insecurities they already have or even creating new ones.

Consider, also, anecdotes recounted, by Anne Applebaum, in her essay about high status individuals occupying prestigious positions who were subjected to the wrath of The New Puritans. It is easy enough to dismiss these as the troubles of the well to do, but she mentions in passing that some among them experienced suicidal ideation, and in one case, even committed suicide. I dont think, as a fellow human being, this is something that should simply be brushed off.

Its quite possible their privileged lives left them more vulnerable to this outcome. Consider In The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, Walter J. Torres and Raymond M. Bergner explain:

[A]n individual suffers humiliation when he makes a bid or claim to a certain social status, has this bid or claim fail publicly, and has it fail at the hands of another person or persons who have the status necessary to reject the claim. Finally, what is denied is not only the status claim itself, but also and more fundamentally the individuals very status to have made such a claim at all.

Whether the incidents that Applebaum and others like her have recounted involved temporary or permanent setbacks, they were no doubt perceived by the individuals in question as, to use Torres and Bergners words, a literal de-grading, entailing a significant loss of status that had been, up until then, successfully claimed and acted on and thus a loss of the individuals range of behavioral eligibilities in some community or communities.

The consequences of such de-grading, felt to be severely humiliating treatment by the individuals undergoing it, can be quite extreme; Suffering severe humiliation has been shown empirically to plunge individuals into major depressions, suicidal states, and severe anxiety states, including ones characteristic of posttraumatic stress disorder.

I think there is a strong argument to be made that high status occupations and prestigious institutions, together with their intensely competitive pipelines, both create a higher risk environment and select for a higher risk type of person, when it comes to experiencing setbacks as a harm. The tenured professors rivals who sought the same position, and had the same life trajectory of always succeeding in the ambitious goals they had set out to accomplish, might very well experience similar harms simply from having failed to obtain that position.

To accept this, we do not need to believe that anyone is owed a prestigious position, or even that it is wrong to publicly criticize them and actively work to remove them from that position. No doubt a politician or police officer who was taking bribes would be at similar risk for psychological harm if their crimes were exposed to the public; that is no argument against exposing those crimes.

All I wish to emphasize, for now, is that these harms are real, and just as we wouldnt doubt that people far removed from positions of social power are full human beings capable of being hurt, we ought not to doubt it of Applebaums subjects and their peers either. And of course, bullying and its psychological consequences are present at every level of the social hierarchy. This need not involve physical intimidation to cause harm; verbal abuse, especially when perpetuated in groups rather than by lone bullies, is quite capable of driving people to suicidal ideation.

No one defends verbal abuse as a category, but it stands in uncomfortable relation to freedom of speech. Verbal abuse alone is not necessarily a crime in this country. It may in some instances be construed as harassment, which is a crime, but the legal waters can be quite murky here. In practice, the boundaries between frivolous insults and verbal abuse are more ambiguous than we might like.

Let us now consider the harms that can be brought about through the exercise of other liberties. Freedom of association and contract allow people to band together for comfort, companionship, and to coordinate group action. It also allows people to enter into employment relations in order to provide something for sale and thereby to pay for the livelihood of employees and business owners alike. In short, these freedoms allow people to work together to fulfill their material, moral, and emotional needs, by entering into relations of mutual support and mutual dependence. But dependence is coterminous with vulnerability, and the types of punishments that association and contract make possible are far more severe than verbal abuse alone.

I have discussed how at-will employment might be reformed, but for the time being, that is the model that Americans live under. And under that model, what keeps most people in their jobs most of the time is more the lack of a reason to let them go, rather than a positive reason to keep them, specifically, on board. There are switching costs associated with finding a replacement and getting them ramped upcosts that, as I write this, are higher than they have ever been in my lifetimebut this important friction aside, the difficulty of objectively measuring employee performance leaves a great deal up to perceptions, which can be quite slippery and vulnerable to suggestion. This is most acute in white collar or knowledge economy settings where objective outputs are few and such outputs as exist are produced by teams, for which it can be quite impossible to determine individual contribution with precision. In the ordinary course of business, simply making a bad impression on the wrong person can set you on an uphill battle to maintain your position, never mind grow your career within the firm.

Under these conditions, if someone wants to make trouble for you for reasons entirely orthogonal to your job performance, it is not that difficult. We ought not to dismiss the threat that even a single social media user can pose to someones position with their current employer, any more than we should dismiss the impact of a single social media users threats of violence. It would not take a great deal of negative attention for management to begin to judge an employees perceived PR liabilities as exceeding the cost of replacing them.

But risk analysis aside, we ought not to underrate the psychological stress of having people publicly calling for you to lose your job, or even for termination to be considered. The impact of reprimands and internal investigations ought not to be dismissed either. Both could be considered a form of public shaming, whether they are done before the broader public or simply before ones coworkers. And the precarious nature of perceptions within an organization are such that raising the possibility that someone is a problem makes it sharply more likely people will consider them one regardless of the outcome of an investigation.

No one is owed a good reputation, and it falls to all of us to do the best we can to manage our own, and to stand up for others we feel are being wrongfully condemned. My point is not that criticism, reprimands, investigations, and termination are never warranted. My point is simply that we should be clear eyed about the harms they can produce, whether the actions that produce them are warranted or not. Too often, law and order conservatives are willing to dismiss the harms suffered by those put in contact with our criminal justice system, simply because some of those people turn out to have been correctly suspected of committing serious crimes. If liberals can recognize that the perpetrators of violent crimes are human beings whose dignity and safety is still worth caring about, surely we can extend this insight to racist or insensitive coworkers. Even when we agree the punishmentwhether jail time or termination of employmentfits the offense, we ought not to give in to the temptation to dehumanize the punished.

Feeling anxiety over losing ones job is hardly irrational, even among the relatively affluent and successful. No one can tell you how long it will take for you to find a new job, and therefore how long you will be drawing down whatever cash you were able to set aside before that point. Even if getting stuck in long term unemployment is unlikely for a given person, it is much more likely when you are already unemployed to begin with. And of course, with the increased chance of long term unemployment comes the other risks that increase with that; being unable to afford basics such as food, shelter, or medical care.

Even if we move beyond employment, where the potential harms are more obvious, other voluntary associations create vulnerabilities as well. To be stripped of membership, or even simply to be humiliated in front of other members, are perfect examples of Torres and Bergners de-grading, with the potential for the same sorts of psychological harms.

One can believe, as I do, that liberty is a central pillar of a liberal society, that it is the beating heart of the dynamism of liberal societies, and also believe that its edges can be very sharp, and cause real harm.

We might be better off if more people, before participating in their punitive desires or collective calls for blood, took a moment to consider the human cost of such personal indulgences. Even if punishment is merited, even if we think it is important, we need not revel in it. It is the reveling, the indulgence, actively encouraged by the culture of our public sphere, which I believe leads to excesses. If more people take these harms seriously, perhaps they will feel that they ought, before jumping on some media event bandwagon, to put in the proper time to understand what is known and with what certainty, and the substance of itor not, and simply leave well enough alone. Perhaps some will try speaking with HR or a manager first, rather than jumping as a first approach to gathering coworker signatures on a public petition to discipline or fire one of their colleagues.

These are the kinds of considerations that we ought to encourage as a matter of cultural and individual ethic. Its no cure-all, and theres no mechanism by which we guarantee such cultural changes will get adopted in the first place. But for those with an interest in this topic seeking to make a difference through persuasion, this is the route I would suggest.

While I dont think the matter has been empirically settled by any means, I dont believe that the challenges of speech in Americaeven including the red state anti-CRT billsare anywhere near the greatest problem in American society. The scale of abuse, humiliation, and violence on display in immigration enforcement, child protective services, and the criminal justice system are difficult to measure up against in this respect.

Nevertheless, a smaller problem is still a problem, and there is merit in trying to understand it. Many conservatives in the Cold War pointed to the real horrors of communism abroad in order to distract from the equally real horrors of Jim Crow at home, to say nothing of many problems that were smaller but worth talking about. When the chances of open nuclear warfare have increased, as it undoubtedly has today due to Russias war on Ukraine, it becomes rather difficult for any other problem, no matter how widespread or severe, to measure up. That does not mean we ought to ignore those problems.

The role of public and private constraints on and penalties against speech is a topic of central concern in the liberal tradition. Given that our cycle of re-litigating these questions by recourse to the same talking points over and over seems nowhere near an end, we ought at least to try to improve that conversation.

In the above, I set out to do just that, first by providing a model for thinking about the interplay between individual liberty and the character of the social system overall, and second by encouraging people to take the harms associated with cultural punitiveness more seriously.

[1] Jacob T. Levy, Rationalism, Pluralism, and Freedom (Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2015), 52.

[2] Ernest Gellner, Conditions of Liberty: Civil Society and Its Rivals (London: Penguin Books, 1996), 5-8.

[3] Ibid. 99-100.

[4] Jacob T. Levy, Rationalism, Pluralism, and Freedom (Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2015), 53.

[5] Jacob T. Levy, Rationalism, Pluralism, and Freedom (Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2015), 42-43.

[6] Ibid. 47

[7] Elizabeth Anderson, Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Dont Talk about It) (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019), 48-49.

[8] Jacob T. Levy, The Multiculturalism of Fear (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 2004), 209.

[9] Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans. Harvey Claflin Mansfield and Delba Winthrop (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2012), 244.

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After School Satan Club rejected by Northern York School Board vote – PennLive

Posted: at 10:44 am

A near-unanimous school board vote Tuesday night struck down a proposal to create an After School Satan Club at the Northern York Elementary School.

The proposal was initiated by Samantha Groome, a resident of the district. Every board member except Thomas Welch voted against allowing the club to form.

Someone voted in favor, eh? was the first reaction of Lucien Greaves, the cofounder of the Temple of Satan that created the national After School Satan Club. It is indicative of a school board that has no idea what its limits are and its function is.

At least 300 people gathered to share viewpoints that ranged from emphatic support to vehement opposition of the proposal to form the club. The vast majority of voices, however, voiced dissent.

Many parents cited scripture to reinforce their points of belief. Some heckled opposition speakers. And some rose to the microphone to tell Christians to show Christian love to all.

Jodie Osborne of Wellsville delivered an impassioned speech citing scripture.

Im sad all we are talking about is Satan. Its not about Satan, its about God, Osborne said. Wrongs will be righted, and if we dont start standing now, were going to lose our nation.

Paul Miller took to the microphone and told the community to cast those in favor of the club out of town.

You shouldnt be here. Theres no room for you here. If this freaking group does get voted in, lets do something about it, Miller told the crowd.

The After School Satan Club is an after-school program that promotes self-directed education by supporting the intellectual and creative interests of students, according to its website.

The group does not worship Satan, nor does it try to proselytize. It seeks to promote free inquiry and rationalism, according to its website.

It was clear these people had no idea who we are, and what we are doing, Lucien Greaves, cofounder of the Temple of Satan that sponsors the after school club, said.

Some in the audience felt they knew enough to oppose it.

One Northern York County High School junior defended the group.

I am a religious person myself, however, Ive often found myself at the teeth-end of Christian love, the junior, who declined to give his full name, said. I find they can be quite intolerant at times. They can push people away easily.

The After School Satan Club could provide a place for kids who know they are different to go without being asked demeaning questions or having to explain themselves, the junior said.

Jackie Bieber, a recent arrival in Dillsburg, said she just lost a child to a suicide website run by a Satanic group.

They gave her step-by-step instructions. We move over here, and now we find out theres an after-school Satan club, Bieber said.

Wes Gessaman took to the microphone and said This is how it begins.

When I hear Satan, I dont research that. I dont look it up, Gessaman said. Im not about to let it slip through my fingers I could have stopped this from happening to others children.

The self-described mission of The Satanic Temple is to encourage benevolence and empathy, reject tyrannical authority, advocate practical common sense, oppose injustice and undertake noble pursuits.

Its a complete contradiction because Satan is a tyrannical force, Becky Rosely, of Dillsburg, said. However, she did speak of compassion.

They will know we are Christians by our love, Rosely said. Not by our nasty, snarky remarks. We should be doing a whole lot better job at sharing the love of Christ with them.

I do not want my towns image to be destroyed, William Dacheux, of Dillsburg, spoke up. I do not want Dillsburg to be known as the town that accepts everyone so long as you believe what we do. If we shelter our children from different worldviews that are out there, we are doing them a disservice.

A member of the audience held a crucifix above the crowd as Dacheux spoke.

Deanna Weaver, a Dillsburg resident, said while a significant number of people in the room were Christians, there were also people who do not believe in a superior being.

That in no way makes me a child pornographer, a cannibal or any of the absurdities that have been rumored. This lady [Samantha Groome] has been misrepresented, Weaver said.

Weaver continued to read the seven tenets of The Satanic Temple:

1. One should strive to act with compassion and empathy toward all creatures in accordance with reason.

2. The struggle for justice is an ongoing and necessary pursuit that should prevail over laws and institutions.

3. Ones body is inviolable, subject to ones own will alone.

4. The freedoms of others should be respected, including the freedom to offend. To willfully and unjustly encroach upon the freedoms of another is to forgo ones own.

5. Beliefs should conform to ones best scientific understanding of the world. One should take care never to distort scientific facts to fit ones beliefs.

6. People are fallible. If one makes a mistake, one should do ones best to rectify it and resolve any harm that might have been caused.

7. Every tenet is a guiding principle designed to inspire nobility in action and thought. The spirit of compassion, wisdom, and justice should always prevail over the written or spoken word.

What is objectionable about all that? Weaver said.

Everything! the auditorium erupted in raucous comment. Weaver silently returned to her seat.

Greaves called the experience unnecessarily traumatizing for those who wanted the group brought to Northern York County and said religious freedom does not come down to a school boards vote.

They had the first meeting, and people didnt show up. They were hoping to humiliate and intimidate us and drive us out So they allowed people to show up and shout us down, then do their show trial and say they will not allow us to run the club, Greaves said.

They are a disgrace to their public post and they have no right sitting in those chairs, Greaves said.

Greaves said the group tried to do everything in their power to meet the standards district policy set and to work with them as smoothly as possible.

They instead decided to make a controversy out of it and turn it into the spectacle it became. Thats very regrettable, Greaves said.

READ MORE:

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