Hard Kaur: Artists need to be respected for freedom of expression – indica News

IANS-

Rapper and controversys favorite child Hard Kaur, whose real name is Taran Kaur Dhillon, has come up with a new song titled Kashmir2Khalistan. Known for being blatantly vocal, she says a real artist needs to be respected for his or her freedom of expression.

Thats how it should be. As artists we shouldnt be pressured into making club bangers and commercial songs all the time. A real artist needs to be respected for his freedom of expression. When thats taken away or overtaken with business and money it puts very difficult choices in front of an artist, Hard Kaur told IANS from London.

Its hip-hop. It was invented to speak against the wrongs in society, to raise voice for the innocent and it being such a powerful technique of words and delivery its has brought big changes in the world, she added.

The Char baj gaye rapper said that hip-hop has proven again and again that its not just music. Its a whole different way of existing.

The new track, Hard Kaur says is a song for the times we are living in.

Its my way of raising awareness as an artist through my music as. Being a Sikh, its my duty to stand up against oppression and protect humanity especially when its my land, my people, my country, she added.

The track has real footage. The Sherni rapper says it is because she is not very financially stable at the moment, as everything has stopped.

I knew the consequences my actions will have and I will lose a lot but I have no regrets. The song covers so many issues, so it only made sense to clearly show the people what I am trying to say through real footage, she added.

In June, she had been booked for sedition for posting allegedly objectionable remarks against Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on social media.

Her social media handles were suspended in the country after she posted videos in which she was seen using abusive words for the government.

She says she misses her land.

Does she fear for her life in India, as she has constantly got death threats on social media by users?

One should only fear god and I am smart. I have learned from history that I can do more for my country and people by staying alive, she replied.

She is looking forward to next year.

In 2020, my album will be released The Road To Khalistan as well as a couple of collaborations. Ill also be featuring Asian MCs from around the world as well as Econ whos a Kashmiri rapper. He sent me his verse for The Rising Mixtape Vol 2, which I had started work on just a few days before the lockdown. Ill feature his verse on one of the songs. Ill be dropping a few singles too, she revealed her plans for next year.

Read the rest here:

Hard Kaur: Artists need to be respected for freedom of expression - indica News

Freedom Teams picked to win NWC – Taylorsville Times

Members of the Unifour media recently cast votes in the NW 3A/4A Basketball Conference Preseason Poll. The Freedom Patriots Mens and Womens Teams were chosen as preseason favorites to capture the NWC crowns. The Freedom men earned six first-place votes, while Hickory was picked to finish second with four first-place votes. Alexander Central is picked to place third in the mens conference. Freedoms James Freeman is the top pick as Preseason Player of the Year. In womens basketball, Freedom claimed all 10 first place votes and is picked as the preseason favorite. Watauga is picked to place second, while the ACHS Lady Cougars are picked for the leagues seventh spot. Lady Patriot Blaikley Crooks is the medias Preseason Womens Player of the Year.MEN(First-place votes in parentheses)1. Freedom(6), 662. Hickory (4), 633. Alexander Central 454. Watauga335. McDowell276. St. Stephens227. South Caldwell21Player of the Year votes: James Freeman (Freedom) 5, Cody Young (Hickory) 2, Davis Amos (Hickory) 1, Jem Lowrance (Alexander Central) 1.

WOMEN1. Freedom (10), 702. Watauga543. Hickory 534. McDowell385. South Caldwell276. St. Stephens207. Alexander Central18Player of the Year votes: Blaikley Crooks (Freedom) 6, Brooke Byrd (Watauga) 1, Adair Garrison (Freedom) 1, Makenna Parkins (McDowell) 1.

See the article here:

Freedom Teams picked to win NWC - Taylorsville Times

Bills Today | Freedom in route running has helped John Brown excel in Buffalo – BuffaloBills.com

1. Freedom in route running has helped John Brown excel in Buffalo

John Brown has been the top wide receiver in the AFC this season. His 817 receiving yards rank first among all wide receivers and second overall only behind Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. Part of that success has been the freedom Brown has to run more routes in Brian Dabolls offense.

"I've been running routes since high school. Certain offenses that I got put in they liked me to go deep, so I was doing what I was told to do. Now I'm here and they let me run routes, Brown said onWGR 550Howard and Jeremy show. Routes underneath, getting open on short routes, so I'm just happy that I'm able to show that I'm an all-around athlete as a receiver. Even though it came kind of late in my career, I'm still just thankful that I'm able to show that I'm not just a deep threat."

But Brown has to be on the same page as Josh Allen. The two have taken extra time during practice to get timing down in their first season playing together.

"We take time out, even at practice when the defense is going, we'll run a few routes, Brown said. He gives me a couple of signals, and I give him a signal back to let him know whether I like it or not. If he gives it to me, we show body language and things like that, but it's getting better every week."

Originally posted here:

Bills Today | Freedom in route running has helped John Brown excel in Buffalo - BuffaloBills.com

In context: Freedom of information reform – Holyrood

"In January, it will be 15 years since the law came into effect, and its time to look at whether its still fit for the modern world" the information commissioner has said What's it all about?

Freedom of information law in Scotland is being reviewed.

A Scottish Government consultation on the need to extend the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002 (FOISA) to cover a wider range of bodies involved in providing services on behalf of the public sector closed last Friday.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Parliaments Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee has, since March 2019, been looking into the effectiveness of FOISA. The committee has taken evidence from journalists, campaigners and the public on the scope of the law and the compliance of public authorities with it, with a view to improving the act to increase transparency in public services.

The decision to re-examine FOISA came after journalists and campaigners highlighted frequent failings on the part of public authorities to meet the statutory requirements of the act, as well as instances of apparent mishandling of information requests by the Scottish Government.

There are also concerns about record-keeping practices and the ability of public authorities to meet increasing demand with existing resources.

In January, it will be 15 years since the law came into effect, and its time to look at whether its still fit for the modern world. It is easy to take the availability of information for granted, but such openness was not the norm prior to 2005 and it is not the norm elsewhere.

- The Scottish Information Commissioner

The act came into force in 2005 and is enforced by the Scottish Information Commissioner. Under FOISA, any person who requests information from a public authority is entitled to be given that information.

The law applies to recorded information, that is, information that is stored in some way, whether physically or digitally.

There are some limitations on what type of and how much information can be released on request, including certain exemptions and a cost threshold.

FOISA also puts a duty on public authorities to proactively publish information that is of public interest.

The Scottish Government has made three extensions to FOISA, most recently to cover registered social landlords, which came into force on 11 November.

According to the Information Commissioners annual report, published in October, public authorities are receiving a record number of information requests. Almost 84,000 requests were submitted in 2018/19, something the commissioner has welcomed.

But the report also highlighted concerning trends, such as the increasing number of failures to respond to requests within the statutory 20 working-day period. The research also highlighted disappointing levels of confidence among the public on authorities ability to respond on time.

An increase in the number of appeals made to the commissioner was also seen from requesters unhappy with the response they received from authorities. In over three-quarters of those cases, the commissioner ruled in favour of the requesters, leading to the release of information.

In 2017 the commissioner launched an investigation after journalists highlighted repeated examples of Scottish Government departments treating journalists requests improperly. The issue was twice debated in parliament, and a motion was agreed to launch an inquiry, which lead to the Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee review this year.

More recently, controversy over the First Ministers use of non-government email accounts to conduct items of government business and her offices practice of destroying hand-written notes has forced the First Minister and Permanent Secretary to reaffirm a commitment to FOISA good practice.

83,963 The number of information requests made to public authorities in Scotland in 2018/19

10.3% of these requests were for environmental information

75% of requests to public authorities resulted in full or partial disclosure of information to the requester

0.7% of total requests to Scottish public bodies were appealed to the commissioner

560 appeals to the commissioner, a 10 per cent increase on 507 in the previous year

21% of the commissioners decisions were about environmental information

64% of appeals followed requests made to local, or central government

64% of the commissioners decisions found wholly or partially in favour of the requester

26% of valid appeals to the commissioner were about an authoritys failure to respond to requests

75% of appeals to the commissioner were made by members of the public

- The Scottish Information Commissioner's annual report 2019

While journalists are in favour of reforming FOISA to broaden its coverage and make it easier to enforce compliance, some public authorities have expressed a desire to relax the laws.

Two groups representing local council leaders SOLAR (Society of Local Authority Lawyers and Administrators in Scotland) and SOLACE (the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives and Senior Managers) submitted written evidence to the committees enquiry.

The organisations said that there was a downside to FOISA, specifically, the resource implications of an increasing number of requests and the misuse of laws by commercial actors and disgruntled individuals.

They recommended lowering the cost threshold and making it easier to class requests as vexatious, therefore making them easier to reject.

The Information Commissioner, in his evidence to the committee, expressed a different view, writing: to allow authorities to refuse a request on the basis that it is not sufficiently serious would be a major retrograde step... It is sometimes only by asking the daft questions that matters of true public importance are revealed.

Pressure on public authorities could be alleviated, some argue, simply by publishing more without being asked.

The commissioner recommended reforming the act to introduce a statutory duty to publish information, supported by a new legally enforceable Code of Practice on Publication.

The First Ministers veto power should also be removed, because it is contrary to the fundamental principles of FOISA, the commissioner said.

But while strengthening the laws could lead to greater transparency, it has been stressed by many expert witnesses that the biggest improvements would come from a culture of good practice within public authorities.

The issue of freedom of information reform will be scrutinised in detail atHolyrood's annual Freedom of Information conference on Tuesday 26 November 2019.

Originally posted here:

In context: Freedom of information reform - Holyrood

Climate, freedom and denial: What Green Thatcherism teaches us today – The Economist

Rightly, the world has been celebrating the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. On November 9th 1989 the communist government of East Germany announced that its security forces would no longer prevent people from visiting West Berlin. Quickly, delirious Berliners surged through the old checkpoints or clambered over the wall. Soon the hammers and pick-axes were out, precipitating the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

For the two leaders of the West during the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, the breaching of the wall was a vindication of years of ideological struggle against the evil empire. Reagan had already retired, succeeded as president by George Bush, but Thatcher was in New York, where the previous day, November 8th, she had addressed the United Nations.

Upgrade your inbox and get our Daily Dispatch and Editor's Picks.

The Iron Lady was no fan of the UN; she hadnt spoken there for four years. But now she had an issue to address that had grown clearer than any other in both urgency and importance, and she needed the whole world to listen. Not the end of communism, or even history itself, as was the fashion, but the threat to our global environment.

Thatcher thus became the first prominent political leader to warn the world about the danger of climate change, and to outline a strategy to deal with it. The timing of her speech, as communism was crumbling, was no coincidence: she cast climate change as the successor menace to socialism and nuclear annihilation. What she characterised as these conventional political dangers appeared to be receding, but now, instead, lay the prospect of irretrievable damage to the atmosphere, to the oceans, to the earth itself.

Thatchers UN speech was not just a one-off either, but the final part of a trilogy that had begun just over a year earlier at the Royal Society in London. Proud of her membership of Britains most prestigious scientific body, and of being one of very few world leaders ever to have studied and trained as a scientist (she worked as a research chemist), the prime minister had enthusiastically accepted an invitation to speak at the societys annual dinner at Fishmongers Hall in the City.

Her advisers cast around for a suitable subject, but it was Thatcher herself who came up with the threat from greenhouse gases and the large hole in the ozone layer. The second speech in her trilogy was delivered to the Tory party conference in October 1988, a month after the Royal Society talk. She prided herself on mastering the science of climate change. As Jon Agar, professor of science and technology studies at University College London observes, Thatcher even asked for the exact chemical formulas that were used to analyse acid rain, which she then went through herself.

Thatcher had a galvanising effect on the environmental debate, and in greening mainstream politics. Jonathan Porritt, head of Friends of the Earth in the late 1980s, has argued that she did more than anyone in the last 60 years to put green issues on the national agenda. She also put her governments money where her mouth was. Thatcher ensured that the Treasury invested in the supercomputers to model climate change at the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, still one of the worlds leading outfits for such modelling. After she resigned in 1990 she was invited to become a sort of world climate tsar, heading a new institute to spread the word; she was tempted, but eventually turned it down.

Yet whereas Thatchers hostility to communism and socialism seemed to be a straightforward battle between good and evil, liberty and oppression, her call to arms on climate change sowed the seeds of an ideological battle that clouds thinking on the subject to this day.

For although she argued for continued economic growth via free enterprise capitalism at the UN, she also suggested that free markets are not an end in themselves, but only a means to an end; contingent upon producing a sustainable environment. They would defeat their object,'' she continued, if by their output they did more damage to the quality of life through pollution than the well-being they achieve by the production of goods and services.

This ideacall it Green Thatcherismwas heresy to many of her admirers and ideological bedfellows. All the more so as she further argued that a threat as dangerous as climate change could only be dealt with through multilateral institutions and new international conventions. For this seemed to invite exactly the kind of bureaucratic regulations, official meddling and collectivist thinking that her supporters had spent a lifetime overcoming with the fall of the Berlin Wall. It appeared to be Socialism through the back door,'' as she herself characterised her objections to an increasingly ambitious European Union in 1988.

Thus her legacy on this issue, unfortunately, remains extremely confused. A few have been inspired by her greenery, and taken her advice to use markets and free enterprise to search for solutions. Many on the left, however, have ignored her perfectly sensible suggestions because they cannot acknowledge that such a hate-figure for people on the left could have contributed anything to the green debate.

This is the wishful thinking of the left. Yet many of her former colleagues and admirers are equally guilty, challenging or denying the science in order to resist the extra regulations and taxes that are required to reduce global warming. This inverts her original argument. Reared on decades of fighting for individual liberty and capitalism against dictatorships and collectivism since the 1930s, their politics moulded by the spectre of Auschwitz and the gulags, such ideological defensiveness is perhaps understandable. Thatcher was reared on exactly the same stuff. But her fellow travellers on the right resist the ideological sacrifices that Thatcher suggested may be necessary for such a threat as global warming.

Thus, for instance, rather than regard climate change as the successor menace to communism, as Thatcher originally did, her erstwhile chancellor, Nigel Lawson, has argued consistently that the quasi-religion of green alarmism, as he calls it, has replaced the needs for transcendent values that communism once provided, leading to all the same evils. Thus this prominent climate sceptic will refight the old battles, dismissing the science to do so.

And much as Eurosceptics have expended a lot of energy poring over a few speeches of Winston Churchill to claim him for their cause, so Thatcherites have parsed her words to try to show that she was never that green in the first place, eager to prove that her Green Period was merely a blemish on an otherwise spotless record. It helps that Thatcher herself, under different influences, later seemed to endorse the climate change is socialism line. But as her latest and most comprehensive biographer, Charles Moore, reminds readers, she really did don the green mantle on the world stage, and, moreover, wore it with panache and sincerity.

Mark Littlewood, head of Thatchers favourite think-tank, the Institute of Economic Affairs, acknowledges that in prioritising ideology over the science, the free-market right has often been guilty of just wishing away all the bad news about climate change in a manner that Thatcher would never have countenanced. Such wishful thinking, of course, permeates the present Trump administration, which routinely trashes the science in order to escape the regulatory consequences of accepting the science. Hence Americas withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement in the name of sovereignty.

Yet, as Thatcher argues in her speeches, this extremism is unnecessarythe free-market system can offer perfectly good solutions to climate-change adaptation, more so, often, than other ideological systems, providing there are incentives to do so and a political will. Harder for the climate sceptics to accept, perhaps, especially in this age of nationalism, is the potential loss of sovereignty involved in the sort of target-setting and politicking envisaged by Paris and other international climate accords.

It is possible to accuse Thatcher of a dismal lack of consistency on sovereignty; she rebelled against the EU, for instance, over the loss of British sovereignty, but was prepared to cede sovereignty to supranational bodies to mitigate climate change.

Yet it was these very inconsistencies that made her such a successful politician and a visionary leader. She herself later swallowed the flattering illusion that she had always been ideologically consistent, to feed the Iron Lady mythbut it is just that, a myth.

The fact is that if both sides removed their ideological blinkers, as Thatcher, remarkably perhaps, managed to do, then her trilogy of speeches in the late 1980s still offer some of the best and clearest thinking on the subject. Indeed, 30 years on, again, she has largely been vindicated by events.

The left might learn that private enterprise can and indeed does produce many of the technical solutions to climate change. Economic growth continues to lift millions out of poverty; richer countries, such as those in the EU, have also done the most to curb carbon emissions over the past few decades. But the right must also reflect that it is a global problem that will only be solved by global co-operation, just as multilateral Western institutions such as NATO, Five Eyes intelligence sharing and the IMF helped to defeat communism.

This is the essence of Green Thatcherism; when the Iron Lady went from seeing red to greenforget the hammer, embrace the sickle. Green Thatcherism is as relevant today as Cold War Warrior Thatcherism was in the 1980s. Perhaps even more so.

Here is the original post:

Climate, freedom and denial: What Green Thatcherism teaches us today - The Economist

We met with Vice President Pence to talk about press freedom. Heres why its important. – USA TODAY

Joel Simon, Opinion contributor Published 7:00 a.m. ET Nov. 20, 2019

Mike Pence and Adam Schiff once served as co-chairs of the Freedom of the Press Caucus. Now Pence serves a president who threatens press freedom.

The extent to which the defense of press freedom has been a bipartisan concern is suggested by the fact that as a member of Congress, Mike Pence served as the co-chair of the Freedom of the Press Caucus along with Adam Schiff.

"If you believe in limited government, you understand that the only check on government power in real time is a free and independent press, Pence said on the floor of the House in 2005, when he was pushing for legislation to protect journalists and their sources.

Today, of course, Schiff is leading the congressional impeachment hearings against President Donald Trump, and Pence is the vice president in an administration that has waged a relentless war on the press.

Trumps attacks on the news media, while divisive and polarizing in the United States, are doing far worse damage in places around the world where authoritarian governments are jailing journalists in record number or, as was the case with Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, murdering them with impunity.

On Monday, I went to see Vice President Pence with a group of courageous journalists from Pakistan, Nicaragua, Tanzania, Indiaand Brazil. These journalists were in the United States to receive press freedom prizes from the Committee to Protect Journalists, the organization I lead. We are honoring them for putting their lives on the line to bring us the news.

The journalists shared a variety of experiences. Neha Dixit described the onslaught of hate she has endured in India about publishing stories on sex trafficking and other sensitive issues. Patrcia Campos Mello, who has reported on alleged corruption in Brazil, saidPresident Jair Bolsonarohas emulated Trumps rhetoric, unleashing a torrent of online death threats and harassment. Bolsonaro even went so far as to cancel the governments subscription to her publication, Folha de S.Paulo, after Trump banned The New York Times and The Washington Post from the White House.

Northwestern journalism dean: 'Give the young people a break'in the Sessions story

Several of the journalists raised concern about the proliferation of laws criminalizing fake news and the ways these laws are used to target critical media.

Zaffar Abbas, the editor of the Dawn, one of Pakistans top newspapers, called on Pence to stand up for journalists working in developing democracies around the world.

Meanwhile, Miguel Mora and Lucia Pineda, who were jailed in Nicaragua in reprisal for their critical reporting, thanked Pence for the support they had received from the U.S. government, which they said helped get them out of prison.

The vice president was deeply engaged by these storiesand reaffirmed his commitment to press freedom. Thats important, but the reality is that the impeachment inquiry is polarizing, and its hard to imagine our political leaders coming together again to defend this critical principle.

Thats why the American people should.

Vice President Mike Pence(Photo: Drew Angerer, Getty Images)

Regardless of how you feel about the impeachment proceedings, many Americans are glued to the news, and wewant to know and understand whats transpiring in Washington. Thats the role of a free press, which is facing new challenges in this country, from the decline in local news to legal action targeting journalists sources.

This month, along with our partners at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and more than 40 media organizations around the country, we launched a new campaign called Protect Press Freedom. The campaign seeks to educate Americans about the threats to press freedom, celebrate the diverse journalism that keeps the public informedand mobilize citizens to stand up for freedom of the press no matter what news is important to them.

Theres another reason that we are calling on all Americans to stand firm for press freedom, and thats to bolster journalists around the world who work without the protection of the First Amendment. Their reporting not only informs their own societiesbut also reaches a global audience. The journalists who met with Vice President Pence told him they would like the United Statesto be an ally and an inspiration. Heseemed to get this. Lets hope he can persuadehis boss.

Joel Simon is executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. Follow him on Twitter @Joelcpj

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2019/11/20/mike-pence-donald-trump-press-freedom-dictators-authoritarians-prison-column/4237469002/

Visit link:

We met with Vice President Pence to talk about press freedom. Heres why its important. - USA TODAY

Revolutions of our time: Freedom without US leadership | TheHill – The Hill

A number of recent reports paint a grim picture for the future of global democracy. According to democracy and human-rights watchdog Freedom House, 2018 marked the 13th consecutive year of decline in global freedom.

Since 1994, according to the New York Times, 75 countries have taken steps toward authoritarianism. It is easy to conclude an inevitable, continued decline lies ahead, especially as the U.S. government steps away from its role as the global champion of democracy.

But it is important not to overlook an important piece of the global landscape. Though authoritarianism is on the rise, so are the number of people taking to the streets demanding greater freedom, accountability and transparency from their governments.

In far-flung locales, from Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Venezuela and Algeria to Poland and Sudan, citizens have used nonviolent action to push back against corruption, cronyism and rigid laws and to overthrow ossified autocrats.

Together, these movements tell a different and deeply encouraging story of a democratic resurgence that probably wont be driven by partner nations, heads of state or U.S. leadership. Instead, it will come from people themselves, who have imbibed the powerful ideas and values of democracy and are demanding that vision for themselves.

Remarkably, and against great odds, some of these movements are creating transformational change. In Sudan earlier this year, a popular movement challenged an entrenched military junta, prompting accused war criminal Omar Bashir to step down and ushering in a political transition.

Massive non-violent demonstrations in Armenia forced that countrys leader to resign in 2018. The Peoples Peace Movement in Afghanistans Helmand province where efforts culminated in a 300-mile march to Kabul to demand a ceasefire and talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban ultimately helped jumpstart recent peace talks. And in Algeria, the countrys longest-serving head of state stepped down after tens of thousands of Algerians took to the streets demanding change.

Moreover, research indicates that nonviolent action can be an important indicator that democracy will take hold, bolstered by the very action of civil resistance. Why Civil Resistance Works, co-authored by U.S. Institute of Peace Director of Nonviolent Action Maria Stephan, found that political transitions driven by civil resistance led to democratic outcomes 57 percent of the time, versus 6 percent for transitions driven by armed insurgencies.

The authors concluded that the skills associated with nonviolent organizing, negotiating differences, building coalitions, and collective action reinforce democratic norms and behaviors.

Tunisia is a powerful example of this, where the determined action of civil society groups, human rights activists, labor unions and lawyers resulted in the only Middle East country that has continued on its pathway to democracy after the tumult of the Arab Spring. A quartet of Tunisian leaders rightfully earned a Nobel Prize in 2015, representing the actions and commitments of tens of thousands who joined together to march, negotiate and demand democracy.

There are plenty of examples in which nonviolent resistance failed to lead to democracy. It is difficult for movements to maintain the discipline of nonviolence and, once violence takes hold, movements quickly lose legitimacy and the ability to attract the broadest swath of supporters, from grandmothers to police officers.

It is not enough to topple a dictator; citizens need the support and space to resolve conflicts and build more responsible governance for the long-term.

The heartbreak of courageous movements that failed as they did in Egypt, Yemen and, most tragically, Syria underscores how tenuous gains can be. However, even with these cautionary tales still fresh and potent, the latest wave of movements has not been deterred, illuminating how deeply and broadly the values of democracy and freedom have taken root.

This is where the international community can and should make a difference. Arguably, more important than world leaders taking the helm is the international commitment to provide the tools, training and guidance necessary to support the discipline of nonviolence, capitalize on the determination and energy of these movements, and build in greater systems of accountability

There is much cause for alarm with the current turn toward authoritarianism. However, if we look more carefully, there also is great inspiration in the nonviolent movements that have risen up, even in deeply repressive environments.

The values that are shared throughout the community of democracies, enshrined in the foundation of the U.S. and in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, are now animating citizens around the world to stand up to corrupt, repressive regimes.

The courage and determination of these citizens to attain the promise of a democracy that delivers is carrying forward the vision and filling the void of U.S. global leadership which is the core of the democratic ideal itself.

Nancy Lindborg is president and CEO of the United States Institute of Peace, an independent, nonpartisan federal institute that promotes global conflict resolution and training in diplomacy and peace-building initiatives.

Visit link:

Revolutions of our time: Freedom without US leadership | TheHill - The Hill

When robots need the freedom to maneuver – C4ISRNet

For robots to survive on future battlefields, they must go wherever people go.

Practically, this means the robots must have legs, or backpackable flying bodies, or other ways to tag along with infantry. When it comes to sensors and software, it means robots must have the freedom to operate almost as independently as humans.

How do you access an area that is GPS denied, electronically denied with equipment that is heavily reliant on [those services], asked Brandon Tseng, chief operating officer and co-founder of Shield AI. You cant, but with AI for maneuver, you open up a set of operations that give freedom to maneuver on the battlefield, to gain the intelligence you need, to conduct operations as required in these traditionally denied areas.

Tseng was speaking as part of a Nov. 20 panel on AI and autonomous capabilities at the 2019 AI and Autonomy symposium, put on by the Association of the United States Army in Detroit, Michigan. As Tseng outlined it, AI for maneuver is specifically about the software and sensors that grant autonomy in denied spaces. This is one of the driving forces behind the military adoption of autonomy writ large.

The greatest promise of machine autonomy is that it will lead to greater freedom for the humans commanding and fighting alongside the robots. Tseng said the goal is to shift from 50 soldiers supporting a single drone, or ground robot, or water robot, to a paradigm where one human supports 50 robots.

An ability for machines to operate despite GPS or electromagnetic denial means machines moving through risky areas with some assurance. Autonomy does not prevent the risk of a kinetic response, of drones shot down or blown apart with missiles, but it does make that outcome explicit and harder to deny. This could be preferred to the ambiguity of a drone loss from jamming that could read like mechanical failure.

In this era of massive political risk, what AI for maneuver does is opens up aperture of what missions we can accept because they are inherently very low political risk because they involve unmanned systems, Tseng said.

Unspoken, but underlying the remarks, was the Navys loss of a Global Hawk in the Strait of Hormuz in June. That incident did not devolve into a more traditional kinetic war or lead to human death, a fact thats led to the perception of drones as more-expendable assets.

Know all the coolest acronyms Sign up for the C4ISRNET newsletter about future battlefield technologies.

Subscribe

Enter a valid email address (please select a country) United States United Kingdom Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Congo, The Democratic Republic of The Cook Islands Costa Rica Cote D'ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guinea Guinea-bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and Mcdonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco Mongolia Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territory, Occupied Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Reunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda Saint Helena Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Vincent and The Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and The South Sandwich Islands Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand Timor-leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States United States Minor Outlying Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Viet Nam Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, U.S. Wallis and Futuna Western Sahara Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe

Thanks for signing up!

By giving us your email, you are opting in to the C4ISRNET Daily Brief.

Trusting AI to maneuver surveillance and reconnaissance platforms into place means giving commanders and, ultimately, policy makers, information despite jamming, and despite a risk of loss. With drones, it is a shift from operating in climates of aerial superiority to ones of aerial expendability.

What is missing from the emphasis on denied environments, or asset projection, is what happens when those machines want to communicate back with human controllers. An ISR asset that can navigate denied space but not transmit what it observes is, at best, a liability. If the uncrewed, autonomous platform is carrying deadlier payloads than just sensors, more human control is needed and therefore autonomy in maneuver is insufficient for meeting both its operational needs and its likely battlefield uses.

Still, the concept is useful for orienting how policymakers and force planners think about what they want robots to do in battle. If autonomy is fundamentally about maneuver, then what autonomous machines do depends, to a great deal, on how those robots respond to command, and how they operate when beyond control.

Read the rest here:

When robots need the freedom to maneuver - C4ISRNet

Witnessing Climate Thuggery in Germany – Somewhat Reasonable – Heartland Institute

Billy Aouste

Billy Aouste is a media specialist for The Heartland Institute. Aouste is a graduate from DePaul University with a BA in Political Science.

If you dont visit Freedom Puband theHeartlanderdigital magazine every day, youre missing out on some of the best news and commentary on liberty and free markets you can find. But worry not, freedom lovers! Heartland Weekly is here for you every Monday with a highlight show.Subscribe to the email today, and read this weeks edition below.

Fossil Fuels Create Millions of JobsPeter FerraraWashington TimesPresident Trumps energy deregulation has created a huge boom in jobs and higher wages for blue-collar working people who used to be the backbone of the Democratic Party.

Climate Thuggery in GermanyJames TaylorTownhallMore than 200 people, including dozens of scientists and Heartlands James Taylor, were forced into hiding this week in Germany because of threats by fascist climate thugs.

Family Friendly Schools Act Far From ItChris TalgoThe HillSen. Kamala Harriss so-called Family Friendly Schools Act would do irreparable harm to an already failing institution: the sacred American family.

10th Anniversary of ClimategateHost: H. Sterling BurnettGuest: Paul DriessenPolicy Analyst Paul Driessen explains how 10 years after Climategate little has changed. The offending scientists have continued to manipulate data and hide research from the light of day.

Health Reimbursement AccountsHost: AnneMarie SchieberGuest: William SweetnamWilliam Sweetnam of the Employers Council on Flexible Compensation discusses how HRAs could be a game changer for how employers provide health insurance to their employees.

In the Tank Ep. 218Host: Donald KendalGuests: Jim Lakely and Justin HaskinsThe trio talk about the recent Soho Forum on the topic of socialism vs. capitalism. They also give a sneak peek at an upcoming Heartland/Rasmussen poll on the publics views on socialism.

Public Schools Are Failing StudentsTeresa MullDaily CallerNew standardized test scores have been released, and U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos called the results of the federally mandated NAEP exam for public schools devastating.

Ethics and Morality of the MarketplaceRichard EbelingFreedom PubWho do people consider to be less ethical or honest than either telemarketers or used car salesman? If you said Washington politicians, youd be right on the button.Medicare for Illegals is ImmoralChris TalgoAmerican ThinkerStrangely most Democrats running for the partys 2020 presidential nomination, including Bernie Sanders obviously, support Medicare for All, even for illegal immigrants.

On Demand Climate Crisis ConcernsCharles BattigFreedom PubLiving-in-the-moment mentality cannot distinguish between weather and climate. Panicked claims of a climate crisis do not easily succumb to clear scientific facts.

The State Is Not Your ProxyJeffrey TuckerAIERIm struck by the sheer materialism of the socialist outlook. Somehow it all comes down to who owns what and how much they control, as if this is the very essence of life itself.

Title X Grant Comes with Price TagMark BlocherHealth Care NewsThe changing political winds of Washington, DC and in state legislatures seem to have forced Title X recipients to participate in politics as part of their survival.

Fracking Saved $1.1 Trillion over DecadeTim BensonResearch & CommentaryA new report prepared by Kleinhenz & Associates for the Ohio Oil and Gas Energy Education Program shows fracking has saved Americans $1.1 trillion since 2008.

EPA Backs Off Transparency RulesKenneth ArtzEnvironment & Climate NewsThe government is full of swampy people, making it quite challenging to make substantial reforms at EPA, which has at most a handful of Trump people in place.

More Fiddling While Forests BurnGreg WalcherThe Heartland InstituteWhat if someone said they planned to burn down your house, but its for your own good? They need to study how houses burn, so in the future they might help you.

Witnessing Climate Thuggery in Germany was last modified: November 25th, 2019 by Billy Aouste

Go here to read the rest:

Witnessing Climate Thuggery in Germany - Somewhat Reasonable - Heartland Institute

Uri Regev: Religious freedom is important to Israelis, and could bring down Netanyahu – The Jewish News of Northern California

Israel will next March almost certainly hold its third round of elections in less than a year, but Rabbi Uri Regev says thats not necessarily a bad thing.

Ive heard words of despair from American Jews [saying] nothing has changed between the first elections [in April] and the second [in September], Regev said Nov. 21 in a talk at Temple Isaiah in Lafayette.

But thats not true. Likud lost tens of thousands of votes between April and September, and Blue and White gained tens of thousands. [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu managed to get 60 Knesset seats in April, and just 55 in September. I believe those gains will be even greater in a third election.

Regev is the CEO of Hiddush, an Israeli nonprofit he founded 10 years ago to advocate for religious freedoms and social equality in the Jewish state. A longtime leader in the Reform movement in Israel and around the world, Regev decided in 2009 to broaden his outreach beyond his countrys relatively small Reform community to take advantage of what he describes as Israels unique character.

Until recent decades, there was in Israel, as in most Western countries, a correlation between the political right and the religious right, and between the political left and the religious left. That is, however, no longer true.

Israels once-dominant political left is now decimated, he said, with just 15-16 percent of Israeli Jews describing themselves as to the left versus more than 65 percent who say they support the political right. Continued security concerns and no apparent solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict contribute to that rightward drift, he said.

Meanwhile, he continued, several studies, including one in 2016 from the Pew Research Center, show that two-thirds of Israeli Jews support a separation between state and religion. In the 2019 Israel Religion and State Index, commissioned by Hiddush, 69 percent of Israeli Jews said it was important that the party they vote for support religious freedoms, notably the freedom to marry whom they choose, and public transit on Shabbat, as well as social equality including an end to draft exemptions for yeshiva students.

So what we have is two-thirds of Israelis on the political right, and two-thirds supporting religious freedoms and social equality, he said. No study shows different figures.

Both Likud, on the right, and Blue and White, a center-right party, satisfy voters security concerns, he said. But whereas Netanyahu has allied himself politically with the haredi parties, which support the religious status quo, Blue and White has included in its platform the key religious freedoms supported by most Israelis.

So those of you who think issues of religion and state are not important to Israelis, the September elections show they are front and center

And that, he stated with some relish, is why support for Likud is slipping, and why support for Blue and White will continue to grow.

Avigdor Lieberman, the former defense minister, emerged this year as the canary in the coal mine. His political views are to the right, Regev reminded the crowd, but he and his party, Yisrael Beiteinu, strongly oppose the ultra-Orthodox control over religious life. Lieberman just squeezed into the Knesset in the April elections, with five seats. But over the summer he made his support for religious freedoms the linchpin of his campaign.

The result? His party netted eight seats in the September elections. And his popularity seems to be growing.

So those of you who think issues of religion and state are not important to Israelis, the September elections show they are front and center, Regev concluded.

But Israelis are concerned about different issues than those championed by American Reform and Conservative Jews, he explained. Egalitarian prayer at the Kotel? A recent poll showed it was of concern to just 4 percent of Israeli Jews.

So his advice to this audience gathered in a Reform synagogue in California was, yes, speak up. You have a stake in how Jewish life is lived, how Judaism is practiced, in the Jewish state. But understand what it is that Israeli Jews want.

If we focus our battle on egalitarian worship at the Kotel, we marginalize ourselves rather than aligning with the concerns of mainstream Israeli Jews, he said.

Regevs talk was the last of several he gave in local Reform synagogues, and it came the same day that Israels attorney general publicly charged Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and breach of public trust.

Three elections in 11 months? Well, Regev said, if it brings the right result the beginning of an end to the ultra-Orthodox control over religious life then thats the silver lining, he said.

I see already the progress made between April and September, and there will be further progress by March, he said. Im encouraged by the tremendous growth in public support, the emergence of a clear majority on the same page as we are.

Read the rest here:

Uri Regev: Religious freedom is important to Israelis, and could bring down Netanyahu - The Jewish News of Northern California

Farm Freedom And Safety Act Introduced To Protect Farmers – StrathmoreNow.com

Bill 26, also known as theFarm Freedom and Safety Act, has been introduced to address how employment standards, workers compensation, labour relations, and occupational health and safety laws that apply to farms and ranches. The bill was developed following extensive consultation with farmers, ranchers and workers. It recognizes thatfarms are unlike other businesses and need more flexibility to balance the unique economic pressures of farming with the need for a common-sense farm safety regime.

Devin Dreeshen, Alberta's Minister of Agriculture and Forestry said, We promised Albertans we would consult first and legislate second and thats exactly what we did. Weve taken this feedback and built common-sense farm workplace legislation that works for people, not against them.

The proposed legislation fulfills the governments commitment to consult with farmers and ranchers to build farm workplace legislation that works for them. The government is committed to restoring balance, fairness and common sense to the regulation of Albertas agriculture sector by repealing and replacing the previous governments failed Bill 6 legislation.

Rhonda Mulligan from Tri M Farms said, Farmers asked for these changes to give us the flexibility to run our businesses and build a program collectively that works for everybody. This government has really listened to and responded to our concerns. Modern farms are highly safety-conscious operations and we take care of our farm workers like they are family.

Tom Steve, Alberta Wheat and Barley Commission/general manager of Alberta Barley said, In terms of the overall shape of the industry, consultation has been a critical feature of the new government for Bill 6 and theFarm Freedom and Safety Act. We didnt have that under the previous government in 2015 when those changes were rolled out. We are very encouraged and optimistic about the future shape of farm safety legislation in Alberta.

Grassroots conversations, industry meetings, engagement sessions and an online survey were just some of the ways Albertas farmers and ranchers gave their input on practical farm workplace rules.

Albert Cramer, president of the Alberta Greenhouse Growers Association said, The greenhouse industry is very thankful to the Government of Alberta and, in particular, to Minister Dreeshen for his support in recognizing greenhouses as farms. Being excluded from the definition of farms under the Employment Standards Code was a huge challenge for our industry and we are grateful that this has been rectified in theFarm Freedom and Safety Act.

Some of the changes theFarm Freedom and Safety Actwould bring would be, allowing employers to have a choice when it comes to workplace insurance, protecting family farms from legislated and regulatory cost increases, ensuring basic safety standards on all farms and others that would protect and benefit farmers.

Read more from the original source:

Farm Freedom And Safety Act Introduced To Protect Farmers - StrathmoreNow.com

Turkish Constitutional Court: Dismantling of Turkish-Armenian friendship statue violation of freedom of expression – Information-Analytic Agency…

The Turkish Constitutional Court has ruled that the freedom of expression of famous Turkish-Armenian sculptor Mehmet Aksoy has been violated. Aksoy is the creator of the Statue of Humanity, which was placed in Armenias bordering Kars and was dismantled after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan referred to the statue as perverse and disgusting and called on removing it and building a garden in its place.

The Turkish Supreme Court had ordered to pay 20,000 Liras ($3483) as compensation to the sculpture for dismantling his statue, reports Ahval.

Aksoy had appealed to the Turkish Constitutional Court and made a reference to the restriction on his freedom of expression. The Court on Monday ruled that the authorities had overlooked the constitutional provisions concerning freedom of expression.

The verdict was announced in accordance with the Turkish courts decision of 2015 according to which Erdogan had to pay Aksoy $4,000 as compensation.

See the original post here:

Turkish Constitutional Court: Dismantling of Turkish-Armenian friendship statue violation of freedom of expression - Information-Analytic Agency...

Threat against freedom and transparency – MENAFN.COM

(MENAFN - Newsroom Panama) The following editorial published on Monday, November 25 in Panama's leading newspaper. which has won numerous awards for its investigative journalism and has pulled back the covers on multiple State and business corruption scandals is a "must-read" for all who value free speech. The perpetrator of the latest attacks who boasts he has the power and money will not be hard to identify

LA PRENSA was born in the middle of the military dictatorship, to fight for the recovery of freedom of expression and the right to information of all Panamanians, as the foundations of democracy. From our first edition, the tyrant and his successors bothered with this newspaper, harassed and, censored, us and vandalized our facilities and, finally, we were closed.

With the restoration of democracy, each of the Presidents of the Republic sought ways to pressure and influence La Prensa. Our cartoonists, photographers, reporters and managers have been singled out and even become defendants, but La Prensa has won over every effort to silence it, thanks to the commitment of our associates, and the loyalty of readers, subscribers and advertisers.

Now, again, not only La Prensa - but also the freedom of expression and the right to information of all Panamanians - faces a new threat that previously failed in its very open attempts to silence us. The new strategy is the use of judicial terrorism and economic defamation.

This is a company with solid financial fundamentals, that punctually fulfills its obligations with all its associates, suppliers, the State and social security. Like all global media companies, and many companies in Panama, we have had to make adjustments in the face of accelerated technological change and a slow-growing economic environment.

However, this is by no means the end of La Prensa.

Never before in the history of Panama, have the networks of political corruption and organized crime appropriated media. They were acquired with suspicious funds and their operation financed with state advertising, which also served to reward the aligned media and punish critics.

Precisely because of the independent exercise of our journalism, these networks of corruption know that La Prensa is an obstacle against their perverse ends. For this reason, they sue us and complain against us recklessly, with the purpose of defaming , label at the level of the audience and produce fear and self-censorship internally.

This judicial terrorism is accompanied by a concerted propaganda effort against this newspaper in the media and social networks controlled by this corruption network. Repeatedly and insistently they persist in inventing rumors that this newspaper will cease to circulate, or manufacture lies to defame our journalists and executives, even getting to muddle our investigative reputation characterizing it as a collaboration with the State security apparatus.

Right now, that overseas aspects of the regime of extortion and blackmail that ruled us begin to reveal themselves, those threatened against this newspaper are getting worse. They warn us that they will not have rested until they close us. For our part, we will not rest either; and we will continue publishing what you want to hide and bringing to light what you want to keep in the dark. We will continue fighting for the freedom of expression and the right to information of all Panamanians, so that this country is a territory where integrity and transparency shine as fundamental qualities of the State and of the whole society.

T

MENAFN2511201902180000ID1099325243

More:

Threat against freedom and transparency - MENAFN.COM

The Good, The Bad And The Ugly: Reaction To Farm Freedom And Safety Act – StrathmoreNow.com

While Alberta farm groups are congratulating the UCP Government on their new Farm Freedom and Safety Act, the proposed legislation doesn't sit well with the Alberta Federation of Labour.

The new act set to replace the NDP's contentious Bill 6 includes an exemption for small farm employers, takes away farm workers' ability to form a union, and allows larger employers to choose between Worker's Compensation Board coverage or private insurance.

In a statement, Alberta Federation of Labour President, Gil McGowan, says it's a giant step backwards for farm and ranch employees.

McGowan says they're now back to no longer having the basic workplace rights enjoyed by their counterparts in every other province.

"Removing mandatory Workers Compensation coverage sets a horrible precedent," he said. "Albertans will no longer be able to track farm and ranch injury rates for the province and farms with private insurance will be a risk for lawsuits."

In the meantime, Team Alberta representing the Province's four crop commissions, is welcoming the legislation, saying the Government of Alberta is focusing on education over legislation when it comes to farm and ranch safety.

They're commending both the Agriculture Minister and Associate Minister of Red Tape Reduction on implementing what they heard from farmers during the consultations over the summer, and creating a new "common sense and flexible" farm safety regime.

The farm groups says while there are exemptions for smaller operations, the Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act will remain as a strong baseline of safety standards while reducing burdensome regulatory requirements they say often dont apply to small farms.

"The focus on education and best management practices will help address labour shortages and other regulatory requirements that dont improve safety practices," Team Alberta said in a statement.

The Farm Freedom and Safety Act was tabled in the Alberta legislature by Agriculture Minister, Devin Dreeshen, on Wednesday, November 20.

When Dreeshen announced the legislation earlier this week, he was asked what his response would be to critics concerned about a division in farm workers by allowing smaller operations to be exempt, but workers employed by larger operations will still have insurance coverage.

"I would say that the critics don't understand agriculture," Dreeshen said.

He says what farmers are telling them is, smaller, mostly family farms are unique, as the extra regulation and costs stress their margins.

"This is the Government of Alberta understanding that, respecting that, and that's why we went down this path."

If passed, all the changes will be in effect as of March 1, 2020.

Read more: Legislation Tabled To Repeal And Replace Bill 6

Read more: WCB Or Not To Be? That Is The Farm Safety Tour Question

Send your news tips, story ideas and comments to [emailprotected]

Follow on Twitter @GoldenWestABAg @JessicaR_Giles

The rest is here:

The Good, The Bad And The Ugly: Reaction To Farm Freedom And Safety Act - StrathmoreNow.com

‘Significant reduction’ in Freedom of Information backlog says PSNI – The Irish News

THE PSNI is "working extremely hard" to eliminate its backlog of unanswered Freedom of Information requests, a senior police officer has said.

Assistant Chief Constable Alan Todd there has been a "significant reduction" after recruiting new staff, and police are providing the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) watchdog with monthly updates.

Last year it emerged police had amassed a backlog of nearly 300 unanswered FOIs amounting to more than a fifth of requests received at the time.

It prompted concerns from politicians and transparency campaigners who warned that it impacted scrutiny of policing if problems continued.

FOI legislation gives people a right of access to an array of information held by public bodies and has often been used by campaigners and journalists to expose issues, such as the MPs' expenses scandal.

Under the law, public bodies must reply to FOI requests promptly and within 20 working days, but there have been significant delays to many police FOI responses.

Last year's backlog of 273 requests which had not been responded to within the legislative timescale has since been reduced to 69.

Mr Todd said the PSNI received 1,459 FOI requests in 2018 and 1,389 in 2019 so far.

He said the PSNI's Corporate Information Branch now has 21 full-time staff attached to it, with 10 new employees joining since last year.

"In total 163 requests remain outstanding, of which 83 are actively being processed. Of those outstanding requests, 69 have not been responded to within the 20 day timescale set out by section 10 of the Freedom of Information Act," he said.

Mr Todd said the PSNI meets with the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) and provides the watchdog with monthly updates on the progress on delivering an action plan to eradicate the backlog.

He added: "The Police Service of Northern Ireland has been working extremely hard to eradicate its backlogs including resourcing new staff, implementing training and working closely with the Information Commissioner's Office in keeping them updated on progress.

"Whilst backlog numbers have fallen, we will continue to advance this work until all requests received by us are answered promptly and in line with legislative timescales.

"PSNI takes its obligations toward request handling very seriously and understands that the Freedom of Information legislation provides an important framework for the public to access information held by public authorities and fosters a culture of transparency and accountability in all public bodies including PSNI."

An ICO spokesman said: "Following advice and engagement from the ICO, Police Service Northern Ireland has been making progress in dealing with a backlog of delayed responses to Freedom of Information requests.

"While such improvement is welcome, the ICO will continue to monitor the force's performance in order to assist it to make necessary further improvements and achieve compliance with its statutory responsibilities."

See more here:

'Significant reduction' in Freedom of Information backlog says PSNI - The Irish News

Familiarity goes beyond the field for Parkland footballs Santos vs. Freedom – lehighvalleylive.com

The Freedom Patriots are extremely familiar foes for Parkland High Schools football team at this point.

But theyre extra familiar for Angel Santos.

The Trojans senior played with the current Patriots until moving out of the Bethlehem Area School District in the eighth grade and his two brothers, Andres and Joseph, competed for Freedom a handful of years ago.

It's a big game for me because I know all the kids there, said Santos, a middle linebacker/running back. I went to school with them. I was supposed to play with them, but I moved over here and now I'm playing for Parkland.

Friday night will mark the fourth straight year the Trojans (9-2) will meet Freedom (10-1) in the postseason. The second-seeded Patriots host third-seeded Parkland in the District 11 Class 6A semifinals at Bethlehem Area School District Stadium.

Parkland has the wind at its back, with seven consecutive wins after a 2-2 start. One of those early setbacks was a 21-18 defeat to Freedom.

I think they've been hungry the whole year, coming from 2-2 with their backs against the wall, Parkland coach Tim Moncman said of his players. This is our fourth time (playing Freedom) in two years and they've won the last three. We just hope to play our best and see what happens.

Parklands early season injuries have been well-reported. The Trojans will enter Fridays semifinal with more tools at their disposal compared to their first meeting with Freedom, particularly as Moncman noted, senior offensive tackle Nick Dawkins, a Penn State recruit.

Parkland has also been clamping down on opposing offenses. The Trojans are allowing an average of 10.3 points per game over their last seven victories.

Defensively, we have a couple bodies back, but we're just clicking, Moncman said. We're playing pretty well running to the ball, swarming to the ball.

Our defense has been key, Santos said. Our defense has been great, and it's been stopping everyone. And our offense is getting better and better every week.

While the team has dealt with ailments at different areas, Santos has been a steady presence in the middle of the D all season.

He's the captain of the defense, Moncman said. He makes all the calls and gets there with a purpose.

Santos, who is listed at 5-foot-10, 210 pounds, can certainly make the pads pop when he reaches the ball-carrier.

He is as blue-collar as it gets, Moncman said.

The middle linebacker and his teammates have a tall task in slowing down the Patriots, who are the defending District 11 Class 6A champions.

(Quarterback Jared) Jenkins makes all the right decisions, Moncman said. I think (Jalen) Stewart and (Matty) Russin are as good a 1-2 punch as you could see. They'd be primary backs for anybody. So, they're explosive on offense and come after you on defense.

Santos leads the Trojans with 88 tackles, including eight TFLs and three sacks.

Hes also an effective change-of-pace back behind junior Isiah Rico (200 carries, 1,289 yards, 16 touchdowns).

We'll use him at running back and he's a beast to bring down, Moncman said.

Santos has taken 39 carries for 302 yards and six touchdowns.

I try to get as much as I can, Santos said of playing running back. I try not to let anyone take me down 1-on-1.

A steady running game will be important for Parkland as sophomore quarterback Ty Tremba (58-for-107, 964 yards, 8 TDs, 5 INTs), who took over near the midway point of the regular season, enters the biggest start of his young career.

I think the switch at quarterback has sparked us quite a bit, Moncman said.

Santos knows the rushing attack is important. He also knows that his strength is a major element of his game, and he credits his work with the Parkland power-lifting team for some of the advancements in that area.

It was a great experience lifting with them, the senior said. Everyone was getting stronger and stronger.

Santos found a little motivation from within his family when he worked in the weight room.

When I was younger and my brothers were playing for Freedom, I used to work out with them all the time, he said. ... When I got here and I saw (the power-lifting team), my goal became to lift more than my brother (Andres).

Has he reached that goal?

Just by a little bit, Santos said with a laugh.

Right now, the senior is more focused on beating his brothers old team.

RELATED: High school football predictions for Week 12

Kyle Craig may be reached at kcraig@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter @KyleCraigSports. Find Lehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

Read the original:

Familiarity goes beyond the field for Parkland footballs Santos vs. Freedom - lehighvalleylive.com

Internet freedom declined in the US and worldwide this year: report | TheHill – The Hill

Internet freedom has declined in the U.S. and worldwide in 2019 for the ninth consecutive year, according to a report released by Freedom House.

Out of 65 countries reviewed in the report, 33 have experienced an overall decline in internet freedom since June 2018, compared to 16 countries which have seen an increase. The largest internet freedom declines occurred in Sudan and Kazakhstan, followed by Brazil, Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

The report detailed how leaders of countries have used social media as propaganda, calling out China, Iran and Saudi Arabia in particular. A new high record of 38 out of the 65 countries had political leaders who recruited others to shape online opinions.

The authors alsosaid authorities are using social media surveillance to track citizens, reducing civil liberties around the world, with 47 countries having arrested users for political, social and religious speech, another record high.

China was named the worlds worst abuser of internet freedom for the fourth consecutive year, with censorship increasing on the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre and with ongoing protests in Hong Kong.

The researchers named Iceland as the best protector of internet freedom.

Ethiopia was cited has experienced the most progress in internet freedom because of the prime ministers efforts to reduce restrictions. But the authors noted that the majority of improved internet freedom scores were marginal.

Read more:

Internet freedom declined in the US and worldwide this year: report | TheHill - The Hill

Embrace The Freedom Of Honoring Your Word Impeccably – Inc.

Earlier this week, I was at a business event filled with many incredible people. One of those people was Michael Fishman, who is an advisor to leading health experts and the founder of Consumer Health Summit. Michael is a friend of mine and a business colleague, and also a mentor in many ways.

There's a quote: "When the student is ready, the teacher will appear." That's what happened to me this week, with Michael being my wise teacher.

In the midst of the event, and surrounded by many people, I told Michael I'd meet him for breakfast the next day.

Although I had good intentions, I also threw out that commitment frivolously. I was lackadaisicalin my word.

Plans slightly changed over the 24 hours, but I didn't communicate that clearly to Michael. In the end, I no-showed him twice and without clearly or respectfully communicating why.

Today, I had the opportunity to discuss with him what had happened, and he told me that my word is of universal importance.

Small things become big things.

If I'm serious about the goals I'm setting, I need to have complete integrity with the small stuff.

How I show up in the small stuff trains people in what to expect from me in general.

I knew Michael was right. Part of me wanted to resist or justify, at least to myself, why I was willing to lack integrityin that particular situation.But then I thought about the quote from Strategic Coach founder, Dan Sullivan, "All progress starts by telling the truth."

If you're serious about making a change, you have to face the fact that you've been wrong. There's no room for justification. Only a pure admittance that you've been wrong about this thing.

Until you can admit, especially to yourself, that you've been wrong, then you haven't really learned the lesson.

Lessons are repeated until they are learned.

In the words of American author, Florence Shinn, "Your word is your wand." Use it wisely.

It was humbling having this conversation with Micheal. A person I love and respect. It made me think about the book Choice Theory: A Psychology Of Personal Freedom, which explains that, in our relationships, we tend to treat those who are closest to us the worst, and those most stranger with the most respect.

Think about it: who do we offer moreautonomy and choice? Strangers or our family? We don't force strangers to do what we want. But we often bark orders at those we callfamily.

Personally, I admitted to Michael that I often find it harder to say "No" to people I care most about. I'm more likely to say "Yes," even if I don't want to, to someone I'm close to. Moreover, given that I'm close to that person, I figure I can be a little lax about the relationship.

At least not when you're in healthy relationships with self-respecting people. With low-energy people, such behavior is the norm and expected. When you evolve as a person, you stop allowing that level of integrity and energy in your atmosphere.

Sometimes, you need to be called out by someone who cares about you.

Sometimes, you can't accurately see it until someone points it out, with grace and kindness, but firmness and self-respect.

I was grateful to be called out in a loving and safe environment by a friend and mentor.

I was further reminded of the quote from trauma expert, Dr. Peter Levine, who said, "Trauma isn't what happens to you, but what you hold inside in the absence of an empathetic witness."

An empathetic witness is someone who gives you the space to see the truth; to process it in a safe environment and absorb it. That empathetic witness also encourages you to love yourself more, and to have higher sights for yourself,not get stuck in old ways,or imprisoned in the pain of the past.

Some hard and humbling truths.

This is why, if you want to go far in life, you need to be surrounded byamazing people. You need people to respect themselves enough to call you out when you're disrespecting them.

I'm grateful for Michael Fishman, my friend, colleague, and mentor, who helped me today.

His words to me, "Embrace the freedom of honoring your word impeccably" was the lesson I needed today.

How is your level of integrity?

The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.

Continued here:

Embrace The Freedom Of Honoring Your Word Impeccably - Inc.

Hayek, Republican Freedom, and the Universal Basic Income – Niskanen Center

Note:This is part of the Promise of Republicanism series, which can be foundherein its entirety.

The idea of a Universal Basic Income (UBI) is getting a lot of attention these days, thanks largely to the fact that Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang has made it the centerpiece of his campaign. Yang calls his version of the UBI the Freedom Dividend, a proposal under which every American over the age of eighteen would receive $1,000 a month from the Federal government, no strings attached.

The name Freedom Dividend is, of course, a nice bit of political rhetoric for an electorate largely inclined to view any large-scale scheme of income redistribution as a form of socialism. But beneath the rhetoric lies a legitimate, substantive point. Yang is right: Theres a good case to be made for a UBI based on the importance of individual freedom. Indeed, the foundations of that case have already been laid by none other than the renowned champion of economic and personal liberty, Friedrich Hayek.

Hayeks devotion to the ideals of free markets and limited government is well-known. His most famous book, The Road to Serfdom, argued that economic and political liberties are tightly connected, and that liberal democracies cannot safely curtail the former without also endangering the latter. His later works, especially The Constitution of Liberty, set forth a positive vision of a free society centered on the idea that individuals should be left largely free to act on the basis of their own values and beliefs, rather than those of government regulators or planners, in both the personal and economic dimensions of their lives.

While everybody knows that Hayek saw himself as a champion of individual freedom, few understand the precise nature of the freedom that Hayek sought to defend. Unlike many libertarians, who understand freedom primarily in terms of non-interference or respect for property rights, Hayek subscribed to a republican theory in which freedom consists of being able to live ones life according to [ones] own decisions and plans, in contrast to one who was irrevocably subject to the will of another.

Understanding Hayek as a commercial republican helps to make sense of many different aspects of his political theory. It explains why, unlike many libertarians, Hayek was never seriously tempted by the idea of anarcho-capitalism. Hayek did not believe that government was necessarily inimical to freedom. Indeed, he believed that government, or at least governance, in the sense of a set of institutions that subject human conduct to general and impartial rules, is a necessary precondition for freedom. For example, traffic laws limit the actions we can perform, but they do so in a way that makes us more free rather than less. They do so by allowing us to form reliable expectations about the behavior of others, which enables us to carry out our own plans more effectively than we could without them. However, a tyrant who can order us to perform or refrain from specific behaviors at a whim deprives us of the ability to effectively set and pursue our plans with any confidence even if the tyrant happens not to interfere at any given time. The fact that it is always in her power to intervene in any way she likes strips us of control over our lives, and thus renders us unfree.

Considerations such as these explain why Hayek continually emphasized the distinction between general rules on the one hand and commands on the other (or between law and legislation) in his writings. To be subject to the commands of a tyrant is to be dependent on the arbitrary will of another person. The actions of those subject to commands are based not on the beliefs and values of the actor, but on the beliefs and values of the tyrant. In contrast, general and impersonal rules do not subject individuals to the will of anyone else. They are, in Hayeks words, like laws of nature stable facts of social existence around which individuals can learn to navigate and plan their lives. They do not place some citizens in a position of subordination, nor do they elevate others to a position of dominance.

Hayeks republican political theory provides one of the main theoretical foundations for his strong support of free markets. Although many contemporary republican theorists have been either overtly hostile or at best lukewarm toward the market economy, Hayek saw correctly that market competition can serve as one of the most effective guarantors of republican freedom.

The essence of market competition is the existence of alternatives, and the right to say no to offers that fail to serve ones interests at least as well as one of those alternatives. In a competitive labor market, an employer who tries to force an employee to do something she doesnt want to do is constrained by that employees ability to quit and find a job elsewhere. A used car dealer who would like to take advantage of a buyer by charging an unfairly high price is similarly constrained by the presence of a competing dealer next door. In general, the more competitive a market is, the more prices and other terms of agreements will be regulated by the impersonal forces of supply and demand, and the less any particular market agent will be able to impose her particular will on her partner in exchange. All market actors are constrained by the general, impersonal rules of the market. But those same rules generally work to prevent any market actors from achieving a position of dominance over others.

Similarly, it is largely because Hayek views competition as such an effective check on coercion that he views government power with suspicion. After all, government is the only institution within society to claim and generally possess an effective monopoly on the use of force. And this monopoly on force is often used to establish and maintain other monopolies: on roads, on the delivery of regular mail, on the creation and enforcement of criminal law, and so on. Because individuals who value these services have nowhere else to go, they are often left with no practical alternative to compliance with the governments demands.

Moreover, as legal rules become more numerous and complex, as ordinary individuals become unable to know in advance what actions are permitted and which are prohibited, as law enforcement becomes practically unable to enforce all the rules that they could, in theory, enforce, the extent of individual discretion within government increases, and so too does the possibility of arbitrary coercion. In that case, individuals are no longer required to comply with the law, but with the edicts of a bureaucrat behind a desk, or an officer behind a badge. When the agents of the state are granted a practically unchecked power to apply the law (or not) in whatever way he sees fit, individuals are no longer fully free.

But while Hayeks republicanism provides strong support for the ideals of free markets and limited government, it also provides a criterion for determining when those institutions are not enough. Market competition generally protects the consumer against predation by unscrupulous sellers, but this protection can be undermined by collusion and natural monopolies. Similarly, competition in the labor market might protect workers from exploitation when those workers have an adequate range of alternatives available to them, but fall short when those alternatives are limited either by features of the local economy (a lack of jobs) or by characteristics of the employee (e.g. limited skills or lack of mobility).

In order to protect individual freedom in these circumstances, Hayek believed that some governmental action was both necessary and appropriate. Indeed, Hayek took great pains even in his most partisan work, The Road to Serfdom, to distance himself from a dogmatic opposition to government action, writing that nothing has done so much harm to the liberal cause as the wooden insistence of some liberals on certain rough rules of thumb, above all the principle of laissez faire. Hayek believed that government had a legitimate (though delicate) role to fill in preventing and/or regulating monopolies. He believed that government had important work to do in the areas of sanitation, health services, and public works. And, most strikingly of all, he believed that it was not only permissible but necessary for government to redistribute income in order to provide a social safety net that would ensure a certain minimum income for everyone, or a certain floor below which nobody need fall even when he is unable to provide for himself.

Hayek himself did not have much to say about why he thought such a policy might be justified. But Hayeks commitment to republican freedom provides a starting point from which an argument can easily be constructed. Poverty, while not itself coercive, renders people vulnerable to coercion by others. A wife who is dependent on her husbands paycheck may have to put up with abusive behavior simply in order to keep a roof over her head. And as Hayek himself noted, an employee in a slack labor market must do what his boss tells him or else risk destitution. In these cases and many more, people are unable to escape serious and pervasive interference by others because they lack the financial resources to stand on their own. Providing people with money gives them options, and thus the ability to live their lives in accordance with their own will, rather than in subjugation to the will of another.

Moreover, there are strong Hayekian reasons for providing assistance in the form of cash, rather than in-kind benefits. One of the most powerful and consistent themes in all of Hayeks work is the idea that government planners often lack knowledge of the particular circumstances of time and place that would be necessary to carry out their plans effectively. For Hayek, that limitation was an important part of the case for decentralized (i.e., free market) economic planning. But these same considerations provide a powerful argument for redistribution taking the form of cash grants, as opposed to in-kind transfers. Cash gives individuals the freedom to decide for themselves what they need, whether that is paying rent, buying groceries, or saving for future consumption. A system of in-kind transfers, in contrast, puts those decisions in the hands of government, where they are at least as likely to be determined by powerful special interests as they are by genuine and accurate considerations of recipients basic needs.

Hayeks support of a minimum income is compatible with his famous rejection of social justice. There is a difference, Hayek argued, between a society that accepts the duty of preventing destitution and of providing a minimum level of welfare and one which seeks to determine the just position of everybody and allocates to each what it thinks he deserves. The latter task requires a level of knowledge on the part of government that Hayek believed was impossible to obtain, and a level of discriminatory power that he believed was incompatible with a free society. The former, in contrast, could be administered by precisely the sort of general, impartial rules that Hayek believed were essential to a genuinely liberal order.

Still, despite all this, it would be misleading to claim that Hayek supported a Universal Basic Income. One of the defining features of a UBI is the idea of unconditionality, meaning that eligibility is not limited to those who are working, or who are willing to work. And this is an idea that Hayek explicitly and repeatedly rejected.

I do not question any individuals right voluntarily to withdraw from civilisation. But what entitlements do such persons have? Are we to subsidise their hermitages? There cannot be any entitlement to be exempted from the rules on which civilisation rests. We may be able to assist the weak and disabled, the very young and old, but only if the sane and adult submit to the impersonal discipline which gives us means to do so.

Still, just because Hayek rejected a UBI does not mean that Hayekians must do so. Indeed, as I argue in more detail elsewhere, Hayeks own fundamental principles provide one of the best arguments for rejecting the kind of work requirement that Hayek himself endorses. In particular, Hayeks own insights into the radically dispersed nature of knowledge of the particular circumstances of time and place pose a serious obstacle to conditional schemes such as those he favored.

The problem is this: Hayeks support of a work requirement appears to be based on a kind of reciprocity principle according to which those who seek to benefit from the productive activities of society have a moral obligation to make some reciprocal contribution to society. But it would clearly be a mistake to assume that paid labor is the only way to make such a contribution. Artists, parents, and caregivers, for instance, all make (or are capable of making) an important contribution to society, even if none of them are engaged in the sort of work that would qualify them for benefits under something like the Earned Income Tax Credit.

Furthermore, even if the reciprocity principle is true, presumably some accommodation will have to be made for those who are genuinely incapable of making a reciprocal contribution. Those who are physically or mentally unable to work, for instance, presumably should not be excluded from receiving benefits even if one thinks that those who are able but unwilling to work should not be eligible.

So, in order to correctly apply Hayeks principle, governments would have to know both (a) what sorts of activity count as a legitimate reciprocal contribution and which do not, and (b) which particular individuals are genuinely incapable (as opposed to just unwilling) to make such a contribution. But how could we expect governments to accurately arrive at this information? What standard should they apply to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate contributions to social welfare? What sort of intrusive powers will they require to distinguish between a genuine inability to find work and mere shiftlessness? The Hayekian case for an unconditional benefit is that it economizes on governments scarce knowledge, and that it errs on the side of protecting individuals who truly are in danger of subjugation due to their economic vulnerability, even if that means erring on the side of supporting some individuals who do not truly need it.

Hayeks republicanism provides an attractive way for reconciling a commitment to free markets and limited government with support for a social safety net. Moreover, Hayeks particular emphasis on the significance of dispersed knowledge push in favor of that safety net taking the form of a UBI.

This principled case for a UBI leaves many concerns of a more practical nature unanswered. Wouldnt the UBI cost too much? Wouldnt it discourage work? Wouldnt it turn the United States into a welfare magnet or, on the flip side, lead voters to push for even tighter restrictions on immigration?

But these concerns are not really objections to a UBI as such. Rather, they are objections to particular ways in which a UBI might or might not be set up. It is probably best to think of the UBI not as a single policy but as a family of policies, all of which involve cash transfers, but which vary according to the size of those transfers, whether or not they are means-tested, what sort of citizenship and residency requirement are attached to them, and so on.

My own inclination is to favor a UBI in the form of a Negative Income Tax (as Niskanens Samuel Hammond has argued, UBI is really just a NIT with a leaky bucket), and to address concerns about excessive costs and unemployment effects by altering the size and phase-out rate of the transfer. But as Miranda Fleischer and Daniel Hemel have pointed out, there are a variety of different ways of structuring the Architecture of a Basic Income, each with its own costs and benefits.

The important point is that pragmatic concerns about the UBI can largely if not entirely be addressed at the level of policy design. If the Hayekian argument I have presented here is correct, and there really is a good case to be made for a UBI on grounds of a republican conception of individual freedom, then we should not let such concerns stand in the way of making progress toward a basic income for all.

Originally posted here:

Hayek, Republican Freedom, and the Universal Basic Income - Niskanen Center

Lula’s Free, and He’s Promising to Fight – The Nation

Former Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva waves the Brazilian flag after being released from prison, in Sao Bernardo do Campo, November 9. (Amanda Perobelli / Reuters)

Subscribe now for as little as $2 a month!

Curitiba, BrazilLulas freedom was never a foregone conclusioneven after Brazils Supreme Court decided last Thursday that it was unconstitutional to jail defendants before they had exhausted their appeals. This included former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and roughly another 5,000 people in detention around the country. Legally, they should have been freed, but justice, particularly in Brazil, doesnt just happen.Ad Policy

After the Supreme Court decision, leaders of the Landless Workers Movement and Lulas Workers Party called for supporters to descend on the southern Brazilian city of Curitiba. People poured into the Santa Candida residential neighborhood surrounding the prison and joined a community of Lula supporters who had been protesting there for 19 months.

In front of the jail, rows of cameras on tripods were pointed at the entrance, waiting. Lulas lawyers visited him in the morning, and announced that they had asked a local Curitiba court to release him immediately.

Spontaneous cheers and Free Lula chants erupted every few minutes from a crowd that would grow to more than 20,000 people, according to organizers. People in red shirts walked in half-euphoria, half-daze, still disbelieving that Lula might really be free within a few hours.

We could not be happier, Pauliana Silva Gonalves told me, her fist raised before the prison walls. She wore a black shirt with a white image of Lulas face. She wiped away tears under thick sunglasses. Our voices are filled with the freedom of our companion Lula da Silva. Weve been here for 580 days, resisting.

Lula had been incarcerated since April 7, 2018. The charge was corruption: accepting a beachside apartment from a company seeking government contracts. But the evidence was weak. Lula maintained his innocence, and so did his supporters.

Gonalves arrived the day after he was imprisoned with others from the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo, more than 800 miles away. She had been here ever since. The night the helicopter arrived carrying Lula to his cell, his supporters launched an around-the-clock vigil just outside the federal police prison. Hundreds arrived and pitched their tents on the sides of the streets of the middle-class neighborhood. Gonalves was one of them.Current Issue

Subscribe today and Save up to $129.

We will only leave Curitiba when Lula is freed, said Lindbergh Farias, then a Workers Party senator, on April 8. They kept their promise. The vigil would become ground zero for left organizing around the country.

On May 1, 2018, Brazilian unions held the countrys first united Workers Day rally in decades in Curitiba. Thousands came. They returned for major actions every few months: New Years, the anniversary of Lulas imprisonment, Lulas 500th day in jail.

Those at the vigilsometimes dozens, sometimes hundredscontinued to demand Lulas freedom, day after day. They rallied. They sang. They held workshops, trainings, and endless other activities. They were physically attacked. They were threatened with eviction. In the early days, many camped. Others found places to stay. They created lives there, met spouses. One couple had a little girl. And still they cheered good morning, afternoon, and evening to Lula, every day. The former president said he could hear them from his cell. He said it gave him strength.

The fight to free Lula became the key mobilizing issue of the Brazilian left. Free Lula committees sprung up across the country. They held their own local rallies and events. On Lulas birthday, October 27, his supporters celebrated with events and all-day concerts in more than 80 cities. Leading international figures visited him in jail, including Noam Chomsky, who called Lula the worlds most prominent political prisoner.

If you like this article, please give today to help fund The Nations work.

Lula was no average leader in Brazil. He was the countrys charismatic working-class hero, who for many has near mythic status. As a metalworker in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he led massive union strikes that would mark the beginning of the end of the military dictatorship. He founded the Workers Party, and was finally elected president in 2002. During his two terms, he lifted millions of out poverty, and left office at the end of 2010 with an approval rate nearing 90 percent.

Neither he, nor his Workers Party, were perfect. They were criticized for losing touch with their base, embracing big agricultural companies, and pushing development at the cost of local communities. There were scandals; there was a recession; and there was corruption, though it was across the political spectrum. The media and the political opposition blamed it on the Workers Party. And they impeached Lulas successor, Dilma Rousseff, in 2016, under politically motivated charges of manipulating the budget, the cover for the congressional coup.

The incoming government of Michel Temer rolled back social programs, sold off state infrastructure, froze public spending for 20 years, and embroiled itself in an even bigger web of scandalkick-backs, graft, and extortion.

Lula was seen as the answer. The man who could set the country back on track. Even from behind bars, he led all of polls heading into the 2018 elections. But then he was blocked from competing.

Now, he was free. At just after 5:30 pm on Friday, Lula stepped from the building in a gray shirt and a black suit coat, flanked by his top Workers Party allies.

The crowd exploded. Shouts. Tears. Rolling chants of Lula! or Free Lula! echoed off the surrounding buildings.

He walked out the gates and into a sea of people. They squeezed and rushed. Lula pushed forward, half walking, half carried by an ocean of supporters, arms raised above their heads, cell phones filming the momentous occasion.

This would mark an end and a beginning, potentially shifting the countrys political dynamics.

Lulas freedom is certainly a boost for the Brazilian left, which has been facing an ongoing attack from the government of Jair Bolsonaro. Lula has the ability to speak like no one else to Brazils poor and working class.

Get unlimited digital access to the best independent news and analysis.

Bolsonaro has the most to lose from Lulas release, and he called an emergency meeting to discuss it with military officials the following day. Meanwhile, publicly Brazils Trump-like president remained uncharacteristically silent about Lula for almost two days. When Bolsonaro finally did comment, healso uncharacteristicallycalled for restraint.

Some analysts, however, believe Lulas freedom could also be a blessing in disguise for the far-right president, helping to unite the government camp by giving them a vocal and prominent enemy.

Bolsonaros government has been plagued by infighting among the disparate groups in its coalition: the military, the evangelicals, the devotees of Bolsonaros far-right philosophical guru Olavo de Carvalho. According to reports, Bolsonaros relationship with the military, which holds dozens of top posts, is at its most strained since he came to power. And infighting in Bolsonaros own Social Liberal Party reached a crescendo last month, when Bolsonaro expressed disgust over numerous impasses over control of the party and its finances. Today Bolsonaro announced he would quit his party and form a new one.Related Article

Despite the Supreme Court ruling permitting his release, Lula still has numerous charges and accusations against him. His lawyers are now working to clear his name, based, in part, on revelations by The Intercept Brasil, which show clear bias against Lula and the left by former judge Sergio Moronow Bolsonaros justice ministerand the countrys anti-corruption task force, which schemed in private WhatsApp messages about how to keep the Workers Party from returning to power.

Overturning Moros conviction looks far more plausible now than earlier in the year, before the release of the Intercept Brasil leaks. Already, the Supreme Court has annulled a number of Moros decisions, in a major blow to the highly politicized Car Wash operation.

For Bolsonaros far-right supporters, this is a sign of the Supreme Courts complicity in impunity and its willingness to turn the country back to the dark days of lawlessness. They have often called for the court to be impeached or removed. They railed against the courts 6-5 decision, which allowed for Lulas release, as an unconscionable act of impunity. The hashtag #STFVergoniaNacional (#SupremeCourtNationalShame) was trending on Twitter. At a right-wing rally in Curitiba, the day after Lulas release, protesters threw tomatoes at blown up pictures of the six Supreme Court justices who voted for the decision that would release Lula.

For Bolsonaros base, Lula is the head of a cabal, the epitome of Brazils corrupt and criminal political system, which has run Brazil into the ground. For his supporters, he is a hero who has once again returned to bring them hope and lift them out of despair.

Now, Lula says, Im back.

The day after his release, he led a huge rally outside the ABC Metalworkers union, where he got his start, in Sao Bernardo do Campo, So Paulo. Speaking to a sea of red-clad supporters, Lula told the crowd, Biologically speaking, Im 74 years old, but I have the energy of a 30-year-old.

He attacked Bolsonaro for pushing privatization, cutting pensions and social programs, and for his alleged ties to the paramilitaries accused of killing the black LGBT Rio de Janeiro city council member Marielle Franco, last year. He announced that the left would take back the presidency in 2022 and confirmed that he would be touring the country.

I want to build this country with the same happiness that we built it when we governed this country, Lula told supporters. The only thing Im certain of is that I have more courage to fight than before I left.

Read more here:

Lula's Free, and He's Promising to Fight - The Nation