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Monthly Archives: February 2017
Americans ‘plain dumb’ – Hastings Tribune
Posted: February 17, 2017 at 1:07 am
After reading Saturdays Hastings Tribune featuring stories and letters about a Bigfoot conference, guns everywhere, a creepy Daddy/Daughter Date Night, media bias and some absurd political views, Ive come to the conclusion that many Americans are just plain dumb.
A recent Psychology Today article said Dumbness has been steadily defined lately, by a combination of irresistible forces. These include the triumph of video over print culture; a disjunction between Americans rising level of formal education and their shaky grasp of basic geography, science and history; and the fusion of anti-rationalism with anti-intellectualism.
Yes, there has been a long tradition of anti-intellectualism in the U.S. Much of the reason is because of our declining state of education.
Im thankful we have a great learning environment here, including Hastings College, Central Community College-Hastings, and many scholarly public school teachers who place emphasis on science, research methodology and critical thinking.
Lets hope our teachers, friends and neighbors begin using their brains and the fad of increasing anti-intellectualism, now found in education, politics and business, and advanced by social media, is soon reversed and reflected in stories featured in the Tribune and elsewhere.
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Canadian architecture firm discusses design in the Midwest – Iowa State Daily
Posted: at 1:07 am
Sasa Radulovic and Johanna Hurme from 5468796 Architecture discuss previous projects they have worked on during their lecture Feb. 15. They highlighted the struggle of being creative while operating within the margins. Alex Kelly/Iowa State Daily
The status quo is never easy to change.
Johanna Hurme and Sasa Radulovic discussed Wednesday about how to go about changing the status quo in regard to architecture at Iowa State.
The two are the founders of an architecture firm, 5468796 Architecture, which began in 2007 Winnipeg, Canada. Their discussion focused on a single theme: they believe students and future architects can shape design.
Hurme began the talk by comparing the similarities of Winnipeg to cities in the Midwest.
One of their main points was to show how in many of their designs, they have tried to cut down on interior space in order to expand exterior space.
Its about the stuff that happens between buildings, Hurme said.
The firm believes by doing this, it can offset a trend in much of the United States in the design of apartment and condo buildings, where the living space is cramped, leaving little room for social gatherings.
There is this Finnish word, 'piha,' which sort of means collective outdoor space, and as kids we would say we were from the piha, not the building, and we wanted to impose that onto people, Hurme, who is from Helsinki, Finland, said.
A theme that Hurme and Radulovic also discussed was the idea of hyper-rationalism in architecture.
We often get accused of doing things for the sake of their aesthetic, but often that way is the best way to do it and [it] becomes necessary, Hurme said.
Radulovic presented a project they worked on that exemplified this thought. Their firm designed an elevated, circular condo building, with two stories of living space. Hurme mentioned that while building an elevated condo may seem irrational, it ended up being the most efficient way for the building to come to existence.
The architects also spent time discussing the business side of their firm and architecture in general.
Its our [architects'] responsibility to know our value, so that we know when we should work for free, or when we should be paid, and how much, Hurme said.
Hurme advised students to avoid putting themselves into the two common boxes the corporate architect and the struggling designer architect and to be successful in whatever way they are able to.
This facet of the discussion is what stood out to senior architecture student Amanda Hoefling.
A lot of the architects that come talk about their projects, but fail to talk about the business side, so I absolutely love how they mentioned that, because thats real life, Hoefling said.
One of the most important topics Hurme and Radulovic talked about was the ability for anyone to make an impact, even in smaller areas such as Winnipeg, or even Ames and Des Moines.
Radulovic said they believe many of their designs have had impacts in their community on social, environmental and economic levels. They have been able to be who they want to be and have success.
One thing that comes from the reality of living in a city with a smaller population is that the feedback you receive from users and people familiar with your project is very quick and direct, Radulovic said.
Throughout the lecture, the pair of architects stressed the importance of staying true to oneself and the ability each design student in the room had to impact the world. It was their belief as well, that the opportunity for impact was greatest by practicing architecture in second and third cities.
Dont abandon the place, make something out of it, Hurme said.
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House panel gives unanimous support to campus free speech bill – Salt Lake Tribune
Posted: at 1:07 am
Dixie altered its policies as a result of the lawsuit, but Coleman said there is a need to preserve spontaneous acts of constitutionally protected expression.
"Their rights were denied by the institution," Coleman said of the Dixie State University students. "If that would have been our standard, we wouldn't be a country."
Marina Lowe, legislative counsel for the ACLU of Utah, spoke in support of the bill. Diversity of thought is a key component of higher education, she said.
"I can think of no more appropriate place to really be affirming the right of speakers to speak than on a college campus," Lowe said.
Spencer Jenkins, assistant commissioner of public affairs for the Utah System of Higher Education, said Utah's colleges and universities have worked to update their free speech policies. He did not speak against the bill, but cautioned lawmakers that the portions dealing with litigation increases the liability of public campuses and, by extension, the state of Utah.
Members of the House Judiciary Committee approved the bill on a vote of 11-0. It will now go before the full House for consideration.
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House panel gives unanimous support to campus free speech bill - Salt Lake Tribune
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Free Speech, Free Religion, Voting and Taxes – Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Posted: at 1:07 am
Wall Street Journal (subscription) | Free Speech, Free Religion, Voting and Taxes Wall Street Journal (subscription) Letter writer Gary Hartzell makes an interesting statement in his Should Politics From the Pulpit Be Banned? (Letters, Feb. 10). His letter defending the 1954 Johnson Amendment that authorizes tax-exempt status for religious organizations only so ... |
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Free Speech, Free Religion, Voting and Taxes - Wall Street Journal (subscription)
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Corey Lewandowski and Free Speech: New at Reason – Reason (blog)
Posted: at 1:07 am
Anthony Behar/ZUMA Press/NewscomPresident Donald Trump's penchant for lies and demonization has thoroughly polluted political discourse. He has blurred the line between reality and fiction in a way that North Korean propagandists must envy. He has also converted many of his followers to ideas they once rejectedsuch as the ineffable charm of Vladimir Putin.
But he has also driven some on the left mad. On Feb. 1, at the University of California, Berkeley, self-styled anarchists attacked police and civilians, started fires and smashed windows in a successful effort to prevent an appearance by the venomous Breitbart News contributor Milo Yiannopoulos.
This time, the offending party is the president's first campaign manager and notorious apologist, Corey Lewandowski. He was invited by the University of Chicago's Institute of Politics, headed by longtime Barack Obama adviser David Axelrod, to participate in a closed, students-only seminar on Wednesday. Naturally, some at the university demanded that he be disinvited. Steve Chapman explains what happened next.
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Ferris: Friends’ Central not alone in fighting free-speech battles – Philly.com
Posted: at 1:07 am
The Quakers have an elegant turn of phrase for humanity's common link to the divine: There is that of God in everyone.
The belief is at the core of many of the testimonies of the Society of Friends: honesty, equality, simplicity, peace, integrity, stewardship. All are one in the spirit. With that connection in mind, you treat all, and even the very environment around you, with dignity and respect. Do unto others, in other words.
It's an ideal, something to aspire to, like all core religious philosophies. Being human, on any given day people will fall short. And blessed are the transgressions that occur in private, for they allow you to kick your own butt. Err publicly, though, or just be perceived as doing so, and you get to experience another common link among humans: That of the judge in everyone.
In the eyes of some, Craig Sellers has lately fallen short. Quite publicly.
Sellers is head of Friends' Central, a 172-year-old Quaker school in Wynnewood. Its vision: To awaken courage and intellect - and peacefully transform the world.
But what the school community was recently awakened to was news that a speaking invitation to a Swarthmore College professor had been rescinded.
Sa'ed Atshan is a professor of peace and conflict resolution studies. An advocate of LGBT rights in the Middle East. A Palestinian Quaker. And - most critical to the canceled talk - someone with ties to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel. BDS bills itself as a Palestinian rights movement but is considered by many as both anti-Semitic and committed to the destruction of the Jewish state. The movement is also famous for shutting down anything resembling pro-Israel speech on college campuses.
With members of the Friends' Central community raising concerns, Sellers has called for a "pause" on speakers coming in to discuss the Mideast.
Don't judge him too harshly. He's caught between the highest of religious, education, and civic ideals and an issue involving a decades-long life and death struggle on which there is no discernible compromise. And maybe the wrong step here means the annual fund drive is a little less flush.
Somewhere in that cauldron, Sellers now must help his community discern the way forward, while setting the example, with each step, that there is that of God in everyone. Even within those who might, in the most heated of moments, effectively mask their claim on the divinity.
If this school were an anomaly, there might be more room to single it out and bewail this affront to free speech. But it's hardly alone in struggling with how best to discuss, debate, or flat-out fight over, seemingly intractable issues. And it's certainly not the only place where who gets to speak is every bit as contested as what gets said.
Look at higher education, where, every spring, proud parents receive their invitations to the college commencements of their graduates. And just as reliably come disinvitations to speakers whose views upset some constituency on campus. In addition, as Conor Friedersdorf described it in the Atlantic last year, "free speech on campus is threatened from a dozen directions. It is threatened by police spies, overzealous administrators, and students who are intolerant of dissent. It is threatened by activists agitating for speech codes and sanctions for professors or classmates who disagree with them. It is threatened by people . . . who shut down events to prevent people from speaking."
Newsrooms are not immune to these struggles. The unconventional candidate who often brought out the worst in his primary and general election rivals is having a similar effect on those who cover him. During the campaign, some in the journalism community called for abandoning objectivity to thwart what they saw as a threat to decency and democracy. And - despite much excellent work - no doubt some readers and viewers chuckled and thought: What objectivity? Plenty of those same people are now taking their business elsewhere over what they consider unfair coverage of the new administration and its supporters.
Such tensions prompted a recent town-hall meeting at the Wall Street Journal. The New York Times reported that the Journal editor defended his paper's coverage to the staff, some of whom worried about being too pro-administration; suggested other newsrooms had discarded objectivity; and invited those who wanted a more confrontational approach on President Trump to seek employment elsewhere. Also there, an editor on the newspaper's opinion pages has been forced out, with the Atlantic calling the move "a victory for the pro-Trump faction on the editorial staff." He is not the industry's only such casualty.
In the frenzied political moment, some see in these battles the stirrings of fascism. Nonsense. Americans disagree, they challenge each other, constantly. Even, one would hope, on campuses and in newsrooms. But they needn't despise each other, or show disdain for other viewpoints. And they don't have to blow every complaint - or tweet - out of proportion. Follow Sellers' example and take a pause. Commit to treating others with dignity and respect. Recommit to the values of the institution being served.
These are ideals. No one expects perfection. But without a solid foundation to stand on, it's tough to weather the inevitable storms of criticism or judgment.
Kevin Ferris is the Inquirer commentary editor. kf@phillynews.com @ferrisk3
Inquirer Editorial: Let Friends Central students hear from an Israeli and a Palestinian Feb 16 - 12:07 PM
Friends' Central alumni ask school to reinvite Palestinian speaker, reinstate teachers Feb 15 - 3:57 PM
DN editorial: Friends' Central lacks integrity in shunning controversial speaker Feb 14 - 8:32 PM
Commentary: Friends' Central wrong to cancel speaker Feb 14 - 8:55 AM
Friends' Central School suspends teachers over Palestinian speaker Feb 13 - 5:05 PM
Friends' Central students protest cancellation of Palestinian speaker Feb 10 - 4:35 PM
Published: February 16, 2017 3:09 PM EST The Philadelphia Inquirer
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What is Freedom of Speech? – Swarthmore Phoenix
Posted: at 1:06 am
As a citizen of China, one of the most oppressive regimes in the world, I must say that I am disappointed by my fellow liberals indifference toward free speech. My experience tells me that whether or not citizens have the right to free speech is the most important distinction between a democracy and a dictatorship. To give you an idea of what it is like to be a Chinese citizen, for the first 18 years of my life, my typical class schedule included a Politics and Thoughts class that taught Communist Party propaganda, a History class that taught alternative history carefully censored and rewritten by the Communist Party, and a literature class that included only authors and articles the Party deemed appropriate. I was required to memorize key speeches and principles invented by Party leaders in order to pass the ideology test, in which if anyone dared to write anything negative about the Communist Party, he or she would automatically get a zero and not graduate.
In China, online forums and social media are carefully monitored so that counter-revolutionary comments are promptly removed and perpetrators are punished. Human rights lawyers and activists are routinely jailed in secret locations or sent to forced labor camps for their beliefs and activities. It isnt that life is insufferable for normal people without free speech; the brilliance of censorship is that it makes you think only one kind of view can possibly be right, so you dont feel the need to protest, dissent, or even think.
In high school, during a summer at Yale, and my first time in the United States, I took a human rights class and a legal philosophy class. For the first time in my life, I read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which proclaims that everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression. I read John Stuart Mills On Liberty and his belief that everyone should have the absolute right to free speech. I read the landmark Supreme Court case, National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie (1977), in which a Jewish lawyer of the American Civil Liberties Union defended the Nazi Partys right to march in a predominantly Jewish village. I learned about the Tiananmen Square Massacre, on which information was censored in China and where brave college students fought for democracy. They fought for freedom of speech and thought only to face the crackdown of an illiberal regime stuck in its own ways. I learned that liberalism means tolerance and commitment to our inalienable and indivisible rights, no matter what powerful people say, and I began to proudly call myself a liberal. Imagine my surprise when I discovered that most of my liberal friends at Swarthmore not only advocate violence against those who hold a different view, but also believe that freedom of speech is somehow a conservative value.
Most debates about free speech these days are simply confused. The kind of knee jerk reaction that many liberals display toward claims of free speech is largely a response to the hypocrisy of some conservative politicians, who, while arguing that liberals are stifling free speech on campus, are perfectly willing to withhold funding from colleges they deem too radical. Free speech as a constitutional right is different from the kind of campus free speech for which such conservatives are clamoring. Unfortunately, many liberals fail to draw the distinction and end up losing faith in the doctrine of free speech in general. Even more unfortunate are attempts to equate free speech with oppression or even white supremacy. Without freedom of speech, only those in positions of power can speak.
Freedom of speech as a legal, constitutional, and human right is important because it is the bedrock of democracy. Every attempt to undermine this right risks undermining the foundation of democracy and making the U.S. more like China or Russia. You may think I am being alarmist, but plenty of examples exist where free speech restrictions in other liberal democracies have backfired. After a German comedian accused the Turkish President and Dictator Recep Tayyip Erdoan of oppressing minorities and having sexual intercourse with farm animal Erdoan sued the comedian with the support of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, under an old German law. In France, after the terrorist attack in 2015, a Muslim was sentenced to a year in prison for shouting Im proud to be Muslim. I dont like Charlie [Charlie Hebdo, a far-left French magazine previously attacked for mocking Islam]. They were right to do it. As Howard Gillman, the Chancellor of UC Irvine, argues, [d]emocracies are more fragile things than we might like to believe. Free speech is important partly because it allows political minority groups to voice their opinion without fear of retribution.
The constitutional right to free speech, however, is not absolute. Child pornography, obscenity, fighting words, libel, and incitement, for example, are not protected by the First Amendment. But these exceptions are meant to be exactly that exceptions. Some have argued that hate speech is not free speech. It is factually incorrect as a descriptive claim, and practically and legally problematic as a prescriptive claim. Since the issue of hate speech matters deeply to many skeptics of free speech, Id like to set the record straight here. In R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992), a unanimous decision of the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a law that banned the placement of a burning cross or Nazi swastika on public and private property. The majority reasoned that the law was unconstitutional because it only prohibited particular kinds of fighting words that involve race, color, creed, religion or gender. In other words, the law constituted both viewpoint and subject matter discrimination. Even though in Beauharnais v. Illinois (1952) the Supreme Court upheld a similar law because the Court considered speech targeting racial or religious groups to be group libel, as constitutional law scholars Kathleen Sullivan and Gerald Gunther explain, most judges no longer believe that Beauharnais is good law.
Should the government be allowed to ban hate speech as many free speech skeptics wish? I do not believe this is a good idea. While it is permissible for the government to prohibit speech that incites imminent violence (see Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)), or increase penalty for hate crime (see Wisconsin v. Mitchell (1993)), as the Court argues in R.A.V., any specific prohibition on hate speech involves content-based restrictions. If, for the sake of argument, the government is allowed to ban speech based on its content, then who is to stop right-wing politicians from passing laws that prohibit speech, for example, that advocates for the violent overthrow of capitalism or mocks Christianity? As the ACLU argues, free speech rights are indivisible. Restricting the speech of one group or individual jeopardizes everyones rights because the same laws or regulations used to silence bigots can be used to silence you. Of course, the Court can recognize a hate speech exception to the First Amendment, but as The Economist argues, such an exception will only encourage ideologues to harass those who hold a different view. In India, a psychologist and well-known public intellectual was charged under the countrys hate speech law for making a point about corruption and lower-caste politicians. He has since said that because of the incident, he will have to be careful now. Similarly, a hate speech law may allow Trump to sue Clinton if she had instead said Evangelical Christians or white Trump supporters belong to a basket of deplorables. I am not arguing that instituting a hate speech exception is constitutionally impossible, but I suspect it will either be too broad so as to amount to censorship, or too narrow so as to be utterly indistinguishable from other exceptions such as fighting words.
Speech on campus, of course, is an entirely different matter. Public colleges are required by the Constitution to provide First Amendment protection for everyone. Private colleges like Swarthmore, on the other hand, should protect the most vulnerable members of their communities, but they should also promote diversity of political opinion and speech that has intellectual value. The decision to allow or disallow certain speech is ultimately a balancing act, but colleges should not, for example, disinvite conservative speakers merely because their viewpoints are unpopular or offensive. (I do not, however, believe Milo Yiannopoulos deserves a platform on campus, because I do not believe his speech has any value at all.) Some, however, have argued that hate speech deserves a place on campus. Gillman and UC Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks, for example, argue that only by subjecting hate speech to examination can we expose the lie and bigotry that it is. I am sympathetic to such arguments even though I believe the line should be drawn where students might begin to feel unsafe.
There is another issue: do some students, because of their privileges, have no right to discuss certain topics or issues? There is a strong case to be made that those who belong to groups that traditionally have less voice should be given more voice to enrich the marketplace of ideas, but I think the answer to this question should be no. A friend of mine told me that when his public policy class was discussing whether catcalling should be made a felony, he was told by a female student that his view does not matter because he is not a woman. However, as a low-income and minority student, he knew that such laws disproportionately affect minorities. Regardless of whether his view was correct, he was capable of making a valuable contribution to the discussion. The point is, in the context of campus speech, more speech is almost always better than less.
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At UCLA, book on ‘Islamic Totalitarianism’ censored at free speech event – The College Fix
Posted: at 1:06 am
At UCLA earlier this month a book about Islamic Totalitarianism prompted a group of student protesters to allegedly form a human shield around a table holding the publication, a confrontation that ended after a campus official demanded the books be removed.
The incident took place before a panel discussion Feb. 1 on the threat to free speech co-hosted by the UCLA chapter of the Federalist Society and the Ayn Rand Institute.
The university has since apologized for the incident and has implemented procedures to ensure it does not happen again, and a campus spokesman disputes the claim that students formed a human shield to block the book.
The book that drew the ire of protesters is Failing to Confront Islamic Totalitarianism: From George W. Bush to Barack Obama and Beyond. Its co-author, Elan Journo, director of policy research at the Ayn Rand Institute, was not at the event but was told by his staffers who were there what happened.
Journo told The College Fix that approximately twelve UCLA students expressed disapproval of the publications insulting language and effectively formed something like a human barricade around the table where his book was presented during a reception prior to the talk.
In an article in The Hill, Journo states that at this point, you might hope the UCLA administration would step in to re-assert the principle of intellectual freedom that is so crucial to education, a free society, and the advancement of human knowledge. Finally a rep from UCLA did step into abet the student protestors. My book was inflammatory. It had to go.
Thus: at a panel about freedom of speech and growing threats to it not least from Islamists UCLA students and school administrators tried to ban a book that highlights the importance of free speech, the persistent failure to confront Islamic totalitarianism, and that movements global assaults on free speech.
Journo told The College Fix that based on eyewitness accounts of my colleagues on the scene when the UCLA rep stepped in, my colleagues who were staffing the table tried to point out the absurdity of ban the book. At that point, the rep picked up the stack of books and demanded that all copies of the book be removed, and that either he would take them or they could be put them under the table.
Not wanting to escalate the dispute or delay the event, which was about to start, the staff manning the display table decided to put the stack of books under the table. That was about the time the event began, and people entered the auditorium. The protesting students dispersed, except for two who attended the event, Journo told The Fix.
Later, during the panel event, YouTube broadcaster Dave Rubin, who also served as the event moderator, held up a copy of Journos book, bringing to light the irony of the situation.
Rubin placed the book on the table and jokingly stated that its a scary thing filled with words.
He added: Its just a book and its a set of ideas.
Reached for comment, ULCA Laws Executive Director of Communications Bill Kisliuk said in an email to The College Fix that it is true that that a UCLA staffer made an error in judgment and requested that a book be removed from sale in violation of university policy.
The school has since apologized for this action and taken steps to prevent it from happening again. It is worth noting that the evenings event, in which speakers addressed a student audience and exchanged in a free flow of ideas, proceeded without interruption or interference, Kisliuk said.
The speakers included Flemming Rose, author of The Tyranny of Silence, and Steve Simpson of the Ayn Rand Institute.
In his email to The College Fix, Kisliuk also pointed out that while the institute had permission to have a table in the hallway outside the event, ARI representatives never indicated in multiple discussions with UCLA officials beforehand that they planned to sell materials. University of California and UCLA policy require that third-party organizations obtain advance approval before seeking to sell products on campus.
Kisliuk also disputes the claim that the students formed a human shield.
Prior to the event, several students gathered at the ARI table and engaged in dialogue about the book. They did not seek to impede attendees interested in the book, nor was anyone prevented from entering the room where the panel discussion took place, he said. A member of the UCLA Law staff did ask an ARI representative to stop selling copies of the book. While ARI staff removed copies of the book from the table on request, at least one copy remained visible on the table until ARI packed its materials and stopped staffing the table.
Kisliuk said that in a letter of apology to the Ayn Rand Institute, Law Dean Jennifer Mnookin stated that the request to remove copies of the book was not in keeping with UCLAs Law or her vigorous commitment to support free speech and respectful debate.
Moving forward, Mnookin has partnered with administration to hatch out a plan for enhancing policies and procedures which would prevent this occurrence from repeating. Kisliuk describes how the plan now includes improved student organization training in regard to protection of free speech at events.
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About the Author
Dominic Mancini is an undergraduate student completing Ashford University's online psychology program. Currently working as an intern at the Quicken Loan's Detroit headquarters, his career goals include human resources, journalism and political commentary. He has previously managed a YouTube channel by filming and uploading video blogs and tutorials. During his spare time, Dominic enjoys playing the piano, heading to the gym, and discussing current events.
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Can Mattis Back Up His NATO Threat? – Foreign Policy (blog)
Posted: at 1:03 am
Foreign Policy (blog) | Can Mattis Back Up His NATO Threat? Foreign Policy (blog) Jim Mattis delivered the goods at his first NATO defense ministerial as Secretary of Defense. There was a bit of whiplash during the first day as Mattis went from a reassuring public statement to a statement behind closed doors warning that the Untied ... Mattis's NATO Warning NATO's European allies take steps to meet US demand Brexit Britain's Nato strategy is fatally flawed |
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NATO, Finland deepen cooperation on cyber defense | TheHill – The Hill
Posted: at 1:03 am
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Finland are stepping up their cooperation on cyber defense in the face of increased threats in cyberspace and a resurgent Russia.
NATO and Finland on Thursday signed a political framework agreement on cyber defense cooperation that will allow them to better protect and strengthen their networks.
We look forward to enhancing our situational awareness and exchanging best practices with Finland, including through dedicated points of contact for rapid information exchange on early warning information and lessons learned, Ambassador Sorin Ducaru, NATOs assistant secretary general for emerging security challenges, said.
This arrangement is a good example of the cooperation between NATO and Finland it is practical, substantial and at the same time mutually beneficial, Juusti said in a statement. Finland sees many opportunities of enhanced cooperation for example in conducting training and exercises in the cyber domain.
The new agreement comes on the heels of the Russian governments alleged cyber meddling in the U.S. presidential election. The U.S. intelligence community has concluded that Moscow used cyberattacks and disinformation to undermine confidence American democracy and damage Democratic nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonThe 16 most memorable quotes from Trump's press conference Trump airs grievances at first full press conference Trump to black reporter: Help me meet with Black Caucus MORE, which Russia has denied.
There are now suspicions that Moscow will also try to meddle in forthcoming European elections, including those in France and Germany.
NATO has focused more on cyber defense as cyber intrusions have become more pervasive and damaging, stoking concerns about the potential for attacks that might compromise critical infrastructure. At the Warsaw Summit last July, member states recognized cyberspace as a domain of operations in which NATO must defend itself.
NATO infrastructure came under threat from 500 cyberattacks each month in 2016, an increase of 60 percent over the previous year, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg revealed last month.
Finland and NATO actively cooperate on security and other operations, and the country has shown signs of wanting to boost cooperation with the alliance. Last year, Russian President Vladimir Putin signaled that he might move troops closer to the Finnish-Russian border if Finland were to join NATO.
NATO member states have bolstered troop presence in the Baltic States and Poland to deter Russian aggression in eastern Europe, nearly three years after Moscows annexation of Ukraines Crimean Peninsula.
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NATO, Finland deepen cooperation on cyber defense | TheHill - The Hill
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