Saturday, December 21, 2019

Kashmir Internet Shutdown Takes Toll on Economy 

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Kashmir Internet Shutdown Takes Toll on Economy 

The internet shutdown in India's Muslim-majority state of Jammu and Kashmir, which shows no signs of abating and has been the longest lockdown in a democracy, is taking a toll on the local economy and has led to the loss of thousands of jobs, according to rights groups and analysts. 

Access Now, a global digital rights group that has been monitoring the situation in Kashmir, told VOA the "loss of connectivity in the valley" because of the shutdown has been "devastating to the local economy." 

"India's internet shutdown in Kashmir is the longest ever in a democracy," Raman Jit Singh Chima, Access Now's senior international counsel and Asia Pacific policy director, told VOA. 

"The Kashmir Chamber of Commerce has gone on record to speak of the immense economic cost that the internet shutdown has caused to the region, undermining the very economic goals that the Union Government promised it would drive through integrating the area into the wider Indian Union," Chima added. 

The lockdown has been in place since August, when New Delhi revoked Kashmir's semiautonomous status and imposed a curfew on the region, including shutting down the internet. 

Indian security personnel guard outside the civil secretariat of the Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir during the annual reopening of the former state's winter capital in Jammu, India, Nov. 4, 2019.
FILE - Indian security personnel guard outside the civil secretariat of the Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir during the annual reopening of the former state's winter capital in Jammu, India, Nov. 4, 2019.

The government defended its decision, saying it was a temporary measure to prevent possible terrorist attacks. 

In a televised address to the nation in August, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said, "The Kashmir decision will bring positive changes in the lives of the common man. It would mean the protection of Indian laws, industrialization, a boost in tourism and, therefore, more employment opportunities." 

However, opposition parties in the country argue the opposite is happening. 

"You have redefined the definition of normalcy, the J&K [Jammu and Kashmir] definition of normalcy now prevails in the rest of the country. This is uncaring and unthinking government," Indian National Congress said on twitter this week in reference to what's happening in Kashmir and the passage of a recent controversial law. 

India's parliament recently approved legislation that allows Hindus, Christians and other religious minorities who are living in India illegally to become citizens. The applicants must prove they were persecuted because of their religious beliefs in neighboring Bangladesh, Pakistan or Afghanistan. 

However, the law does not apply to Muslims, which critics say is discriminatory. 

Terrorism or protests? 

India's government, led by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), defends its continued lockdown of internet connectivity in Kashmir as a deterrent to terrorist attacks. 

While briefing the country's lawmakers in November, Indian Home Minister Amit Shah, a close ally of Modi, said the internet would be restored as soon as local authorities felt it was appropriate. 

"There are activities by our neighbors in the region, so we must keep security in mind. Whenever local authorities see fit, a decision will be taken to restore it [internet service]," Shah said, referring to Pakistan's alleged interference in the region. 

India has accused Pakistan's intelligence agency of fomenting instability in Kashmir by supporting local militant groups, a charge Islamabad has denied. 

A masked Kashmiri boy throws stones at a police drone flying over Jamia Masjid mosque where Kashmiris are offering their first…
FILE - A Kashmiri boy throws rocks at a police drone over Jamia Masjid mosque where Kashmiris were offering their first Friday prayers since Aug. 5 in Srinagar, Kashmir, Dec. 20, 2019. The mosque was shut Aug. 5 as part of India's security lockdown.

Some analysts, however, say the internet lockdown is largely designed to prevent collective political protests. 

"The stated reason [by the Indian government] was to contain possible terrorist attacks. In my view, it is largely designed to prevent collective political protests of any sort," Sumit Ganguly, a professor of political science and the Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilization at Indiana University, told VOA. 

Other analysts, such as Ashok Swain, a professor of peace and conflict studies at Uppsala University in Sweden who follows Indian politics, said the reasons behind the Indian government's decision to shut down the internet in Kashmir are multifaceted. 

"As I see [it], the real reason for [the] internet shutdown is not to restrict communication within Kashmir Valley, but to restrict Kashmir's communication with [the] outside world," Swain said, adding the government is more concerned about its global image as a democracy. 

"By taking away the internet, [the] regime is also controlling the local media and its publication as the journalists are dependent on [the] regime's mercy to communicate with [the] outside world and to contact with their offices," Swain said. 

Local economy 

Sheikh Ashiq, the president of the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, told VOA that there has been a rapid rise in unemployment and a significant drop in Kashmir's cottage industry. 

"Our handicraft sector, that is solely based on the internet, is at a standstill. As a result, 50,000 artisans are jobless," Ashiq said, adding that the export of its heritage industry handicrafts had declined by 62%. 

Experts say the action against Kashmir has led to losses in tourism, health care, education and in the communications industries. 

"The state economy has lost more $1.5 billion due to [the] lockdown. Several companies, whose operations were internet-dependent, have been closed," Swain said. 

The internet lockdown "has affected education, health service and even regular movement of the people, creating a severe humanitarian crisis. Business, particularly fruit trade and tourism, have [been] affected severely," he added. 

Kashmir Economy Suffers Under Internet Shutdown video player.
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Local voices 

Young Kashmiri entrepreneurs like Muheet Mehraj see a bleak future in Kashmir, as the internet shutdown has placed a cloud over future employment prospects. 

"If something doesn't change for the better with time or our internet isn't resumed, then I don't understand what I am going to do in the future," Mehraj told VOA. 

Many businesspeople told VOA they have been forced to leave Kashmir to earn an income. 

Syed Mujtaba, the owner of Kashmir Art Quest, shifted his business to Delhi because of the lockdown. 

"Eventually, my family and my own logic told me it was best to leave Kashmir," Mujtaba told VOA. 

"Now I am in Delhi, you know … in search of new opportunity … and halfheartedly so, to be honest. My heart is still in Kashmir and will always remain in Kashmir," he added. 

The government, however, continues to paint a normal picture of the situation on the ground. 

"The situation in Kashmir does not need to be normalized. The situation in Kashmir is already normal," Home Minister Shah told lawmakers last month. 

Ashiq, of the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce, paints a different picture. 

"We are handed a narrative of development. However, we do not see any form of development," he said. 

VOA's Zubair Dar contributed to this story from Srinagar. 


December 22, 2019 at 11:00AM

New Lebanon PM, Lawmakers Discuss Road Ahead

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New Lebanon PM, Lawmakers Discuss Road Ahead

Lebanon's new prime minister consulted Saturday with parliamentary blocs, discussing the shape of the future government, and said afterward that legislators all had one concern: to get the country out of its ``strangling`` economic crisis. 

Hassan Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He's also taking office against the backdrop of nationwide protests against the country's ruling elite. 

``Lebanon is in the intensive care unit and needs efforts'' by all sides, from political groups to protesters, Diab said. 

Consultations began a day after scuffles broke out in Beirut and other areas between supporters of outgoing Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Lebanese troops and riot police. The ex-premier's supporters were protesting Diab's nomination. At least seven soldiers were injured. 

Urgency

Diab told reporters later that all members of Parliament encouraged him to form a cabinet ``as soon as possible.`` Cabinets usually take months to form in Lebanon because of bargaining among rival groups. 

Diab said he hoped to form a government of about 20 ministers made up of independents and technocrats within few weeks. ``It's time to work and we ask God to make us successful,'' he said. 

He added that the situation in Lebanon could not stand any delays amid its worst economic and financial crisis since the end of the 1975-90 civil war. 

Lebanese banks have imposed unprecedented capital controls in recent weeks. Thousands have lost their jobs and the economy is expected to contract in 2020. 

Diab began his meetings Saturday at Parliament with Speaker Nabih Berri, then held talks with former prime ministers, including caretaker Hariri. He later met with blocs at the legislature. 

Militant Hezbollah and its allies had previously insisted that a new government consist of politicians and experts, but on Saturday, Diab said ``all parties agree with me regarding a government made up of independents and experts, including Hezbollah.'' 

Legislator Paula Yacoubian, who backs the protest movement, said Diab told her ``the government will be fully made up of independents and that he will step down if there is going to be members of the state's political parties.'' 

She added: ``I heard very nice talk similar to what the people have been demanding.'' 

Protesters' demand

The protesters have been demanding a government that does not include members of political parties whom they blame for widespread corruption. Diab said he would meet with the protesters in the coming days, without elaborating. 

Earlier Saturday, Hariri cautioned supporters against violent protests, saying: ``The army is ours and police forces are for all Lebanese.'' 

An anti-government protester, right, leads a chant as activists gather outside of the state-run electricity company in Beirut,…
An anti-government protester, right, leads a chant as activists gather outside the state-run electricity company in Beirut, Lebanon, Dec. 21, 2019.

Shortly before sunset Saturday, scores of protesters, including Hariri supporters, closed two major intersections in Beirut, demanding that Diab step aside and saying he failed to win wide support from Sunni legislators. 

Saturday's protests were peaceful, unlike those of the night before, when stones and firecrackers were hurled at security forces. 

The new prime minister won a majority of lawmakers' votes after receiving backing from powerful Hezbollah and its allies, which have a majority of seats in Parliament. 

However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party, headed by Hariri. That's particularly problematic for Diab, who, as a Sunni, doesn't have the backing of his own community. And under Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing agreement, the prime minister must be Sunni. 

The head of Hezbollah's 12-member bloc, Mohammad Raad, said the group wants a government that preserves what the Lebanese have achieved in ``victories during the confrontation with the Israeli enemy and to maintain our national sovereignty, our maritime [oil and gas] wealth and land and to prevent the enemy from undermining its sovereignty and the national dignity.'' 

Anti-corruption efforts

A lawmaker from the bloc led by the Shiite Amal group — headed by Berri, the Parliament speaker — said the incoming government should focus on fighting corruption. 

``It should be an emergency government that works on solving the economic, financial, social and banking crisis,`` Anwar al-Khalil said after the meeting with Diab. 

Samir al-Jisr of Hariri's bloc said they would not take part in Diab's government. 

Hezbollah's ally, Gebran Bassil, who heads the largest bloc in Parliament, said the future government ``is not Hezbollah's Cabinet but of all Lebanese and it is not against anyone.'' 

Michel Moawad, a harsh critic of the militant group, said Diab told him the new government will not be controlled by ``Hezbollah and will not be confrontational.'' 

Hezbollah had backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but the group differed with him over the shape of the new government. 

Lebanon's sustained, leaderless protests erupted in mid-October and forced Hariri's resignation within days. But politicians were later unable to agree on a new prime minister. Protests and paralysis have worsened the economic crisis. 


December 22, 2019 at 06:55AM

『CDTVスペシャル!クリスマス音楽祭2019』SP企画の一部を発表

『CDTVスペシャル!クリスマス音楽祭2019』SP企画の一部を発表


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1986年にリリースされて以来、30年以上されている久保田利伸のラブソング『Missing』。この名曲を久保田とAIがコラボで歌唱。収録は都内の教会で行われた ...
December 21, 2019 at 10:07PM

Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win

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Tom Homan: 2020 Dems making promises to illegals 'guaranteeing' Trump win 2020 Democrats making promises to illegal immigrants are "guaranteeing" President Trump's re-election in 2020, former Acting ICE Director Tom Homan said Saturday.
December 22, 2019 at 12:15AM

7 tech freebies, Facebook tracking, secure gadgets, and more: Tech Q&A

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7 tech freebies, Facebook tracking, secure gadgets, and more: Tech Q&A Facebook tracking, secure gadgets and much more in this week's Tech Q&A.
December 21, 2019 at 09:00PM

Ex-FBI analyst sentenced for accessing activist’s emails to 'protect Mueller'

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Ex-FBI analyst sentenced for accessing activist's emails to 'protect Mueller' A former FBI analyst was sentenced to seven days in jail Friday after admitting he illegally accessed an email address belonging to his neighbor, a right-wing Washington lobbyist, as part of his efforts to expose a smear campaign against Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
December 21, 2019 at 08:30PM

Arshak Makichyan

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Arshak Makichyan

Lopifalko: External links: interview with Makichyan at UNESCO


'''Arshak Makichyan''' is a Russian climate youth activist, originally from Armenia.<ref name="aljazeera-brown"></ref> As of December 2019 he has staged a solo [[School strike for the climate]] every Friday in [[Pushkin Square]], [[Moscow]],<ref></ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> for more than 40 weeks.<ref name="guardian-watts">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> In Russia, individual protests are lawful but anything larger requires police permission.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> Makichyan has applied to hold a bigger demonstration unsuccessfully more than 10 times.<ref name="guardian-watts"/>

Makichyan has inspired others across Russia to do the same, including other single person pickets in Moscow.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> In December 2019 he was jailed for six days.<ref name="guardian-watts"/>

Makichyan is a violin student.<ref name="aljazeera-brown"/><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

==References==


==External links==
*[https://ift.tt/2tFepKA "Arshak Makichyan: The lone picketer"] – interview with Makichyan at UNESCO




[[Category:Climate activists]]
[[Category:Russian people]]
[[Category:Armenian people]]
[[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Living people]]

December 21, 2019 at 04:49PM

Pennsylvania boy, 3, shoots sleeping father in buttocks, cops say

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Pennsylvania boy, 3, shoots sleeping father in buttocks, cops say A Pennsylvania man was rushed to the hospital Thursday evening after police said his 3-year-old son fired a shot into his buttocks.
December 21, 2019 at 04:04PM

North Korea Slams ‘Reckless’ US Remarks on Rights Record

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North Korea Slams 'Reckless' US Remarks on Rights Record

North Korea Saturday lashed out at the U.S. State Department's recent criticism of its human rights record, warning Washington would "pay dearly" for what it called "reckless" remarks.

North Korea's Foreign Affairs Ministry specifically took issue with a recent VOA interview of a senior State Department official who said the U.S. remains "deeply concerned" about North Korean human rights abuses.

"Such malicious words which came at this time when the DPRK-U.S. relations are reaching a highly delicate point will only produce a result of further aggravating the already tense situation on the Korean peninsula, like pouring oil over burning fire," the North Korean ministry said in a statement published in the Korean Central News Agency.

The comments come at a particularly tense moment. North Korea, which has promised the U.S. an ominous "Christmas gift," has threatened to walk away from nuclear talks and resume major provocations, such as a nuclear test or long-range missile launch.

The U.S. is also gradually increasing pressure on the North. The State Department Friday renewed its designation of North Korea as a violator of religious freedom. The same day, U.S. President Donald Trump also signed legislation tightening sanctions on Pyongyang.

North Korea hasn't commented on those latest moves. Instead, it objected to a Thursday interview that VOA State Department correspondent Nike Ching conducted with Robert Destro, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights, and labor.

"We remain deeply concerned about what's going on in North Korea," Destro told VOA. "I think the credible evidence that's coming out of North Korea speaks for itself."

Destro defended the Trump administration's policy of pursuing negotiations with North Korea while it criticizes its human rights record.

"My view is that there's nothing inconsistent with the president trying to engage with the North Koreans and to try and get them to change their behavior. That's the whole point of the negotiations," Destro said.

North Korea's foreign ministry called those remarks "reckless."

"If the U.S. dares to impair our system by taking issue over 'human rights issue,' it will be made to pay dearly for such an act," the KCNA statement said.

The statement accused the U.S. of being a "cesspit of all sorts of human rights violations," but insisted North Koreans "fully enjoy genuine freedom and rights, being masters of the country."

North Korea is widely seen as being one of the world's most repressive governments. It restricts nearly every aspect of its citizens' civil and political liberties, including freedom of expression, assembly, association, religion, and movement.

Lots of Posturing, Little Progress in US-North Korea Talks in 2019
Teaser Description
There was lots of posturing but little progress in 2019, as the United States and North Korea spent much of the year trying to convince the other side to take the first step in nuclear talks. With North Korea's end-of-year threats and its misguided belief that it can influence the 2020 U.S. presidential election, some fear the Korean Peninsula could soon return to a state of major tensions, as VOA's Bill Gallo reports from Seoul.

Mixed messages?

The U.S. has been accused of sending mixed messages on North Korean human rights issues.

Earlier this month, the Trump administration prevented a United Nations Security Council meeting on North Korean human rights abuses, effectively blocking the meeting for the second consecutive year.

Reports suggested the move was meant to preserve the chances for diplomacy. Human Rights Watch said the decision sent a "clear message to Pyongyang and other abusive governments that the U.S. is prepared to look away regarding rights violations."

However, by signing the sanctions legislation Friday, Trump is applying major additional pressure on North Korea.

The legislation, part of a broad 2020 military spending bill, calls for sanctions on North Korean imports and exports of textiles, coal, and other natural resources, as well as sanctions on banks that deal with North Korea.

The North Korea sanctions provision is called the "Otto Warmbier North Korea Nuclear Sanctions and Enforcement Act," named after the U.S. student who died after 17 months in a North Korean prison.

Joshua Stanton, a Washington-based lawyer and major proponent of more sanctions on North Korea, said the legislation is significant because it shifts enforcement authority from the Treasury Department, which has been reluctant to tighten sanctions on North Korea, to the Justice Department.

"One way or another, whether Donald Trump still loves him or not, (North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's) reprieve is about to end," said Stanton in a blog post.

Stalled talks

Trump and Kim have met three times since June 2018 but have failed to make any progress in nuclear talks. Earlier this month, North Korean officials suggested denuclearization was off the negotiating table.

At their first meeting in Singapore, Trump and Kim agreed to "work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula." Neither side has agreed on what that phrase means or how to begin working toward it and Pyongyang has since insisted it never agreed to unilaterally give up its nuclear weapons.

Kim has given the U.S. an end-of-year deadline to provide more concessions. It has threatened to conduct a long-range missile test. That would end North Korea's self-imposed moratorium on intercontinental ballistic missile and nuclear tests, which it announced in April 2018.

On Friday, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley said the U.S. is closely watching North Korea.

 "North Korea's indicated a variety of things, and I think you're aware of all those. So we are prepared for whatever," Milley said at a Pentagon briefing.

Steve Biegun, the U.S. special envoy for North Korea, recently wrapped up a last-minute trip to the region, meeting with South Korean, Japanese and Chinese officials in an attempt to help save the talks.

North Korea has not publicly responded to those requests.

 


December 21, 2019 at 03:15PM

『CDTV』XマスSP企画発表 久保田利伸×AIは教会で「Missing」

『CDTV』XマスSP企画発表 久保田利伸×AIは教会で「Missing」


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久保田利伸は1986年に発表した名バラード「Missing」をAIとデュエット。都内の教会で事前収録が行われ、2人のソウルフルなハーモニーが響き渡った。
December 21, 2019 at 12:00PM

Henry Arthur Knight

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Henry Arthur Knight

Schwede66: new article


Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
[[File:Henry Arthur Knight.jpg|thumb|Henry Arthur Knight]]
'''Henry Arthur Knight''' (also known as '''Harry Knight''', 29 August 1860 – 3 October 1935) was a New Zealand sheep farmer, racehorse owner, and local politician. He was the first student and the third director of the [[Lincoln University (New Zealand)|Canterbury Agricultural College]].

Knight was born in 1860; his parents were Richard and Lucy Knight.<ref name="who is who"></ref><ref></ref> He received his secondary education at [[Christ's College, Christchurch|Christ's College]] in [[Christchurch]].<ref name="who is who" /> When the [[Lincoln University (New Zealand)|School of Agriculture]] of [[Canterbury University College]] opened at [[Lincoln, New Zealand|Lincoln]] on 19 July 1880, Knight was the first student to enrol. He graduated in 1882 with a Diploma of Agriculture.<ref name="College journal obit">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

In 1887, he married Beatrice Dicken, the daughter of Thomas Dicken. They were to have three daughters.<ref name="who is who" />

In 1899, Knight was elected to the Board of Governors of his [[alma mater]], by then called the Canterbury Agricultural College, and he remained a member until his death. He was chairman of the board from 1915 until 1926.<ref name="College journal obit" /> He lost the chairmanship when the Canterbury members of the [[New Zealand House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] had a tie when they elected their representative in December 1926. The returning officer gave his casting vote to Knight's opponent, George Murray, and Knight temporarily lost his position on the board.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

Knight had the Racecourse Hill property near [[Darfield, New Zealand|Darfield]] from 1885.<ref name="who is who" /> It was a large property and Knight grew the most wheat north of the [[Rakaia River]]; up to of his land were in wheat.<ref name="College journal obit" /> When his property was cut up in the late 1890, Knight started breeding race horses. He started having success after 15 years and from 1915 until his death, it is estimated that his horses have won him [[New Zealand pound|NZ£]]76,000. His horse Malaga won the [[Auckland Cup]] in 1921, netting him NZ£3500. His mare Medley produced Ballymena and [[Limerick (horse)|Limerick]], both very successful horses.

Knight died at Racecourse Hill on 3<!-- note that the obituary in the Canterbury Agricultural College Magazine erroneously says that he died on 4 October --> October 1935.<ref name="Herald obit">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

==References==



[[Category:1860 births]]
[[Category:1935 deaths]]
[[Category:New Zealand farmers]]
[[Category:Horse breeders]]
[[Category:People educated at Christ's College, Christchurch]]
[[Category:Lincoln University (New Zealand) alumni]]

December 21, 2019 at 02:08PM

Robert De Niro wants Trump to get a bag of this thrown in his face

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Robert De Niro wants Trump to get a bag of this thrown in his face Robert De Niro said Friday that he'd like to see President Trump have a "bag of s---" thrown in his face.
December 21, 2019 at 01:42PM

Charlie Hurt riffs on 'absolutely amazing' Joe Scarborough theory that Hunter Biden scandal 'helps' his father

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Charlie Hurt riffs on 'absolutely amazing' Joe Scarborough theory that Hunter Biden scandal 'helps' his father Fox News contributor Charlie Hurt said MSNBC host Joe Scarborough came up with an "absolutely amazing" theory for how former Vice President Joe Biden is actually helped by the firestorm over his son Hunter's activity in Ukraine.
December 21, 2019 at 12:50PM

Friday, December 20, 2019

Georg Goldberg

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Georg Goldberg

Drmies: /* Works */


'''Georg Goldberg''' (12 May 1830, [[Nürnberg]]<ref name="BKL">Hermann Alexander Müller: ''Goldberg, Georg'', in: ''Biographisches Künstler-Lexikon'', S. 212.</ref> - 25 July 1894, [[Munich]]<ref name="edocs">Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main: [https://ift.tt/2Sg7S38] ''Georg Goldberg''</ref>) was a German copper<ref name="BKL" /> and steel<ref name="Schiller-Galerie">Friedrich Pecht: ''Verzeichnis der Abbildungen'', in: ''Schiller-Galerie …''</ref> engraver of Jewish descent.<ref name=je></ref>

== Biography==
Georg Goldberg studied in [[Nuremberg]] with [[Johann Leonhard Raab]] and at the [[Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg]].<ref name="BKL" /> He left for [[Munich]] in 1856, where he created most of his works.<ref name="BKL" /> By 1890 he was a member of the [[Allgemeine Deutsche Kunstgenossenschaft]].<ref>[[Wladimir Aichelburg]]: [https://ift.tt/2omYzkQ ''1899''] auf: ''150 Jahre [[Künstlerhaus Wien]] 1861-2011''</ref>

== Works==
[[File:Schiller-Galerie komplett Bild 31.jpg|thumb|''[[Jeanne d'Arc|Johanna]]'', [[Die Jungfrau von Orléans (Schiller)|Die Jungfrau von Orléans]];<br />
<small>[[Stahlstich|Stich]] der [[Schiller-Galerie]], nach [[Friedrich Pecht|Pecht]], um 1859</small>]]
* ''[[Bacchus]] und [[Ariadne]]'', nach [[Jacopo Tintoretto]];<ref name="BKL" />
* ''Die Grablegung'', nach [[Giorgione]];<ref name="BKL" />
* einige Blätter nach [[Alexander von Liezen-Mayer]]s Szenebildern zu [[Goethes Faust]];<ref name="BKL" />
* ''Das Erwachen des Frühlings'', nach [[Ernst Kaiser (Maler)|Ernst Kaiser]];<ref name="BKL" />
* Porträt von ''[[Oskar II. (Schweden)|König Oskar II. von Schweden]]''<ref name="BKL" />
* Für die 1859 erschienene [[Schiller-Galerie]] schuf den Stich ''[[Die Jungfrau von Orléans (Schiller)|Johanna]]''.<ref name="Schiller-Galerie" />
* Für Friedrich Pechts 1876 erschienene ''[[Shakespeare-Galerie]]'' war Goldberg tätig<ref>[https://ift.tt/34Mhm8W Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek]</ref>
** Die [[Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg]] der [[Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main]] besitzt 5 Blätter Goldbergs mit Szenen von [[William Shakespeare]]:
*** [[Der Kaufmann von Venedig]] nach ''H. Hoffmann'';<ref name="edocs" />
*** [[Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (Schauspiel)|Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor]] nach [[Hans Makart]];<ref name="edocs" />
*** [[Ein Sommernachtstraum]] nach [[Friedrich Schwörer]]<ref name="edocs" /> sowie
*** zwei Stiche zu [[Romeo und Julia]] nach ''H. Hoffmann'' und ''A. Spiess''.<ref name="edocs" />

== References==

===Sources===
* ''Verzeichniss der Abbildungen'', in: ''Schiller-Galerie. Charaktere aus Schillers Werken. Gezeichnet von Friedrich Pecht und [[Arthur von Ramberg]], Fünfzig Blätter in Stahlstich mit erläuterndem Texte von Friedrich Pecht'', [[Friedrich Arnold Brockhaus|F. A. Brockhaus]], Leipzig 1859 ([https://ift.tt/34JD8Ky Digitalisat])
* [[Hermann Alexander Müller]]: [https://ift.tt/35JGGhl ''Goldberg, Georg''], in: ''[[Biographisches Künstler-Lexikon]]''. Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts, Leipzig, 1882, S. 212.
* [[Salomon Wininger]]: ''Große jüdische National-Biographie. Mit mehr als 8000 Lebensbeschreibungen namhafter jüdischer Männer und Frauen aller Zeiten und Länder. Ein Nachschlagewerk für das jüdische Volk und dessen Freunde''. Band 2, Chernivtsi 1927, S. 440.
* Manfred H. Grieb: ''Nürnberger Künstlerlexikon. Bildende Künstler, Kunsthandwerker, Gelehrte, Sammler, Kulturschaffende und Mäzene vom 12. bis zur Mitte des 20. Jahrhunderts''. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-598-11763-3, S. 493. [https://ift.tt/2SdntR9 Digitalisat]




[[Category:1830 births]]
[[Category:1894 deaths]]
[[Category:Jewish German engravers]]

December 21, 2019 at 10:59AM

Facebook Says Group Used Computer-generated Faces to Push Pro-Trump Message

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Facebook Says Group Used Computer-generated Faces to Push Pro-Trump Message

Facebook Inc has taken down a well-financed campaign that used dozens of artificially generated faces to spread pro-Trump and anti-Chinese government messages, the company and outside researchers said on Friday.

Researchers from New York-based Graphika and the Digitial Forensics Research Lab, an arm of the Washington-based Atlantic Council, said it was the first time they had seen the large-scale use of computer-generated faces to spread disinformation on social media.

Tell-tale signs

The researchers said in a report that while tell-tale signs such as misshapen ears and distorted backgrounds had helped them identify the fakes, "this technology is rapidly evolving toward generating more believable pictures."

Facebook said 610 Facebook accounts, 89 Pages, 156 Groups and 72 Instagram accounts were involved in the network.

The social media giant said those behind the operation had spent upward of $9 million on advertising to promote their content, which touched on hot-button issues such as "impeachment, conservative ideology, political candidates, elections, trade, family values and freedom of religion."

Activity traced to Vietnam

 The amount is almost 100 times what Facebook said Russia's infamous troll farm spent in the run-up to and shortly after the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

Facebook said its investigation linked the activity to U.S.-based Epoch Media Group and individuals in Vietnam working on its behalf, though the accounts more openly associated with The BL, for the Beauty of Life.

In a statement, Epoch said it had "no connection with the website BL."

"The BL was founded by a former employee, and employs some of our former employees," publisher Stephen Gregory said in a post to the Epoch Times website. He called on Facebook to withdraw its allegation and lift a pre-existing ban on Epoch Media's advertising.

Facebook responds

Facebook fired back, saying that BL executives "were active admins on Epoch Media Group Pages as recently as this morning when their accounts were deactivated and the BL was removed."

The BL, whose website lists its headquarters as a single-family home in Middletown, New York, did not immediately return emails seeking comment. Its listed phone number rang unanswered.

The Epoch Times was set up as a print publication by followers of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, banned in China, before moving heavily online. Its output has tended to steer toward support for Trump and attacks on his opponents.

The content removed by Facebook had the same tilt. Groups identified by the outside researchers bore names such as "America Needs President Trump," "TRUMP MAGA 2020," or "WE STAND WITH TRUMP & PENCE!"

"Alongside pro-Trump material, these assets posted large quantities of material attacking his critics and rivals, often presenting users with a partisan statement and urging them to respond if they agreed," the researchers wrote in their report.

'Moral standards and values'

The BL's now-removed Facebook page said it would "focus on content that represents fundamental moral standards and values, to enlighten all who prefer to be inspired," according to the researchers.

While the page said it rejected misinformation, Facebook said, "The BL-focused network repeatedly violated a number of our policies, including our policies against coordinated inauthentic behavior, spam and misrepresentation."

The takedown followed investigative stories by NBC on the Epoch Times' heavy use  of Facebook and by the fact-checking website Snopes.com  on The BL.


December 21, 2019 at 10:52AM

US Agency, GM Discuss Deployment of Self-Driving Cars

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US Agency, GM Discuss Deployment of Self-Driving Cars

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is holding talks with General Motors Co. on the automaker's petition to deploy a limited number of self-driving vehicles on American roads without 
steering wheels or other human controls, the head of the agency 
said Friday. 

Acting NHTSA Administrator James Owens said his agency aims to decide soon on GM's January 2018 petition as well as on a request by Nuro, a driverless delivery startup backed by Softbank Corp., to deploy a limited number of low-speed, highly automated delivery vehicles without human occupants. 

The agency's review comes at a time of heightened concerns 
about the safety of automated piloting systems in vehicles and 
aircraft, a potential revolution in ground and air transportation. 

"I expect we're going to be able to move forward with these 
petitions soon — as soon as we can," Owens told Reuters, adding 
action "definitely" would come next year. 

"This will be a big deal because this will be the first such action that will be taken," Owens said. 

GM, the No. 1 U.S. automaker, confirmed it has been in talks with NHTSA about the petition. Nuro also confirmed it is in talks with NHTSA. 

Still work to do

GM Chief Executive Mary Barra and U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao last week met and discussed the petition, officials said, but significant work remains at the technical level. 

Owens said NHTSA officials are "crawling through these petitions because we want to make sure" the driverless vehicles are at least as safe as other cars on the roads. 

"There's a lot of back and forth between us and the companies," Owens said during a Reuters interview that also included Chao and other Transportation Department officials. "We're sharing with them thoughts and ideas and concerns. They come back to us with additional information." 

Chao said it is important that NHTSA take its time in reviewing the GM petition. Chao suggested that some auto industry officials and analysts were too optimistic about the timing for deployment of fully autonomous vehicles. 

"I think the complexity was far greater than what a lot of very optimistic advocates were thinking," Chao said.  

FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2018, file photo a self-driving Nuro vehicle parks outside a Fry's supermarket, which is owned by…
FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2018, photo a self-driving Nuro vehicle parks outside a Fry's supermarket, which is owned by Kroger, as part of a pilot program for grocery deliveries in Scottsdale, Ariz.

In GM's petition, NHTSA is for the first time looking at a vehicle in which all driving decisions are made by a computer rather than a human driver. Nuro, which partnered with Kroger Co. last year to deliver groceries, seeks approval not to include a windshield in the vehicle. 

The petitions — formal applications for action by the agency — seek exemptions from U.S. vehicle safety rules largely written decades ago that assumed human drivers would be in control of a vehicle. The petitions are for up to 2,500 vehicles per manufacturer. 

GM initially said it hoped to win approval to deploy the vehicles by the end of this year. But in July its self-driving unit, Cruise, said it was delaying commercial deployment of cars as more testing of the vehicles was required. A new target date wasn't specified. 

Alphabet Inc.'s Waymo unit this year began offering some rides with no human driver in its limited autonomous ride-hailing service in Arizona, but with steering wheels and employees watching remote feeds of the vehicles' cameras. 

"We're in communication with them about how they are ensuring the safe operation of the vehicle," Owens said. "We will continue having a back-and-forth with them." 


December 21, 2019 at 10:30AM

Air Force Secretary Barrett: Space Force now operating to preserve and protect our vital interests in space

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Air Force Secretary Barrett: Space Force now operating to preserve and protect our vital interests in space As the sixth branch of the armed forces, the U.S. Space Force embodies our nation's commitment to the peaceful development of space.
December 21, 2019 at 10:00AM

Jane Memmott

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Jane Memmott

Cisca85: Created page


'''Jane Memmott''' [[Royal Entomological Society|Hon.FRES]] is an [[Ecology|ecologist]] and [[Entomology|entomologist]] in the United Kingdom, she is professor of ecology at the [[University of Bristol]]. Her research looks at [[Community (ecology)|community ecology]] and she is an expert on the interactions of [[insect]] [[Pollinator|pollinators]] and [[Plant|plants]]<ref name=":0"></ref>.

== Education and career ==
Memmott was educated at the [[University of Leeds]] where she studied a BSc [[zoology]] in the early 1980s; she continued at Leeds studying a PhD looking at the community ecology of [[Phlebotominae|phlebotomine]] [[Sandfly|sandflies]] with fieldwork in Costa Rica. As a postdoctoral researcher she constructed the first [[Food web|food webs]] in tropical ecosystems, looking at [[Plant|plants]], [[Leaf miner|leaf-miners]] and [[Parasitoid wasp|parasitoids]]<ref> School of Biological Sciences University of Bristol|last=Bristol|first=University of|website=www.bristol.ac.uk|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-12-20}}</ref>, working with [[Charles Godfray]]<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> and she later did research looking at [[invasive plants]] in New Zealand.

In 1996 Memmott moved to the University of Bristol to be a lecturer, in 2012 she was appointed Head of the School of Biological Sciences and she oversaw the school move to a new Life Sciences building<ref> News University of Bristol|last=Bristol|first=University of|date=6 October 2014|website=www.bristol.ac.uk|language=en-GB|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2019-12-20}}</ref>.

== Research ==
Memmott's research looks at a wide range of areas in ecology including [[pollination ecology]], [[Invasive species|invasion ecology]], [[Agroecology|agro-ecology]], [[Biological pest control|biological control]], [[urban ecology]] and [[restoration ecology]]<ref name=":0" />.

Her work in urban habitats includes the urban pollinators project (part of the Insect Pollinators Initiative<ref></ref>) which sampled insect pollinators in 1km long transects in urban areas<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. The project found that private residential gardens, allotments and community gardens had a higher abundance of insect pollinators than public amenity gardens such as parks and road verges<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>.

Memmott is an advocate that urban habitats can provide resources to sustain pollinators<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>, in particular she has found growing areas of wildflowers, which have plants with more [[nectar]] and [[pollen]] than many [[cultivated plant]] varieties, can provide more [[Foraging|foraging resources]] for pollinators<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>.

She has also looked at how resources available to insect pollinators has changed over the past century and also they can change over a single year. Her research looking at longterm [[Vegetation|vegetation surveys]] found that nectar resources in the UK declined up to the 1970s, during agricultural intensification, but since the 1970s resources have increased<ref> News University of Bristol|last=Bristol|first=University of|website=www.bristol.ac.uk|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-12-20}}</ref>. On the smaller timescale Memmott found a potential for mismatch in the phenology (timing) between flowering plants and the flighttimes of pollinators that visit them through the year<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>.

Memmott also researches [[Agroecosystem|agroecosystems]] and her research showed that seasonally there are significant gaps in resources for pollinators from plants, such as pollen and nectar, in early spring and late summer; this knowledge could be used to alter the species mix of wildflower strips as part of [[Agri-environment scheme|agri-environment schemes]]<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>.

== Honours and awards ==
Memmott is a reviewing editor on [[Science Magazine]]<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2) AAAS|language=en|access-date=2019-12-20}}</ref>.

She was awarded the [[Marsh Ecology Award]] by the [[Marsh Christian Trust]] and the [[British Ecological Society]] in 2015<ref></ref>.

In 2018 gave the Sir John Burnett Memorial Lecture at the [[National Biodiversity Network]] annual conference<ref></ref>.

Memmott was made President Elect of the British Ecological Society in 2019, she will become President of the society in 2020<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>.

== References ==
<!-- Inline citations added to your article will automatically display here. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WP:REFB for instructions on how to add citations. -->


== External links ==

* [https://ift.tt/2uozTHm University of Bristol profile]
* [https://ift.tt/1Ewe5b3 Memmott Community Ecology lab webpage]




[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Year of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:British ecologists]]
[[Category:British entomologists]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Entomological Society]]
[[Category:Women entomologists]]

December 21, 2019 at 08:47AM

Earthquake today

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December 20, 2019 at 09:00PM

Home Depot co-founder lashes out at Warren over jabs at rich: 'What the hell did she do' to earn her millions?

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Home Depot co-founder lashes out at Warren over jabs at rich: 'What the hell did she do' to earn her millions? Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus blasted Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., over her continued attacks on wealthy Americans, which Warren continued in Thursday's PBS Democratic debate.
December 21, 2019 at 08:14AM

'Homosexual Face': Brazil's Bolsonaro Lashes Out at Press

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'Homosexual Face': Brazil's Bolsonaro Lashes Out at Press

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro lashed out at journalists on Friday, saying one had a homosexual's "face" in a remark that was promptly mocked by the president's critics.

A visibly upset Bolsonaro accused the press of bias against him and his son, Sen. Flavio Bolsonaro. Prosecutors in Rio de Janeiro are investigating allegations the younger Bolsonaro hired employees with no duties while he was a state legislator. Another investigation is probing whether those "phantom" workers kicked back part of their salaries to then be laundered through a chocolate shop he co-owns.

In a video posted to Facebook, the younger Bolsonaro has delivered a lengthy denial of all wrongdoing.

FILE - Flavio Bolsonaro, son of Jair Bolsonaro, is seen behind him at the transition government building in Brasilia, Nov. 27, 2018.

The drone of accusations has been a thorn in the side of President Bolsonaro, who was elected on an anti-crime platform to purge the political class of corruption. He has routinely attacked the credibility of mainstream media, particularly targeting the goliath Globo, for unfair coverage.

At a routine morning meeting with journalists in the capital, the president complained that media have accused him of being a racist and committing crimes against the environment. Then he told one reporter, "Your face looks an awful lot like a homosexual's, but that's no reason to accuse you of being a homosexual."

The comment was met with laughs from his aides and supporters standing nearby.

Meanwhile some politicians, journalists and other Brazilians turned to social media, posting selfies with the caption "awfully homosexual face." Jean Wyllys, an openly gay former lawmaker who often clashed Bolsonaro when the two served in Congress, was an early participant of the online movement.

"'An awfully homosexual face.' With pride!" Wyllys, now a professor at Harvard University's Afro-Latin American Research Institute, wrote on his Twitter feed.

History of offensive rhetoric 

Bolsonaro has a history of making derogatory remarks about women, gay people and racial minorities, including on last year's campaign trail. Such offensive rhetoric has diminished since he took office at the beginning of this year.

Asked at the morning briefing whether he had proof that a suspicious deposit into his wife's bank account was merely repayment of a debt, Bolsonaro instructed the journalist, "Ask your mother if she gave your dad a receipt," prompting a cheer from his supporters. He then asked whether the reporter had a receipt for his shoes. "No, you don't have it!" he concluded.

Bolsonaro also complained that details of a sealed investigation have consistently leaked to the press. "Is the process under seal or not? Answer! Answer, damn it!" he said, and then accused Rio's prosecutors' office of having a "direct line" to Globo's news channel.

In a statement published Friday, Globo said that while it took pride in delivering breaking news to its audience, it had not been the first publication to reveal information on the prosecutors' investigations into Sen. Bolsonaro.
 


December 21, 2019 at 07:46AM

Officials Warn of Looming Famine in South Sudan

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Officials Warn of Looming Famine in South Sudan

The head of the U.N. World Food Program has warned that more than 4 million South Sudanese may slide into famine in the next six months unless the WFP receives funding to pre-position food aid. 
 
WFP Executive Director David Beasley visited South Sudan this past week in the wake of floods that have destroyed crops, livestock and the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of South Sudanese. He pleaded with donors to help the nation's people. 
 
"Please, we cannot turn our back on the innocent families and children out there," Beasley told VOA's South Sudan in Focus. "Failure to raise the money we need within the crisis period could mean loss of lives, it could mean famine conditions, but let's hope we get the response we need to avert famine."  
 
Aid agencies say nearly 1 million people need assistance after floodwaters destroyed their animals, produce and much of their property. 
 
Beasley warned that if the crisis was not addressed quickly, it could be a source of conflict within South Sudanese communities and cause a wave of immigration to other countries. 

4.5 million in jeopardy
 
Matthew Hollingworth, the WFP country director in South Sudan, said 4.5 million people faced acute and emergency levels of food insecurity.   
 
He said when people reach that point, they can slide into catastrophic food insecurity, which means a state of famine, which can quickly lead to many deaths. 
 
Hollingworth said South Sudan was already at the worst level of malnutrition. 
 
"We are already, from a nutrition perspective, above the emergency threshold for malnutrition in the world today, with 16 percent malnutrition in young children," he told South Sudan in Focus. "Fifteen percent is the global emergency threshold. When you are above that, you have already crossed a red line."   
 
Hollingworth said WFP might be forced to scale down its operations if it does not secure the required funding in time. 
 
In one severe local case, officials and residents in South Sudan's Boma state said more than 10,000 households in Jebel Boma County were facing severe hunger. 

'Really suffering'

Resident Mary Medina said the hunger crisis started five months ago when floods hit the area. She said locals were surviving on wild vegetables collected from the bush, after heavy rains washed away all roads that enabled traders to import goods from neighboring states. 
 
"We are really suffering here in our state," Medina said. "We don't have access to roads, and also there is no network to connect us to other states. So we are just isolated here. Another problem is our markets are closed because there is nothing to be sold to the people for survival." 

Jebel Boma County resident Martha Kuram said children in particular were suffering. 
 
"Our children are really starving," she said. "We are just managing on a local vegetable called malkiring. We cook it for the children to eat every day. For those who would like to help, they should hurry up and rescue us, because if they don't, then I think people are going to perish in the near future." 

Jebel Boma County Commissioner Aliston Waskin said severe hunger in Boma state was widespread. Waskin said he had pleaded with national officials and humanitarian agencies to intervene, but that no single agency had responded. 
 
Waskin said many people were at risk of dying. 
 
"All these 58,000 are suffering. In fact, some of the people went to Ethiopia … and some of them came back," Waskin said. "So those who are now present in Jebel Boma County in various places are facing this hunger." 


December 21, 2019 at 07:35AM

Earthquake Today

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December 20, 2019 at 09:00PM

Earthquake in Delhi today

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December 20, 2019 at 09:00PM

Isabelle Nef

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Isabelle Nef

LouisAlain: ←Created page with ''''Isabelle Nef''', ''née'' '''Lander''' (27 September 1895 – 2 January 1976) was a Swiss pianist and harpsichordist, as well as a professor at the Cons...'


'''Isabelle Nef''', ''née'' '''Lander''' (27 September 1895 – 2 January 1976) was a Swiss pianist and [[harpsichordist]], as well as a professor at the [[Conservatoire de musique de Genève]].<ref></ref>

== Life ==
Born in Geneva, Nef studied the piano at the conservatoire de Genève with [[Marie Panthès]] then, in Paris, [[Musical composition|composition]] with [[Vincent d'Indy]] and [[harpsichord]] with [[Wanda Landowska]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

She had a concert career in Europe, South America and North America including Seattle, New York and Washington<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> in USSR, and South Africa<ref>[https://ift.tt/2PIZgjU 1956 photo]</ref><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> and in Australia. For her 80th birthday, she performed works by Mozart and Bach on [[fortepiano]] at the in Geneva.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

In 1936 she became the first harpsichord teacher at the Conservatoire de Genève. She then became an honorary professor and remained there until 1975 when she retired at the age of 80. She died in [[Collex-Bossy]]. She was succeeded by harpsichordist [[Christiane Jaccottet]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

A path was given her name in [[Collex-Bossy]].<ref></ref>

== References ==


== External links ==
* [https://ift.tt/2MhEi9A Baker's Biographical Dictionary of 20th Century Classical Musicians] on [[WorldCat]], 1997
*





[[Category:Swiss harpsichordists]]
[[Category:Swiss classical pianists]]
[[Category:20th-century classical pianists]]
[[Category:Women classical pianists]]
[[Category:1895 births]]
[[Category:1976 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Geneva]]

December 21, 2019 at 03:21AM

Apostolic Nunciature to Panama

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Apostolic Nunciature to Panama

Bmclaughlin9: ←Created page with 'The '''Apostolic Nunciature to Panama''' is an ecclesiastical office of the Catholic Church in Panama. It is a diplomatic post of the Holy See, whose rep...'


The '''Apostolic Nunciature to Panama''' is an ecclesiastical office of the [[Catholic Church]] in [[Panama]]. It is a diplomatic post of the Holy See, whose representative is called the [[Apostolic Nuncio]] with the rank of an ambassador. The nuncio resides in [[Panama City]].

==List of papal representatives to Panama ==
;Apostolic Internuncios to Central America
*[[Angelo Rotta]] (12 October 1922<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 6 June 1925)
;Apostolic Internuncio to Panama
*[[Angelo Rotta]] (21 September 1923<ref name=aas1923>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 6 June 1925)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
;Apostolic Nuncios
*[[Carlo Chiarlo]] (30 September 1933 – 1940)
*[[Luigi Centoz]] (3 December 1941<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 26 April 1952)
*[[Paul Bernier]] (7 August 1952<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 9 September 1957)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*[[Luigi Punzolo]] (12 December 1957<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 1961)
*[[Antonino Pinci]] (31 October 1961<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 1971)
*[[Edoardo Rovida]] (31 July 1971<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 13 August 1977)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*[[Blasco Francisco Collaço]] (23 September 1977<ref name=collaco>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 26 July 1982)<ref name=collaco/>
*[[José Sebastián Laboa Gallego]] (18 December 1982 – 21 August 1990)
*[[Osvaldo Padilla]] (17 December 1990<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 1994)
*[[Bruno Musarò]] (3 December 1994<ref name=musaro>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 25 September 1999)<ref name=musaro/>
*[[Giacomo Guido Ottonello]] (29 November 1999<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 26 February 2005)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*[[Giambattista Diquattro]] (2 April 2005<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 21 November 2008)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*[[Andrés Carrascosa Coso]] (12 January 2009<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – 22 June 2017)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>
*[[Mirosław Adamczyk]] (12 August 2017<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> – present)

==Notes==


==References==


[[Category:Apostolic Nuncios to Panama| ]]
[[Category:Lists of ambassadors to Panama|Holy See]]
[[Category:Diplomatic missions of the Holy See|Panama]]

December 21, 2019 at 03:15AM

Warren pops her cork on Buttigieg

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Warren pops her cork on Buttigieg Buttigieg's 'wine cave' fundraiser becomes focus at Democrat debate.
December 21, 2019 at 03:14AM

MS-13 crackdown -- the largest ever in New York -- ensnares nearly 100 members, associates, report says

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MS-13 crackdown -- the largest ever in New York -- ensnares nearly 100 members, associates, report says New York prosecutors are gearing up Friday to announce criminal charges against 96 members and associates of MS-13 in what reportedly is the largest crackdown against the gang in the state's history.
December 21, 2019 at 02:57AM

Earthquake

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December 20, 2019 at 09:00PM

Prathi roju pandage review in telugu

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December 20, 2019 at 04:00PM

Al Franken compares Mitch McConnell to serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer in post-impeachment tweet

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Al Franken compares Mitch McConnell to serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer in post-impeachment tweet Nearly two years removed from the U.S. Senate, it appears Al Franken may be trying to revive his comedy career.
December 20, 2019 at 09:19PM

Florida suspect in shooting of police captain is tracked down, killed in standoff

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Florida suspect in shooting of police captain is tracked down, killed in standoff A Florida man on the run after shooting a police captain near a gas station in Eustis was shot and killed following a gun battle Thursday evening, authorities said.
December 20, 2019 at 07:30PM

Odessky Uyezd

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Odessky Uyezd

Pamrel: ←Created page with ''''Odessky Uyezd''' (''Одесский уезд'') was one of the subdivisions of the Kherson Governorate of the Russian Empire. It was situated in the...'


'''Odessky Uyezd''' (''Одесский уезд'') was one of the subdivisions of the [[Kherson Governorate]] of the [[Russian Empire]]. It was situated in the southwestern part of the governorate. Its administrative centre was [[Odessa]].

==Demographics==
At the time of the [[Russian Empire Census]] of 1897, Odessky Uyezd had a population of 610,042. Of these, 37.4% spoke [[Russian language|Russian]], 22.0% [[Yiddish]], 21.9% [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]], 10.3% [[German language|German]], 3.0% [[Polish language|Polish]], 1.4% [[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]], 1.2% [[Greek language|Greek]], 1.2% [[Moldovan language|Moldovan]] or [[Romanian language|Romanian]], 0.3% [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]], 0.2% [[Tatar language|Tatar]], 0.2% [[Armenian language|Armenian]], 0.2% [[French language|French]], 0.1% [[Italian language|Italian]], 0.1% [[Czech language|Czech]], 0.1% [[Latvian language|Latvian]], 0.1% [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]], 0.1% [[English language|English]] and 0.1% [[Turkish language|Turkish]] as their native language.<ref></ref>

==References==

[[Category:Uyezds of Kherson Governorate]]
[[Category:Kherson Governorate]]
[[Category:Odessky Uyezd]]

December 20, 2019 at 06:44PM

Fram Committee Nansen Award

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Fram Committee Nansen Award

Doremo: New article, translated from part of Norwegian WP


The '''Fram Committee Nansen Award''' () is a [[Norway|Norwegian]] academic award for polar research named after [[Fridtjof Nansen]]. The award has been given out since 1961 by the [[University of Oslo]].<ref></ref> It can be awarded to Norwegian researchers who, through a dissertation or otherwise, have made significant contributions to the exploration of the polar areas in biology, geography, geophysics, geology, or oceanography.<ref></ref><ref></ref> The award is conferred on Nansen's birthday, October 10.<ref></ref>

The Fram Committee Nansen Award is one of several awards associated with Fridtjof Nansen's name. Other awards include the Norwegian [[Nansen Medal for Outstanding Research]], which in turn is linked to the [[Fridtjof Nansen Award for Outstanding Research]], and the [[Nansen Refugee Award]].

==References==


[[Category:Norwegian awards]]
[[Category:Norwegian science and technology awards]]

December 20, 2019 at 01:24PM

UN Human Rights Expert: Seoul Sent Wrong Message to Pyongyang

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UN Human Rights Expert: Seoul Sent Wrong Message to Pyongyang

Seoul sent the wrong message to Pyongyang by declining to co-sponsor a resolution that the U.N. General Assembly passed on human rights violations of North Korea, said a U.N. human rights expert.

Tomas Quintana, U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in North Korea, said, "It [sends] a message that implies that human rights, the importance of respecting and protecting human rights of the people in North Korea, is something that comes second" to Seoul's effort to build a relationship with Pyongyang.

He continued, "It's not the best message to North Korea because North Korea might feel that [it] can always use human rights as a leverage for negotiations, and that's something I don't believe that can be done." 

The U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution condemning North Korea's "long-standing and ongoing systematic, widespread, and gross violation of human rights" by consensus without a vote Wednesday.

North Korean Ambassador to the United Nations Kim Song speaks during a news conference in New York, Oct 7, 2019.

North Korea's U.N. Ambassador Kim Song rejected the resolution. He told the General Assembly that the resolution has "nothing to do with the genuine promotion and protection of human rights as it is an impure product of political plots by hostile forces that seeks to tarnish the dignity and image of the DPRK and overthrow our social system."

The DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, an official English name for North Korea.

The resolution was sponsored by 60 countries including the U.S. This year, South Korea declined to co-sponsor it for the first time since 2008, when it started the sponsorship of an annual resolution calling out North Korea on its human rights violations.

Seoul made the decision to turn down co-sponsoring it in November when a draft resolution was being prepared.

International human rights groups as well as 76 nongovernmental groups, coalitions and individuals from 22 countries, including Quintana, sent a joint letter to South Korean President Moon Jae-in, urging him to stand up for human rights in North Korea. 
 
Human rights experts said they have not received any responses so far from the Moon government.

"We're being ignored," said Greg Scarlatoiu, executive director of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea (HRNK). "We're getting the cold shoulder. This is coming from a president who used to be introduced as a human rights lawyer. This is beyond embarrassing and beyond incomprehensible."

Moon began his political career as a human rights and civil rights lawyer. 

People watch a television news screen showing live footage of US President Donald Trump, South Korean Moon Jae-in and North…
FILE - People watch a television news screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump, South Korean Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un meeting at the truce village of Panmunjom in the DMZ, at a railway station in Seoul, June 30, 2019.

Phil Robertson, deputy director of the Asia Division for Human Rights Watch, thinks Moon is trying to appease North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in his attempt to continue diplomacy with Pyongyang.

"I think that Moon Jae-in is so afraid of somehow offending Kim Jong Un," said Robertson.  "He's bending over backwards to do anything he can to try to get Kim Jong Un to come back to the table."

Inter-Korean dialogue that began in 2018 has been stalled as Pyongyang refused to engage with Seoul after its talks with Washington broke down in February at the Hanoi summit.
 
Back in August, North Korea said it was "senseless" to think inter-Korean talks would resume when it was expressing its displeasure of joint military drills South Korea held with the U.S.

FILE - Amphibious assault vehicles of the South Korean Marine Corps fire smoke bombs as they move to land on the shore during a U.S.-South Korea joint landing operation drill as a part of the two countries' annual military training called Foal Eagle,...
FILE - Amphibious assault vehicles of the South Korean Marine Corps fire smoke bombs during a U.S.-South Korea joint landing operation drill as a part of the two countries' annual military training in Pohang, South Korea, April 2, 2017.

Robertson thinks South Korea should play a leading role in demanding North Korea respect human rights of its people with a long-term goal of unification in mind.

"Ultimately, South Korea and North Korea will come together," said Robertson. "And any human rights issues in North Korea will have to be addressed. By trying to run and hide from human rights, I think that Moon Jae-in is doing a disservice not only to South Koreans but also to North Korans as well."

Robertson said the resolution adopted by the U.N. General Assembly sends an important reminder to the world that North Korea is a human rights abuser.

The resolution "offers important moral clarity and also political support for the ongoing effort to pressure North Korea to improve human rights," said Robertson. "It shows that the international community is not prepared to acquiesce to the denials and to the fabrication by the government in Pyongyang about their human rights situation."

According to Scarlatoiu, the North Korean regime has been repressing its people through the denial of basic freedoms such as speech and religion, as well as through the intentional use of torture and execution in order to stay in power.

"This is the only way they know how to run their system," said Scarlatoiu. "The regime stays in power through a deliberate policy of human rights denial."

Robertson said, however, information getting into North Korea has helped empower people to realize their government is denying rights that are available outside the country.

"When information comes in from overseas, that provides new ideas," said Robertson. "It provides new perspectives. These are the sort of things that the government of North Korea fears, and this is why they've tried to crack down on anybody trying to bring in information into North Korea from outside sources."

He continued, "When we talk about trying to change the situation in North Korea, really what has changed so far is that no one believes [the government's] propaganda anymore that the Kim family are gods on Earth and that the Juche idea [of self-sufficiency] is the best idea in the world."

Three dynasties of the Kim family, starting with the current leader's grandfather, Kim Il Sung, founder of North Korea, and his father Kim Jong Il, the second leader, have ruled North Korea with totalitarianism since the early 1950s.

Lee Yeon-cheol contributed to this report.


December 20, 2019 at 11:35AM

US Man Jailed in Russia on Spying Charges Loses Job

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US Man Jailed in Russia on Spying Charges Loses Job

A Michigan man who has been imprisoned in Russia on spying charges for nearly a year has lost his job with an automotive parts supplier in a corporate restructuring, a move his brother has denounced.

Paul Whelan was arrested Dec. 28, 2018, in a Moscow hotel while visiting for a friend's wedding. The Russian government charged him with espionage and has repeatedly extended his detention while he awaits trial on charges that carry a sentence of up to 20 years. Whelan has denied the charges.

FILE - Paul Whelan, a former U.S. marine, who was arrested for alleged spying in Moscow at the end of 2018, stands in a cage while waiting for a hearing in a court room in Moscow, Russia, Aug. 23, 2019.

Whelan, a Marine Corps veteran, had been director of global security for BorgWarner, based in Auburn Hills, Michigan, but that role was eliminated last Friday in a corporate restructuring announced in April, BorgWarner spokeswoman Kathy Graham said.

Whelan's twin, David Whelan, told The Detroit News in an email Wednesday that his brother's health has been deteriorating and that his life has "unraveled" as he became "collateral damage in the Russian Federation's geopolitical gamesmanship."

The firing "increases the strain on our family's ability to keep some semblance of his former life ready for when he returns home," Whelan continued.

Paul Whelan, 49, started with BorgWarner in January 2017 and oversaw security at facilities around the world. BorgWarner notified Whelan's representatives of his termination while he remains in Russian custody, Graham said.

Whelan spent about a decade cultivating friends and contacts in Russia, building connections on a social media platform with men who have ties to the military. Several of them said Whelan never seemed sinister, merely someone with an interest in Russia and a desire for pen pals.

Whelan, of Novi, Michigan, also holds British, Irish and Canadian citizenship. He was born in Canada to British parents.

Congress has demanded that the Russian government present evidence against Whelan or release him. The U.S. Embassy said requests to send a doctor to examine him have been rejected.

David Whelan said the federal government's involvement is crucial.

"Without action in Washington, D.C., to secure his freedom, his life will continue to unravel and Paul will end up spending many more months as a political prisoner of the Russian government." he said.


December 20, 2019 at 11:28AM

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Return of Street Protests Pose Little Threat to Thai Government for Now 

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Return of Street Protests Pose Little Threat to Thai Government for Now 

Thailand's pro-military government has little to fear for now from the sharp shift in tactics by a leading opposition party that called thousands of its supporters into the streets over the weekend to demand democratic reforms, analysts say. 

That could change, though, if the government's crackdown on critics picks up and the economy continues to stutter, some of them warned. The Bank of Thailand clipped its growth forecast in gross domestic product for 2020 from 3.3% to 2.8% earlier this week. 
 
Saturday saw a rally in the heart of Bangkok's shopping district estimated by some participants to have attracted a crowd of at least 5,000. The Future Forward party, which called for the rally the day before, claims the turnout was twice that. Either way, it was the largest protest Thailand has seen since a military coup in 2014.  

Future Forward leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit told a cheering crowd that the gathering was "just the beginning," a "test run" for bigger protests to come starting next month. 

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit of Thailand's progressive Future Forward Party talks to his supporters during an unauthorised…
FILE - Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit of Thailand's progressive Future Forward party talks to his supporters during an unauthorized flash mob rally in Bangkok, Thailand, Dec. 14, 2019.

"Protesters are unlikely to follow past patterns of staying in the streets for days and weeks but will be more amorphous," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, who lectures on Thai politics at Chulalongkorn University. 
 
"The government, with military backing and help from other agencies, can withstand. But what undermines government longevity are economic doldrums in conjunction with general disenchantment with abuse of power," he said. 
 
Return to the junta 
 
Critics see the government, installed in a tainted general election in March that ended five years of military rule, as little more than a rerun of the junta it replaced.  

However, given the military's continued popularity among older Thais, a government at the helm of a powerful state propaganda machine, and the threat of arrest for joining unsanctioned rallies like Saturday's, the opposition will struggle to muster crowds much larger than the weekend's, said Wanwichit Boonprong, an assistant professor of political science at Rangsit University. 
 
"It's not the right time to expand [to] bigger protest," he said. 
 
Future Forward is already under a barrage of legal challenges the party and its supporters believe to be politically motivated. Last month, the Constitutional Court disqualified Thanathorn from the National Assembly, Thailand's parliament, for owning shares in a media company while running for office. Future Forward itself is facing dissolution over a loan Thanathorn, an auto parts billionaire, extended his young party to see it through the campaign. 
 
Pandit Chanrochanakit, an assistant professor of political science at Chulalongkorn, said he also saw the new push for protests posing little threat to the government for the time being. 
 
He said, though, that they could snowball if the government reacted to the challenge with an increasingly heavy hand. 
 
"It depends on the situation," he said. "If the government responds in a way that cannot satisfy the public, that all the cases will be conducted with fair[ness] and justice ... people would come out more," he said. 
 
He said the lawsuits police have filed against Thanathorn for organizing Saturday's rally without official permission proved that the government was already nervous. 
 
Limiting the military's influence 
 
Thanathorn hinted at the protests months ago. He told VOA in July that he saw no way to pressure the government into constitutional amendments that would limit the military's influence — a core goal of the party — without them. 
 
"Maybe not now, but one way or another. Eventually, if you want to amend the Constitution, if we are going to change it, partly or wholly, there must be rallies," he said at the time.  

Supporters of Pheu Thai Party react after unofficial results, during the general election in Bangkok, Thailand, March 24, 2019…
FILE - Supporters of the Pheu Thai party react to unofficial results of the general election in Bangkok, Thailand, March 24, 2019. Pheu Thai emerged as the largest party and formed alliances yet was unable to form a government.

The upstart opposition Future Forward finished a strong third in the March polls on a platform of driving Thailand's powerful military out of politics, and Peter Mumford, head of Southeast Asia coverage for the Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy, believes the opposition is playing the long game, hoping to best the military's proxy parties in future votes. 
 
"I think the opposition parties, including [Future Forward], are not looking to instigate mass social unrest. They recognize disruptive protests would be counterproductive to their long-term goals as they would most likely trigger a harsh crackdown or another coup," he said. 
 
"The risk, though, is whether events get out of control." 


December 20, 2019 at 08:29AM

GOP Embraces Trump as Never Before

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GOP Embraces Trump as Never Before

One day after House Republicans stood in unanimous opposition to impeachment, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell positioned his GOP-controlled chamber to second the party's unapologetic embrace of President Donald Trump, putting the president's effective takeover of the party on stark display.

 McConnell signaled his confidence in Senate acquittal from the "most unfair" charges brought by the House, evidence of the party's remarkable turnaround from four years ago, when congressional Republicans wanted nothing to do with the insurgent and inflammatory Trump campaign.

The party is now bound to a president whose loyalty from his party's core conservative voters is matched only by his opponents' loathing for him.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., strikes the gavel after announcing the passage of article II of impeachment against President Donald Trump, Dec. 18, 2019, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

"They are who they are," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., when asked about the lack of daylight between the president and his party's rank-and-file.

She also questioned GOP lawmakers' comments during Wednesday's debate comparing Trump's impeachment to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

"Something's strange there," she said. "Apart from the fact that they want to protect the president at the cost of the Constitution."

In recent weeks, Trump's team has pointed to widespread GOP support for Trump as exemplifying the president's grip on his adoptive party and a cementing of the 2016 electoral realignment that sent Trump to the White House.

"I was not a Republican. Now I'm a Republican," said Jared Kushner, who was a Democrat before helping steer his father-in-law's surprise victory three years ago. "I think the Republican Party is growing now that people like me feel comfortable being part of it."

Just three months ago, initial revelations of a phone call in which Trump tried squeezing Ukraine's new president to announce an investigation into Democrats gave a handful of Republicans pause. By Wednesday, the Democratic-led House voted to impeach Trump over unanimous GOP opposition, a moment spotlighting his hold on congressional Republicans and raising questions about the vote's political impact.

"Trump is strong as a tank with Republicans," said Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, a member of the House GOP leadership. He said that along with what he called Democrats' weak evidence against Trump and unfair impeachment process, "The combination of the three make this one of the easier votes we'll cast.''

In the short-term, it was moderate Democrats from swing districts who seemed most at risk. Nearly all backed impeachment, which could cost some their careers in next November's congressional elections. The most vulnerable include several of the 31 Democrats representing districts Trump won in 2016, many of whom are freshmen.

Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., speaks to reporters, Oct. 28, 2019.

"Today may be the only consequential vote they ever cast, because they won't be back," said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., one of Trump's staunchest defenders.

But Trump's Republican critics and Democrats said the House GOP's solid backing inextricably bound Republican lawmakers to Trump and would ultimately inflict a damaging blow.

"You can play to the base and excite the base and turn an election here and there, but that's not a long-term strategy. Demographics will take care of that" as anti-Trump younger, diverse voters join the electorate, said former Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who declined to seek re-election last year after clashing with Trump for years.

"There will be a time when we Republicans wake up from this and say, 'We did this for this man?'''

Wednesday's House debate on impeachment brought GOP comparisons to the crucifixion of Jesus and imperial Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.

"I don't think the Republican Party nationally really exists anymore. It is now the Trump party," said Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore. "When he goes at some point, it will be interesting to see how they define themselves, what they stand for."

In Trump's past pivotal fights — including his failed effort to repeal former President Barack Obama's health care law — congressional Republicans strongly rallied behind him, but there were small but significant numbers of defectors.

A handful of Republican lawmakers had expressed concern when word of Trump's pressuring Ukraine first emerged in September. While stopping short of abandoning him, several initially took a middle-ground position, saying they wanted to learn more about what happened.

Wednesday's unanimous GOP vote came after party leaders held numerous impeachment briefings for lawmakers. Those sessions were aimed at making sure they were "getting information to people," said No. 2 House GOP leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

FILE - U.S. Rep. Will Hurd, a Texas Republican, speaks at a news conference outside the Capitol in Washington, Feb. 13, 2019.

GOP Rep. Will Hurd, a Texas moderate who's clashed with Trump over immigration and other issues, was closely watched as the House Ukraine investigation progressed.

Hurd, 42 and a former CIA agent, is not seeking reelection, leaving him freer than most Republicans to abandon Trump. But Hurd last month said that while Trump's actions were "inappropriate," he believed the president had committed no impeachable offense, making it harder for wavering moderate Republicans to defect.

"We've seen evidence of a bungling foreign policy" but no evidence that Trump had broken laws, Hurd said Wednesday in a brief interview. 

"Whether or not other people make decisions based on what I do, that's for them to answer."

Rep. Francis Rooney, R-Fla., said early on that he wanted to learn more about what happened with Ukraine. After saying he was open to impeachment — and announcing his retirement the next day — he said Wednesday he was opposing impeachment after "agonizing over it" and deciding there was insufficient evidence to justify Trump's removal.

Rooney said Wednesday's vote further aligns his party to Trump.

"And that's not necessarily the Republican Party that I've been part of and been a funder for, for many years," he said. "This is a different era that we're in for Republicans, and I don't know where it's going to go.''

With the impeachment vote coming just 11 months before the next presidential and congressional elections, Republicans said they believed it was Democrats who would be hurt.

"Pelosi has made this the party of impeachment," Scalise said of Democrats led by Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California. ''Clearly this has been a personal vendetta they've been carrying out to please their most radical base."

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo, waits for President Donald Trump to arrive to sign various bills in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, March 27, 2017, in Washington.

 "What we're defining ourselves as is defenders of the Constitution,'' said Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., another member of House GOP leadership. Asked if it was risky for the GOP to unanimously align itself with Trump, she said, "There is absolutely zero peril for the Republican Party to align itself with the Constitution."

One freshman Democrat from a closely divided district is Rep. Abigail Spanberger of Virginia, who is supporting impeachment.

"It's about the presidency and I think it's about upholding rule of law," she said when asked how the GOP's solid support for Trump would affect that party's reputation. "So their conscience and their oaths are their own to consider."

Peter Wehner, a Republican who served in the White House under GOP Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, said the Republican vote against impeaching Trump would only strengthen the "absolute headlock" he has on his party.

"For some period of time, the brand is going to be the Trump brand, which is divisive, misogynistic and unethical," Wehner said. "The trouble for Republicans is that brand, the searing impression it's going to leave, is going to be most vivid for the rising generation of voters."


December 20, 2019 at 07:26AM

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