Archive for February, 2021

The GOP Cheat Code to Winning Back the House – The Atlantic

The gerrymandering report bookends other analyses, by the Brennan Center and others, documenting how state-level Republicans have introduced some 165 proposals in 33 states this year that would make voting more difficult. These include imposing new voter-identification laws, rolling back access to mail balloting and early-voting periods, and adding new hurdles to the voter-registration process. H.R. 1 and a new VRA, if they become law and survive legal challenges, would preempt almost all of those moves as well.

Read: The decision that will define Democrats for a decade

Given the likelihood that, absent federal intervention, red states will enact severe gerrymanders and new obstacles to voting, the decision about whether to end the Senate filibuster to pass these two bills could shape the future of American politics more than anything else Democrats do in the next two years. If the filibuster remains in place, [H.R. 1] dies in the Senate, Dan Pfeiffer, the former White House communications director for Barack Obama, wrote this week. If that happens, the Republicanswho represent a shrinking minority of Americanswill likely return to power and control politics for the next decade or more.

When Senate Democrats like Joe Manchin, Kyrsten Sinema, and [Dianne] Feinstein oppose getting rid of the filibuster, Pfeiffer added, they are deciding to make it more likely that their time in the majority is ever so brief.

Li told me that, in some respects, partisans may have less opportunity now for aggressive redistricting than they had after the 2010 census, though that may not be true in key states. States draw new lines for congressional districts after each decennial census, and that process is shaped by a complex convergence of legal and political factors.

Republicans leverage over the process seems slightly reduced since the 2010 redistricting. Parties have the greatest freedom to manipulate the lines in states where they control redistricting without input from the other sidealmost always because they hold both chambers of the state legislature and the governorship. (Some states deny the governor any role.) After the 2010 census, Republicans enjoyed this level of control over the drawing of 213 congressional districts. They used their authority to impose extremely one-sided gerrymanders in states including Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Georgia, and Texas.

This time, Republicans hold complete control in states that will draw up to 188 districts. (Democrats, by contrast, completely control the maps in states with up to 74 seats.) The number of seats Republicans will oversee has diminished because they lost unified control of government in some statesincluding Wisconsin and Pennsylvaniaand because Michigan transferred control of redistricting from the state legislature to an independent commission. Additionally, in GOP-controlled Ohio, voters approved an initiative that created redistricting standards that could impede, though not eliminate, gerrymandering.

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The GOP Cheat Code to Winning Back the House - The Atlantic

Opinion | Trumps Republicans, Brought to Their Knees – The New York Times

Trumps lawyers excused it and gave Republican senators their rationale for acquittal by talking about free speech, but that cast the president of the United States the most powerful person in the world, entrusted with the security of his country as just any old crank spouting off. It minimized his station. It trivialized the stakes. It also overlooked that its not OK to yell fire in a crowded theater, though Representative Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat, reminded them of that, describing Jan. 6 as a case where the town fire chief whos paid to put out fires sends a mob not to yell fire! in a crowded theater but to actually set the theater on fire.

The lawyers also turned history on its head, essentially bookending Trumps presidency by minting the precise sorts of alternative facts that Kellyanne Conway smugly heralded at the start. Unlike the left, President Trump has been entirely consistent in his opposition to mob violence, one of his lawyers, Michael van der Veen, said, scaling new summits of preposterousness. Trump blessed mob violence at his campaign rallies. He blessed mob violence in Charlottesville, Va. Hes against mob violence the way Im against spaghetti carbonara. Which is to say that he thrills to it and eats it up.

Both before and during the Senate trial, Trumps defenders asserted that theres no clear causal link between his malfeasance and that police officers screams. But the House Democrats effectively destroyed that argument by documenting not only Trumps words in the days, hours and minutes before the mob attacked but also his long, painstaking campaign to erode trust in democratic processes, so that if those processes didnt favor him, his supporters were primed to junk them. Hes a study in slow-motion treason. Jan. 6 was simply when he slammed his foot down on the accelerator.

It was also, in retrospect, the climax that his presidency was always building toward, the inevitable fruit of his meticulous indoctrination of his base, his methodical degradation of American institutions, his romancing of right-wing media and his recruitment of the most ambitious and unscrupulous Republican lawmakers. At his behest, Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz and several other Republican senators promoted the lethal falsehood that the election was fraudulent, yet that didnt disqualify them from sitting as jurors to render a foregone verdict on a man whose delusions they had already endorsed. What a system. What a farce.

They were distracted, cavalier jurors at that. Rick Scott, who of course voted not guilty, was seen studying and then fiddling with a map or maps of Asia. Dare we dream that hes plotting his own relocation there? Hawley, who also voted not guilty, at one point moved to the visitors gallery above the Senate floor and did some reading there, his feet propped up, his lanky body a pretzel of petulance. What happened to Republicans respect for authority? What happened to basic decency and decorum?

Clinton was a supposedly unendurable offense against that, but then along came Trump, and Republicans decided that decency and decorum were overrated. Truth, too. Heck, everything that they claimed to stand for in the Clinton years was now negotiable, expendable, vestigial. Nothing was beyond the pale.

But that footage was beyond the pale. Did you really look at it, Senators Hawley, Scott and Cruz (yet another not guilty)? Did you see the blood and the terror on that police officers face? Do you honestly contend that theres no connection between Trumps lies refined over years, repeated incessantly and rendered in the most incendiary fashion possible and the officers pain?

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Opinion | Trumps Republicans, Brought to Their Knees - The New York Times

Cassidy and Burr were quickly censured for voting for Trumps conviction – Vox.com

In the hours after Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy (LA) and Richard Burr (NC) joined five other Republican senators in voting to convict former President Donald Trump on an article of impeachment for his role in inciting the January 6 insurrection, the state Republican parties in Louisiana and North Carolina wasted no time laying down a marker that the GOP still belongs to Trump.

The LAGOP and NCGOP each quickly censured Cassidy and Burr for their votes. In a statement posted to Twitter, the LAGOP wrote that it condemn[s], in the strongest possible terms, the vote today by Sen. Cassidy to convict former President Trump, while NCGOP chair Michael Whatley released a statement denouncing Burrs vote as shocking and disappointing.

Trump won both Louisiana and North Carolina in 2020. Cassidy was loyal to Trump throughout Trumps term in office, but began to distance himself during the impeachment trial, perhaps feeling emboldened by the fact that he just won reelection for another six-year term. Following his vote, he posted a remarkably succinct video statement in which he said, I voted to convict President Trump because he is guilty.

Burr was also mostly loyal to Trump throughout his term, but is more free than some of his Republican colleagues to vote his conscience, since hes already announced he doesnt plan to run for reelection next year. As Voxs Li Zhou has reported, a recent Vox/Data for Progress poll found 69 percent of Republicans say they are less likely to support a senator who voted to convict Trump. Notably, one of the Republicans running to fill Burrs seat, former Rep. Mark Walker, was quick to post a tweet condemning the senators vote.

Cassidy and Burrs votes to convict were somewhat surprising, given that each of them voted to end the trial before it began on the grounds that convicting a former president of an article of impeachment is unconstitutional. But they were apparently persuaded of Trumps guilt by House impeachment managers.

While Trumps encouragement of the January 6 insurrection and his conduct in the weeks and months leading up to it a period in which he relentlessly pushed lies about election fraud to discredit Joe Bidens victory has been widely condemned, state Republican parties have repeatedly censured Republican lawmakers who have had the temerity to condemn it.

Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY), for instance, was not only censured by the Wyoming Republican Party after she voted in favor of Trumps impeachment but was targeted by staunch Trump loyalist Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) in a rally in her home state following her vote. And the Arizona Republican Party censured Republican Gov. Doug Ducey (as well as Cindy McCain and former Sen. Jeff Flake) simply because the governor was unwilling to work with Trump to invalidate Joe Bidens victory in the state.

While the fact that seven of the 50 Republican senators voted for Trumps conviction indicates his hold over members of his party in that chamber has weakened since he was in office, the quick censures of Cassidy and Barr are reminders that his popularity among grassroots Republicans remains strong.

The series of censures also points to a worrying dynamic that will be at play if Trump decides to run again in 2024. After all, if publicly inciting a violent attack on the legislative branch of the federal government isnt enough to prompt state-level Republicans to break with him, then what, if anything, would?

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Cassidy and Burr were quickly censured for voting for Trumps conviction - Vox.com

Israeli rule, not occupation: In a sign of the times, Hebrew Wikipedia renames a key article – Haaretz

Israels occupation of the West Bank may be a fact of life for Palestinians, but it may no longer be a fact on Hebrew Wikipedia. The community of volunteer editors has voted to rename the article on the occupation, dropping the word in favor of Israels rule or control over the contested territory.

Though occupation still appears in the article, the change reflects what can be called a version of Israels creeping annexation of the territory online in Hebrew, where the West Bank has long been called by its biblical name and the term occupation is increasingly perceived as inaccurate due to its temporary and politicized nature.

The Hebrew Wikipedia community, like Wikipedia in all other languages, maintains autonomy from the famous English-language online encyclopedia. Though overseen by the Wikimedia Foundation, each project is independent. Content varies dramatically from language to language, and each Wikipedia tends to reflect its base of volunteer editors and the media sources available to them.

Therefore, the articles on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are very different in English, Hebrew and Arabic. For example, while almost all Wikipedias use the term the West Bank, Hebrew Wikipedia has for years opted for Judea and Samaria.

Moreover, while all content on all Wikipedias must be neutral and based on respected sources, the editorial practices of each language community is different, enforcing certain views of what is considered neutral at the expense of other outlooks.

For example, while the English community doesnt hold formal votes but strives to reach a consensus among different factions of editors, in Hebrew decisions are voted on and editors receive a number of different options to rank in preferential order many times.

In a vote this week, the community had to decide between a number of options for the title of an article on the occupation. The title Israels occupation of Judea and Samaria reflected the lack of harmony in both the local community and Israeli society as it mixed the word occupation with the biblical name for the territory.

Ten different names were debated, four of which still included occupation, while others offered different options for Israels control or rule over the Palestinian territory. Interestingly, only two of those using occupation included West Bank, while another used Palestinian territory.

Control is better than occupation, its more neutral, the editor backing the winning option said during the debate. The former is better while occupation seems to describe a cruel active action.

Another editor countered: Israel may not be a conqueror of the Land of Israel, but Palestinians are living under a military occupation. The question of whether this is an oppressive occupation or an enlightened one well leave to the readers, but the word occupation is more accurate than Israeli control.

Others argued for using the West Bank and not the biblical terminology in the articles headline, but because West Bank had been dropped from the main article years earlier, this line of argumentation failed to win support.

Hebrew or Israeli Wikipedia?

Hebrew Wikipedia is edited largely by Jewish-Israeli editors; only a handful of editors whose native language is Arabic have been known to take part. My own reporting has suggested that more than being a Hebrew Wikipedia, the local version has become the Israeli Wikipedia, reflecting the political biases and divides in Israeli society. Though the local community is very Jewish-Israeli in its bias and tone, it is as divided as Jewish-Israeli society is on politics.

Its telling that while Hebrew-language debates on the conflict tend to divide the community along left and right-wing lines, the debate and vote this time actually remained on topic and focused on clarifying terminology. Thus it possibly reflects shifts in the Jewish-Israeli consensus on both the word occupation and the status of the West Bank.

Youre making a mistake in Hebrew. The word occupation in Hebrew doesnt just connote a specific instance in time but an ongoing situation and some of us know that occupation is indeed an ongoing action, one editor said.

It seems that the word control or authority is misleading regarding this content because it creates the false sense that the same control or authority that exists within Israels borders also exists in the territory in question, he added. Others suggested that use of such terminology required explaining how Israels rule over Arab communities in Israel proper differs from the situation in the West Bank.

They added that the communitys decision in the past to use Judea and Samaria should not constitute a binding editorial decision. Interestingly, though the community is divided based on Israeli political fault lines, the decision to use the biblical term is over a decade old.

In fact, very little change has taken place on this topic on Hebrew Wikipedia. In English, much as in Hebrew, the conflict is among the most contentious topics in the encyclopedia. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is actually one of the three most regulated arenas on English Wikipedia, with especially strict restrictions imposed on its editing to prevent political brawls. The other contentious topics are articles on India and Pakistan, and on antisemitism in Poland, highlighting just how fraught the topic is.

In Hebrew, the Israel-related topic is just as contentious, and a kind of stalemate set in during Wikipedias early days. However, changes to Israels occupation have eroded this consensus, and though the Judea and Samaria article contains information on the occupation, a specific article on military rule over the Palestinians was opened only a few months ago, launching a debate in Hebrew on the need for this specialized entry. After it was decided that the article could remain, the debate shifted to the title.

'A balance to be struck'

The editor tasked with enforcing the decision told Haaretz that though he disagreed with some aspects of it, he thought the community process yielded a factually accurate result.

The vote didnt happen according to political lines. Theres a problem with the word occupation. It has two meanings: The first is an action happening now and the second is the ongoing situation that in Hebrew can also be called an occupation, he said.

There is something mistaken about using the first sense of the word because no one is actively entering and occupying now, he said, adding that in the military sense Israel had already taken over the West Bank and there was no ongoing military campaign to seize control of the territory.

The other issue is that the word occupation now also has political connotations. The left tends to call [Israels presence in the West Bank an] occupation while the right calls it a liberation. Obviously neither are accurate and theres a balance to be struck.

The fact that the vote didnt take place along political lines, and the fact that it focused on the different meanings of the term, indicates a possible shift in Hebrew regarding the significance of occupation from the first meaning to the second. In other words, the consensus around the factual basis of the occupation is shifting in Hebrew, less due to politics and more because Israels control of the territory is less and less perceived as temporary.

At the end of last year I reported on a similar yet inverted process taking place on English Wikipedia. There, after years of consensus that Israel is not an apartheid state, the apartheid comparison made a comeback and was allowed to appear in an article because of statements by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump administration officials on Israels long-term plans for the West Bank and desire to annex the territory if peace talks failed.

In English, Israels creeping annexation has undermined its claim against the apartheid analogy. In Hebrew, the same process takes on a different tone and indicates that for Israelis too the occupation is an immutable fact, so they may as well call it by its name.

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Israeli rule, not occupation: In a sign of the times, Hebrew Wikipedia renames a key article - Haaretz

Wikipedia’s code of conduct to combat misinformation Latest News, Breaking News, Top News Headlines – Explica

Disinformation, information intoxication or fake news has always existed. Information has always been a weapon, a tool of power that has raised and destroyed empires, countries and civilizations. And in the age of the internet, misinformation goes viral at high speed.

One of those responsible for bring light to darkness of ignorance in these times is Wikipedia, the digital encyclopedia to which we all resort constantly to resolve doubts and to settle disputes about a data, a date or a name.

In its quest to improve the way it generates and improves its content, it has launched a code of conduct. As a style guide focused on the moderation and rigor of what contributors or Wikipedians contribute, Wikipedia launches its own Universal Code of Conduct o Universal Code of Conduct.

A first draft was submitted in September 2020. Then it was corrected. And on February 2 of this year, its version ratified by the Council that directs the Wikipedia and all the projects in its environment. Now it is being translated into all the languages in which there is a Wikipedia version. At the time of this writing, the translation to Spanish goes for 30%.

Another fact that exemplifies the importance of this code of conduct is that they have participated in it more than 1,500 volunteers of 19 versions or languages other than Wikipedia. And why is this document so important? In the words of those responsible, its purpose is to combat misinformation. And, especially, negative behaviors derived from the polarization that exists in the current internet.

In the words of Mara Sefidari, President of the Council of the Wikimedia Foundation, this code of conduct should serve to create a welcoming, safe and inclusive environment for our collaborators, and a movement more open and powerful for free knowledge .

The text, of about 1,600 words, covers several aspects: it defines what is the acceptable behavior in the Wikipedia community, wants to prevent abuse of power and harassment of project participants and combat misinformation or the introduction of false or inaccurate information deliberately or intentionally.

Todays internet is a reflection of the society in which we live. With the good and with the bad. On the good, projects like Wikipedia they have brought culture and information to the whole world and it has become another tool for educators. In the bad, hate speech has proliferated thanks to the intoxication and misinformation that is viralized in social networks and, lets not forget, also in traditional media.

The Universal Code of Conduct Wikipedia is one more contribution to the many that arise every day to combat misinformation. On this occasion, this code serves to give some guidelines that can be extrapolated to other areas of the internet.

Some of the elements that we find in this code seem very obvious. But it is convenient to list and remember them to avoid what we later find on social networks. For starters, what is the acceptable behavior in Wikipedia: mutual respect, empathy, civility Words that forget those who are dedicated to intoxicating or insulting everyone does not think the same.

Precisely, the Wikipedia code highlights the toxic behaviors, so common in forums and social networks: harassment, insults, abuse of power, manipulation, incitement to violence or suicide A list of behaviors to avoid on Wikipedia but also in other areas of online communication.

You will find more information about the Universal Code of Conduct on its official page. You can also consult the discussion related to the document or collaborate in the translation of the text.

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Wikipedia's code of conduct to combat misinformation Latest News, Breaking News, Top News Headlines - Explica