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1947 and now – The Interpreter

A Moscow leader aggressively expanding. Conflict between Jews and Palestinians. An unpopular Democratic president in the United States suffering a polling slump one year before the election. Sound familiar? This, in fact, was the situation in 1947.

A year later, Harry Truman hadnt solved these international problems, which of course fester to this day. But he had settled on clear policies. He had also won re-election, fostering in the process a bipartisan coalition that would endure for decades. Small wonder that Joe Biden is keen to talk up the parallels between then and now.

How did Truman do it? He began with obvious strengths. With so much of Europe and Asia still devastated by the Second World War, the United States was in a pre-eminent economic position. Other players, from London to Canberra, had not only become accustomed to working with Americans during the war, but were also desperate to follow Washingtons continued lead. Truman, although inexperienced, surrounded himself with an impressive team, most notably George Marshall, his secretary of state in 1947 and 1948 and an almost universally respected bipartisan general.

Yet beyond Washingtons corridors of power, most Americans were not enthusiastic about assuming the leadership role that Truman and Marshall wanted the United States to adopt. No one forgot the decision to reject the Versailles Treaty and membership in the League of Nations after the last war. In 1946, demobilisation and domestic reconstruction were the political priorities. That year, the Republican Party exploited this mood to win control of Congress, promising the country a smaller state and lower taxes. Some of the new Republican intake including a young Richard Nixon were also hyper-partisans, prepared to conflate liberalism with communism at the start of a witch-hunt that Joe McCarthy would spearhead a few years later.

Trumans problem in 1947 was that he needed this Republican-controlled Congress to appropriate money for many of the foreign policy programs he had in mind, including most notably the Marshall Plan. Having lost the last four presidential elections, Republicans had little incentive to help the unpopular Democrat in the White House. Nor were they keen to spend money on foreigners, especially when their backers in big business told them that such a move would be inflationary.

Yet the Republican Party was a place where hierarchy mattered. Its senior figures, led by Senator Arthur Vandenberg, had been convinced by the war that the United States could not retreat from global leadership. They agreed to support Trumans policies, if Truman gave them political cover with a speech that scared the hell out of America.

Although there were obvious perils in the president exaggerating the danger, the news agenda appeared to support the thrust of Trumans rhetoric. Moscow, in particular, seemed bent on expansion. Its takeover of Czechoslovakia in the spring of 1948 proved particularly powerful in mobilising Republicans during the final push to approve the Marshall Plan.

Among those voting in favour was Nixon. In 1948, the young congressman acted in defiance of the main political supporters in his home district. Within a few years, he used this vote to cultivate the image of a responsible internationalist, who could be trusted with power at the national level.

Three-quarters of a century later, Biden will have a far greater scope to campaign against a Congress that has literally done nothing other than wrangle over its internal leadership while conflict rages in Ukraine and war erupted in Gaza.

In the spring of 1948, Truman also recognised the new state of Israel. It was a decision that generated much controversy inside the administration Marshall even threatened to resign for officials wanted to avoid alienating the Arab world, given the obvious strategic importance of oil and the Suez Canal. Truman, however, was convinced that supporting the creation of the state of Israel was the right thing to do, a homeland for the Jews being vital, in his view, in the wake of the Holocaust. Nor was Truman blind to the political advantages that would accrue, given the power of the Jewish-American vote in key swing states.

Truman based his re-election campaign in 1948 on concrete foreign policy achievements. Despite the crucial support Republicans had given him, he showed them little gratitude. On the stump, he railed against the do-nothing Congress, even though it had only recently passed the Marshall Plan.

Three-quarters of a century later, Biden will have a far greater scope to campaign against a Congress that has literally done nothing other than wrangle over its internal leadership while conflict rages in Ukraine and war erupted in Gaza. Whether he can convince these legislators to act in the coming months and whether he can translate this political dynamic into votes next November remain to be seen. But as Truman showed, even presidents with poor polling numbers have the power to seize control of the agenda, to lead, and to win.

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1947 and now - The Interpreter

Albania’s deal with Italy on migrants has been welcomed by many … – Las Vegas Sun

Published Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023 | 7:59 a.m.

Updated Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023 | 10:36 a.m.

SHENGJIN, Albania (AP) When the leaders of Albania and Italy announced a contentious agreement earlier this week to jointly process some asylum applications of migrants arriving by sea, some in the Western Balkans country saw it as reciprocation.

Italy had welcomed thousands of Albanians fleeing poverty after the fall of communism more than three decades ago, and Albania's current government wanted to pay back the Italians' hospitality.

On Monday, Albania said it agreed to shelter thousands of migrants while Rome fast-tracks their requests seeking asylum in Italy, up to 36,000 a year. A memorandum between the countries says Italy would agree to remove migrants whose applications are rejected. The European Commission has requested more details.

The deal , which must be approved by Albania's parliament, already has been criticized by rights organizations and other groups , and it could backfire against Albania as it aspires to EU membership. Italy's left-wing opposition parties are protesting the deal.

Meanwhile, ordinary Albanians are divided.

Bib Lazri, 66, a resident of the northern Albanian village of Gjader, where one of two accommodation centers is set to be built, said he welcomed the move given the historical ties between the two countries.

All my kids are abroad. They (the Italians) have welcomed us for 30 years now, Lazri said. It is up to us to say a good word, to keep them and show our open heart.

In 1991, around 20,000 Albanians came on one dangerously overcrowded ship that reached the southeastern Italian region of Puglia. It was less than a year since political pluralism was announced in Albania, which for decades under communism had been closed to much of the world, and only months after the first democratic election.

Poverty was widespread and basic goods, including bread, were in short supply. Albanians saw Italy as their Western window. Many of the Albanians settled in Italy, obtained work and raised families.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama announced the five-year deal on Monday in Rome standing beside Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni. Rama expressed gratitude on behalf of Albanians who found refuge in Italy, and escaped hell and imagined a better life.

But for many other Albanians, confusion and even anger is the main feeling for the surprise announcement.

Albania will offer two facilities, starting with the port of Shengjin, a main tourist spot about 75 kilometers (46 miles) south of the capital Tirana that has attracted almost 1 million tourists this year in the surrounding area.

Many fear that the accommodation center will have a negative impact on the country. Albania has become a major tourism magnet this year, bringing more than 9 million tourists to its pristine coastline so far.

A refugee camp at the port is not compatible with the governments idea of a European elite tourism, said Arilda Lleshi, a 27-year-old human rights activist, speaking from Tirana.

Many people were upset by the fact that such an agreement with wide social impact was done without a wide social consultation, Lleshi said. It seems our prime minister continuously takes over to resolve the worlds issues to get some credit internationally, without consulting with people beforehand.

Those who will be deported will be sent to Gjader, 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of the Shengjin port, at a former military airport.

Italy has committed to pay for the construction of two centers that can hold up to 3,000 migrants at a time.

Albania would also provide external security for the two centers, which would be under Italian jurisdiction. While the memorandum offers Albania broad security and financial reassurances, it fails to describe what migration procedures would be followed inside, experts noted.

It was not written by a migration expert, said Hanne Bierens of the Migration Policy Institute Europe. We have a lot of questions about how it would work.

Migrants will be brought to Albania on Italian ships, and Italy agrees to remove any whose applications for international protection have been rejected, under the memorandum.

However, it does not outline how they will be repatriated, which is often a long and difficult process. Nor does it say where migrants will be screened for transfer to Albania, whether at sea or on Italian soil.

The head of the port where the migrants will be processed, Sander Marashi, supports the government's agreement, saying that the facility won't be problematic for the port's normal operations.

Such an agreement shows that ... Albanians hospitality is not only words but deeds too, Marashi said.

But some Albanians were surprised and not clear about what the agreement meant.

Albania has a recent history of welcoming refugees fleeing conflict and poverty, temporarily hosting around 4,000 Afghans in 2020. A small number of Afghans are still in Albania waiting to move to the United States or to other Western countries.

Rama also mentioned how Albanians welcomed ethnic Kosovo Albanians to escape massacres by Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic in 1999. Albania also sheltered Jews and hid them from the Nazis during World War II.

Requests by The Associated Press to interview government officials at the central and local level about the new deal with Italy were declined.

The agreement must be approved in parliament before it takes effect. Albania's political opposition has asked the prime minister to report to parliament before it is voted on. A vote hasn't been scheduled yet.

Rama's governing Socialists have 74 seats in the 140-seat parliament, so in theory, the government shouldn't have any issues in passing it. But the deal has created such consternation among some sectors of the population that passing it could become problematic.

Albert Rakipi of the Albanian Institute for International Studies considered the deal as ridiculous, deceitful and unsustainable, and unreasonable.

None of the thousands of people risking their lives to reach Europe dream of a future in which they are placed in camps in a small and poor country just outside" the borders of European Union countries, Rakipi said.

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Associated Press writer Colleen Barry in Milan, Italy, contributed to this report.

Follow Llazar Semini at https://twitter.com/lsemini

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Follow APs global migration coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/migration

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Albania's deal with Italy on migrants has been welcomed by many ... - Las Vegas Sun

Grothman’s Bipartisan Hmong New Year Resolution | U.S. … – Glenn Grothman

Congressman Glenn Grothman (WI-06) has introduced H. Res. 801, a bipartisan resolution recognizing the cultural and historical significance of the Hmong New Year.

Grothman is joined by Representatives Bryan Steil (R-WI), Mark Pocan (D-WI), Gwen Moore (D-WI), Scott Fitzgerald (R-WI), Mike Gallagher (R-WI), Betty McCollum (D-MN), Doug LaMalfa (R-CA), Dean Phillips (D-MN), Jim Costa (D-CA), Scott Peters (D-CA), Sara Jacobs (D-CA) Michelle Steel (R-CA), David Valadao (R-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV) and Young Kim (R-CA).

Wisconsin is the state with the 3rd highest Hmong population and I am privileged to represent one of Wisconsins largest Hmong communities. Each year, I attend the New Year celebrations in my district and am looking forward to attending them again this year in places like Oshkosh and Sheboygan, said Grothman. These celebrations of thanksgiving are an honor to attend the food, music, and dance make these festivals truly special events. The Hmong people will always be dear to my heart for the important role they played helping the United States fight communism in the Vietnam war. I am glad that both sides of the aisle have come together to recognize Hmong Americans significant role in our communities and their pursuit of the American Dream.

The Hmong New Year is a significant cultural tradition in Minnesotas Fourth District, which is home to our nations largest Hmong population, said Congresswoman McCollum. With this resolution, I join my Hmong neighbors and constituents in recognizing the holiday, giving thanks for the harvest, and celebrating the year to come.

Congresswoman Jacobs said, Hmong New Year is celebrated across San Diego and I am proud to recognize this important holiday with my colleagues from both parties in this resolution. I join my Hmong neighbors in giving thanks and celebrating the year to come.

I am proud to join my colleagues in a bipartisan effort to recognize the cultural and historical significance of the upcoming Hmong New Yeara time to honor their ancestors and give thanks for the harvest. I wish everyone who observes the holiday a safe and happy celebration,said Congressman Fitzgerald.

Hmong New Year is a joyous time to commemorate the end of harvest season and bring the community together. I am excited to join my constituents in celebrating this new beginning and the rich tradition of Hmong New Year, said Congresswoman Moore.

Congressman Pocan added, The annual Hmong New Year celebrations are a treasured part of Wisconsins community and culture, and we welcome the opportunity to recognize this wonderful tradition. I am happy to support this resolution honoring the Hmong community in Wisconsin and nationwide.

Hmong New Year is one of the greatest and most valued traditions in our San Joaquin Valley. Each year, this celebration draws 100,000 people to honor the rich culture of the Hmong people and welcome the New Year. I am proud to co-sponsor this bipartisan resolution that recognizes the importance of Hmong heritage, and its an honor to represent the Hmong community, said Congressman Costa.

The Hmong New Year is traditionally celebrated at the end of the rice harvest season in Laos and Southeast Asia in late November and early December. In the United States, the Hmong New Year traditions have carried over, occurring from October through December, and have become significant celebrations for Hmong Americans and many others.

Click here to view Grothman floor remarks on the Hmong New Year.

Click here for the full text of the resolution.

-30-

U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Glenbeulah) is serving his fourth term representing Wisconsins 6th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives.

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Grothman's Bipartisan Hmong New Year Resolution | U.S. ... - Glenn Grothman

Another View: DeSantis was strong, Haley was sharp, Ramaswamy … – Press Herald

There were few fireworks at Wednesdays Republican debate in Miami. No major flops either (though Vivek Ramaswamy continued to prove hes unfit to be president and, in the famous words of Chris Christie at a previous debate, he sounds more like ChatGPT.)

Was there a clear winner? With Donald Trump not on stage and instead holding a rally about 10 miles away in Hialeah can you truly declare one?

Wednesday was a good night for Ron DeSantis. With only five candidates on stage, he had a chance to talk at length about Israel, gunning down Mexican cartels and other topics.

The question at this point isnt whether DeSantis will surpass Trump in polls that show the former president with a double-digit lead. DeSantis is fighting to be the anti-Trump alternative, and his debate performance, as good as it was, didnt neutralize the main threat for that No. 2 spot: former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

If DeSantis presence on stage has become more polished over the course of three debates, hes also facing a formidable opponent in Haley. Quick on her toes or, as she boasted, her five-inch heels Haley didnt cede any ground.

With the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks against Israel as the backdrop, the first part of the debate was devoted to foreign policy. DeSantis landed a good one-liner, saying he would tell Benjamin Netanyahu to Finish the job against Hamas. He acknowledged the threat of antisemitism in the United States and said he would cancel the visas of college students who support the terrorist group. He sounded tough, so how hard would it be to denounce neo-Nazi marches that have taken place near Orlando something he has yet to do?

Foreign policy doesnt usually decide presidential elections, until it does. With the wars in the Middle East and in Ukraine, the world is more dangerous. DeSantis came out strong on Israel, but the topic has been Haleys strength since the first debate. By calling Vladimir Putin a thug, and defending the need to support Ukraine to deter Russia, she may face resistance from a Republican Party thats skeptical of U.S. involvement in the war, but she makes a strong argument that America is weaker when it sits on the sidelines.

DeSantis answer on Ukraine, by the way, was a flop. He said he would not send troops to the country, even though thats not under consideration, and deflected by switching to border security.

Meanwhile, at Trumps Hialeah rally, the focus wasnt on an unstable world or policy discussions. It was Trump himself, as usual.

Trump took his adoring audience on a gallop down memory lane, reviewing his greatest hits mean-spirited nicknames, murderous illegal immigrants and all.

The former president touted his Muslim travel ban; name-dropped Crooked Joe Biden, Pencil Neck Adam Schiff and, of course, Ron DeSanctimonius; pledged to stop the invasion of our Southern border; and compared illegal immigrants to bloody-thirsty Hannibal Lecter. He promised the largest deportation operation in American history.

He told his predominantly Hispanic fans that he would protect them from communism on these shores.

Most amazing, as always, were Trumps shameless accusations that the radical left Democrat communists are shredding the Constitution and gutting the rule of law. We are not the ones endangering American democracy, he said. We are the ones saving it.

This from the man who incited the Jan. 6. Capitol assault on U.S. democracy; faces charges in Georgia that he unlawfully conspired to change the 2020 election outcome while participating in a criminal enterprise; and vows to use the hammer of the law to rain down retribution on his enemies.

Right, saving our democracy.

What would truly reinforce our democracy is a strong Republican alternative to Trump, one that respects our Constitution and democratic processes. But, were not naive. Given the former presidents outsize popularity, its hard to envision any other candidates path to primary victory.

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Another View: DeSantis was strong, Haley was sharp, Ramaswamy ... - Press Herald

AI Could Learn a Thing or Two From Rat Brains – The Daily Beast

Have you noticed that when you open a new chat with ChatGPT, it has no memory of your previous chats? Or that your self-driving car keeps making the same mistake every time it passes through the tunnel?

Thats because modern AI systems do not yet learn continuously as they go. Retraining only occurs manually with human oversight; engineers collect and clean incoming data, retrain the system, and meticulously monitor its performance before sending it back into the world.

Modern artificial neural networks suffer from what is known as the problem of catastrophic forgetting: when you teach them new things, they tend to forget old things. Other limitations include lack of common sense and fine motor skills.

Billions of dollars are being spent on trying to solve these challenges. But we are late to the game. Nature discovered solutions to these problems over 100 million years ago in the brains of the first mammals. All modern mammals solve these problems effortlesslyeven a small rat.

A rat acquires new information without forgetting old information, exhibits exquisite common sense, has fine motor skills that surpass even the most sophisticated robotic arms, and can plan its routes through a complex maze better than any modern robot.

How do rats do it? In your brain (just as in all mammal brains) there are two systems of thinking; one in which you pause to perform some mental operations, and the other in which you automatically make choices. This duality shows up in AI research, psychology, and neuroscience: in psychology these are called System 2 versus System 1 (after Daniel Kahnemans famous book Thinking Fast and Slow); in neuroscience they are called goal-directed decision making and habitual decision making; and in AI research they are called model-based and model-free.

One of the crucial things missing in modern AI systems is this slower version of thinking. This inner world model is the basis of our imaginationwhat enables us to close our eyes and plan how we want to get to work, or what we want to say in a speech, or how to place our fingers on our guitar to play a specific chord. It is what gives us common sense and enables us to incorporate old information without disrupting new information.

Some AI systems can simulate possible futuresGoogle maps can chart a path and AlphaZero can play out possible future moves when playing chess. But AlphaZero and other AI systems still cant yet engage in reliable planning in real-world settings, outside of the simplified conditions of a board game or a map. In real-world settings, simulating possible plans requires dealing with imperfect noisy information, an infinite space of possible next actions, and ever-changing internal needs, all feats rats perform effortlessly.

Because of these limitations, the recent success of large language models has taken many AI researchers, cognitive scientists, and neuroscientists by surprise. It turns out that if you scale up a model-free, habitual, System 1 artificial brain with a lot more neurons and a lot more data, it starts being capable of many of the feats that many researchers thought would only be possible with a model-based, goal-oriented System 2 brain. GPT-4 answers commonsense questions surprisingly well despite the fact that it never pauses to render a simulation of the external world; indeed, it has never seen our world, it has only ever learned from words. GPT-4 can also explain its own reasoning with an eerie level of coherence, despite the fact that we know it did not pause to think about how it reasoned about a prior answer. GPT-4 is an incredible feat of fast thinking.

The goal of AI is not to recreate the human brain, which has its own portfolio of flaws, but to transcend it.

However, if we just continue to scale up these systems with more data and more neurons, they are likely to remain brittle, frozen in time, and risk making mistakes in unpredictable ways that we cannot explain. They may never acquire the fine motor skills we want them to have. Should they achieve human-level performance, it will suggest they do so while working in a very different way than our own brains, which means we will be rolling dice that they will not spontaneously start making mistakes in ways we did not anticipate.

The goal of AI is not to recreate the human brain, which has its own portfolio of flaws, but to transcend it. To take the good and re-engineer out the bad. But the current approach of ignoring the human brain entirely, of barreling forward with scaling up neural networks by giving them more neurons and more data, may risk missing a crucial aspect of human intelligence that we will want to see in our AI systems.

The human brain evolved over a long period of time through a long process of incrementally acquiring intellectual faculties, each stacked on top of another. Modern AI systems are missing past breakthroughs that occurred in brain evolution. If we slow down to make sure we add them, the AI systems we will end up creating will be safer, more robust, and better equipped to fulfill AIs promise. Or at the very least, we will tip the odds in favor of a good outcome in this new, odd, scary, and possibly utopic world of AI we have now entered.

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AI Could Learn a Thing or Two From Rat Brains - The Daily Beast