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Senate Republicans, Democrats plunge into weeds for rules scuffle … – Kansas Reflector

TOPEKA The dustup in the Senate over a bill delivering voucher-like funding to Kansas private schools featured zinger one-liners, rival interpretations of an obscure parliamentary rule and allegations Republican leadership engaged in abuse of power.

Senate Minority Leader Dinah Sykes, a Democrat from Lenexa, got the ball rolling Thursday with a motion to call a vote on Senate Bill 83, which was transformed by the House to include a mandate to raise teacher raises, increase funding of special education and establish the Sunflower Education Equity Act. The equity act would create state funded $5,000 savings accounts for low- and middle-income students attending homeschools and private schools.

The bill barely cleared the Kansas House 64-61, despite an 85-40 GOP majority in the chamber. Gov. Laura Kelly equated the bundled bill to a political form of blackmail, suggesting it could be vetoed with little threat of two-thirds majorities required of an override by the Senate and House.

Sykes pressed her case by pointing to Rule 3B, which she said provided leverage to compel a snap vote in the Senate on the education bill.

I do think we should vote, she said. I do think this bill was gutted and significantly altered from the way it came out of this chamber.

Senate President Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican, disagreed and urged his colleagues to steer the bill into a House-Senate conference committee. His substitute motion would place the bill in hands of six Senate and House negotiators. If compromise was reached by a bipartisan three-senator, three-representative negotiating committee, the deal could be voted on in both chambers without opportunity for amendment.

Im in support of this, said Sen. Renee Erickson, a Wichita Republican. A bill of this magnitude, the importance of this subject matter, we need more time to look at it through the conference process.

Sen. Jeff Longbine, R-Emporia, said he was perplexed by the conference-committee approach outlined by Masterson that apparently would bypass the Senates education committee. He suggested the Senate committee, with its subject-matter expertise, ought to evaluate details of the voucher-like initiative and consider other parts of the K-12 package.

If this bill is of such magnitude, why is the Senate Education Committee not taking a look at it? Longbine said.

At that point, Sen. Molly Baumgardner, the Louisburg Republican and chairwoman of the committee, revealed she requested from legislative staff comparative analysis of the Senates original Senate Bill 83, which offered low-income scholarships and tax credits to help students enroll in private schools, and the revamped Senate Bill 83 adopted by the House launching the voucher-like system.

For example, Baumgardner said, the Legislature didnt have a solid grasp on the actual cost to taxpayers of the Houses version of the bill.

We want to make sure we have as much data as possible, Baumgardner said. We make decisions based on real data, not just assumptions.

Finally, Masterson got his vote to drop the bill into a conference committee. His motion prevailed 21-12, potentially another sign of underwhelming support for the education legislation.

That opened the door for Sykes to renew her call for a Senate vote on merits of the House substitute of Senate Bill 83. Masterson said the only point of such a vote would be to kind of disrupt the process and slow things down, because a way would be found to move ahead with the legislation.

McPherson Republican Sen. Rick Wilborn, the Senates vice president, said Sykes was too late. The Senates request for a conference with the House on the bill was already on its way across the Capitol rotunda, he said.

However, Sykes responded that her motion was still in order because the House hadnt formally appointed its three members to the negotiating committee.

The motion to concur is out of order, Wilborn said.

This motion is in order, Sykes said.

We are going to convene the rules committee, Wilborn replied.

A lengthy huddle of senators on the rules committee led to a determination Sykes motion was out of bounds. Sykes said the situation illustrated reliance by Senate Republicans on interpreting rules for partisan advantage.

Theres a loophole and they didnt like it, Sykes said. So, theyre going to err on the side of what they want, which happens in this building all the time.

Her formal challenge of that rules committees decision prompted a vote of the full Senate. The Senate upheld the rules committee 22-14, meaning the Senate wouldnt proceed to an up-or-down vote on the bill.

Masterson objected to Sykes characterization of the way Republican senators handled disputes on procedural matters. In this case, he said, the rules committee sought advice of the Senate clerk and the Legislatures bill-writing office of the revisor.

Its offensive, the contention that was made, Masterson said. Thats why we have a parliamentarian to determine any rule thats in limbo. The majority party even went to the next extent and brought up the revisor of statutes, who concurred with the parliamentarian.

That rousted Sen. Dennis Pyle, the Hiawatha independent who ran for governor in 2022 and was stripped of committee assignments by Masterson.

He asked Wilborn to order the Senate parliamentarian to identify the text in Roberts Rules of Order relied upon to declare Sykes motion out of order. Wilborn didnt do so.

The parliamentarian is not the Senate, Pyle said. We have an opportunity to act on our own right now as a Senate body in the interest of what is right and true. Right and true. We should all stand against an abuse of power.

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Tennessee Democrats demand release of children removed from … – Chattanooga Times Free Press

The Tennessee Democratic Caucus demanded the Department of Children's Services release five young children taken from their parents, who are Black, after a traffic stop in Manchester, Tennessee, last month.

The children -- ages 7, 5, 3, 2 and a 4-month-old infant who was still nursing -- were removed from their parents Feb. 17 after a traffic stop initiated by the Tennessee Highway Patrol because of "dark tint and traveling in the left lane while not actively passing." The children have been in the custody of Children's Services since.

Deonte Williams, the children's father, was arrested and charged with possessing 5 grams of marijuana, a misdemeanor in Tennessee. Bianca Clayborne was cited and released. Court records, Children's Services emails and Highway Patrols citations cited in a story about the family by the Tennessee Lookout published Wednesday raised a series of questions about why the child welfare agency pursued removal of the children after a misdemeanor arrest of one parent and another parent who was free to leave.

(READ MORE: Pulled over for tinted windows, a Georgia family fights to get their children back from Tennessee DCS)

Democrats on Thursday demanded the children be returned to their parents.

Sen. London Lamar, a Memphis Democrat, called the actions "ridiculous" and an "overuse of power."

"DCS, Coffee County, y'all need to do the right thing before the situation gets worse, and we have a nation of people coming to the rescue of this Black family," she said.

"Give them their children back. It's borderline discrimination, because if this was any other family, as their attorney said, we don't even think this would be the outcome," she said.

Sen. Raumesh Akbari, also a Memphis Democrat, said the goal should be to keep families together because babies and young children belong with their parents.

"It is outrageous that the state forcefully separated Bianca Clayborne, a breastfeeding mother, and Deonte Williams from their kids and have allowed this to continue for nearly a month," she said. "The state exercised extreme and flawed judgment in taking their children and it seems they've doubled down on this poor decision."

"No family is perfect, but an imperfection, like a simple marijuana charge, is no excuse for tearing a family apart. The state is supposed to support reunification. If they don't have a better reason, they must immediately return these five children to their parents."

A spokesperson for Children's Services could not be immediately reached for comment.

(READ MORE: Audit finds Tennessee children in state custody in jeopardy)

Also on Thursday, the Tennessee Highway Patrol denied a request by the Lookout for body- and dash-cam video of the traffic stop and interactions with the family.

The Lookout's request, submitted last week, was denied because videos are "part of an ongoing criminal investigation and prosecution, and the district attorney's office serving Coffee County has asserted its privilege to not release the documents at this time pursuant to Rule 16 of the Tennessee Rules of Criminal Procedure," a letter from an agency attorney said.

The Highway Patrol also said state law prevents the agency from releasing documents or information that directly or indirectly identifies a child or a family member receiving services from Children's Services.

Courtney Teasley, the family's attorney, on Thursday said "we echo the response of the Democratic Caucus."

(READ MORE: Tennessee Children's Services chief says agency is experiencing 'horrific' turnover rate)

An instant hair follicle test performed on the parents at their first court appearance, about a week after the children were taken into custody, was a key element in Children's Services' arguments for why the children should remain in the agency's custody. However, a Coffee County court administrator, speaking to the Lookout broadly about the county's instant hair follicle testing, said the tests are inadmissible in court. An expert told the Lookout rapid follicle tests are unreliable because they often yield false positives.

Lawyers for the family have challenged the test; an attorney for Children's Services has told them the test no longer exists, thought the custody case is still ongoing.

"This is even more reprehensible when the drug test used to justify keeping these children in foster care is known to be inadmissible by the county's own court administrator," Teasley said.

Read more at TennesseeLookout.com.

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Tennessee Democrats demand release of children removed from ... - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fujitsu and Osaka University develop new quantum computing … – Fujitsu

Realizing highly accurate quantum error correction even for quantum computers with about 10,000 physical qubitsOsaka University, Fujitsu LimitedNews Facts:

Tokyo and Osaka, March 23, 2023

Fujitsu and Osaka Universitys Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Biology (QIQB) today revealed the development of a new, highly efficient analog rotation quantum computing architecture, representing a significant milestone toward the realization of practical quantum computing. The new architecture reduces the number of physical qubits required for quantum error correction a prerequisite for the realization of fault-tolerant quantum computing by 90% from 1 million to 10,000 qubits. This breakthrough will allow research to embark on the construction of a quantum computer with 10,000 physical qubits and 64 logical qubits (4), which corresponds to computing performance of approximately 100,000 times that of the peak performance of conventional high performance computers.

Moving forward, Fujitsu and Osaka University will further refine this new architecture to lead the development of quantum computers in the early FTQC era, with the aim of applying quantum computing applications to a wide range of practical societal issues including material development and finance.

Gate-based quantum computers are expected to revolutionize research in a wide range of fields including quantum chemistry and complex financial systems, as they will offer significantly higher calculation performance than current classical computers.Logical qubits, which consist of multiple physical qubits, play a major key role in quantum error correction technology, and ultimately the realization of practical quantum computers that can provide fault-tolerant results.

Within conventional quantum computing architectures, calculations are performed using a combination of four error-corrected universal quantum gates (5) (CNOT, H, S, and T gate). Within these architectures, especially quantum error correction for T-gates requires a large number of physical qubits, and rotation of the state vector in the quantum calculation requires repeated logical T-gate operations for approximately fifty times on average. Thus, the realization of a genuine fault-tolerant quantum computer is estimated to require more than one million physical qubits in total.

For this reason, quantum computers in the early FTQC era using conventional architecture for quantum error correction can only conduct calculations on a very limited scale below that of classical computers, as they work with a maximum of about 10,000 physical qubits, a number far below that required for genuine, fault-tolerant quantum computing.

To address these issues, Fujitsu and Osaka University developed a new, highly efficient analog rotation quantum computing architecture that is able to significantly reduce the number of physical qubits required for quantum error correction, and enable even quantum computers with 10,000 physical qubits to perform better than current classical computers, accelerating progress toward the realization of genuine, fault-tolerant quantum computing.

Fujitsu and Osaka University have been promoting joint R&D in quantum error correction technology including new quantum computation architectures for the early FTQC era at the Fujitsu Quantum Computing Joint Research Division, a collaborative research effort of the QIQB, established on October 1, 2021 at the campus of Osaka University as part of Fujitsus Fujitsu Small Research Laboratory program (6).

By redefining the universal quantum gate set, Fujitsu and Osaka University succeeded in implementing a phase rotating gate a world first which enables highly efficient phase rotation, a process which previously required a high number of physical qubits and quantum gate operations.

In contrast to conventional architectures that required repeated logical T-gate operations using a large number of physical qubits, gate operation within the new architecture is performed by phase rotating directly to any specified angle.

In this way, the two parties succeeded in reducing the number of qubits required for quantum error correction to around 10% of existing technologies, and the number of gate operations required for arbitrary rotation to approx. 5% of conventional architectures. In addition, Fujitsu and Osaka University suppressed quantum error probability in physical qubits to about 13%, thus achieving highly accurate calculations.

The newly developed computing architecture lays the foundation for the construction of a quantum computer with 10,000 physical qubits and 64 logical qubits, which corresponds to computing performance of approximately 100,000 times that of the peak performance of conventional high performance computers.

Research and development of the new quantum computing architecture was supported by the following programs: Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), The program on open innovation platform for industry-academia co-creation (COI-NEXT), "Quantum Software Research Hub" (JPMJPF2014); JST Moonshot Goal 6 "Realization of a fault-tolerant universal quantum computer that will revolutionize economy, industry, and security by 2050", R&D project "Research and Development of Theory and Software for Fault-tolerant Quantum Computers" (JPMJMS2061); MEXT Quantum Leap Flagship Program (MEXT Q-LEAP) "Development of quantum software by intelligent quantum system design and its applications" (JPMXS0120319794) and "Development of quantum software applications by fast classical simulator of quantum computers" (JPMXS0118067394).

Fujitsus purpose is to make the world more sustainable by building trust in society through innovation. As the digital transformation partner of choice for customers in over 100 countries, our 124,000 employees work to resolve some of the greatest challenges facing humanity. Our range of services and solutions draw on five key technologies: Computing, Networks, AI, Data & Security, and Converging Technologies, which we bring together to deliver sustainability transformation. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.6 trillion yen (US$32 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2022 and remains the top digital services company in Japan by market share. Find out more: http://www.fujitsu.com.

Osaka University was founded in 1931 as one of the seven imperial universities of Japan and is now one of Japan's leading comprehensive universities with a broad disciplinary spectrum. This strength is coupled with a singular drive for innovation that extends throughout the scientific process, from fundamental research to the creation of applied technology with positive economic impacts. Its commitment to innovation has been recognized in Japan and around the world, being named Japan's most innovative university in 2015 (Reuters 2015 Top 100) and one of the most innovative institutions in the world in 2017 (Innovative Universities and the Nature Index Innovation 2017). Now, Osaka University is leveraging its role as a Designated National University Corporation selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology to contribute to innovation for human welfare, sustainable development of society, and social transformation.Website: https://resou.osaka-u.ac.jp/en

Fujitsu LimitedPublic and Investor Relations DivisionInquiries

Osaka UniversityInternational Advanced Research Institute, Center for Quantum Information and Quantum BiologyCOI-NEXT, Quantum Software Research HubE-mail: coi-next@qiqb.osaka-u.ac.jp

All company or product names mentioned herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. Information provided in this press release is accurate at time of publication and is subject to change without advance notice.

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Quantum Security Specialist Softforum Voted ‘Most Innovative … – GlobeNewswire

SEOUL, KOREA, March 23, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Softforum (CEO Jeong Jongkap), a company specializing in quantum security, announced it has been recognized as the 'Most Innovative Cybersecurity Company' at the '2023 Cybersecurity Excellence Awards'.

Cybersecurity Excellence Awards is an international event that honors companies, products, services, and professionals that demonstrate excellence, innovation, and leadership in information security worldwide. The event is produced in partnership with the 300,000-member Information Security Community and recognizes the leading companies in the industry.

Softforum has received public attention for its contribution and honored as the Most Innovative Cybersecurity Company of Asia with its information security solutions based on Quantum-Resistant-Cryptography (PQC). The company is recognized in five Cybersecurity Product/Service categories, including Quantum-resistant verified cryptography, Hybrid PQC-based network section encryption, Hybrid PQC-based storage encryption, Hybrid PQC-based de-identification of privacy data, and Hybrid PQC-based biometric authentication.

PQC, which gained the spotlight in the event through Softforum solutions, has seen increasing interest with the recent development of Quantum Computing Technology. In particular, it has been revealed that Public Key Cryptography, the core of electronic transition securities such as internet banking, electronic stock trading, and internet shopping, is being threatened by quantum computers. As the migration to quantum computing is increasing the risk to information security, preventive action to solve the problems has emerged.

Jeong Jongkap, CEO of Softforum emphasized that "PQC is an effective countermeasure to cope with the incapacitation of existing public key cryptography (RSA, ECC, etc.) algorithms and a security solution that organizations should implement." "As quantum security is still in the early stage of the market penetration, Softforum will preempt the future of the security market through systematic preparation and quick response to greater risks." he added.

Softforum is a company specializing in next-generation information security solutions in the PQC field and is rapidly emerging and highly evaluated in the global security market.

Social Links

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@softforumofficial

Media Contact

Company: Softforum Co., Ltd

Telephone: +82 10-6739-2217

Email: anar@softforum.com

Website: https://softforum.com/

Address: Hancom Tower, 49, Daewangpangyo-ro 644, Bundang-gu, Seongnam-si, Gyeonggi-do Republic of Korea

SOURCE: Softforum Co., Ltd

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‘The migrant crisis alone will be the Tories’ downfall’, says Kevin O … – TalkTV

TalkTV's Kevin O'Sullivan says "we are not masters of our own destiny" unless the UK leaves the ECHR

TalkTV's Kevin O'Sullivan slams the government's "floundering" approach to the migrant crisis.

What should we do about the migrant crisis? Should we actually do anything? Or should we adopt the Rishi Sunak approach with a never-ending production line of tough talking announcements and absolutely no action?

Perhaps, we could go for the Boris Johnson solution: shrug our shoulders and think to ourselves that since we live in fashionable London, thousands of foreigners pouring across the English Channel illegally week after lethal week arent worth worrying about.

By my estimation it has taken this sorely out-of-touch government three floundering years to realise that unless they put the brakes on this ongoing invasion, they will lose the next election. Ooh, horror of horrors I used the word invasion.

Thats because, after nearly 50,000 aliens invaded our shores in a year of crossing dangerously, its the right word. Dont let them tell you what you can and cannot say, thats how they seek to control you. Just say no. But never mind all the other reasons the Tories are on course for an historic defeat, the migrant crisis alone will be their downfall.

Now that this glaringly obvious truth has finally dawned on him, our dear billionaire leader this week declared enough is enough and brought in alleged hard-hitting new laws to stop the rot. From now on, stormed Rishi impressively, not a single migrant who arrives on British beaches illegally will be allowed to stay.

Sounds good eh? But how does the Prime Minister define that a migrant is illegal? Does he fall in with the chattering classes insistence that if, having pitched up on our shores in deadly dinghies without passports or documents, they claim political asylum they are legal until their application has been processed. In about a decade. Because thats not going to stop a damn thing.

Watch What Just Happened? with Kevin O'Sullivan every Friday at 9pm on TalkTV

Not so much a deterrent, more an encouragement to anyone who fancies living in the United Kingdom, even though with a rocketing population of 70million and rising this packed out country is officially full up. Our infrastructure is creaking at the seams, we simply cannot take more and more Albanians. In fact, we cant take any more migrants from nations where there is neither war nor torture.

It should be: no war, no torture no new life in Britain. But it aint. Because, a management-speak true globalist at heart, Rishi has decided in his infinite lack of wisdom that we do not need to leave the European Convention on Human Rights. Which means that anytime we want to, I dunno, say, fly a few illegal migrants to Rwanda, the European Court of Human Rights will sit in judgment and rule that the plane stays on the ground.

As long as we cede sovereignty to Europe, the migrant crisis will continue apace. I hope Rishi has got it right and that somehow his optimistic fudge succeeds. I hope he does something to empty the 440 hotels currently fully booked with hungry, unemployed, mostly male migrants who British taxpayers are feeding, accommodating and giving 45 quid a week to.

But if the UK doesnt leave the European Convention on Human Rights, we are not masters of our own destiny. We do what were told. And Home Secretary Suella Braverman will carry on her vital role as the nations hotel-finder in chief. Good luck with the latest of your many tough talking migrant crisis announcements, Rishi. God knows you are going need it.

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