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Madison Cawthorns Farewell to Congress Is a Signal to Dark MAGA – Vanity Fair

Representative Madison Cawthorn may have lost his primary, but hes on a mission; the 26-year-old Republican vowed on Instagram to exact revenge against the cowardly and weak members of his party. But his post wasnt just one of bitterness. His conceding message seemed to embrace a fascistic proDonald Trump meme with dark and violent origins.

I am on a mission now to expose those who say and promise one thing yet legislate and work towards another, self-profiteering, globalist goal, he wrote in the Thursday Instagram post. The time for gentile politics as usual has come to an end, the post read, before it was edited to say, genteel politics. Cawthorn then hailed the rise of the new right, a rebranded strain of paleoconservatism popular among young pro-Trump Republicans. Its time for Dark MAGA to truly take command, he continued. We have an enemy to defeat, but we will never be able to defeat them until we defeat the cowardly and weak members of our own party. Their days are numbered.

On its face, the post can be read as the ramblings of a resentful soon-to-be ex-politician. But Cawthorns shout-out to Dark MAGA, an apparent reference to the latest meme movement launched by the terminally online alt-right, is a window into a fanatic faction born out of Trumps loss in 2020 and his ongoing denial of Joe Bidens victory. It envisions a vengeful, dictatorial Trump returning to office in 2024 to vanquish Washingtons neoliberal and neoconservative order while ruling the country as a Christian authoritarian. (Think, Napoleon retaking the throne after escaping from Elba.) At its core, Dark MAGA is a Pinterest mood-board exercise for young white nationalists who demand that Trump embrace fascist symbolism in his second term. It is also aspirational fan fiction la the America depicted in Philip K. Dicks novel The Man in the High Castle, in which the U.S. is incorporated into the Third Reichand a way for alt-right zoomers to differentiate themselves from middle-aged and elderly Trump supporters.

Much of the movements ideology is masked with multiple layers of irony, but in one #DarkMAGA post, an apparent proponent of the movement wrote that Dark MAGA calls for Torture, nuclear holocaust, genocide, extermination. It is unclear if Cawthorn is aware of the memes origins, or if a sanitized version trickled into his social media feeds. Vanity Fair contacted his office for comment but did not receive a response.

Cawthorn appears to have identified his Dark MAGA allies; in the Instagram post, he thanked a number of America First Patriots, many of whom stood by him amid the torrent of scandals he was at the center of in the past few months. His list of acknowledgements included representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz, and Paul Gosar; and Tucker Carlson, the unofficial mouthpiece of the New Right. Gosar replied to Cawthornspost by writing that his outgoing colleague has a bright future as a leader, adding, I have no doubt you will be back and better than ever.

The lawmakers posts come two days after Republican voters in North Carolinas 11th Congressional District nominated state Senator Chuck Edward over Cawthorn. Though Cawthorn did not explicitly name the cowardly Republicans he plans to depose, he has many detractors in elected office. Among them is GOP senator Thom Tillis, who spearheaded the push to unseat Cawthorn and openly backed Edward. Tillis, North Carolinas junior senator, first turned on Cawthorn in March when the freshman member claimed that his colleagues used cocaine in front of him and had invited him to an orgy. (Cawthorn has since walked back the claims, according to House minority leader Kevin McCarthy.)

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Madison Cawthorns Farewell to Congress Is a Signal to Dark MAGA - Vanity Fair

Where the Buffalo Gunman and the Anti-Abortion Fringe Meet | Time – TIME

In the week since a gunman killed 10 people in a grocery store in Buffalo, N.Y., countless articles and television spots have unpacked the racist conspiracy he shared in a hate-filled manifesto before his shooting spree.

The conspiracythe so-called great replacement theoryis the idea that Democratic lawmakers and other elites are working to force white people into a minority in the United States, usually by increasing immigration. Fox News pundit Tucker Carlson has hammered on the idea more than 400 times while railing against immigration on his show, according to a New York Times investigation, and elected Republicans, including Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York and Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida have bluntly echoed the language in comments and campaign materials criticizing Democrats immigration policy.

But the conspiracy theory also animates another cornerstone of the modern Republican agenda: opposition to abortion.

The anti-abortion movement was born in the 19th century of white fears of a declining white birth rate, says Jennifer Holland, assistant professor of history at the University of Oklahoma. The idea was that by allowing white women to receive abortions, lawmakers were leaving white populations vulnerable to demographic replacement by non-white or immigrant groups with higher birth rates. In the 1870s and 80s, the fear was primarily focused on Jewish and Catholic immigrants, especially those from Italy or Ireland, who had higher birthrates than white Protestants at the time; now, white power organizations that embrace replacement theory focus on Black and Latino communities, which have higher birth rates than whites.

While the Buffalo gunman did not explicitly mention the word abortion in his manifesto, he references birth rates more than 40 times, according to a TIME analysis, and repeatedly expresses his belief that white birth rates must change.

This week, Matt Schlapp, the head of the Conservative Political Action Conference, explicitly linked replacement theory, immigration and anti-abortion, telling reporters in Hungary that overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision enshrining a right to abortion, would be a good first step in fixing the U.S.s immigration problem. If youre worried about this quote-unquote replacement, why dont we start there? he said. Start with allowing our own people to live.

The modern mainstream anti-abortion movement denounces racist groups and ideologies. In January, after white supremacists marched alongside protesters at March for Life event, then showed up at the March for Life rally in Washington, DC, the anti-abortion movements biggest annual gathering, organizers decried any association with them. We condemn any organization that seeks to exclude a person or group of people based on the color of their skin or any other characteristic, Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life, said in a statement to TIME after the January rally. Neither Mancini nor National Right to Life, another prominent national anti-abortion group, responded to TIMEs requests for comments for this article.

But if mainstream anti-abortion activists flatly reject rightwing extremists, the relationship is complicated by the fact that rightwing extremists see the anti-abortion movement as a useful political allyand a potential pool of new recruits. In December, Thomas Rousseau the leader of the white nationalist group Patriot Front reminded his members of approaching opportunities to recruit and proselytize. Our two March For Life events are coming up, he wrote to his followers, according to leaked chats published by media nonprofit Unicorn Riot. The aim is to be more understated, friendly, in smaller groups, and get as many flyers out as possible.

Rightwing extremists attach themselves like a leech to traditional Republican constituencies, Mike Madrid, a veteran Republican strategist who has been critical of the party in the age of Trump, told TIME earlier this year. In doing so, he says, they legitimize and normalize their extremist positions.

Read More: The Coming Battle Over the Anti-abortion Movements Future

Some mainstream anti-abortion activists worry that racist and nationalist groups appear to be increasingly vocal at their events. When you breed this nationalism together with a movement thats largely religious, you start to see these types of things crop up, says Destiny Herndon-De La Rosa, the founder of the anti-abortion group New Wave Feminists, which calls itself a pro-life feminist organization. But never to the degree this year. I was horrified that an actual white supremacy group was there at the March for Life rally in D.C.

In 2018, Herndon-De La Rosas organization pushed out its vice president, Kristen Hatten, after she began sharing white supremacist ideas, including reportedly sharing a Tweet that mocked the idea of Muslims becoming a British majority on social media, according to HuffPost. Hatten later told HuffPost: Ive said I identify with the alt-right to a large extent, and I doThat said, there are elements within the alt-right with whom I dont see eye to eye. I am not a national socialist nor am I a Nazi. I am not a eugenicist. In fact I remain pro-life.

Belief in rightwing conspiracies is ascendent in an increasingly conservative Republican Party, says Kurt Braddock, assistant professor of communications at American University and a faculty fellow at the schools Polarization and Extremism Research Innovation Lab. What weve seen from the Right in recent years is that what was originally on the fringe in 2015, from 2016, forward, the fringe has moved more and more into the mainstream, he says.

Nearly one in three American adults now hold a belief that is in line with the replacement theory. According to an Associated Press and the NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll published May 9, a third of Americans believe a group of people is trying to replace native-born Americans with immigrants for electoral gains. Another 29% shared the concern that a rise in immigration is leading to native-born Americans losing influence in culture and politics.

Prior to the Civil War, abortion was legal with minimum restrictions in the U.S. But when the war ended, white Protestant Americans fears shifted. After slavery was outlawed, the womens suffrage movement began, and immigration increased, the idea that a white Protestant America would soon be diluted or replaced by immigrant groups gained steam. In 1858, group of physicians with the American Medical Association, led by Horatio Storer, began lobbying lawmakers to begin restricting and banning abortions on the grounds that a low birth rate among whites would allow immigrants, particularly Catholics from Ireland and other parts of Europe, to overtake white Protestants demographically.

While replacement theory wasnt given a name until 2012, these 19th century activists embraced the notion and language explicitly. If a majority of all the youths and children under fifteen years of age in a place is made up from those of a foreign parentage, and is relatively increasing in number every year, how long will it be before such a power will be felt in the management, if not in the control, of the municipal government of those cities and towns? said one of those physicians, according to researchers at Northwestern University and University of California, Berkeley.

Storers movement was successful. By the year 1900, abortion was illegal in all U.S. states, marking a profound shift in four decades. (Ironically, Storer would in the later years of his life convert to Catholicism, according to James Madison Universitys undergraduate research journal).

It really is a radical break from American laws before then, Holland, at the University of Oklahoma, says. Prior to this group of physicians involvement in the procedure, abortion was widely legal and was inherited by English common law. The question is, why would state legislatures be open to [abortion restrictions]? Holland adds. It very much has to do with race.

Read more: How the Great Replacement Theory Has Fueled Racist Violence

Even on its own terms, the logic of anti-abortion racism is deeply convoluted. People of color receive disproportionately more abortions than white Americans. But Seyward Darby, author of Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism, says logic is not the point. You have to step away from theory, and you have to realize the kind of wider world worldview, she tells TIME. What they ultimately want is a series of policies, including making white women have more babies, by force if necessary, and then finding ways if not to reduce the number of children who are not white in the country, then to marginalize them to such an extent that they have no power.

Some far right anti-abortion extremists oppose both immigration and abortions for white women only, and throughout history, similar racist thought has undergirded forced-sterilization campaigns of women of color. For white supremacists, they are not seeking to end abortion because of any kind of morality related to the fetus itself, says Alex DiBranco, executive director of the Institute for Research on Male Supremacism, an organization of experts and scholars who study misogynist movements and ideology. Theyre very much seeing this as a strategic and tactical way to force white women to give birth.

With replacement theory and other racist ideologies no longer relegated to 19th century lobbying efforts or the fringes of the internet, experts on political extremism say that Americans must now grapple with the implications of these beliefs on mainstream politics. Its difficult to get into the minds of the people that engage in this violence and say that theyre pro life, says Braddock, at American University. Generally speaking a lot of these individuals, what theyll say is that they had to engage in violence to precipitate something that would inherently make the world better around them.

With reporting by Vera Bergengruen

More Must-Read Stories From TIME

Write to Jasmine Aguilera at jasmine.aguilera@time.com and Abigail Abrams at abigail.abrams@time.com.

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Where the Buffalo Gunman and the Anti-Abortion Fringe Meet | Time - TIME

We cant control guns or the internet. But we can watch kids for signs of extremism – WBUR News

We still don't know all the facts aboutwhy 18-year-old white maleperpetrated a horrific hate crime at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York last Saturday. What appears irrefutable, however, is that his violent act was fueled by racist and xenophobic misinformation online.

As I discussed the shootingwith my husband, an immigrant, person of color, fellow psychiatrist and the bravest person I know he spoke with uncharacteristic vulnerability: Im afraid. Grappling with our fear and anger, we begana heated discussion about what should and canbe doneabout digital extremism in a society that has become tragically passive aboutletting people of color fear for their lives on a daily basis.

In public health, primary prevention solutions are considered the most effective toavoidillness, because they eliminate the source of the hazardsono one is exposed. But what do you do when the illness is white supremacy woven into the framework of a nation?

Primary prevention requires government mobilization and national policies. WriterEileen Riverspoints out,for example, how this shooting highlights the need for national education reform that addresses Americas racist and violent past. But if white supremacist theories are becoming increasingly mainstreamwithin the government, primary prevention measures seem infuriatingly improbable. (Although as I wrote this, Congress did narrowly pass a bill to fight domestic terrorism.)

[W]hat do you do when the illness is white supremacy woven into the framework of a nation?

We could try to crack down on extremist content online, butremovingone problematic forum,like cutting off the head of the Hydra,spawns two new ones in its place. Case in point: TikTok is the latest platform caught in the never-ending pro-ana promoting anorexia problem.

Then there are gun control measures, but again, a lack of bipartisan support makes this fix repeatedly a non-starter.

We're left with a call for individualsto confront online extremism. Because young, white males make up the majority of those committing hate crimes in the name of white supremacy, the individuals who may be able to make the most difference are teachers, mental health professionals and especially, parents. As a child psychiatrist and researcher in problematic digital media use, I have some advice on what we (including myself!) might do better:

*Ask what your child/patient/student does online. Let me be clear: The internet does not cause someone to become racist or violent. But the ways social media platforms uniquely facilitate terrorist group recruitment are well-established. Fringe groups use the internet to lure in new recruits with support and camaraderie, all the while stoking in them a sense of moral outrage, feeding them misinformation, and convincing them that unless they commit to their cause, their very lives are at stake. (This isknown as mortality salience.) A young person's devotion to a single forum or website should, at the very least, prompt additional questioning.

*Monitor closely for behavioral changes, especially now. Much like the internet, pandemics dont cause violence or racism, but they may foster an environment where teens with racist views become radicalized. Troubled youth are especially easy targets for online extremist groups and the COVID-19 pandemic created troubled youth in droves. Grappling with sudden, dramatic shifts in their everyday lives, the teenagers of 2020 flocked to the one remaining source of consistent connection: the internet.

[A]nger is a feeling that extremist groups are masterful at taking advantage of online.

While teens increased their chances of encountering extremism as they spent more time online, the pandemic also slashed healthier opportunities for teenagers to build a sense of identity, community and self-esteem. No more hanging out with friends after school, football games or clubs.

The media may have focused predominantly on the rise in teen suicides during the pandemic, but teenanger has also exploded. I worked on an inpatient psychiatric unit during the early days of the pandemic and pediatric admissions for aggression were sometimes more frequent than those for depression.Unfortunately, anger is a feeling that extremist groups are masterful at taking advantage of online. These groups tell youthlike the Buffalo shooterwhere to direct their anger:

There isnt a problem with you, but with Blacks, Hispanics and immigrants. Youre being replaced. Its up to you to do something.

*Watchfor sudden changes in beliefs. While adolescence is normally a stage where teenagers try on new ideologies, if a teen suddenly starts espousing beliefs entirely inconsistent with previously held worldviews, it is time to investigate further. Los Angeles-based writer Joanna Schroeder described this well when she documented her own experiencewatching her sons' online behavior. The red flags started going up for us when, a year or so ago, [our kids] started asking questions that felt like they came directly from alt-right talking points,she said.

*If a teen is exploring online extremism sites, focus on maintaining an in. While yourfirst instinct may be to forbid or admonish, the fastest way to lose access to a troubled teen is to shame them. Extremist forums make recruits feel empowered, and then work to isolate them from opposing (read: true) viewpoints. Adults must remain curious and invested, correct misinformation, and stay in it for the long haul. This is not to condone racist behaviors, but rather to watchfor potential violence. Increase mental health supports when needed and provide alternative screen-free activities that offer connection and validation. Any suspicion of violent intent should be met with an emergent mental health evaluation.

It is critical now more than ever that white allies do all that they can to fight digital extremism. Even if our country is slow to make systematic changes to confront white nationalism, our Black, Hispanic and Asian neighbors deserve far more from us than passivity during these turbulent times. Diverting just one youth away from these forums could quite literally save Black and brown lives.

Correction: A previous version of this piece mischaracterized Joanna Schroeder's descriptions of her children's online activity.

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We cant control guns or the internet. But we can watch kids for signs of extremism - WBUR News

40 Times People Stumbled Upon Something Hilarious On Wikipedia And It Ended Up Being Shared In This Online Group – Bored Panda

Wikipedia is huge. As of 19 May 2022, there are 6,500,765 articles in its English version, containing over 4 billion words and 55,804,737 pages. It's so big that no person can possibly expect to scroll through everything on their own. We need help. Someone who can sort out the good stuff and present it in byte-size tidbits. Someoone like Annie Rauwerda.

In April 2020, then-sophomore at the University of Michigan, Rauwerda got bored being stuck at home and ended up spending countless hours on the internet.

Passing the time, she came up with an idea for a spontaneous quarantine project and created a new Instagram account, called 'depths of wikipedia.' Flash forward to now, and her online baby has upwards of 800,000 followers, spread across multiple social media platforms.

But its core concept remains the same: Rauwerda curates funny, silly, and weird snippets from Wikipedia and shares them with the world.

More info: depthsofwikipedia.com | Instagram | Twitter | TikTok

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40 Times People Stumbled Upon Something Hilarious On Wikipedia And It Ended Up Being Shared In This Online Group - Bored Panda

A Quantum Leap in the Making Meet Tomorrow’s Super Super Computers – TechNative

Modern computers are incredibly versatile, but even the most potent ones struggle with certain types of calculations and modelling

Now, imagine an entirely different kind of computer, with head-spinning power, using mind-bending quantum mechanics to bring barely believable capabilities to life. A super super computer that can tackle calculations that the most powerful conventional machines would need decades to process in a split second. This contraption which resembles a baroque chandelier that could have hung at Versailles is a quantum computer.

They probably wont replace todays computers dont expect your next laptop to be a quantum device but they will be able to tackle certain boxed and highly complex tasks that force traditional computers to throw in the towel. If there are near-endless possible answers to a clearly defined problem, a quantum computer will find the solution much quicker than any conventional computer.

Quantum computers are powered by qubits (i.e., quantum bits), which, due to the strange properties of quantum mechanics, can exist in something called superposition, which in simplified terms means they exist in both 0 and 1 states simultaneously. Imagine flipping a coin. Itll eventually land on either heads or tails. But if you spin it, you could say that before it settles it is both heads and tails at the same time or, rather, there is a possibility that it can be either of the two. It is in superposition. In order to operate at scale, qubits need to be entangled wired together in superposition. Quantum entanglement, explains IBM, allows qubits, which behave randomly, to be perfectly correlated with each other.

Alas, superposition is fickle, and when decoherence forces a qubit out of superposition, it no longer possesses quantum properties. The solution is called error correction, and quantum computing pioneers like IBM, Microsoft and Google are hard at work making it happen.

For a more comprehensive explanation of quantum computing, check out this primer. And dont miss this irresistible video featuring IBM scientist Talia Gershon explaining quantum computers to five individuals from an eight-year-old to a theoretical physicist from Yale.

Possibilities for quantum use cases include predictive analytics and advanced modeling, which could help streamline and optimize large-scale transit operations and fleet maintenance, energy exploration, disaster prevention and recovery, as well as climate change mitigation. Also on the radar: chemistry simulations of molecules and atoms whose complex behavior is driven by quantum mechanics and simply too hard to handle for conventional machines.Meanwhile, automakers, including Volkswagen, are investigating quantum computing in search of improved battery chemistry for electric vehicles.

In oil refining, massively big machines, called hydrocrackers, are used to upgrade low-quality heavy gas oils into high-quality, clean-burning jet fuel, diesel and gasoline. Extremely complicated and costly to maintain, hydrocrackers may sit idle several months each year, but implementing a predictive modeling application has enabled hydrocracker operators to shave off months of downtime for these behemoths. The idea: Make all acute repairs when the machine is down and use technology to predict what might break next and fix it preemptively. Adding quantum-driven AI as the brain for the hydrocracker could further minimize downtime because the quantum computer could calculate exponentially more scenarios than current technology.

In another example of the immense potential of the technology, bright minds from the University of Glasgows School of Physics & Astronomy recently announced that they have adapted a quantum algorithm called Grovers algorithm to drastically cut down the time it takes to identify and analyze gravitational wave signals.

One of the most interesting use cases is artificial intelligence. Indeed, adding quantum power to AI could be what takes present-day Narrow AI to the next level General AI. The quantum-AI hydrocracker brain described above is a possible example of General AI. Quantum computing could also propel machines toward sentience within specific fields. Imagine computers perfectly empathizing and emulating emotions, with the ability to respond to complex signals, like expressions, eye movement and body language. Perhaps one day, quantum computing could drive us all the way to that barely fathomable third level of AI Super AI where machines outperform humans in every way.

Todays quantum machines are scientific marvels, and they are evolving rapidly. By [2025], IBM says, we envision that developers across all levels of the quantum computing stack will rely upon our advanced hardware with a cloud-based API. The hope is that by 2030, companies and users are running billions, if not a trillion quantum circuits a day. Big Blue, whose most powerful machine currently packs 126 qubits, expects to have an 1121-qubit version in 2023.

Quantum computing is fascinating, promising and just cool. Still, we may need to slow the hype machine down a tad as significant challenges must be overcome before the technology can be commercialized. Functional, stable, production-scale quantum machines could be up to a decade away. But once they materialize, we can start writing software for the quantum stack and begin to realize all these tantalizing quantum computing use cases.

About the Author

Wolf Ruzicka is Chairman atEastBanc Technologies.Wolf is a technology industry veteran with more than 25 years of experience leading enterprise business strategy and innovation. He joined EastBanc Technologies in 2007, originally as CEO. During his tenure, Wolf also served as President of APIphany, a division of EastBanc Technologies, through its acquisition by Microsoft. Wolfs vision and customer-centric approach to digital transformation is credited for helping establish EastBanc Technologies as a leader delivering sophisticated solutions that enable customers to win in todays digital economy. Follow Wolf on LinkedIn.

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A Quantum Leap in the Making Meet Tomorrow's Super Super Computers - TechNative