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Pence reacts to Dems plans to file articles of impeachment – The Republic

Greg Pence Eric Connolly U.S. House Office of Photography

Rep. Greg Pence, R-Indiana, has criticized plans by House Democrats to draft articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump, calling the move a political ploy and sham.

The announcement, made by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, on Thursday, came after two months of investigation sparked by a still-anonymous government whistleblowers complaint.

Im disappointed. I believe its a sham, Pence said in a phone interview on Thursday. I dont think the president did anything wrong.

At the center of the inquiry is Trumps July 25 call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in which he asked for a favor to investigate a Democratic rival for president, according to The Associated Press.

On Tuesday, Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee released a 300-page report, stating that Trump seriously misused the power of his office for personal political gain by seeking foreign intervention in the American election process and obstructed Congress by stonewalling efforts to investigate, according to wire reports. The report relies heavily on testimony from current and former U.S. officials who defied White House orders not to appear.

Trump has denied all wrongdoing, describing the call as beautiful and also nothing.

Pence has repeatedly criticized the impeachment inquiry.

In September, Pence took to Twitter to voice his views on the impeachment inquiry, calling the probe a partisan power grab by Democrats in a tweet.

@SpeakerPelosis #ImpeachmentAgenda puts a partisan power grab above the American people, Pence said in the tweet. @HouseDemocrats were elected on a promise to fix our infrastructure, improve vets care & (decrease) healthcare costs. It seems their #ImpeachmentAgenda is more important than the American people.

If Trump is impeached and removed from office, Pences brother and Columbus native, Vice President Mike Pence, would be sworn in as president.

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Pence reacts to Dems plans to file articles of impeachment - The Republic

HOWEY: Timing and House Speakers Bosma and Huston – Political – WTHR

INDIANAPOLIS To use a well-worn-political phrase, timing is everything. That may have prompted the latest change of the Republican guard at the Indiana Statehouse this past week where we saw State Rep. Todd Huston of Fishers take the House speakers gavel by acclamation from one of the strongest speakers in Hoosier history when Brian Bosma of Indianapolis decided to stand down.

Bosma spent two non-consecutive terms with the gavel in what is considered by many as the most powerful Statehouse office due to the Indianas constitutionally weak governorship, where a veto can be overridden by a simple majority vote. It follows a similar transition in the Indiana Senate a year ago, when Rod Bray of Martinsville took the helm from Senate President Pro Tem David Long of Fort Wayne, while on the fiscal side State Sen. Ryan Mishler of Bremen and Travis Holdman of Markel took the reins from Senate Appropriations Chairman Luke Kenley and Budget Chairman Brandt Hershman.

Informed and reliable sources tell me that House Ways & Means Chairman Tim Bown will seek reelection in 2020 after surviving critical injuries in a 2018 motorcycle accident at the Mackinaw Bridge in Michigan. Huston served as co-chair of that influential, budget-writing committee during the 2019 biennial session.

Im incredibly grateful for the support from our caucus and the tremendous opportunity to serve in this new leadership role. Indianas economic strength is largely rooted in strong, conservative leadership, and Im honored to work alongside Speaker Bosma during his final legislative session and help continue our states momentum, Speaker Huston said after his Organization Day ascension. Bosma added, Todd is an invaluable member of our team and a respected leader, and Im excited for him to take the reins and continue building on Indianas success story. Whether its serving as a tough budget hawk or finding common ground among differing viewpoints, hes been a reliable, go-to legislator for our caucus time and time again. I firmly believe he will take hold of this opportunity with both hands, and bring the vision and energy needed to help keep Indiana on the right track.

Bosma's first stint came with Gov. Mitch Daniels first two years in office during which he was instrumental in pushing through the $3.8 billion Major Moves Indiana Toll Road lease as well at Daylight Saving Time. The GOP lost its majority for four years during the next election. Republicans and Bosma returned to power in 2010, forging an unprecedented super majority era that commenced with the 2014 election. That 2012 class produced a future lieutenant governors in Sue Ellsperman. Bosma also launched an era of paramount transparency, with all General Assembly sessions and most committee sessions live-streamed via the World Wide Web.

Bosma briefly pursued the governorship when Gov. Mike Pence vacated his nomination to join Donald Trump on the national ticket, but quickly dropped out after finding little support on the Indiana Republican Central Committee, with whom he and Long had had a contentious relationship, particularly after Bosma allowed the infamous Religious Freedom Restoration Act to move out of the House. It subsequently blew up in Gov. Pence's face, derailing an expected 2016 presidential run. Sources close to Bosma believe he harbors no gubernatorial aspirations in 2024, when Lt. Gov. Crouch is expected to seek to break Indiana's gender glass ceiling.

Bosma's return to the speakership in 2011, which opened up a key sequence for Todd Huston, then serving as chief of staff to controversial Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett. Sensing a historic opening, former presidential advisor and Indiana Republican Chairman Al Hubbard, and long-time Daniels ally Mark Lubbers dined with Huston over Scotch whiskeys and fashioned the school voucher reforms of 2011. According to reporting by Pence biographer ("Piety & Power: Mike Pence and the Taking of the White House") and then Associated Press reporter Tom LoBianco, Huston wrote in a Feb. 10, 2010 email, My thought would be that we can get the momentum going and let MD (Mitch Daniels) take the lead when he feels it is time. As soon as he takes ownership of it, whether it is (November) or May, it becomes his initiative. This would allow him to do it after the election but the work is being done prior to his taking ownership of it."

Huston ran and won a House seat in 2014, the same year the GOP super majority era began.

As for the "timing is everything notion, Huston takes the gavel with a potential political time bomb ticking. Thousands of Hoosier teachers filled the Statehouse on the day Bosma handed him the gavel, seeking pay raises. Bosma defeated Democrat Poonam Gill by just 3,726 votes, his closest election with a 55.55% plurality, and Huston defeated Democrat Aimee Rivera Cole by just 2,772 votes or 54.5%. Republicans experienced a wipe-out in Indianapolis and Democrats picked up city council seats in once crimson-red Fishers and Carmel this past November.

In this era of President Donald Trump, even Hoosier suburbs are gaining a purple hue. A sitting Indiana speaker hasn't been upset since 1986. Bosma may have decided this calm before the storm may have a good time to get out of Dodge.

The columnist is publisher of Howey Politics Indiana at http://www.howeypolitics.com. Find Howey on Facebook and Twitter @hwypol.

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HOWEY: Timing and House Speakers Bosma and Huston - Political - WTHR

Russia plans to replace unreliable Wikipedia with its own version – MIT Technology Review

The news: Russias government has confirmed plans to set up an online version of its national encyclopedia, after President Vladimir Putin said last month that Wikipedia is unreliable and should be replaced. The government said this will ensure that Russian citizens can go online to find reliable information that is constantly updated on the basis of scientifically verified sources of knowledge.

The details: Specifically, it will be an online version of the Great Russian Encyclopedia (the successor to the Soviet Unions official encyclopedia), volumes of which have been published from 2004 to 2017. The Russian authorities have set aside a budget of about 2 billion rubles ($31 million), Sergei Kravets, an editor for the Great Russian Encyclopedia, told the Russian news agency TASS last month. The government will also set up a national research and education center for the Great Russian Encyclopedia, according to an official resolution.

Some context: The announcement can be seen as part of a wider push by the Russian government to exert more control over what its citizens see and do online. The ultimate goal is to make Russias internet independent from global structures and able to withstand attacks from abroad, as per a new law that came into force on November 1. Its also part of an official push to prioritize Russian-made products and services above others. New legislation passed this week will require manufacturers of smartphones, computers, and other devices to ensure that they come with Russian-made software installed.

A bit of history: Russias government has never been a big fan of Wikipedia. It has repeatedly blocked the Russian-language version of the website since it launched in 2001. Online propaganda groups linked to the Kremlin have been caught trying to edit Wikipedia entries on the shooting down of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 and the 2014 Ukraine conflict. And since 2012, Russian volunteers for Wikipedia have no longer been allowed to receive financial aid from abroad because of the countrys foreign agent law.

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Russia plans to replace unreliable Wikipedia with its own version - MIT Technology Review

Russia to replace Wikipedia with the ‘Great Russian Encyclopaedia’ – Big Think

Wikipedia is full of unreliable information, Russian President Vladimir Putin said last month. The solution? Replace it with an electronic version of the Great Russian Encyclopaedia, an existing reference work whose content is possibly influenced by the Russian government.

"As for Wikipedia it's better to replace it with the new Big Russian Encyclopaedia in electronic form," Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted Putin as saying at a Kremlin meeting in November. "At least that will be reliable information, presented in a good, modern way."

A government resolution said the measure will ensure that "reliable information that is constantly updated on the basis of scientifically verified sources of knowledge."

But upon the launch of encyclopedia's latest iteration, in 2017, writer Nikolai Podosokorsky told the Christian Science Monitor that while some of the pieces featured in the work were "excellent," others were shallow and biased.

"I've gone through several articles that pertain to my area of expertise, and found them quite superficial. The lists of references at the end were often extremely biased."

Of course, the new measure will also help Russia crack down even harder on citizens' internet access, a longstanding project of the Kremlin. In 2017, Russia said it plans to route 95 percent of internet traffic through its own servers by 2020. Earlier this year, Russia conducted an experiment in which it briefly disconnected itself from global servers to test how well it functioned on its self-contained internet. The test seemed designed, in part, to bolster safeguard measures in the event that Russia was attacked in an act of cyber warfare.

But it's also possible that Russia is exploring new ways to make its internet even more censored, surveilled and isolated from outside influence. In March, for example, Russia passed legislation banning the publication of "unreliable socially significant information" and content that shows "clear disrespect" for the government. Under this law, multiple people were fined for sharing a video about the lack of schools in a province of Russia, according to a report from the Russian media freedom watchdog Roskomsvoboda.

Maybe it's no wonder why Russia wants to axe Wikipedia, a crowd-sourced website that currently hosts entries like "Internet censorship in Russia", "List of journalists killed in Russia" and "Propaganda in the Russian Federation". Putin's own Wikipedia page mentions accusations that Putin had elections rigged and his critics tortured and murdered. It also has a section titled "Comparison to Hitler."

There's also a Wikipedia entry for Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, which was shot down over a part of Ukraine occupied by pro-Russian separatists in 2014. That same year, a Twitter bot that monitors edits made to Wikipedia pages found that an internet user affiliated with Russian state media changed the following sentence:

The plane was shot down by terrorists of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic with Buk system missiles, which the terrorists received from the Russian Federation.

To:

The plane was shot down by Ukrainian soldiers.

This year, international investigators accused four pro-Russian military officials of being involved in the attacks.

Russia's history of vying to maintain top-down information control at all costs dates back to the 18th century. And it makes sense, from the perspective of the few in control: The state would lose power if it's unable to control how citizens access and share information, as Niall Ferguson, MA, D.Phil., Milbank Family Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, told Big Think.

"[Stalin] understood that it doesn't take too many additional edges in the network to destroy the dominance of that central node. So one way of thinking about this is: imagine a pyramidal structure, imagine something kind of like a Christmas tree, and there's the big guy like the fairy on top of the Christmas tree. But imagine that on this Christmas tree the lights are just connected to the fairy, they're not connected to one another, and therefore the fairy decides if the lights go on or off. It's a peculiar kind of Christmas tree. That's essentially a hierarchical network.

It wouldn't take too many connections, as it werelateral or horizontal connectionsbetween the lights to reduce the centrality of the fairy on the tree, and ultimately you could end up illuminating the tree without needing the fairy altogether."

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Russia to replace Wikipedia with the 'Great Russian Encyclopaedia' - Big Think

Trash Heap of History exhibit spotlights 1989 fall of Communism in Romania – Vanderbilt University News

Romanian flag with Communist emblem removed was symbol of the 1989 Romanian Revolution (courtesy of the Michelson Collection)

Previously trashed items that offer insight into Romanian life during the overthrow of its totalitarian dictatorship in 1989 are on display at the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, thanks to the family of faculty member David Michelson.

The exhibition Scrounging through the Trash Heap of History: 30 Years since the Fall of Communism in Romania is displayed in six cases: two outside of the Divinity Librarys reference room and other four in the rotunda next to the office suite.

Michelson, who is an associate professor of the history of Christianity and classical and Mediterranean studies at Vanderbilt, was 14 when his father, Paul, was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in 1989. The Michelson family relocated from the United States to Bucharest for the academic year, where they observed firsthand the violent collapse of the Communist government of Nicolai Ceauescu. The protests began on Dec. 15, 1989, in the city of Timioara, and spread to Bucharest on Dec. 21.

As anti-Communist demonstrators ransacked the partys headquarters, protestors burned and trampled propaganda and paraphernalia of the Ceauescu regime. With help from friends, the Michelson family scavenged these memorabilia as evidence of the repressive regime and the difficulty of everyday life.

The exhibit uses these discarded materials not only to tell the story of the dramatic events of 1989, but also to shed light on repression under the Ceauescu dictatorship, said David Michelson. Items in the exhibition include spent ammunition from the fighting, Romanian flags with their Communist emblems torn out, and a single shoe from a protestor believed to have been killed by the feared Securitate secret police.

We also collected books and medals that illustrate the absurd extremes of propaganda in the Golden Epoch of Ceauescu, the younger Michelson said.

Looking back, Michelson recalls watching with his father as history unfolded on the streets of Bucharest. Harrowing images from those events of 1989-90 remain vivid in my mind, he said. Seeing the violence of political repression up close has driven my interests in history and made me curious about politics, religion and how human beings treat each other in society.

He noted that while other nations behind the Iron CurtainPoland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and East Germanytoppled oppressive regimes in 1989, the Romanian experience both before and during 1989 was particularly marked by state violence. Thirty years after the fall of the Romanian Socialist Republic, it is important to preserve the memory of its atrocities and to recognize its victims, he said.

The exhibit has been created through the work of multiple generations of the Michelson family including Anna and Joel Michelson, two of Paul Michelsons grandchildren. The curators are also grateful for the assistance of the late Sanda Romaan, a woman who never gave up hope in freedom and collected many of the discarded items.

The exhibition, which recently opened with a lecture by Paul Michelson, Distinguished Professor of History at Huntington University, will be on display through May 31, 2020. It is co-sponsored by the Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries and Vanderbilt Divinity School.

For more information, email David Michelson or call Divinity Library Exhibit Curator Charlotte Lew at 615-322-2566.

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Trash Heap of History exhibit spotlights 1989 fall of Communism in Romania - Vanderbilt University News