Freedom

Press release - Opening: 22-25 April plenary session

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

- Swedish nationals held in Iran

Key Points: 
  • - Swedish nationals held in Iran
    - Last plenary before the elections
    President Metsola opened the 22-25 April plenary session in Strasbourg with the following announcements.
  • Parliament once again condemns their arrest by the Iranian regime in the strongest possible terms, and will continue to work to secure the release of all those held on trumped up-charges.
  • The vote on Simplification of certain CAP rules will take place during the second voting session on Wednesday afternoon.
  • Contacts:
    Andreas KLEINEREditorial Coordinator / Press Officer (DE)
    Estefanía NARRILLOSEditorial Coordinator / Press Officer (ES)
    Natalie Kate KONTOULISPress Officer

Passover: The festival of freedom and the ambivalence of exile

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

The Jewish holiday cycle is, to a large extent, an exploration and commemoration of the experience of exile.

Key Points: 
  • The Jewish holiday cycle is, to a large extent, an exploration and commemoration of the experience of exile.
  • The fall festival of Sukkot, for example, is celebrated in small booths, temporary shelters that recall the Israelites’ experience sheltering in tents while wandering in the desert for 40 years after fleeing slavery in Egypt.
  • The story of Purim, a springtime festival, takes place when ancient Jews lived in exile in the Persian Empire – and illustrates the precariousness of life as a minority.

Into the unknown

  • In her 1983 novella “The Miracle Hater,” the late Israeli novelist Shulamit Hareven depicts the Hebrews in their passage from Egypt and their first taste of freedom.
  • Writing a modern “midrash” – a rabbinic genre that elaborates on a biblical text – she reimagines the story of Exodus.
  • They have fled oppression, but that means leaving everything familiar to wander, seemingly endlessly, in the great unknown of the desert.
  • Israeli writer Orly Castel-Bloom weaves family lore, history and some alternative history into “An Egyptian Novel,” published in 2015.
  • Those who remained in Babylon became the root of the diaspora and established the oldest continuous Jewish community in the world.

‘Out of Egypt’

  • While those in Iraq could claim a history of hundreds of years, those in Egypt were more likely to have moved there within the last few generations.
  • The Egypt of the Exodus story seemed far from the Egypt of Aciman’s childhood, the one he loved.
  • “The fault lines of exile and diaspora always run deep, and we are always from elsewhere, and from elsewhere before that,” he noted.
  • In “Out of Egypt,” the irony of the family preparing to leave on Passover is not lost on the author, the reader or, one suspects, the characters themselves.
  • After a rather dismal attempt at a Seder, the narrator wandered through the streets of Alexandria, mourning a place that had become home.


It is a poignant account of the very personal nature of exile. And yet it is an experience potentially shared by everyone in the Jewish community. Exile is a place unknown, over the edge of the precipice.

Into Iraq

  • The Passover holiday is also at the center of British journalist Tim Judah’s visit to Iraq to cover the 2003 American invasion.
  • His father’s family had left Iraq in the 19th century for India in the wake of persecutions during Dawud Pasha’s reign.
  • By 2003, the few Jews Judah found lived in trepidation and ramshackle homes.
  • “I tried to picture my forebears, in the fields or perhaps in the shops or the market, but I couldn’t,” Judah wrote in Granta magazine.
  • I will never need to do it again.” Judah’s pilgrimage leads not to a renewed sense of belonging but a break.
  • Yet at the same time, families around the Seder table can remember those who are not yet free, and those still suffering from being uprooted.


Nancy E. Berg does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

In Knife, his memoir of surviving attack, Salman Rushdie confronts a world where liberal principles like free speech are old-fashioned

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

A man named Hadi Matar has been charged with second-degree attempted murder.

Key Points: 
  • A man named Hadi Matar has been charged with second-degree attempted murder.
  • He is an American-born resident of New Jersey in his early twenties, whose parents emigrated from Lebanon.
  • Review: Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder – Salman Rushdie (Jonathan Cape) Knife is very good at recalling Rushdie’s grim memories of the attack.
  • “Let me offer this piece of advice to you, gentle reader,” he says: “if you can avoid having your eyelid sewn shut … avoid it.
  • Here, for a number of reasons, Rushdie is not on such secure ground.
  • Read more:
    How Salman Rushdie has been a scapegoat for complex historical differences

    Rushdie, who studied history at Cambridge University, described himself in Joseph Anton as “a historian by training”.

  • Indeed, a speech he gave at PEN America in 2022 is reprinted in the book verbatim.
  • For these intellectuals, principles of secular reason and personal liberty should always supersede blind conformity to social or religious authority.

Old-fashioned liberal principles

  • In Knife, though, Rushdie the protagonist confronts a world where such liberal principles now appear old-fashioned.
  • He claims “the groupthink of radical Islam” has been shaped by “the groupthink-manufacturing giants, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter”.
  • But for many non-religious younger people, any notion of free choice also appears illusory, the anachronistic residue of an earlier age.
  • Millennials and Generation Z are concerned primarily with issues of environmental catastrophe and social justice, and they tend to regard liberal individualism as both ineffective and self-indulgent.
  • A new book traces how we got here, but lets neoliberal ideologues off the hook

Suffused in the culture of Islam

  • The Satanic Verses itself is suffused in the culture of Islam as much as James Joyce’s Ulysses is suffused in the culture of Catholicism.
  • In their hypothetical conversation, the author of Knife tries to convince his assailant of the value of such ambivalence.
  • He protests how his notorious novel revolves around “an East London Indian family running a café-restaurant, portrayed with real love”.

Attachment to past traditions

  • Rushdie discusses in Knife how, besides the Hindu legends of his youth, he has also been “more influenced by the Christian world than I realized”.
  • He cites the music of Handel and the art of Michelangelo as particular influences.
  • Yet this again highlights Rushdie’s attachments to traditions firmly rooted in the past.
  • Part of James’s greatness lay in the way he was able to accommodate these radical shifts within his writing.

‘A curiously one-eyed book’

  • Particularly striking are the immediacy with which he recalls the shocking assault, the black humour with which he relates medical procedures and the sense of “exhilaration” at finally returning home with his wife to Manhattan.
  • Yet there are also many loose ends, and the book’s conclusion, that the assailant has in the end become “simply irrelevant” to him, is implausible.
  • He insists he does not want to write “frightened” or “revenge” books.
  • This was despite several brave comeback attempts by Milburn that likewise cited Pataudi as an example.
  • Knife, by contrast, is a curiously one-eyed book, in a metaphorical, as well as a literal sense.


Paul Giles does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

How Trump is using courtroom machinations to his political advantage

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

Bakken: It seems like an ordinary trial, but it is an extraordinary trial underneath if we really look at some of the details.

Key Points: 
  • Bakken: It seems like an ordinary trial, but it is an extraordinary trial underneath if we really look at some of the details.
  • The first thing that struck me was on Day 1, when Judge Juan Merchan questioned 96 jurors.
  • Fifty of them said they could not be fair to Trump.
  • That does not bode well for a defendant in a jurisdiction where Democrats outnumber Republicans 9 to 1.
  • Bakken: Merchan has told Trump he may not be able to attend his child’s high school graduation, scheduled for May 17.
  • I think the judge will let Trump attend the high school graduation, because otherwise he might seem to treat Trump a little bit differently than other defendants.
  • Trump has said the requirement to be in the courtroom every day is harming his ability to campaign.
  • … If Donald Trump is convicted then all of these principles are convicted and destroyed with him.” This sets up a catch-22.
  • Since much of the country is paying attention to that media space, that’s a really consequential campaign strategy.
  • Bakken: The New York district attorney decided to prosecute Trump in this case.
  • It seems unquestionable that Trump filed or made false business documents.
  • Donald Trump would not be in trouble for filing this paperwork if he hadn’t done it to allegedly illegally influence an election.
  • They could be the moderators, the good-faith, middle-minded people who can help bridge the gap between the political combatants.


The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

From sumptuous engravings to stick-figure sketches, Passover Haggadahs − and their art − have been evolving for centuries

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

The Jewish festival of Passover recalls the biblical story of the Israelites enslaved by Egypt and their miraculous escape.

Key Points: 
  • The Jewish festival of Passover recalls the biblical story of the Israelites enslaved by Egypt and their miraculous escape.
  • Every year, a written guide known as a “Haggadah” is read at the Seder table.
  • The core text comprises a description of ritual foods, the story of the Exodus, blessings, commentaries, hymns and songs.

An illustrated classic


One of the greatest examples our library has of this blending of cultures was printed in Amsterdam in 1695.

  • The Amsterdam Haggadah was illustrated by Abraham Bar Yaakov, a German pastor who converted to Judaism.
  • In addition, he incorporated a pull-out map of the route of the Exodus and an imaginative rendering of the Temple in Jerusalem.
  • The text, traditionally written in Hebrew and Aramaic, included instructions in Yiddish and Ladino, the everyday languages for Jews in Europe.
  • The Amsterdam Haggadah proved to be incredibly influential on later versions, with its illustrations copied into the modern era.

A Haggadah for everyone

  • Modern Haggadah illustrations also reflected developments in the art world.
  • In 1920s Berlin, a Jewish art teacher, Otto Geismar, reinterpreted the story of the Exodus using plain, black-and-white, modernist “stick figures” – another Haggadah in our collection.
  • Geismar even injected elements of humor: A child is shown asleep at the table, and in another scene a family of stick figures is engaged in animated conversation and debate.
  • In his depictions of ancient Israelite slaves, stick figures appear especially burdened with heavy loads on their backs.

Wine – and coffee

  • Meanwhile, some suppliers sensed an opportunity to adapt it for their own needs.
  • Owner Sam Schapiro savvily linked his products to the Seder, during which participants drink four small cups of sacramental wine.
  • Wine, seen at this point as a luxury item, also symbolized freedom.
  • Schapiro’s Haggadah fulfilled the commandment to relate the story of the Exodus for a new generation – but the opening pages also provide a tribute in Yiddish to Sam Schapiro’s 40-year-old company.
  • Here Schapiro’s is praised for being the place where religious men and intellectuals alike could get together over a good glass of wine.


Rebecca J.W. Jefferson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

South Africans tasted the fruits of freedom and then corruption snatched them away – podcast

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

Mbeki would lead the country for the next nine years, a period of relatively high economic growth which enabled South Africans to begin to taste the fruits of freedom.

Key Points: 
  • Mbeki would lead the country for the next nine years, a period of relatively high economic growth which enabled South Africans to begin to taste the fruits of freedom.
  • To mark 30 years since South Africa’s post-apartheid transition began, The Conversation Weekly podcast is running a special three-part podcast series, What happened to Nelson Mandela’s South Africa?
  • When Mandela took over as president of South Africa in 1994, the country’s economy was emerging from a long recession.
  • It’s a no-brainer that you’re going to have to find ways of transferring ownership of that capital.

The Zuma years

  • In 2008, Mbeki’s presidency came to an end when the ANC recalled him, paving the way for the ascension of his successor, Jacob Zuma, after the 2009 national and provincial elections.
  • Zuma’s years in office unleashed what many see as a significant turning point in South Africa’s democratic history.
  • Allegations of state capture and corruption dogged the Zuma presidency, particularly centred around his relationship with three businessmen called the Gupta brothers.

Disclosure statement


Mashupye Maserumule has received funding from the National Research Foundation. He is a member of the National Planning Commission and the South African Association of Public Administration and Management. Michael Sachs coordinates the Public Economy Project, which receives funding from the Gates Foundation. He was a member and employee of the ANC in the 1990s and 2000s, and later on a government official.

Credits

  • Special thanks for this series to Gary Oberholzer, Jabulani Sikhakhane, Caroline Southey and Moina Spooner at The Conversation Africa.
  • This episode of The Conversation Weekly was written and produced by Mend Mariwany, with production assistance from Katie Flood.
  • Stephen Khan is our global executive editor, Alice Mason runs our social media and Soraya Nandy does our transcripts.

AI chatbots refuse to produce ‘controversial’ output − why that’s a free speech problem

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024

Still, the conversation on AI ignores another crucial issue: What is the AI industry’s approach to free speech, and does it embrace international free speech standards?

Key Points: 
  • Still, the conversation on AI ignores another crucial issue: What is the AI industry’s approach to free speech, and does it embrace international free speech standards?
  • In practice, this means that AI chatbots often censor output when dealing with issues the companies deem controversial.
  • Without a solid culture of free speech, the companies producing generative AI tools are likely to continue to face backlash in these increasingly polarized times.

Vague and broad use policies

  • Companies issue policies to set the rules for how people can use their models.
  • With international human rights law as a benchmark, we found that companies’ misinformation and hate speech policies are too vague and expansive.
  • Our analysis found that companies’ hate speech policies contain extremely broad prohibitions.
  • To show how vague and broad use policies can affect users, we tested a range of prompts on controversial topics.
  • More recently, India confronted Google after Gemini noted that some experts consider the policies of the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, to be fascist.

Free speech culture

  • If they serve a global audience, they may want to avoid content that is offensive in any region.
  • This means society has an interest in ensuring such policies adequately protect free speech.
  • Even where a similar legal obligation does not apply to AI providers, we believe that the companies’ influence should require them to adopt a free speech culture.
  • At least two of the companies we focused on – Google and Anthropic – have recognized as much.

Outright refusals

  • Therefore, users’ exposure to hate speech and misinformation from generative AI will typically be limited unless they specifically seek it.
  • This is unlike social media, where people have much less control over their own feeds.
  • Stricter controls, including on AI-generated content, may be justified at the level of social media since they distribute content publicly.
  • Refusals to generate content not only affect fundamental rights to free speech and access to information.
  • The Future of Free Speech is a non-partisan, independent think tank that has received limited financial support from Google for specific projects.
  • In all cases, The Future of Free Speech retains full independence and final authority for its work, including research pursuits, methodology, analysis, conclusions, and presentation.
  • The Future of Free Speech is a non-partisan, independent think tank that has received limited financial support from Google for specific projects.

Is home bias biased? New evidence from the investment fund sector

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 18, 2024
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Key Points: 

    Information Commissioner’s Office seeks views on accuracy of generative AI models

    Retrieved on: 
    Thursday, April 18, 2024

    The third consultation in the series focuses on how data protection’s accuracy principle applies to the outputs of generative AI models, and the impact that accurate training data has on the output.

    Key Points: 
    • The third consultation in the series focuses on how data protection’s accuracy principle applies to the outputs of generative AI models, and the impact that accurate training data has on the output.
    • Where people wrongly rely on generative AI models to provide factually accurate information about people, this can lead to misinformation, reputational damage and other harms.
    • “In a world where misinformation is growing, we cannot allow misuse of generative AI to erode trust in the truth.
    • The regulator has already considered the lawfulness of web scraping to train generative AI models and examined how the purpose limitation principle should apply to generative AI models.