Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Police Group Says Biden's FCC Nominee Is Too Dangerous Because, Uh, Encryption

Tom McKay 
GIZMONDO
© Photo: Chip Somodevilla (Getty Images) Gigi Sohn, Biden's nominee for the fifth slot on the Federal Communications Commission, testifying before the House Judiciary Committee's antitrust subcommittee on March 12, 2019.

The National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), an organization that represents hundreds of thousands of cops across the country, is hopping mad about President Joe Biden’s nominee to the governing board of the Federal Communications Commission. And no, their stated reasons don’t make a lot of sense.

Earlier this year, Biden nominated Gigi Sohn, a distinguished fellow at the Georgetown Law Institute for Technology Law & Policy and co-founder of the nonprofit Public Knowledge, to sit as the third Democrat on the FCC’s five-member commission. Sohn also happens to sit on the board of digital rights nonprofit the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which is why the FOP authored a letter last week opposing her confirmation by the Senate and claiming she poses a threat to the public.

In the letter, the FOP claims that Sohn’s nomination to the FCC causes “serious public safety considerations” due to her ties with EFF, which among many other things has defended the use of end-to-end (E2E) encryption. True E2E encryption is designed to protect communications against interception by ensuring only the true sender and recipient (the ends) can access the contents of the communications. To accomplish this, a message is encoded using a cryptographic key on the sender’s device; that key, when provided to a recipient, is the only way to unscramble the sent data into a readable format.

The FOP wrote in the letter that the EFF’s “continued advocacy of this technology and support for additional barriers and restrictions to prevent law enforcement from obtaining historically accessible information makes it extraordinarily more difficult for law enforcement to apprehend dangerous criminals and protect the public.”

“Despite the efforts of the FOP and other law enforcement organizations, neither Federal law nor the FCC has any kind of requirement for carriers to comply with law enforcement requests, even when lives are in imminent danger,” the FOP letter continued. “We are apprehensive of Ms. Sohn’s stance on this issue based on her leadership role at EFF and because she has never moderated her extreme views on this subject.” The FOP added it would be “irresponsible” for them not to weigh in on Sohn’s nomination.

Generally speaking, end-to-end encryption is highly regarded in data security and is commonly used to protect everything from journalistic sources and corporate secrets to mundane communications between privacy-minded individuals—for example, anyone who uses Signal as their default messaging app. Like literally any method of hiding knowledge from others, criminals can use it too.

A truly flawless E2E encryption method is uncrackable short of computationally expensive methods like a brute force attack, an automated method of guessing countless keys in sequence until the right one is stumbled upon. Even the most powerful classic supercomputers in existence today couldn’t break methods like 128-bit or 256-bit encryption on timelines far longer than humans have ever been around, and even quantum computers will eventually run into the problem of quantum cryptography.

However, any implementation flaws in the encryption method might make it far easier to gain access to the data via a brute-force method. Or, for example, the key might be weak in computational terms (such as the 4-5 digit codes used to unlock many mobile devices) and instead be protected by methods like locking out a user after a limited number of attempts. Whenever police come around demanding access to encrypted communications, major tech firms have historically declined to actively help police root around for and exploit such flaws. This is at least officially what the FOP claims to be so concerned about, with the letter stating such encryption is what police refer to as “going dark.”

The FOP’s opposition to Sohn’s nomination follows a years-long scaremongering campaign by federal authorities who have attacked encryption as a godsend to criminals, saying its use foils investigators and forces authorities to let everyone from run-of-the-mill cartel members to hardcore terrorists run free. The FBI and Department of Justice have been particularly outspoken on the issue, waging both legal battles and pressure campaigns against tech firms Apple and Facebook to help them get access to encrypted data. The FBI infamously sued Apple in 2016 trying to force the company to help them crack the encryption on an iPhone owned by one of the shooters in a 2015 massacre in San Bernardino, California, specifically by helping them sideload a hacked version of iOS that would allow an unlimited number of tries.



While the FBI insisted that it could not get the data otherwise, it eventually did by partnering with a third-party firm that was able to build an exploit with the assistance of an iOS-cracking specialist. The feds and other regional authorities have repeatedly demonstrated they can get into many (if not all) devices when they really need to, such as by licensing tools from cyber-intelligence companies that often solicit insider knowledge of potential security flaws in common products. The feds have insisted that they don’t want to force tech firms to build surveillance backdoors into their products—something security experts are virtually unanimous would create potentially catastrophic risks for all users. But an internal DOJ inspector general’s report made clear in 2018 that the FBI didn’t really try very hard to get into the phone before its suit against Apple, showing the court case was more a pretext to win legal precedent on strong-arming tech firms.

The FOP letter cites FBI Director Christopher Wray giving a now-familiar argument on the subject to Congress in 2021:

What we mean when we talk about lawful access is putting providers who manage encrypted data in a position to decrypt it and provide it to us in response to legal process. We are not asking for, and do not want, any “backdoor,” that is, for encryption to be weakened or compromised so that it can be defeated from the outside by law enforcement or anyone else.

But the FOP letter doesn’t actually bother to explain what the alternative to building in such backdoors is, other than mentioning something about tech firms amending their terms of service to “provide them authority to protect the public and to comply with lawful court orders.” More importantly, this has almost nothing to do with the FCC. While the FCC does sometimes deal with encryption as it relates to service providers and networks under their regulatory purview—such as encryption of cable TV broadcasts for anti-theft purposes—it doesn’t have any kind of jurisdiction over how Apple encrypts its phones. It also has basically nothing to do with overseeing encrypted communications, except in edge cases like radio broadcasts.

The FOP did not yet respond to Gizmodo’s request for comment.

Harold Feld, a senior vice president at Public Knowledge, told Gizmodo in a phone interview that targeting Sohn over her affiliation with the pro-encryption EFF was “pretty weak tea.”

“It’s not even something the FCC does,” Feld told Gizmodo, “...except actually in circumstances where we actually care about that, like vehicle-to-vehicle communications, where, you know, one of the elements of security is that it’s supposed to be encrypted. ... I find it difficult to believe that the Fraternal Order of Police are upset if, you know, people have difficulty hacking vehicle-to-vehicle communication.”

Here’s where some additional context might come in handy to understand why the FOP is suddenly so interested in the FCC. During Donald Trump’s administration, former FCC Chair Ajit Pai ran wild pursuing policies friendly to the telecom industry, including nuking Obama-era net neutrality rules and regulations on media ownership; while Pai is long gone, the normally five-member FCC commission is now split 2-2 between Democrats Jessica Rosenworcel and Geoffrey Starks and Republicans Brendan Carr and Nathan Simington.

The latter two are Trump partisans who support some of the ex-president’s wilder ambitions, such as turning the FCC into a watchdog for claims of anti-conservative bias on social media sites; the 2-2 split also helps forestall any effort to undo the industry handouts given out during Pai’s tenure. Sohn’s nomination has also come under fire from conservatives, particularly through outlets like the Wall Street Journal or Fox News, who have branded her a hyper-partisan fire-breather who will use her power to censor MAGA types. The FOP has made no secret of its allegiance with “tough-on-crime” conservatives like Trump, so coming out against Sohn fits right in with a partisan playbook with concerns well beyond encryption.

Feld described the letter as “barely coherent” and said that it was “very clear” that attacks on Sohn from conservative media have little to do with encryption. Instead, he pointed to common ownership by the Murdoch family of Wall Street Journal parent company News Corp and Fox Corporation (both of which were involved in a legal battle over the loosened ownership rules). In the event a Democrat-controlled FCC wanted to revisit Pai-era policies, those interests would “have the most to lose from any kind of revitalized media ownership rules,” he said.

“I will also point out that if you want proof of why media ownership matters, one only has to look at the coordination between Fox News and the Wall Street Journal to imagine that maybe there is something to this, you know, theory of media ownership has something to do with a point of view,” Feld told Gizmodo.

Feld said he wasn’t worried that the FOP letter would have much impact on Sohn’s nomination. There isn’t “any sign that something from the Fraternal Order of Police or any of this is going to matter to the committee Democrats,” he said.

Azzi: Enes Kanter Freedom: Boston Celtic. Citizen. Critic.

Robert Azzi
Portsmouth Herald
Sat, December 11, 2021

I grew up with the Boston Celtics, listening (sometimes under bed covers so my parents couldn’t hear that I was still awake) to broadcaster Johnny Most extolling the exploits of Bill Russell, Bob Cousy, and Bill Sharman.


Robert Azzi

I’ve always been a life-long Celtics fan, supportive of a team that, as Bill Russell has pointed out, was the first NBA team to draft a Black player, the first NBA team to start five Black players and the first NBA organization to hire a Black head coach - and have had several since!

I remember a Ramadan Sunday in May 2020 when Celtics center Enes Kanter - today Enes Kanter Freedom - joined protesters following the death of George Floyd and chanted along with others: ”I can't breathe.”

He addressed the protestors, admirably telling them, "First of all, I want to thank you all for what you're doing. I really, really appreciate it. The second thing I want to say, man, is we need change. And change cannot wait. You know? I get emotional, but we are on the right side of history, man. ... Black lives matter.”

I’m one of Freedom's fans and today I applaud him for becoming an American citizen with a new and emotive surname. However, Freedom, well-known for his outspoken views on social justice and human rights issues dear to his heart - and mine - has recently stirred some controversy.


Exiled from his native land, Turkey, for speaking out against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s repressive policies, Freedom is today most visible challenging the NBA for seemingly prioritizing its Chinese business relationships over the rights of oppressed peoples like Muslim Uyghurs, Tibetans, and pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong.

It’s important to remember that such activism from athletes is not uncommon.

I remember Tommie Smith and John Carlos raising their fists during the 1968 Olympics, Muhammad Ali refusing the Vietnam draft, teenager Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (as Lew Alcindor) refusing to stand for the national anthem while at UCLA, Colin Kaepernick taking a knee in 2016 - all sports figures attempting to use their platforms to heighten awareness of issues they perceived to be unjustly resolved in their homeland - issues they believed fell short of being resolved, resolutions falling short of our aspirational values where all people are created equal.

I remember, too, hearing that when Enes Kanter Freedom joined the New York Knicks in 2017 they set aside a prayer room and made halal food available for him.

Freedom said at the time, “I have to pray five times a day, so the Knicks gave me a special room at the practice facility and at Madison Square Garden. We have to eat halal food, so they ordered me special food. It means a lot. This is not a Muslim country. But when you see a team do a respectful thing like that, it shows me how respectful people are in America.”

That was 2017; a time when, as I remember, Lebron James was opposing President Donald Trump’s proposed Muslim ban.

I remember, too, admiring Freedom for his religious fidelity in annually fasting during the Islamic month of Ramadan, often going 18 hours without food or drink for sustenance.

Before Freedom, perhaps the most famous Muslims in the NBA were Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Hakeem Olajuwon, as well as Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, who was suspended in 1996 for refusing to stand for the national anthem.

In 2017, when asked about Abdul Rauf being suspended Freedom responded: “I don’t know much about that, but everyone is allowed to express themselves as they wish. This is the beauty of America. We have that right, whether you agree with it or not, you have the right to protest peacefully. Having these rights in America is something I am proud of.”

Having such rights means it’s also important to recognize that, as Ta-Nehisi Coates argues, “For the majority of American history, this country has argued to itself that Black people are not fit to be equal citizens” and that not all Americans will embrace the same causes with equal ferocity - especially Black Americans struggling under the weight of systemic racism and discrimination.

Yet, concerningly, in spite of all this, Freedom, either ignorant of the racist and xenophobic history that preceded his becoming an American - or seduced by celebrity - has recently allied himself with right-wing white nationalist interests - with people who’ve been fighting for decades to exclude people like him from the Public Square.

When he tells Fox News’s Tucker Carlson that “that players should just keep their mouth shut and stop criticizing the greatest nation in the world, and they should focus on their freedoms and their human rights and democracy” he is just plain wrong; as wrong as Fox’s Laura Ingraham telling LeBron James to “shut up and dribble.”

When Freedom trash-talks Lebron James saying, “I don’t know if he’s educated enough, but I’m here to educate him, and I’m here to help him, because it’s not about money. It’s about morals, principles, and values. It’s about what you stand for…” he should first visit LeBron’s I Promise School; he should remember how James stood alongside our brother Muslims, recognize how James and the NBA have led all sports organizations in standing for the rights of the disenfranchised and dispossessed.

Today, I hope that if Enes Kanter Freedom wants to be a credible voice on social justice, human rights, and Muslim issues - domestic and international - he can’t allow himself to become a voice for the haters - the Islamophobes, antisemites, anti-human rights, and anti-democracy forces - who seek to to marginalize the very people for whom he advocates.


As-salamu alaykum, Freedom! Peace be upon you!

Robert Azzi, a photographer and writer who lives in Exeter, can be reached at theother.azzi@gmail.com. His columns are archived at theotherazzi.wordpress.com.

This article originally appeared on Portsmouth Herald: Azzi: Enes Kanter Freedom: Boston Celtic. Citizen. Critic.
Met exhibit examines origins of civilization in Africa


Forty-two masterpieces of African art spanning five millennia are on display at a press preview for "The African Origin of Civilization" exhibit at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on Monday in New York City. 
Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo


Dec. 13 (UPI) -- Forty-two pieces of African art covering five millennia will be on display starting Tuesday at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

"The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality" exhibit, shown in a press preview Monday, includes artifacts from Egypt dating back to 3650 and 350 B.C., paired with 21 works from sub-Saharan Africa, ranging in date from the 16th to the mid-20th century and representing more than a dozen distinct artistic traditions.

"Despite the chronological and geographical distance between the works in these two distinct collections, visitors will discern unexpected parallels and contrasts that will deepen their understanding of the breadth and depth of Africa as a source of civilization with unparalleled complexity and longevity," the museum said in a statement.

The artifacts have been discovered in tombs and other archaeological contexts that reflect well-established trade networks between ancient Egypt and Europe and Western Asia. The museum said the interconnections of the civilizations of ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt can be seen by shared motifs and artistic forms.

"The exhibition serves as a springboard for a series of installations of important sculptures from West and Central Africa in permanent collection galleries across the museum," the museum said. "These' guest appearances' introduce unexpected cross-cultural connections between works of art from different places and times."

The museum said the first four installations on view in the galleries for Ancient Near Eastern art, Greek and Roman art, Medieval art, and European paintings started Dec. 2. New installations are scheduled to appear later this winter and spring.



A snowy owl was rescued from the front grill of a van in the Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, area and is expected to make a full recovery from a concussion.
Photo courtesy of Salthaven West/Facebook

Dec. 13 (UPI) -- Wildlife rescuers in Saskatchewan, Canada, said a snowy owl is expected to make a full recovery after becoming lodged head-first in the front grill of a van.

The Salthaven West wildlife rehabilitation center said employees were called to the Regina area to rescue an owl that had flown into the path of an oncoming van.

Salthaven West said in a Facebook post that rescuers determined the owl had avoided breaking or fracturing any bones, but required treatment for a "serious concussion."

Megan Lawrence, director of rehabilitation for Salthaven West, said the owl is recovering, and rescuers hope to return the female bird to the wild soon.

"Head injuries can be a little bit unpredictable, so we're hoping that she recovers quickly," Lawrence told CBC News.

She said the owl is expected to make a full recovery, but the process "could be just a few days, or it could be a couple of months."

Lawrence said the group has been called out for seven snowy owls struck by vehicles this year, but the most recent bird is the first to survive.
Michigan students petition for online classes amid school shooting copycat threats

By Adam Schrader

Members of the community embrace during a prayer service and candlelight vigil at Bridgewood Church in Clarkston, Michigan, a day after a 15-year-old student killed four classmates before surrendering to police at Oxford High School
. Photo by Nic Antaya/EPA-EFE

Dec. 13 (UPI) -- More than 10,000 people have signed a petition formed by a group of Michigan students calling for online classes after the revelation of "copycat threats" in the wake of the Oxford High School shooting.

Ethan Crumbley, 15, has been charged with shooting dead four of his fellow students and injuring eight others, including a 47-year-old teacher, on Nov. 30 after bringing a weapon allegedly purchased by his father to Oxford High School.

Since then, students in neighboring school districts have raised concerns about copycat threats that have been made. Students in the West Bloomfield School District were sent home Monday morning and school administrators canceled all after-school activities due to concerns of such threats.

The latest petition, formed by the groups Sunrise Movement Oakland County and March for Our Lives Bloomfield, seeks to garner more than 15,000 signatures to move classes online for Oakland County schools until at least the end of the fall semester. School districts within Oakland County serve 210,000 students, including those at West Bloomfield and Oxford high schools.

"Oxford High School experienced the tragic loss of four students due to a school shooting on Tuesday, November 30th. Since that day, there has been a continuous circulation of threats made to schools within Oakland County," the petition reads.

"These widespread threats have induced fear and taken an emotional toll on all students, making in-person learning essentially useless."

The students claim that the move to online classes is necessary to serve the "mental, physical, and emotional health" of the students.

The petition calls for Oakland Schools, a regional service agency that supports districts in the county, to release "detailed and concrete plans for keeping students safe" before resuming in-person classes.

"Threats to schools cannot be taken lightly and our administrators need to prioritize the safety of students," the petition reads.

In the aftermath of the deadly November shooting, the Oxford Community Schools website added a link to "Resources for Dealing with Trauma." The school district has noted that all events planned at Oxford High School remain canceled until further notice.


In Hinduism, women creating spaces for their own leadership


By DEEPTI HAJELA

When Sushma Dwivedi started seriously thinking about performing wedding rites and other Hindu religious blessings in New York City and elsewhere, she knew who she needed to talk to - her grandmother.

Together, they went through the mantras that are recited by pandits, the priests who perform Hindu religious rituals, to find the ones that resonated with what Dwivedi was trying to do -- offer Hindu blessings and services that were welcoming of all, irrespective of gender identity, sexual orientation, race, any of it.

Her grandmother isn’t a pandit — in India, as well as in Indian diaspora communities, that’s been a domain that is largely populated by men, with cultural mores at play. But she had a wealth of religious knowledge, of ritual, of proper pronunciation, to share with her granddaughter.

And that her grandmother played an integral role in Dwivedi’s understanding and practice of Hinduism reflects a larger religious reality. Those who study the religion and its traditions say that while there aren’t a lot of women priests (although that is changing in India and in other places), women in Hinduism globally continue to take on leadership roles in other ways - building communities, taking on positions in organizations, passing on knowledge.

“We just jammed together and sort of went through scriptures. ... And in that sense, that’s the ‘old school’-est Hindu way on Earth, right? You pass it down,” Dwivedi said.

After all, it was through her grandparents, immigrants from India, that Dwivedi had been exposed to Hinduism while growing up in Canada. They helped build a Hindu mandir, or temple, in their Montreal community, and made the religion an integral part of her life from childhood.
Full Coverage: Women in religion

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This story is part of a series by The Associated Press and Religion News Service on women’s roles in male-led religions.

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Hinduism encompasses a range of practices and philosophies, and has a pantheon of divine figures encompassing both male and female. People can call themselves Hindus and yet practice in different ways from each other. There is no central authority, like an equivalent to the role the pope plays in Catholicism.

So leadership, in India as well as Indian immigrant communities, is decentralized and diverse, encompassing religious scholars, Hindu temple boards and more, said Vasudha Narayanan, a religion professor at the University of Florida who studies Hinduism in India and in the Indian diaspora.

“I would also say that women sometimes create the spaces where they can be leaders in all these other ways,” she said.


Dr. Uma Mysorekar, president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, sits in her office in the Flushing neighborhood of New York's Queens borough Friday, Dec. 3, 2021. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

They’re women like Dr. Uma Mysorekar, who serves as president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America. It runs one of the oldest Hindu temples in the United States in the Flushing section of New York City’s Queens borough.

Mysorekar, trained as a physician, got involved with the temple in the mid-1980s, and has been part of its administration for years, as it expanded its facilities as well as its programming. There are programs for seniors as well as young adults; the temple kitchen is available on food delivery apps.

Being an administrator wasn’t her intention when she started, Mysorekar said.

“I didn’t get involved to become a president. But when the circumstances were forced in, I did accept that challenge.”

She’s convinced that in Hinduism, women can be leaders simply by virtue of their ability to communicate the faith to others, notably to children.

“How many women have led ... going back to times immemorial, and what they have contributed, it should give you that exemplary feeling,” she said. “It’s not that women have to be priests to be leaders, women have to be able to spread the teachings.”

And in this modern age, when so much vital activity occurs online, women are making a difference there, too, said Dheepa Sundaram, assistant professor of Hindu studies, critical theory and digital religion at the University of Denver.

“If you look at social media spaces, you see a lot of women leading different kinds of groups now,” she said.

She pointed to shubhpuja.com as an example, a site co-founded by a woman, Saumya Vardhan, that allows people all over the world to connect with pandits in India, who perform pujas, the religious rituals, that can be seen via videoconferencing.

“We’re seeing women carve out different spaces in the spirituality ecosystem to find a way to actually gain power in that ecosystem,” she said.

And there are examples of women making inroads even when it comes to being pandits, of pushing back against patriarchal restraints.


Manisha Shete, a practicing Hindu priest, smiles as she performs posthumous rituals for her client's mother at a residence in Pune, India, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Abhijit Bhatlekar)

Manisha Shete, 51, a female priest who has been working as the coordinator at Jnana Prabodhini, a Hindu reformist school in Pune in western India that trains men and women to perform rituals, first began to officiate at religious ceremonies in 2008.

Her aspirations stemmed in part from an interest in India’s ancient scriptures; after getting married, she studied

“After my wedding, I studied Indology — the history, culture, languages and literature of India.

“During my research work at the Sanskrit language department in Jnana Prabodhini ... I felt that I can do this and I should do it. It was my favorite subject,” Shete told The Associated Press.

Shete said at her school in Pune, where the course for the priesthood can extend up to 18 months, 80% of the students were women, including many who had been housewives and many others who voluntarily their jobs to enter the school.

She said the demand for female priests is growing in urban areas, especially among young women, and she often gets requests even from Indian families overseas to conduct rituals.

“People have started accepting women priests. Every reform comes with some obstacles. But it is happening.”

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support from the Lilly Endowment through The Conversation U.S. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

  • S1 E4 Wendy Doniger on Hinduism – Thinking About Religion

    https://www.thinkingaboutreligion.org/s1-e4-wendy-doniger-on-hinduism

    Dr. Wendy Doniger’s On Hinduism is a sort of captstone on an epic career exploring Hindu literature, religion, and history. In this conversation we discuss a number of themes from the book, including her own religious background, common misconceptions about Hinduism, the caste system, orientalism, the so-called “Hindu Trinity,” Hindu nationalism, a controversy in India over the charge that she committed …

  • Wendy Doniger and the Hindus | by Murali Balaji | The New ...

    https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2014/07/10/wendy-doniger-and-hindus

    In her essay “India: Censorship by the Batra Brigade” [NYR, May 8], Wendy Doniger touches on a number of issues when it comes to the academic study of religion and larger questions of representation. She frames the debate over her book, as well as other topics when it comes to Hinduism, as one between Hindu right-wing activists and scholars, which essentializes a complex history that involves academic …

    • On Hinduism - Wendy Doniger - Oxford University Press

      https://global.oup.com/academic/product/on-hinduism-9780199360079

      Wendy Doniger. Includes more than 60 essays and lectures spanning the decades-long career of one of Hinduism's most prominent scholars. Examines a rich array of Hindu concepts--polytheism, death, gender, art, contemporary puritanism, non-violence, and many more. On Hinduism. Wendy Doniger.

    • ‘Sex Guru’ Still Preaching to a Million Followers While He’s on the Run from the Cops

      Jeremy Kryt
      Sun, December 12, 2021

      Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/Getty

      To hear him tell it, there isn’t much that self-proclaimed “godman” Paramahamsa Nithyananda can’t do with his alleged supernatural powers. Want to hear a cow or monkey speak Sanskrit? He’s your man. Heal the blind? Check. ESP, stop sunrise, see through walls? The swami says he can do all these and more. And if you swear your fealty to him and start making donations, he’ll teach you how to do them too.

      Nithyananda, who claims to be the physical embodiment of Lord Shiva, is the man skeptics and debunkers love to hate. But he’s pulled off a couple of tricks that not even his most strident detractors can explain. For example, managing to flee India one step ahead of the law and without valid travel papers back in 2019. Or how he continues to evade justice to this day, despite being wanted by Interpol on charges of rape and kidnapping.

      Narendra Nayak, the president of the Federation of Indian Rationalist Associations [FIRA], called Nithyananda a “fraud and a cheat” in an interview with The Daily Beast. “But how he managed to get out of the country is a mystery because his passport had expired long back!” he said.

      Nayak has publicly challenged the claims of paranormal powers made by the swami and his legions of followers. He has also designed tests in which the miracle workers are asked to show off their gifts in a controlled setting, without hidden cameras or other aids. The inability to repeat their feats under monitored conditions does nothing to persuade Nithyananda’s true believers, and some have gone so far as to threaten Nayak for exposing their parlor tricks.

      One such vengeance seeker even vowed to cast a “curse that I would get carcinoma of the penis,” said Nayak, who described his metaphysical assailant as “a woman disciple of Nithyananda’s who said she had already granted cancer of the brain to someone who had challenged her man.”

      Inside Tibetan Buddhism’s ‘Rape’ and Abuse Scandal


      The ‘Sex Swami’

      Nithyananda, 43, began practicing yoga at the age of 3. He later roamed the Himalayas as part of his spiritual training before opening his own ashram in the Indian state of Karnataka in 2003. He served as chairman of the Hindu University of America. Although exiled and in hiding he remains wildly popular on social media—his Facebook page alone boasts some 1.1 million followers—and he often surfaces to drop video clips full of grandiose statements, such as claiming that he and only he could cure India’s COVID woes.

      “Though some of his pronouncements look like jokes, they are all calculated to bring more attention to himself and [serve as] clickbait,” Nayak said.

      Nayak isn’t the only critic to lock horns in public with Nithyananda. Journalist Nakkheeran Gopal helped bring to light some of the swami’s alleged wrongdoings and wound up in court.


      Swami Paramhamsa Nityananda is taken into custody in 2010.

      STR/AFP via Getty

      A nationally acclaimed Indian journalist who operates his own magazine and website, Gopal told The Daily Beast he published “secretly recorded” videos that he said exposed Nithyananda’s “sexual indulgence with young sanyasi [mendicant] girls in his ashramam.”

      In a resulting lawsuit, the godman and his lawyers contended the videos were “morphed” or computer generated, according to Gopal. “[The] court found and held that the clippings were not morphed and dismissed his suit,” Gopal said.

      A sex tape starring the so-called “Sex Swami” had surfaced in 2010, and in that case too he had tried to claim the video was faked, although forensic experts eventually testified otherwise.

      But videos coming to light were just the start of Nithyananda’s trouble. He was later accused of rape by an American woman, Aarthi Rao, who had come to study yoga and meditation under him—and who later stated that she thought she was “having sex with God.”

      At the time, Rao believed that her personal yogi was “not just an enlightened master, but an avatar and incarnation.” Furthermore, the guru convinced Rao herself that she was the “chosen one” ordained by the godhead to be his sole companion in this world—until she found him sleeping around with other students, according to news reports at the time.

      Rao pressed charges against her former teacher in both Michigan and India, “yet he continues to go scot free & harass the witnesses & critics through his brainwashed disciples & followers,” she tweeted.

      Shiva’s personal avatar was later accused of luring at least four underage girls to his ashram and holding them in an apartment against their will, leading to government charges of abduction against him.


      Police escort controversial Hindu Godman Swami Nityananda after his bail plea in 2012.
      Manjunath Kiran/AFP/GettyLess


      By 2019, Nithyananda “found the due processes of law finally closing in on him,” according to Nayak.

      “He had tried to dodge [the charges] for so long by filing plea after plea [and] obtaining adjournments, trying to cast aspersions on character of the one who had complained of rape and so on. Finally there were no more avenues left and he absconded,” Nayak said.

      It eventually came to light that the godman had the students of his ashram sign a sexually explicit non-disclosure agreement that would scare the hell out of loving parents from any culture. According to India Today the clause read:

      "Volunteer understands that the Program may involve the learning and practice of ancient tantric secrets associated with male and female ecstasy, including the use of sexual energy for increased intimacy/spiritual connection, pleasure, harmony, and freedom. Volunteer understands that these activities could be physically and mentally challenging, and may involve nudity, access to visual images, graphic visual depictions, and descriptions of nudity and sexual activity, close physical proximity and intimacy, verbal and written descriptions and audio sounds of a sexually oriented, and erotic nature, etc."

      Twilight of the godmen


      The Nithyananda isn’t the first self-styled godman to get himself into trouble in India for sexually exploting his cult-like followers.

      “There have been quite a few scandals over the years,” said Dr. Brian Collins, an expert on Hindu studies at the University of Ohio, in an email. Collins added that “there is most often money (and/or sex) involved” and that some of the godmen “use their money and power to escape consequences.”


      Collins also said that many in India don’t see a living incarnation of the supreme deity as being so farfetched, which can help traditional godmen like Nithyananda establish their sway over the masses.

      “Unlike in Christianity, gods come to earth in many forms in Hinduism, so the idea of the divine in a human being is not particularly scandalous for most people,” Collins said.


      Dr. Patrick McCartney, who studies the intersection between religion and anthropology at the School of Global Environmental Studies in Kyoto, Japan, described Nithyananda as being “about as sleazy as a used-car salesman at the afterparty to a used-car-dealers’ convention.”

      “His followers are attracted to him because he promises to help them gain powers. People seem to feel powerless and so through his pretence of being all powerful they believe they too can become a powerful yogi.”


      Acnaren/Wikimedia Commons

      “Cult leaders [like Nithyananda] use psychological manipulation to break and rebuild targeted individuals into their puppets,” said Dr. Robert Bunker, director of research and analysis at the security consultancy C/O Futures, LLC.

      “The specialness, and at times divine origins, of the group’s members and the identification of the ‘others’ who become the sworn enemies of the group are part and parcel of this approach,” Bunker said. He also helped explain why the swami’s many die-hards run propaganda websites that defend his actions and tear down his accusers, and why they might try to curse his enemies with cancers of the brain and genitals.

      “Once a cult follower has been turned into a ‘true believer’ all bets are off as far as their potential for violence… Such reprogrammed people will readily fight for and kill on command of their god.”

      ‘People are donating from all over the world’

      Other sex-crazed mystics may come and go, but Nithyananda has secured his place in the godman pantheon by founding his own “country” after he lit out of India on the lam in 2019.

      His “Hindu nation” is known as Kailaasa and is described on the national website as a country “without borders” intended to function as home for “the ancient enlightened Hindu civilizational nation which is being revived by displaced Hindus from around the world.”

      Kailaasa allegedly boasts its own currency, flag, bureaucracy, and COVID policy. It’s rumored to be off the coast of Ecuador, with visa-approved tourist flights coming in by charter from Australia, although the Ecuadorian government has categorically denied selling the swami an island or even granting him asylum.

      “Kailaasa is a decoy,” said journalist Gopal. “There is no Kailaasa island. My guess is [Nithyananda] is hiding in some secret place in Nepal or any other Hindu-lenient country, where he is facilitated to appear on social media.”


      50 Million People Allowed at Superspreader Festival so Modi Can Secure the Hindu Vote

      Others have posited that Kailaasa is in fact a “virtual nation”—that is, a metaphor for the dozens of NGOs that have been set up to receive donations and engage in pro-Nithyananda outreach programs across three continents, including at least 10 in the U.S.

      From Pennsylvania in the east to Hawaii out west, from as far south as Houston to as far north as Minnesota, the guru’s networkers have established a series of franchise-like branch offices that serve as embassies “for global representation for the diaspora who are practitioners (Hindus) of Sanatan Dharma (Hinduism),” according to documents obtained by India Today.

      Like traditional consulates, they also gather intel about the U.S. and other nations so as to “analyse [the] political and economic situation of the host country and report back to appropriate Kailaasa ministry on issues that affect the Kailaasa.”

      India Today quoted the maligned spiritual leader explaining how Kailaasa might work as a broad-based religious organization—one that could also fill his personal coffers and fund his fugitive lifestyle—during an internet address in which he said:

      “People are donating all over the world, working with the local governments because each donation in any country belongs to that country's NGO, follows that country's laws, working with those countries in an organised way [so] this whole structure is absolutely ready.”

      For FIRA’s Narendra, however, the as-yet-undiscovered country is likely just the latest iteration of the Sex Swami’s old M.O.

      “His Kailaasa seems to be a harem with himself as the master stud,” Narendra said.
      ‘Front companies, forged papers, and safe houses’

      Whatever or wherever Kailaasa is, the fact remains that Nithyananda continues to evade an Interpol manhunt, while also dressing in conspicuous orange robes and appearing regularly on internet broadcasts.

      “It is an intriguing mystery that Interpol has failed to trace him,” Gopal said. “Some stealthy protection helps him.”

      Interpol declined an interview request for this story.

      In late 2019, Indian police traced the fugitive godman as far as the island of Trinidad, in the southeastern Caribbean, where he had gone to attend a religious event. The Times of India cited a police spokesperson who indicated that Nithyananda and some of his female acolytes had later departed Trinidad on a private jet bound for Ecuador.

      But he didn’t stay there long. Not only does Ecuador deny selling him an island, it seems they were also quick to show him on his way:

      “Ecuador denied the request for international personal protection (refuge) made by Mr. Nithyananda before Ecuador and later on Mr. Nithyananda left Ecuador,” the government said in a statement in December 2019. And that was the last time the whereabouts of the god-made-flesh renegade were known.

      Security analyst Bunker said the godman’s elusiveness is abetted by his ranks of fanatical worshippers.

      “Since cult leaders typically suck out the wealth of their adherents, they amass large war chests in which to invest in properties and businesses[,] and also bribe public officials in less developed countries,” Bunker said. “I have no doubt front companies are being used, travel documents forged with bogus identities, and safe houses established to protect him.”

      In spite of his ability to elude international law enforcement, religious anthropologist McCartney referred to Nithyananda as “just another shady snake oil spiritual salesman” duping gullible people. He also described the relationship between the godmen and their followers as one based on mutual necessity.

      “The guru needs gullible devotees and the devotees need a guru to take away all self-responsibility,” McCartney said. “It's much easier to let the guru direct you in life than to take charge of one's own.”

      Insurer agrees to $800M settlement in US Boy Scouts bankruptcy

      By RANDALL CHASE

      FILE - In this Feb. 18, 2020, file photo, Boy Scouts of America uniforms are displayed in a retail store at the headquarters for the French Creek Council of the Boy Scouts of America in Summit Township, Pa. In an agreement announced Monday, Dec. 13, 2021, attorneys in the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy have reached a tentative settlement under which one of the organization's largest insurers would contribute $800 million into a fund for victims of child sexual abuse.
      (Christopher Millette/Erie Times-News via AP, File)

      DOVER, Del. (AP) — Attorneys in the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy case have reached a tentative settlement under which one of the organization’s largest insurers would contribute $800 million into a fund for victims of child sexual abuse.

      The agreement announced Monday calls for Century Indemnity Co. and affiliated companies to contribute $800 million into the fund in return for being released from further liability for abuse claims. The payment would bring the amount of money in the proposed trust to more than $2.6 billion, which would be the largest sexual abuse settlement in U.S. history.

      The settlement comes as more than 82,000 sexual abuse claimants face a Dec. 28 deadline to vote on a previously announced Boy Scouts reorganization plan.

      That plan called for the Boys Scouts and its roughly 250 local councils to contribute up to $820 million in cash and property into a fund for victims. They also would assign certain insurance rights to the fund. In return, the local councils and national organization would be released from further liability for sexual abuse claims.

      The plan also includes settlement agreements involving another one of the Boy Scouts’ major insurers, The Hartford, and the BSA’s former largest troop sponsor, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly known as the Mormon church. The Hartford has agreed to pay $787 million into the victims’ fund, and the Mormons have agreed to contribute $250 million. In exchange, both entities would be released from any further liability involving child sex abuse claims.

      The Century settlement, which is subject to court approval, provides for additional contributions from the BSA and its local councils on behalf of chartered sponsoring organizations. They include a $40 million commitment from the local councils and additional potential payments of up to $100 million from the BSA and local councils attributable to growth in membership because of chartered organizations’ continued sponsorship of Scouting units.

      “This is an extremely important step forward in the BSA’s efforts to equitably compensate survivors, and our hope is that this will lead to further settlement agreements from other parties,” the Boy Scouts said in a prepared statement. “In addition to our continued negotiations with other insurers, the BSA has worked diligently to create a structure that will allow the Roman Catholic-affiliated churches and United Methodist-affiliated churches who sponsored Scouting units to contribute to the proposed settlement trust to compensate survivors.”

      The Boy Scouts, based in Irving, Texas, sought bankruptcy protection in February 2020, seeking to halt hundreds of individual lawsuits and create a fund for men who say they were sexually abused as children. Although the organization was facing 275 lawsuits at the time, it’s now facing more than 82,000 sexual abuse claims in the bankruptcy.

      Attorneys with an ad hoc group called the Coalition of Abused Scouts for Justice, which represents about 18,000 abuse claimants, said in a news release that the Century settlement is another reason for victims to vote for the BSA’s reorganization plan.

      “Not only is the coalition creating the biggest possible compensation fund for survivors — it’s the only fund on the table, and it vanishes with a ‘no’ vote,” said attorney and coalition co-founder Anne Andrews. “The coalition also continues to work with the Boy Scouts of America on accountability and safety measures to ensure that no child will have to endure the horrific harm and abuse our clients have suffered.”

      The coalition, which is affiliated with more than two dozen law firms, has played a dominant role in the bankruptcy despite the existence of an official committee charged with representing the best interests of all abuse claimants. It also has been at the center of various disputes over information sharing and how the BSA’s reorganization plan and trust distribution procedures were crafted.

      Opponents of the plan include several other law firms, as well as the official abuse claimants committee appointed by the U.S. bankruptcy trustee. The committee has said the plan is “grossly unfair” and represents only a fraction of the settling parties’ potential liabilities and what they should and can pay.

      The committee, for example, has said the settlements with local Boy Scout councils would leave them with more than $1 billion in cash and property above what they need to fulfill the scouting mission. The committee has also noted that sponsoring organizations such as churches and civic groups can avoid liability for abuse claims dating to 1976 simply by transferring their interests in insurance policies purchased by the BSA and local councils to the victims fund, without contributing any cash or property.


      News of the Century settlement came the same day that a bankruptcy judge in Indiana approved a $380 million settlement involving USA Gymnastics and more than 500 victims of sexual abuse by former national team doctor Larry Nassar. The agreement, which also involves the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, is in addition to the $500 million that the University of Michigan agreed to pay in 2018 to settle lawsuits brought by more than 300 victims of Nassar, a former associate professor and sports doctor at the school.

      The $880 million in the combined Nassar settlements represents an average of more than $1 million per victim, while the proposed $2.6 billion settlement in the Boy Scouts bankruptcy averages about $31,600 per victim.
      MEDICAL SEXISM, MISOGYNY, AND FEMICIDE
      Study: Poor outcome more likely when patient is female, surgeon is male

      By Denise Mann, HealthDay News


      Women undergoing surgery with a male surgeon often fare worse after the procedure, according to a study in Canada. File Photo by Kzenon/Shutterstock


      You can't always choose who operates on you, especially in an emergency, but the sex of your surgeon shouldn't matter, should it?

      It just may, according to a Canadian study of 1.3 million people.

      It reported that women who underwent common elective or emergency surgeries with male surgeons had a 15% higher chance of dying, experiencing a major complication or being readmitted to the hospital within 30 days than they did if a woman performed their surgery.

      In contrast, men experience similarly good outcomes regardless of their surgeon's sex, the study showed.


      Exactly why such "sex discordance" exists is not fully understood yet, and the study wasn't designed to answer this question.

      "We hypothesize, based on prior work regarding communication between patients and physicians, that this may underpin the observation," said study author Dr. Christopher Wallis, an assistant professor of urology at the Mount Sinai Hospital and University Health Network in Toronto.

      Previous studies have shown that female doctors tend to listen more, and their patients may fare better as a result.

      "Patients should seek to find surgeons that they trust and communicate well with," Wallis said. "As a surgical community, we should seek to better understand the factors underpinning these observations such that we can understand the processes of care that lead to optimal outcomes so all surgeons can use these and all patients can benefit."

      The study included more than 1.3 million patients who had 21 common elective and emergency surgeries between 2007 and 2019.

      Of these, close to 15% experienced one or more bad outcomes in the month after surgery including death, readmission or a complication. Nearly 46% of patients were the same sex as their surgeon.

      Female patients treated by male surgeons fared worse after surgery, but female surgeons experienced similarly good outcomes whether they operated on men or women, the study showed.


      The research took place in Canada, but the findings are likely generalizable to the United States, Wallis said.

      The findings were published this month in JAMA Surgery.

      "This study provides new information about the role of sex differences between surgeons and patients and the potential relationship with outcomes by showing that sex discordance does affect outcomes," said Dr. Amalia Cochran, who cowrote a commentary that accompanied the findings.

      There simply aren't as many female surgeons as male ones, said Cochran, a professor of surgery at the University of Florida College of Medicine.

      While there's finally sex equality in medical school, it's not yet showing up in surgical ranks: Women made up just 22% of U.S. general surgeons in 2019, the editorial noted


      Women should not be at a disadvantage just because of these numbers, and the study is "yet another reason why as a profession we must be intentional about having a workforce that is representative of the patients we care for and in which we foster belonging for all workforce members," Cochran said.

      Dr. Cassandra Kelleher, a pediatric surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, said the findings probably don't relate to differences in surgical prowess or technical skill between male and female surgeons.

      "It's likely due to something more nuanced such as how surgeons listen to people after surgery and the way that they involve family or caregivers, or listen to nurses on the floor who express concern," said Kelleher, who was not involved in the new study.

      Other factors may play a role, too, including how approachable the surgeon is and the level of risk he or she is willing to assume.

      The patient-surgeon relationship is extremely important.

      "It may be that a woman has a really good rapport with a male doctor, and that is much more important than gender," Kelleher said. "All surgeons should place more weight on communication, listening skills and risk assessment to help close these gaps in care."

      More information

      AARP offers tips on choosing a surgeon.

      Copyright © 2021 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

      Larry Nassar survivors agree to $380M deal from USA Gymnastics, Olympic committee

      By Adam Schrader

      From left to right, U.S. Olympic gymnasts Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Maggie Nichols arrive to testify during a Senate judiciary hearing about the FBI's handling of the Larry Nassar investigation of sexual abuse of Olympic gymnasts in Septermber.
       File Pool Photo by Saul Loeb/UPI | License Photo


      Dec. 13 (UPI) -- Hundreds of gymnasts who were sexually assaulted by former Olympic team doctor Larry Nassar will receive a $380 million settlement from USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee after an agreement was reached Monday.

      The settlement, after years of talks, will compensate more than 500 gymnasts, including Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney and Aly Raisman, who were preyed on by Nassar and others -- marking one of the largest ever announced for sexual assault.

      It includes the settlement of lawsuits against Steve Penny and Bela and Marta Karolyi, ESPN reported. Penny, the former CEO of USA Gymnastics, has been charged with evidence tampering relating to the Nassar investigation and has pleaded not guilty. The Karolyis have been accused of turning a blind eye to Nassar's sexual abuse, as well as their own physical and psychological abuse of female athletes.

      The settlement was revealed as part of bankruptcy proceedings regarding USA Gymnastics in an Indiana federal court, The New York Times reported. Insurers for the two organizations agreed to pay most of the settlement -- but the Olympic committee will dole out $34 million and loan $6 million to USA Gymnastics for the organization to pay its end of the agreement.

      Rachel Denhollander, an attorney and former gymnast who was abused by Nassar, tweeted that she was particularly proud of the non-monetary reform commitments that were made as part of the settlement agreement.

      "This chapter is finally closed. Now the hard work of reform and rebuilding can begin. Whether or not justice comes and change is made depends on what happens next," Denhollander tweeted.

      USA Gymnastics agreed to set up a program to give survivors a say in how sexual assault issues are handled in the future.

      RELATED Simone Biles, other gymnasts say system failed in Larry Nassar sex investigation


      "I am proud of the non-monetary reform commitments in particular -- this represents so much hard work from members of the committee, and I am eager to see these changes through."

      Denhollander added in comments to The Times that "no amount of money will ever repair the damage that has been done" but welcomed the financial commitment, which will allow Nassar's victims to receive mental health treatment for anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.

      Olympic gymnasts testify in Senate on Larry Nassar case

      U.S. Olympics gymnasts McKayla Maroney (L) and Aly Raisman attend a press conference Wednesday after testifying during a Senate judiciary committee hearing about the Inspector General's report on the FBI handling of the Larry Nassar investigation of sexual abuse of Olympic gymnasts, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo