Rptr Foradori Edtr Humke National Security
1 RPTR FORADORI EDTR HUMKE NATIONAL SECURITY IMPLICATIONS OF THE RISE OF AUTHORITARIANISM Tuesday, February 26, 2019 U.S. House of Representatives, Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Washington, D.C. The committee met, pursuant to call, at 10:00 a.m., in room 210, Cannon House Office Building, the Honorable Adam Schiff (chairman of the committee) presiding. Present: Representatives Schiff, Himes, Sewell, Carson, Speier, Quigley, Swalwell, Castro, Heck, Welch, Maloney, Demings, Nunes, Conaway, Turner, Wenstrup, Stewart, Crawford, Stefanik, Hurd, and Ratcliff. 2 The Chairman. The committee will come to order. Before we begin, I want to remind all of our members that we are in open session, and as such, we will discuss unclassified matters only. Without objection, the chair may declare a recess at any time. I want to welcome our members and this panel of esteemed witnesses to the committee's first open hearing of the new Congress. When the Berlin Wall fell in late 1989, followed 2 years later by the demise of the Soviet Union, it seemed that the enlightenment ideals that animated the birth of the Nation, democracy, equality, and Jefferson's unalienable rights had finally triumphed. As the academic, Francis Fukuyama, put it then, we had reached the end of history and liberal democracy represented an end to ideology and presaged a new era of political harmony. As humanity's bloodiest century drew to a close, a century that had seen two cataclysmic wars and titanic ideological struggles between Fascism and democracy, between Soviet communism and capitalism, between colonialism and self-determination, the optimism of the 1990s was understandable.
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