CyberWire Daily - Juneteenth: Reflecting, belonging, and owning your seat at the table. [Special Edition]
Episode Date: June 19, 2025We put together an open conversation between our podcast hosts, CyberWire Daily's Dave Bittner, T-Minus Space Daily’s Maria Varmazis, and CISO Perspectives podcast’s Kim Jones. Their conversation ...goes deeper than just the historical significance of Juneteenth, diving into candid conversations on allyship, representation, and the enduring value of diversity in the cybersecurity and space fields. Grab your coffee and join us in the room. Resources: Juneteenth CISO Perspectives podcast: Does diversity matter in cyber? Mid season reflection with Kim Jones. T-Minus Space Daily podcast: Dr. Sian Proctor sharing her poem "Space to Inspire" on Instagram. Deep Space: Inspiration4 with Dr. Sian “Leo” Proctor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello everyone and welcome to today's special segment in honor of Juneteenth.
I'm Dave Bittner, host of the CyberWire Daily Podcast, and joining me today is Kim Jones,
the host of our CISO Perspectives podcast, along with Maria Vermazes, host of the T-Minus
Space Daily Podcast.
It is my pleasure to welcome you both to today's conversation.
Thanks for joining me today. Thanks for having me.
Thanks, Dave.
So Juneteenth isn't just a day on the calendar.
It is a chance to reflect on our shared history,
examine where we are today,
and I think ask how we can build some more inclusive spaces.
And of course, this is a day that marks the end of slavery
in the United States
and stands as a powerful reminder of that long journey toward freedom, equity, and justice.
Can we start off with just some ground level stuff here from each of us? I'd love to start
with you, Kim. What does Juneteenth mean to you?
So historically, we all are familiar with the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation,
and then the fighting that went on.
Texas became one of the last states holding out near the end of the war, even past the
surrender at Appomattox in holding out in terms of slavery. The last portion of Texas that was held out in terms of being notified that the war was
over and that slavery had now been abolished was the day when Galveston, Texas was notified that slavery was over and thus
meant the end of slavery here in the United States.
One of the things, before we started recording, one of the things I was talking about with
you and Maria was that this was something that until it became a federal holiday,
many people did not know about. And a lot of ethnic communities inside of the United States
keep record, worldly or otherwise, regarding the history of what's gone on within their communities. Maria, you're Greek heritage and the Greek community.
Amongst the African American community, there are pieces of history that aren't taught within
the common framework. The history of Black Wall Street being burnt,
believe it was Oklahoma City, back during the Depression. And Juneteenth is another piece of
that history that amongst the African American community, it's been an important and celebrated
day that just came back into prominence once the federal holiday was declared.
So it has significant meaning for me in terms of not only remembering that there's history
out there that gets buried, that gets whitewashed, that gets forgotten.
And seeing this history brought back into the mainstream for me is, you know, it warms my heart.
Um, Kim, so in terms of like lifelong awareness of this, because I think something Maria and I
have in common is generally, um, ignorance of it. Like I was not aware that Juneteenth was a thing
until it became a federal holiday. Yep. I will absolutely fess up to that. I was, I'm entirely aware that Juneteenth was a thing until it became a federal holiday.
Yep.
I will absolutely fess up to that.
I was entirely in that camp.
No, no, no.
As I said earlier, it's not something to feel bad about.
It gets back into that oral histories within varied communities.
And it's particularly in...
So here's a...
Let me take this back a little bit. I'm old enough to remember the publication of Alex Haley's Roots and LeVar Burton in
his breakout role before Jodie LaForge as Cunta Kinte was in that series.
What we don't necessarily recognize or realize is why that was such a big deal.
It's because of the history of African Americans coming over as slaves and families being broken
up.
It was thought that it was not just difficult, but damnably impossible to put together a
lineage on an individual that dates back as they do in other communities within the
environment.
So the ability for us to keep history, even back 150, 200 years, has been difficult, has
been, I won't call it underground because it really hasn't been underground, it's been more a matter of kept within ethnic communities,
is not unusual and we're not unique. Think about towns and cities that have Chinatowns
and think about how much we don't know regarding the history and the calendars, etc.
They are so for me,
I've been aware of Juneteenth for decades, you know because this is part of the history that my father
Made sure that we did not forget as children growing up. So yeah, it's been lifelong for me
It's been something I've known about for a while
It's been something that I've taken a quiet moment and reflected upon in my adult years before the rest of the world became aware of it
What has it been like for you Kim upon in my adult years before the rest of the world became aware of it.
What has it been like for you, Kim,
to witness the rest of the United States become aware of this and to see it become
recognized as a national holiday?
This gets to the point we were talking about beforehand
in terms of how meaningful a discussion
do you wish to have Dave?
And I want to ask you that question directly before I answer the question you just asked
me.
Because depending on how meaningful you want to get, there are a multitude of answers I
can give you.
Well, I'd say don't hold back.
All right then.
On the one hand, and I'm probably not, I'm probably going to give you partly an expected answer and partly
an unexpected answer.
The expected answer and one that I wholly support, agree with, and pleased with is this level of recognition of this part of our history
within the environment for me is a great and wonderful thing.
It is recognizing that there are portions of our society that it is not necessarily
pleasant for us to remember that we treated in a subhuman fashion, I would
argue, or still, and I'm not just talking African-Americans treating in a subhuman fashion,
and recognizing those struggles and celebrating our triumph over those struggles, for me is
an absolutely wonderful thing. And that's the expected answer.
And it's one that I wholeheartedly agree with.
Partly the expected answer is also,
we are now living in a time where we're seeing a backlash
against that recognition.
Where we're seeing oppressors claim oppression within the environment.
We're seeing terms like diversity, equity, and inclusion being used in some cases to
mask a resurgence of prejudice and bigotry.
And considering I'm a West Point grad and I spent many years in the profession of arms
defending this constitution and doing things that some of those who would claim that I'm
a diversity hire despite 40 years of just doing it damn hard and use that as an excuse
to denigrate my accomplishments, etc.
There's no better way to say it pisses me off to no end.
The unexpected answer is that I've got to admit that part of what we're going through
is deserved.
And it's deserved because in typical human fashion, when we swung the pendulum, we didn't
swing the pendulum, we didn't swing the
pendulum to the middle. We swung the pendulum absolutely to the other direction. We didn't
go towards an environment where everyone was being recognized for the content of their
character to quote Brother Martin, but we went to the environment where we castigated vilified white men for lack of a better term.
And I would sit on diversity panels for many years and say,
we're missing somebody.
You know, here's the minority, here's the female,
here's the transgender individual.
Where's the white male?
It's not exactly like they're the enemy guys.
And we're seeing, unfortunately, a backlash
against diversity because we didn't swing to the middle.
And unfortunately, we are also swinging again
180 degrees out versus truly creating the environment
that I believe our founding fathers wanted
and that shows the progress that we have made
versus refighting the battles that
my dad marched with John Lewis at the Edmund Pettus Bridge decades ago.
Why are we refighting those battles again?
And why am I worrying about my son the way that my dad worried about my brother and me?
That's a very complex answer, but I believe if we really want to talk about these things, we need to
recognize their complexity versus just put simple labels on things and say it's good
or it's bad or it's right or it's wrong.
This is a complex issue.
I think diversity matters.
In my podcast, I talked about how diversity creates critical thinking, which in security
gives us better solutions
and a better ability to innovate.
I talk about a little bit about the reason
that the numbers have gotten better
and we've seen the results, not only of the numbers,
but of the innovation that has happened
is because we put focus on it.
I think those are good things.
And swinging away from that,
I think will have an adverse impact on our ability
to ideate, to innovate, and to solve within the cyberspace.
I think it's hugely important.
And I'm hearing too many voices either go to one extreme or the other versus talk about
value proposition and how we meet middle.
And I could probably say that about a lot of things,
but I think it weakens us all if we continue to divide
instead of figuring out this is an issue
we should want to come together on,
particularly within the cyber community.
And now I'm gonna exhale and get back off my soapbox
and calm down.
You told me go for it, don't hold back, so I didn't.
No, no, it's all good.
It requires nuance.
No, I'm really appreciating what you said, Kim, because it is very easy to go into extremes
and those are the easier answers and this is definitely something that requires thought
and nuance as you provided, so I want to thank you for that.
And I love the first part that you said there, it requires thought.
Thought requires us to sit back and reflect,
not just to react.
So we have to think about this stuff.
We do.
I'm really appreciating what you said.
I'm a white lady, so I'm speaking from that point of view,
but I know there have been times in my-
No, no, no, your name is Homegirl.
We've established that, all right?
And now we're gonna let the podcast figure out why but if you're looking for this home girl that's gonna be it for now.
There have been times where like I've been the only woman in the room and I
haven't I couldn't help but wonder and is the reason I'm the only woman in the
room because I'm like the token diversity lady here and that is a really
insidious it gets into you deep that that wondering
like why am I actually here? Am I here because of my expertise? Do I provide value or am
I just good optics for somebody? Am I like a convenient, am I useful idiot for somebody
for lack of a better term? And that is a feeling that really gets into you.
And I would encourage you and I would encourage everyone else, don't. And you know, I'm a child of the late 60s.
I grew up in arguably the most liberal state in the union, yet I still had crosses burned
on my lawn in Northeast Massachusetts.
I remember the Klan marching down in Boston in the late 1980s.
I also remember Boston saying, no, we fought this battle. We're not going to do it. And the Klan marched literally three feet into the paddy wagon
so they could get out. So I've seen Boston go through its busing. Yeah. I've seen Boston
go through busing, segregation. I've lived through these. One of the things that my dad
instilled in me when I would be here in these environments is he said a couple things he said look it's not good bad right wrong it is.
And while you rail against it which you should and while you fight against it which you are too and why you survive it which you are you win despite the circumstances.
You gotta figure out how to survive it, which, and while you win, despite the circumstances, you've got to figure out how to survive it.
And part of figuring out how to survive it is never forgetting your self-worth.
Look me in the mirror and say, do you think anyone is giving you anything?
Do you think anyone is doing you any favors?
Do you think it's going to be harder than the next person standing next to you?
So you have a choice to either wallow in self-pity or realize you're here because you belong here and
That's it. And I've always taken the attitude if I'm the only one in the room
it's because I was the only one who was good enough and in
honoring enough to actually stand there if they opened the door because they thought they were going to get a token, shame on them because I do, I do break, fix, clean up
CISO work and I know nothing about the back now and I guarantee you Maria, I
know you're the same way.
So, you know, I don't like the fact that that may be the reason the door open.
I hope it's not.
But the bottom line is I'm here
because I deserve to be here.
And I encourage you and anyone listening,
you're in the room because you deserve to be there.
And if you question that, they are one step,
they, those who would think less,
I'm gonna use the term human humanely regarding fellow human beings,
they're one step closer to winning.
And I'm sorry, I hate to lose.
So I'm just going to give them that.
Important wisdom, especially right now.
Let me ask you this,
because I'm sure there are folks listening to this,
and it is every time we enter this avenue
of discussion, we get letters and people say, hey, here you go again, that woke cyber wire,
stay in your lane.
Your lane is cybersecurity.
Why are you getting into politics?
Stay in your lane.
I think that's an outdated thought these days.
It would be easy for me to say, yeah, I agree.
And, but these are all nuanced conversations.
So, yeah, a shameless bit of self promotion that answers the question is to
ask people to listen to episode six
of Seesaw Perspectives.
Episode six, I took on diversity, and I said there's diversity matter in cybersecurity.
And I thought long and hard before I did that episode, because there would be presumption
as an African-American male
and one who remembers when there were only 27 African-American CISOs in the United States,
we all knew one another, you know, and remembers those things,
that I was attempting to make a political statement.
And there are concerns as things become politicized that all we are doing is making political
statements.
So one of the things that I did during that episode and that I continue to do, this episode
being the exception, is I try and get away from the divisiveness around those politics
that you hear within the media this day and
age.
And what I said then, and I actually repeated it a few episodes ago when I did my mid-season
reflection, and that one is out in the public space, is I said, look, I'm not qualifying
to talk about political issues.
I'm not a politician, so I like
to tell people in business who are running politics, I don't dance, but I do
know the steps and can call the tune because I hate politics of any form or
fashion. So I'm not going to make political statements within the
environment. I can't speak to politics, but I can speak to security. And after
doing this for almost 40 years,
there are not too many people who have that much more
experience at this doing operational security than I do.
So I can speak to the importance of critical thinking.
And I can speak to how having diversity of backgrounds,
perspectives, and ethnicity is included in that.
And gender is included in that.
Makes for teams that think critically better than other teams.
And considering our job is to make lemonade out of two apples, a grapefruit,
and a kumquat and make it look easy, you want the ability,
you can still have it using a few years, Maria.
I'm literally writing that down in my head.
But considering that that's our gig,
I need people who can think critically and teams to think critically.
If we all have the same background, ethnicity, gender,
affiliation as well as education, etc.,
we lose that capability.
So I understand the backlash in terms of,
oh my God, stay in your lane.
Well, okay, my lane is security, okay?
That is my lane.
And I've been doing it a lot longer,
and dare I say, in some cases, damn sight better
than a lot of the some of the folks out there, some.
But I've been doing it a lot longer
than a whole lot of the folks out there. Some, but I've been doing a lot longer than a whole lot of the folks out there.
And in my lane, critical thinking matters.
And in my lane, understanding that diversity creates better critical thinking teams.
I contend that any security professional should be a proponent of diversity.
And if you're not, you're cutting off one of the legs of the profession.
So I understand the pushback in today's contentious environment and the politicizing of the issue,
but let's take all of that out of there.
Diversity makes us better innovators.
It makes us better problem solvers.
And considering that my job is to whoop up on bad guys and make it look easy and find
innovative ways to let the companies do those BS things that are driving big holes and
truck holes through your environment and still be secure, yeah, I damn sure need to think
critically.
And that means I need folks who don't think like me, don't have prior military experience,
didn't grow up in New England, didn't have a college education, and the list goes on
the team so that somebody could come up with the idea that I can't even begin to conceptualize.
Diversity is how we win in cyber. So in that regard, if you're a cyber professional, diversity is your lane.
And, you know, and all the other political noise and that's going out there.
You're right.
You know, if that's where you're right, that's not my lane as a citizen and a
human being, yeah, that's my concern.
And I do things to support that.
But in my podcast and your podcast, you're a cyber professional diversity Dan will better be your lane because it's how we win
So again, we get back off
My perception though is that
It's not that we're straying out of our lane, it's that they've come careening into ours with things like Doge,
with the current situation in Washington and the White House,
that cybersecurity used to, much more than it does today,
enjoy sort of bipartisan neutrality.
Same thing for space, by the way.
Yes.
Yeah. It's not space, by the way. Yes. Yeah.
And it's not so much that way anymore.
And that's not the fault of the folks in cyber.
Right.
But what the fault is, is how we approach it.
And Doge goes beyond Juneteenth.
But as an example, what we get is into identity, access management, exposure of data, and data
protection. The way we argue this problem isn't politically over, you know, the
president's right to do X and how this happens with Y, but an understanding
that what we are doing in certain cases and be specific and fact-based about
those cases, violate some basic tenets that we've grown up under.
cases, violate some basic tenets that we've grown up under. What we tend to do is we tend to do what I just did and get on the soapbox and rail at
things and we contribute to the noise engine rather than this particular problem violates
basic practices of security that we've done for three to four decades. And if you wish to do this, which is your right as commander-in-chief,
or is your right as the government, and those conversations as to whether it is or ain't,
are well outside of my wheelhouse, then I have a right as not only a private citizen,
but as a decades-old cyber professional to ask,
what the hell are you doing to take
care of these concerns?
And that's not a political statement.
That's a, I'm a cyber guy.
I should be asking those statements because my customers are going to ask them of me.
So I'm your customer.
It's not wrong for me to ask them of you.
So for me, the issue is not just that these things
are careening in, Dave, but our response is, again,
it is not thoughtful, data-driven, experiential response.
It is knee-jerk reaction that feeds the engine
and allows others to dismiss the argument.
Well, let me bring it back to Juneteenth
and maybe wrap up with this question, which is
as the representative middle class privileged white male in the room, what's the best way
for me to be an ally?
What do you hope for me as I am reflective and thoughtful about this
day?
I don't want allies. I want humans. That's really what it amounts to. Be a human being.
I think if we just treated everyone like human beings and understood that, you know, our
history is complicated, our relationships are complicated.
But going back to Brother Martin, let's talk and judge people not by the color of their
skin but by the content of their character.
And let's do that on all sides of the equation.
I'd like to add one more thing as a different answer to your question.
I still, I don't want allies. I want humans,
but it's something that I encourage us all to do. It is to be fearless. And it's hard
because again, and now I am straying outside the wing of a cyber professional here as I have this conversation.
But in this case, I do believe it needs to be said.
There has been a retaliatory nature within the administration.
An executive order that targets specific law firms or a specific human being for doing his job.
You know, it's created a fear within if I speak up or I show up.
Now, oh my God, what's going to happen is created fear in some of the
organizations that I have affiliated with who are either being quiet or adjusting
some of what they do within the environment because they're fearful of losing business
or having the full weight of the government potentially come out against them.
So I understand it's easy at someone at my end of my career, at this point in my life, to
say, be fearless.
But that level of fearlessness is how we will succeed. And if you're being factual as you are being fearless, you don't contribute to the noise
engine and you force people to think.
And you remind yourself that there are other fearless individuals out there.
And again, this is beyond cyber and I admit that freely to your listeners, and it reflects
my personal feelings.
I'm an FCI.
I'm a West Point grad.
I went to the No Kings Rally rather than celebrate the 250th anniversary of the service that
I was in with a lot of other old Army guys as well.
We were all there and it was surprising and I was actually west of
Greater Phoenix. I wasn't even one of the main rallies. And as my wife and I were
heading there, there was that, you know, even if it's only two or three of us
we're going to show up and we're going to represent because there's that feeling
of isolation because everybody is being quiet quiet that you are the only ones out there.
You are the only ones who feel this way.
And when I say West of Phoenix, but there were quite literally thousands of
people lining the street for two hours before the sun broke triple digits,
but still damn hot out there first thing in the morning and tons and tons and tons of
people just honking their horns and waving signs.
It was a reminder that you're not alone. So I urge not only in the larger context,
in terms of to answer your question, David,
to be fearless, but Maria, to your comment earlier
regarding being the only person there,
I've had conversations with folks that say,
I don't want to take gigs because no one looks like me
and my response has been very, very angry.
How the hell is it going to change if you don't show up?
Somebody has got to be the first person through the door.
And if you're given that opportunity, I'm not saying it's going to be easy, but be fearless.
It's the only way things continue to evolve and get better.
Back off the soapbox, last time.
I'm giving you snaps.
If we go.
We're gonna close today with a special bit of poetry here.
And Maria, this comes from the T-minus podcast.
Can you tee this up for us?
What are we gonna hear here?
Yeah, so this is Dr. Sian Proctor, and she is an astronaut who was on the
Inspiration4 mission a few years ago, not that long ago. And I got to interview her
in person, which was, I think, my first in-person astronaut interview earlier this
year. And I asked her to recite the poem that she wrote that was basically what
got her on this mission.
I didn't actually know what was in the poem, so it was kind of a surprise.
It was a beautiful surprise.
And so she recited it for me, and here it is.
Fantastic.
This is Space to Inspire, the poem that won me a seat to space.
You've got space. I've got space. We all have space to inspire. That's why we dream of going
higher and higher. But what is space if you can't breathe? Let's stop sucking out
the air of our humanity. We have a moment to seize the light. Earth from space, both day and night.
We have J for justice, to ignite the bold.
We have E for equity, to cut past the old.
We have D for diversity, to end the fight.
We have I for inclusion, to try to make it right.
A Jedi space to rally behind. A universal force so make it right. A Jedi space to rally behind,
a universal force so big it binds.
Inspiration to change the world,
a new beginning for us to hold.
It's not about you, it's not about me,
it's about space to inspire for all of humanity.
Science, technology, technology,
engineering and math, sending us out on the explorers path.
But don't forget the arts, the heartbeat of time.
Consider sending a poet who knows how to rhyme.
So let us drop the mic and close the capsule door,
but please make sure Dr. Proctor is on board.
My space to inspire is what we need inspiration for for all of humanity.
That is beautiful.
She's an amazing person.
And the sad part is I was just linked with her by Jennifer, one of the producers, because
she lives here in Phoenix.
Oh, that's all I did not know that.
She's amazing.
I'm sure you guys will have some fascinating conversations and I'd love to be a fly on
the wall for them.
You should come on out.
You should come on out in October.
It's 110 today.
Don't come out today.
Yeah, I was going to say, not this's 110 days. I'll come out today.
Not this time of year.
I'll melt in a New England-y pile of goo.
I was really moved by her poem.
I didn't know what was in it because I had never heard it before.
So her just reciting it from memory was very powerful.
But we were in the context of, I think, a lot of the cuts at NASA.
And this is earlier this year.
A lot of the stuff that Doja was doing had just started happening,
and we started seeing a lot of biographies
of basically non-white male astronauts
getting cut from a lot of websites.
It was a very emotionally charged time for a lot of us,
and she was fearless in what she was saying,
and I respect the hell out of her for
that, honestly.
Alright, well Kim Jones is host of the CISO Perspectives podcast right here on the N2K
Cyberwire Network and Maria Vermas is host of the T-Minus Space Daily podcast.
Thank you so much for taking the time.
This was time well spent and I very much enjoyed it.
So thank you all
and thank you everyone for listening. We will see you back here again soon. Take care.