Colleagues, I may be completely wrong here, and if so, excuse me. The discussion around Question 4 reminds me, from my Canadian vantage point, of the early this year U.S. Republican Nominating Conference in which the now U.S. President Elect was opposed by many in the Republican party, and their motto & chant was "Anybody but Trump". That was of course a non-starter since sound strategy says "Who else? Present a contender.". Whether or not jurisdiction should be an issue, immediately post IANA Transition and dealing with those issues is not the time to move it to the top of a "to do" list. The "to do" plate is full, and nothing is obviously broken. Beyond that, there is time for the research around "Where else? Present contender locations.". I used to hear, in the ICANN event hallways, whispers about Geneva, then we got the Olympic and FIFA (football/soccer) organization scandals. What they made clear is that location is less important that organizational transparency and accountability. These are areas where the ICANN multistakeholder constituencies are hard at work, working on ICANN improvements. I may be completely wrong here, but no matter what our individual independent views are about "location and jurisdiction" there is plenty on our "to do" list. That work is relevant no matter where ICANN resides. For those of us who feel that there are jurisdiction and location issues, I would suggest that research, call it due diligence if that sounds more non-academic, be done to identify contenders, and at an appropriate time the existing location and jurisdiction can be evaluated against a list of contenders. Sam Lanfranco NPOC/csih