Navy Unmanned Aviation and Strike Weapons Office


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Without comment, just thought folks would be fascinated by the office’s logo, as noted by Spencer Ackerman today.

RI Beach Towns Fare Better Than Business Rankings


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The editors of Yankee Magazine are free to disagree but Block Island is the best beach town this side of Hawaii. (Photo by Bob Plain)

So CNBC thinks Rhode Island is a rotten place to do business … well at least Yankee Magazine recognized that the Ocean State has some of the coolest coastal communities in the region. In its annual ranking of the best beach towns in New England, editors ranked five Rhode Island municipalities among the 25 best in New England.

Newport and Block Island, ranked fourth and fifth respectively, were the top local towns. Watch Hill squeaked into the top 10 and Narragansett was named number 15. Little Compton, 21. It’s hard to argue with many of the towns the esteemed editorial staff included, but Jamestown and Charlestown – and maybe even South Kingstown – certainly deserved spots as well.

Here’s the full list, with my commentary in italics:

  1. Ogunquit, Maine: The water is way too cold to be the best beach town in New England. Sorry, Maine but stick to lobsters.
  2. Provincetown, Massachusetts The queer capital of New England!
  3. Nantucket, Massachusetts Beach towns should be accessible and egalitarian, not ritzy and rarefied.
  4. Newport, Rhode Island The nightlife more than makes up for the red tide, but as a point of fact many of the best beaches are in Middletown.
  5. Block Island, Rhode Island God made this patch of sand some 13 miles off the coast of the Ocean State to cater to beach bums. It is not only the best beach town in New England, it is the best beach town this side of Hawaii. Take that Santa Cruz and Laguna Beach.
  6. Edgartown, Massachusetts The set of the mythical Amity Island in Jaws.
  7. Kennebunkport, Maine No beach is worth risking potentially seeing George W. Bush sunbathing.
  8. Rockport, Massachusetts I feel like the Yankee Magazine felt like they had to include a North Shore community in the top 10, but I’ll know more after my cousins vacation here this summer.
  9. Chatham, Massachusetts How can you argue with where Sandra Day O’Connor spends her summers?
  10. Watch Hill, Rhode Island When I die, I’m certain that downtown heaven will resemble Watch Hill, Rhode Island.
  11. York Beach, Maine The saltwater taffy capital of New England, and everyone knows the Cape Neddick Lighthouse.
  12. Falmouth, Massachusetts Woods Hole, the southwestern most point of Cape Cod.
  13. Wellfleet, Massachusetts Famous for its oysters, some 70 percent of this town is protected parkland.
  14. Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts
  15. Narragansett, Rhode Island Imagine how high Narragansett would rank if it wasn’t the site of one of this state’s greatest ever waterfront redevelopment projects…
  16. Newburyport, Massachusetts More of a little beach city than a beach town.
  17. Orleans, Massachusetts Best place on the inner arm.
  18. Ipswich, Massachusetts John Updike and Dennis Eckersley called this sort-of suburban beach town home.
  19. Madison, Connecticut They had to give Connecticut at least one slot, I suppose.
  20. Old Orchard Beach, Maine Where Portland goes to play.
  21. Little Compton, Rhode Island What Vermont would be like if it had beaches and billionaires. 
  22. Plymouth, Massachusetts I’ll take Scituate or Marshfield over Plymouth in the summer. November, on the other hand…
  23. Hampton Beach, New Hampshire The Coney Island of New England. Pretty fun here.
  24. Hull, Massachusetts Best beaches near Boston.
  25. Brewster, Massachusetts Yeah, we get it … Yankee Magazine really likes Cape Cod…

Just as they do in education metrics, Massachusetts cleaned our clock; the Bay State claimed 14 of the top 25 spots. On the other hand the tiny Ocean State eked out second place from the comparatively giant Vacationland; Maine took only four of the slots.

But why compare beach communities to business climates? They are both important components of our economic success, but as a culture we spend far too much time bemoaning the latter and not nearly enough capitalizing on the former. It is our tourist towns that endow Rhode Island with much of its fantastic quality of life and while they may not garner much attention at the State House or in stump speeches, our beaches and coastal communities are the best tool we have at our disposal to attract either new businesses and/or residents. To that end, beach towns can be said to be the Ocean State’s strongest economic asset.

Taveras Impresses Even Conservative EG Rotary


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras at Netroots Nation. (Photo by Bob Plain)

At first blush one might guess the East Greenwich Rotary Club wouldn’t be the easiest audience for a progressive mayor of Providence to impress. But this, remember, is Angel Taveras, and I’ve honestly never known a politician with such a gift to win over various constituencies and to influence positive outcomes.

Angel inherited a cash-strapped city and handled it by getting the three-headed hydra of Providence politics – taxpayers, public sector unions and tax-exempt non-profits – to fork over their hard-earned money almost without so much as a debate. He also negotiated a peaceful and mutually beneficial outcome with the local Occupy crowd, a feat I believe to be unmatched in America.

Last week, he traveled downstate to the most conservative town around to talk to a group of business-backing Rotarians, and how do they greet him?

“You should run for governor!” he was told, according to East Greenwich Patch.

It’s easy to understand why Angel is so popular … he’s got an uncanny ability to level with both friends and foes, to tackle problems head-on and to date he’s proven he’s utterly unafraid of reaching consensus on any issue regardless of where a solution may fall on the political spectrum. That is exactly the set of skills Rhode Island needs most in a statewide leader.

He even explained to the group why it is that folks in East Greenwich ought to care more about the plight of Providence:

“We’re all co-dependent … Providence is the heart of the state. If your heart’s not healthy, the rest of your body isn’t. We’re all in this thing together.”

Taveras has already done wonders in healing the state’s heart … here’s hoping he the EG Rotarians, and many others, will get their wish and Angel will apply his considerable political acumen to the rest of the state via a run for governor in 2014.

Progress Report: Barrington Balks on Bag Ban; Sheldon and the P Triple C; ‘Romney Can’t Win but Obama Can Lose’


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Sunset near the Cranston/Scituate border. (Photo courtesy of @Piz816)

Barrington balked a bit in its bid to ban plastic bags last night. The Projo reports that last night “a divided council authorized the town solicitor to draft an ordinance on the use of plastic bags but was unable to define exactly what that measure would say.”

The Council will hold a workshop sometime in August to discuss the ramifications of asking people to supply their own grocery bags – here’s a cheat sheet on how that debate will go down: the environment will be a lot better off and CVS will make a tiny bit less money.

Speaking of recycling, Bradley Campell of RIPR delves deep into how the recycling process works in Rhode Island.

WPRI gives Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee some love … the PCCC called Sheldon “a rising progressive star” in an email it sent out yesterday that Ted Nesi turned around into a pretty informative post. Me, I’m not really sure how much higher his progressive star can rise … he’s introduced the best bills in Congress this year and he seems perpetually willing to stick up for the middle class. Sheldon is the number one star of the progressive movement in America.

A rising star would be more like Darcy Burner, from Seattle. Watch this woman, as she is sure to make some political waves in her career.

By the way, I want RI’s junior senator to start a giant funk band called Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. Sheldon and the P Triple C, for short.

Add Projo columnist Ed Fitzpatrick to the list of journalists to take issue with Anthony Gemma’s unbelievable social networking prowess.

Hitchcock himself would have a hard time scripting a scarier trip abroad than what Mitt Romney just pulled off. He managed to make enemies with England, of all countries, before running roughshod like a bull in a china shop over one of the most delicate political situations on the planet. but Chris Cilliza of the WaPo wonders if it matters.

In his post, he quotes prominent Republican Ed Rogers who sums up everything you need to know about the presidential campaign this year: “Let’s face it,” Rogers said. “Romney can’t win, but Obama can lose.”

Olympic #Twidiocy


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NBC has rightly earned some ink deriding its coverage of the Olympics so far (even as it breaks viewing records). But people on Twitter have been the fiercest critics of the National Broadcasting Company, attacking it again and again as the network stumbles to walk a fine line between pleasing their advertisers and dealing with the fact that the whole world can find out what’s going on on the web or from 24-hour news.

For instance, I checked Twitter on Friday and discovered all the secrets of the Olympic opening ceremony; Daniel Craig’s entrance, the NHS celebration, that some MP had complained about all the “multicultural crap”, that there was a tribute to British terrorism victims, etc. See, I follow a few British accounts, and they were reacting in real-time. Since I’m not particularly excited about the Olympics, I just assumed I was missing the opening ceremony and got on with my life.

Until it got to be about prime time, and NBC decided to finally show it in America. It was an eery experience, one made really goddamn annoying by Matt Lauer and Meredith Viera attempting to outdo each other with inane commentary. While we here in Rhode Island experienced the global event with only a three-hour delay, in California there was a six-hour delay. Naturally, quite a few people were pissed off, and made their displeasure felt; with such Twitter trends as #NBCfail, “Shut Up, Matt Lauer” and #Costasfacts (named for Bob Costas’ wonderful additions like reminding everyone that Uganda was once ruled by Idi Amin—as though everyone didn’t already know; thanks Last King of Scotland).

It wasn’t any better on Saturday, because by 3:00 PM anyone with access to the Internet and paying attention knew that the US beat South Korea, that Ryan Lochte took gold and Michael Phelps finished fourth, and that Elizabeth Beisel had taken silver. But instead airing all of that live, as it happened, NBC decided they would rather show that after 8:00 PM. Keep in mind, prior to 8:00 PM, NBC Nightly News reported those results anyways. You could’ve watched it online (assuming you subscribe to cable) or on your smartphone, but those two things were down most of the day as people tried to do exactly that.

I can understand why NBC would want to put high profile events on after 8:00 PM. That’s actually reasonably convenient. However, in this modern era, there’s absolutely no reason you can’t broadcast things live first, and then broadcast them again at a more convenient time.

Photo courtesy of Mashable

There’s also absolutely no reason, if you have three hour time delay, to be an idiot and not look up who Tim Berners-Lee is (he’s the inventor of the World Wide Web). But instead of doing that, NBC decided to treat America to Meredith Viera going “if you don’t know who he is, well, we don’t either.” Or now, just on Monday night, NBC had its own commercial spoil the information that it’s withholding. This kind of idiocy isn’t forgivable.

Neither is what NBC did to The Independent’s Guy Adams; getting Twitter to suspend his account because he was criticizing them. Deadspin (linked above) has the best summation, but essentially, Mr. Adams posted a corporate email to an NBC’s Olympics executive. Even though the email account is public and corporate, upon prompting from NBC (which Twitter has partnered with to provide real-time coverage of the Olympics—irony!), Twitter decided to suspend the account due to a policy which bans sharing personal and private emails!

Somehow, you’d think Twitter, which has watched similar stories play out countless times on its own service, would know better. That NBC is a domineering jerk isn’t surprising, given the way it’s behaved. But Twitter, seriously, this is like a Facebook-style move. Guess that’s been working out though; treat your customers like garbage and somehow profit.

Anyway, at this point, it seems like the only thing on television with a greater time delay than the Olympics on NBC is HBO’s The Newsroom. And it’s also garbage.

Doherty Disses DISCLOSE Act, Backs Citizens United


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Brendan Doherty

I don’t know what’s worse for Rhode Island: that Republican congressional candidate Brendan Doherty is so conservative that he doesn’t support legislation that would help bring a bit of transparency to political advertisements or that he actually takes money from Citizens United, the namesake of one of the worst Supreme Court decisions ever and the worst thing to ever happen to campaign finance.

Unfortunately for Rhode Islanders, we don’t get a choice as both are true.

“It’s much worse than we thought,” said Bill Fischer, a spokesman for the state Democratic Party, in an email press release. “Standing with Citizens United is disturbing enough, but to also publicly pronounce your opposition to basic campaign finance reform is simply alarming. Brendan Doherty has bought into Citizens United’s mission hook, line and sinker, all for the lowly price of $10,000 and he’s indicated that he is standing with the more extreme flanks of the Republican Party, another sign he is far removed from the political positions of most Rhode Islanders.”

Doherty has been trying to parse himself as a moderate Republican. But his continued opposition to health care reform and his anti-working class and anti-women positions make this harder and harder to believe … now that we know he doesn’t even support the DISCLOSE Act, maybe he doesn’t even support the American people’s right to know who is paying for the propaganda they are watching on TV.

“Doherty’s ‘I’m a moderate’ position is about as thin as an outdoor skating rink in the Mojave Desert,” added Fischer. “The more Mr. Doherty talks frankly about the issues, the more voters of the First Congressional District are going to find out Brendan is a conservative in moderate’s clothing.”

Viola Davis Shills for Charter Management Model


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Education expert Diane Ravitch is right to be disappointed in Rhode Island’s best known former public school student Viola Davis.

Both RI Future and Ravitch both wrote about parent trigger laws this morning, ALEC model legislation that allows parents to privatize public schools – here’s Ravitch’s piece and here’s Russ Conway’s. Ravitch notes that RI’s own Viola Davis, famous around the country for almost winning an Oscar and famous here in Rhode Island for growing up in Central Falls, will star in a new propaganda film about parent trigger laws.

Here’s what Ravitch writes about Davis:

It’s sad to see Viola Davis involved in this sneaky push for privatization. I remember when she won the Academy Award in 2010 and announced that she was proud to be a graduate of Central Falls High School, right at the time that all the corporate reformers were gloating about the threat to shut it down.

It should come as little surprise though that DAvis is shilling for the corporate education model … earlier this month even more famous Hollywood actor Meryl Streep, who beat out Davis for the Best Actress Academy Award, recent gave a grand total of $15,000 to the Segue charter school in the runner-ups hometown of Central Falls. According to the Projo, Davis “had introduced Streep to Segue and mentioned that the school was in dire need of a new building.”

Progress Report: Plastic Bag Ban in Barrington; Projo on Gemma, Social Networking, GoLocal Goes for Local Sports


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

When the American autopsy is finalized, it could turn out that the little things finally nail our culture’s coffin shut. Mr. Coffee machines, ATM cards, electric can openers and plastic grocery bags are potentially far more nefarious than factory farming, too big too fail banks, food-borne illness and the mountains of non-biodegradable garbage we’ve created.

Probably not, but good for the Barrington Town Council in any case for taking on what in the future will seem like a real no-brainer: banning plastic grocery bags. The Council could vote on the proposal at a meeting tonight, according to ecoRI.

It was the invisible hand of the marketplace that gave us this non-biodegradable form of temporary storage and long-term pollution and it’s right that the public sector step in and help to encourage more wise use of our resources.

Though, as the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity humorously points out: “the American Progressive Bag Alliance spokeswoman argues, ‘Paper bags are worse for the earth.'” Who is the American Progressive Bag Alliance, you may ask (because the local right-wing propaganda machine sure didn’t tell you?) They represent the plastic bag industry, of course…

Here’s a tip for translating Orwellian language in politics: when you hear someone talk about freedom and prosperity, they probably aren’t talking about your freedom, or your prosperity.

The Projo finally covers Anthony Gemma’s fake Twitter followers and Facebook friends in its print edition. We liked its web version better in which they credited RI Future with breaking this story way back in March. But then again, we didn’t mention that they actually took on the same issue in the last election … though they reported then there was no way to prove or disprove Gemma’s outlandish claims about his social networking prowess…

Also in the Projo’s Political Scene piece this week: they mention again about all the legislators who are declining raises. About Rep. Scott Guthrie, they write, “As recently reported here, Berman tells Political Scene that there is just one lawmaker, Rep. Scott Guthrie, D-Coventry, who accepts no legislative pay.” Interesting choice of words given that the Projo was beat on this story by at least two Rhode Island news organizations. Maybe it should read: as reported here more recently than elsewhere…

Speaking of the local daily being behind the curve … Ian Donnis reports that the Projo (which I should note I actually love dearly and is easily one of my all-time favorite newspaper) is now encouraging its reporters to take advantage of social media. I hear they are also suggesting reporters use laptops rather than tele-type machines and drive automobiles to assignments rather than traveling by horseback…

Ian’s right, there are no shortage of Projo reporters who are fun to follow on Twitter … one he left off, IMHO, is education reporter Jennifer Jordan. Personally, I’m looking forward to more of the paper’s staff to join the fun on Twitter (did anyone hear the rumor that Apple is considering buying Twitter, btw?) especially members of the editorially board – the state’s paper of record ought to have someone on the left who can to counterbalance conservative Ed Achorn. If its interest is in fostering a healthy marketplace of ideas that is…

Anyone notice that GoLocalProv seems to be making a big move into local sports coverage? say what you will about publisher Josh Fenton, and he and I have certainly had our disagreements (or, more accurately, he’s threatened to sue me!!) but he is a tremendously bright businessman and he seems to be the first to take advantage of the lack of local sports coverage.  Nice work id’ing another info niche, Josh … and thanks GoLocal for naming my brother-in-law Steve King, a former Henricken, Brown U. and NHL hockey player as one of the best athletes in West Bay history.

Speaking of props for the Plain/King clan … thanks also to Ted Nesi for giving a nice shout-out to our daily Progress Report this weekend … Likewise, Ted’s Saturday Morning Post is a great place to gather what he calls scooplets. For example, this weekend he informed his readers that Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick could end up an Obama SCOTUS selection. Also interesting to note … both Ted and I use the “Speaking of…” lede to transition from item to item. Probably we both picked it up from Bill Reynolds’ “For What It’s Worth” column … Reynolds is the godfather of this genre of journalism in Rhode Island and his Saturday morning column gave birth to my love of the written word, reporting and being a local blowhard…

ALEC’s Parent Trigger Laws


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After reading about how ALEC could enter the education debate in Rhode Island, I read this headline with particular interest: “U.S. mayors back parents seizing control of schools.”

Hundreds of mayors from across the United States this weekend called for new laws letting parents seize control of low-performing public schools and fire the teachers, oust the administrators or turn the schools over to private management.

The U.S. Conference of Mayors, meeting in Orlando, Florida, on Saturday unanimously endorsed “parent trigger” laws aimed at bypassing elected school boards and giving parents at the worst public schools the opportunity to band together and force immediate change.

Mayor Taveras, it’s worth noting, is part of the U.S. Conference of Mayors and a member of the Jobs, Education and the Workforce committee.

Parent trigger laws, popular with education budget hawks, allow parents to wrest control of public school from elected officials and either shut them down or outsource operations to a private charter school company. Lately, such laws have caused controversy in California and there’s a new movie about the concept, in the same vain as Waiting for Superman coming out in the near future. The parent trigger act is piece of ALEC model legislation (cached ALEC doc). RI Future correspondent Aaron Regunberg wrote about parent trigger laws this weekend for GoLocalProv.

Giving parents so much control over a school’s destiny is, frankly, nuts, as Diane Ravitch put it. Parents, of course, don’t own the public schools and more than picnickers own Central Park .

A parent trigger — a phrase that is inherently menacing — enables 51 percent of parents in any school to close the school or hand it over to private management. This is inherently a terrible idea. Why should 51 percent of people using a public service have the power to privatize it? Should 51 percent of the people in Central Park on any given day have the power to transfer it to private management? Should 51 percent of those riding a public bus have the power to privatize it?

Public schools don’t belong to the 51 percent of the parents whose children are enrolled this year. They don’t belong to the teachers or administrators. They belong to the public. They were built with public funds. The only legitimate reason to close a neighborhood public school is under-enrollment. If a school is struggling, it needs help from district leaders, not a closure notice.

Let’s hope this idea receives the reception in Rhode Island it deserves.

Save Olympic Basketball from Kobe, Lebron


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With a career record of 54-1, the U.S. Olympic basketball team, a collection of NBA All-Stars, MVPs, scoring champions, and defensive players of the year are poised to dominate yet again.  And yet again I’m bewildered by the media makers who try to capture our attention of this entertaining coronation ceremony where our team often leads by 20 to 30 points… and must struggle with how sporting it is where there is no mercy rule.

They focus on the one loss, a result of slackidaisical street-balling (and perhaps some partying?) in Athens eight years ago… and Spain.  But the Gasol brothers are not “Spaniards” in the lineage of Maximus Decimus Meridius.  They have two NBA starters (and Pao is fading) and two NBA journeymen.  So to give this competition some perspective, I decided to look at USA v. The Entire World (excluding those who are not in London, such as Dwight, D-Wade, and Griffin).

USA’s Top 5 Bench Team  v.  The World’s Best 5:

The USA second unit                    Team World

PG  Michael Westbrook               Tony Parker (FRA)

SG  James Harden                         Manu Ginobili (ARG)

SF  Andre Iguodala                        Luol Deng (GBR)

PF  Carmelo Anthony                   Pau Gasol (ESP)

C  Kevin Love                                  Marc Gasol (ESP)

This is actually a decent match-up, as all ten players are effective scorers in the NBA, with only Iguodala known as a defensive stopper.  Most would consider the Thunder backcourt to have surpassed the hardware-winning Spurs backcourt at this point.  Love and Marc Gasol are an even match, while the merits of both Carmelo and Pau are both in dispute.  So lets look at depth, as every championship team requires 8 or 9 solid players in the rotation.

USA’s Starting 5  v.   The World’s 2nd Best 5:

PG Chris Paul                          Sarunas Jasikevicius (LIT)

SG Kobe Bryant                       Leandro Barbosa (BRA)

SF  Kevin Durant                    Nicolas Batum (FRA)

PF  Lebron James                   Luis Scola (ARG)

C  Tyson Chandler                   Nene (BRA)

Okay, so I left off Deron Williams (PG) and Anthony Davis (PF) on our side, and you want to replace someone with PF’s Varejo (BRA), Kirilenko (RUS), Diaw (FRA), Al-Farouq (NIG), Jianlian (CHI), or perhaps C’s Splitter (BRA), Turiaf (FRA), or Bogut (AUS).  But ultimately, the World has a clear lack of guards, and is bringing out a group of journeymen.  If we fielded a team of Horace Grant, Robert Horry, Kurt Rambis, M.L. Carr, and Tony Fisher… we could talk about all their rings, headbands, and goggles; we would root for them, but they couldn’t beat a pack of Hall of Famers.

The Sporting Solution  

So what to do?  Olympic soccer limits teams to three over-25 players, which wouldn’t change the composition of our Bomb Squad much.  In a sport with 19 year old rookies like Anthony Davis, people like Blake Griffin, Kobe, and Durant get a lot done by age 25.  And if your Big Three are the likes of Kobe, Lebron, and CP3… are you really worried?  (i.e. Miami Heat title tactic).

My Solution: Every four years, the NCAA Champion goes to the Olympics.  This allows the nation to root for a competition once again.  The experience of Gasol Brothers and a few NBA journeymen (the would-be Conquistadors) would match up against teams that have played together for several years in the same system.  It would make March Madness huge every fourth year, and perhaps inspire a few more prospects to stay in college for the chance at a medal.

This year the team would be Kentucky, led by NBA first round picks Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Terrence Jones, and Marquis Teague; and second round picks Darius Miller, and Doron Lamb.  Yes, the entire team was drafted into the NBA.
In 1992, we sent the Dream Team, but we could have sent the Duke squad of Christian Laettner (he did go), Bobby Hurley, Grant Hill, and their team coming off back-to-back NCAA titles.

In 1996, the Kansas team of Paul Pierce, Raef Lafrentz, Scott Pollard, and Jacques Vaughan could have done considerable damage with their post-play and Paul (“I used to be a slasher with ups”) Pierce.  Atlanta would have welcomed this group leading us to gold.  Could they have beaten Vlade Divac, Sasha Danilovic, and some other vitches by nearly 30 like our NBA All Stars did?  Maybe by 10 or 20.

The 2000 Michigan State squad of “Flintstones” (a group predominantly from the downtrodden Flint, MI gave it a Bruce Springsteen underdog feel) was one of my least favorites, but I’ve always disliked the Big Ten in general.  Mateen Cleaves, A.J. Granger, Morris Peterson, and Jason Richardson could likely have donned the Red, White, and Blue and done similar work at the Sidney Olympics.  Could they have beaten the French silver medalists, led by guys who sound like a bunch of poets and philosophers?  Our All Stars won by ten over guys who never sniffed the NBA.  This should have been a sign of how hard the Americans played, or how sorry they felt for the opposition.

The 2004 UCONN team was truly dominant behind Emeka Okafor, Ben Gordon, Charlie Villanueva, and Josh Boone.  If we sent that squad to Athens to face the world, Calhoun would have prepared them well.  Instead, our All Stars lost to Puerto Rico and Lithuania in the prelims, giving up over 90 points to each, and then lost by eight to the Argentinians: Ginobili, Pepe (remember me at Temple!) Sanchez, Scola, Nocioni, and Delfino.  Pepe was the first Argentinian to play in the NBA, and none of these other journeymen, like Pepe, were in the prime of their careers.  Surprise: Lebron, ‘melo, Iverson, Marbury, D-Wade, Bosh, and Duncan couldn’t figure out how to play together.  They certainly didn’t lose for lack of speed, size, or talent.

In 2008 the Kansas squad would be tapped again to go into battle.  Beijing would see Mario Chalmers, Darrell Arthur, Brandon Rush, Darnell Jackson, and Russell Robinson continue the team ball and defensive domination they showed throughout the tournament.  This was the vengeance year, where an embarrassed Lebron, ‘melo. and D-Wade combined with Kobe, Dwight, CP3, Deron, and others to win by an average of thirty points, scoring 118 in the final.  They beat Spain by 11, and never bothered to play defense, as it simply wasn’t needed.  That year, Pau brought the Raptor’s Jose Calderon, his brother Marc (not yet in the NBA), Ricky Rubio (only 17 years old), and Rudy Fernandez (drafted the next year).  Kansas could compete with that.

I’m no Kentucky fan by any stretch of the imagination.  But I would watch every game if they wore Team USA and expect them to be on the medal stand, regardless.  I don’t get anything extra in my life when USA wins a gold, silver, or bronze.  The athletes get their moment, and sometimes I get to witness a record, a miracle, or a tear-jerker.  Watching Kobe and Lebron find a place on their mantles for a gold medal doesn’t serve anything like that.  But hey, maybe its just me, and the rest of you enjoy watching a good ol’ fashion beat down.

Why We Swim Across Narragansett Bay


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Naval Station Newport 2010

The view from NewportNext weekend marks the 36th Annual Save The Bay Swim where some 500 swimmers attempt the 1.7 mile swim from Newport to Jamestown in support of Save the Bay. This will be my 4th year participating (please consider making a donation). The swim this year is taking place on my birthday! I can’t think of a better way to spend it.

Saturday, July 28th
Start – 8:15 AM, Naval Station Newport
Finish – Potters Cove, Jamestown

The event raises hundreds of thousands of dollars and supports an organization important to all Rhode Islanders.

Today, a Bay without Save The Bay could be defined by: a nuclear power plant at Rome Point; a failing municipal sewage treatment plant at Fields Point, dumping millions of gallons of raw sewage into the upper Bay; a 60-ton-per-day sewage sludge incinerator at Fields Point; shores unprotected from oil spills; a large-load container port at Quonset built, in part, by filling 144 acres of the Bay; no marine science in Providence’s public elementary schools; lost salt marshes and historic herring runs; a reputation for being a place where development rules — even when wetlands, shorelines and public access are compromised; eelgrass extinction.

I’ve written on this blog about many of Save The Bay’s important efforts, including the Roger Williams Park ponds restoration and oversight of the polluting special interests along the waterfront.

Save the Bay Swim Start 2011
Photo courtesy Save The Bay

The photo to the right is of last year’s start (I’m in there somewhere). Swimmers affectionately call these starts the “washing machine” where you contend with the flying hands, arms, legs, feet, and bodies of other swimmers. I just call that good fun! My goal again this year is to swim my age in minutes as part of the Jim Mullen Challenge. This challenge honors the memory of Jim Mullen, who participated in the swim for nine years. Jim set a goal each year to complete the swim in the number of minutes that equaled his age or less. Last year I finished in just over 51 minutes so I need to get a little faster, a little older, or both (and hope for flat calm).

For me the swim is both a personal challenge to motivate me in the long winter months in the pool and a way to demonstrate the importance of the Bay for the state and for the health of all Rhode Islanders.

The author, looking a bit winded
Looking a bit winded

WE SWIM because we treasure Narragansett Bay and its watershed as a natural resource.

WE SWIM because we believe environmentally sound management of the Bay is important to our way of life and the economy that supports it.

WE SWIM because it is one thing to say you are “for the environment” but quite another to get involved and dramatically demonstrate that clean water is a public health issue.

Since 1977, the Swim has been a tangible reminder that when Save The Bay speaks, it speaks on behalf of people who care about the Bay in extraordinary ways.

Again, please consider making a donation to support this worthy cause!

Politico Shows Why RI Future Matters


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaSo, Politico’s Steve Friess published a story today about a phenomenon about the Gemma campaign I pointed out on March 20th. I’ve sworn off on saying anything more about Mr. Gemma, I’ll let other writers for RI Future and the rest of Rhode Island’s chattering class cover it

I also want to take the time to give credit elsewhere; I didn’t discover these social media oddities, a friend’s friend did, and I was alerted about it and went digging. Luckily RI Future’s editor, Bob Plain, had already been looking into it as well and provided me the screen shots and the other information he had. It’s a testament to him that he let me run with it.

That highlights that even our master strokes tend to come from elsewhere. Mr. Friess’ story is a brilliant piece of work, taking from my initial piece to picking up on WPRI’s Ted Nesi’s July 19th piece about the now-abandoned Twitter handle @gemma4congress. Mr. Friess has access to social media research that I simply didn’t on March 20th, and couldn’t access today. Now, as a result of the Politico piece, RIPR and even the The Providence Journal has covered the action (in fairness, their PoliFact RI arm had looked into issues about Mr. Gemma’s LinkedIn account last election cycle).

What bothers me is that it took so long for local media like The Journal to pick up on this story. We broke this in March, The Phoenix‘s Phillipe and Jorge mentioned it, WPRO’s Dan Yorke talked with Bob about it soon after, and then nothing until Mr. Nesi got tweeted at by whatever script was operating @gemma4congress (though Twitter was a bit more alive about it in March, if my recollections are correct). Perhaps it was the tone of my piece, or perhaps because Mr. Gemma had not made an official announcement at that point. Perhaps because I was willing to give Twitter the benefit of the doubt then.

Regardless, we broke this in March. It is July now. That’s the kind of news you can expect from RI Future. We cannot be everywhere. None of us get paid to do this. We’re the news that lives like you. Yet what we get is important, it matters. That same ability is going to be applied to the primaries and the general election. It’s going to be applied to races for the General Assembly. We face a lack of resources (I, for instance, commute to work by foot). Yet what we bring you will be strong.

I lacked the ability to take this story all the way; Mr. Nesi pushed it forward, and then Mr. Friess got it to where it is today (by not only providing social media research on Mr. Gemma alone, but doing the due diligence that an amateur like myself wouldn’t think of and looking into the surrounding organizations). It’s great when a small outfit like ours can toss the ball to a stronger outfit and then it gets passed to an even stronger one that can score big, like in a rugby game. Granted, I would’ve loved to have this all in March. But I also would’ve loved if this had happened sooner. It’s 4 months from March to July. RI media could’ve been on this without Politico showing us the way.

But perhaps the timing wasn’t right in March, coming as it did during a news lull; in contrast, shortly after Mr. Nesi mentioned his Twitter run-in with @gemma4congress, news broke about Mitt Romney having suspiciously inflated Twitter numbers. Perhaps that’s what finally made this matter. Oh well, next time, RI media, next time.

Fried Chicken Fundamentalism


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As if there aren’t enough reasons already to dislike a fast food conglomerate that traffics in both factory-farmed fried chicken and, it turns out, wing-nut Christian fundamentalism, Chic-fil-A had to go and give us yet another reason not to want to purchase their product.

The fast food chain restaurant evidently doesn’t believe in equality.

Company CEO Dan Cathy recently told the Baptist Press: “We are very much supportive of the family — the biblical definition of the family unit. We are a family-owned business, a family-led business, and we are married to our first wives. We give God thanks for that.”

It’s really just the latest example of how this creepy company owned by a family of anti-gay religious zealots have crusaded against sexual equality and the LGBTQ community has long organized against the Cathy family business and its bigoted beliefs.

Mayors from some of the nation’s biggest cities, either seeing an opportunity to stick up for equality or a political one, quickly fired back.

Mayor Tom Menino pulled no punches when he wrote to the Cathy:

In recent days, you said Chick-fil-A opposes same-sex marriage and said the generation that supports it has an “arrogant attitude.” Now — incredibly — your company says you are backing out of the same-sex marriage debate. I urge you to back out of your plans to locate in Boston.

You called supporters of gay marriage “prideful.” Here in Boston, to borrow your own words, we are “guilty as charged.” We are indeed full of pride for our support of same sex marriage and our work to expand freedom to all people. We are proud that our state and our city have led the way for the country on equal marriage rights.

I was angry to learn on the heels of your prejudiced statements about your search for a site to locate in Boston. There is no place for discrimination on Boston’s Freedom Trail and no place for your company alongside it. When Massachusetts became the first state in the country to recognize equal marriage rights, I personally stood on City Hall Plaza to greet same sex couples coming here to be married. It would be an insult to them and to our city’s long history of expanding freedom to have a Chick-fil-A across the street from that spot.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel added: “Chick-fil-A’s values are not Chicago values. They’re not respectful of our residents, our neighbors and our family members. And if you’re gonna be part of the Chicago community, you should reflect Chicago values.” A Chicago alderman even went so far as to say he would vote against the eatery in their business application to the city.

Good for these elected officials’ who had the healthy instinct to stick up to such blatant bigotry, but they shouldn’t be trying to beat the Cathy clan at its own game.

Yes, that’s correct … discrimination has long been part of Chick-fil-A’s business model. This from MinnPost:

Few knew that founder Truett Cathy had firm opinions about the personal lives of the owners of Chick-fil-A’s 1,600 franchises and their employees. He preferred them married, and expected adherence to the company’s stated mission to “glorify God.”

“Family members of prospective operators — children, even — are frequently interviewed so Cathy and his family can learn more about job candidates and their relationships at home,” Forbes reported in 2007, when Cathy was 86.

” ‘If a man can’t manage his own life, he can’t manage a business,’ says Cathy, who says he would probably fire an employee or terminate an operator who ‘has been sinful or done something harmful to their family members.’ “

Let’s allow the marketplaces to punish Chick-fil-A. This company is sure to do itself in – its already been busted making fake Facebook profiles to defend itself on social networking sites and a large component of its marketing campaign is misspelling chicken as “chikin.” At least I’ll give the Cathy family the benefit of the doubt and assume the spelling error was on purpose – though with a name like Chick-fil-A, who knows…

We’re lucky there are none here in Rhode Island, so we already can’t put any money in their pockets – but let’s remember this story in case they ever want to locate here. And here’s where the marketplace of ideas can contribute as well: spread the word about this bigoted business or, better yet, spread the word about National Same Sex Kiss Day at Chick-fill-A on Friday August 3.

Since RI doesn’t have a Chick-fil-A maybe we should hold our same sex kiss day outside the state Senate chambers instead … it’s the only local group nearly as opposed to marriage equality…

‘They Bought It’: How RI Is Like Ferris Bueller Parents


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If you are of a certain age “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ is an iconic movie.  Reading about the fretting going on in the media about the latest edition of CNBC “Business Rankings” I can’t help but think about the movies’ opening sequence when Ferris’ parents, thoroughly convinced he is sick (once again) let him stay home from school and as soon as they close the door to his bedroom and are safely out of ear shot he shoots up from under the covers and says:

“They bought it.”

Five years ago, CNBC ranked us 48th in the country.  At the time, our unemployment rate was less than half of what it is today, 5.2% for July of 2007.   In the legislative session that followed, there was a progressive proposal to revamp the tax structure of the state, known as the Economic Growth and Fairness Act of 2008.  I’m not interested in re-arguing those ideas here, what I am interested in is the response to the bill from the corporate class in Rhode Island.  Writing in The Providence Business News, Greater Providence Chamber leaders Laurie White and Ed Cooney specifically referenced the CNBC ranking as a reason to kill the bill.  But more interestingly, they ended their essay with these words:

Protect our jobs. Fight for our ability to compete. Stay the course on tax reform.

I could be snarky and ask “Whose jobs?” but I won’t.  But I will point out the current unemployment rate is 10.9% according to DLT. But it is the “stay the course” line that is intriguing to me for two reasons.

  1.  We have stayed the course.  And it hasn’t worked.

If 5 years ago we were ranked near the bottom in the country we are now at the bottom (again, assuming these lists matter, which I am not willing to concede, but for arguments sake….).  In those 5 years, we have seen the Flat Tax option for high income earners made permanent, cuts to the income tax, two rounds of draconian pension reform to public sector workers including teachers and state employees, an erosion of collective bargaining rights in the public sector, cuts to social services in the state budget, aid to cities and towns in the state budget slashed and slashed again, and the escalation of the property tax cap at the local level thanks to the 3050 law of 2006.

In other words, state mandated austerity for the last five years and our  “Business Climate Ranking” declined.  Now, we can believe the corporate class and say “stay the course” or as more recently stated “give the cure more time to work” or we can wake up to the realization that Ferris isn’t sick…he’s skipping school.

2.     When did Tax Reform Start?

When Ferris says “They bought it”  who is “they” in this case?  The legislature? The Press? Both? Maybe…. you can help decide.  See, the theme in the debate over the proposal in the last legislative session to raise income taxes on the wealthy centered in part on giving recently enacted tax cuts a chance to work.  SOME local media outlets (I won’t link to them, you can find them on your own and decide) fell for the argument hook line and sinker that tax reform just started in 2010.  That’s why when Chamber Lobbyist Kelly Sheridan wrote in The Providence Journal “It would extremely unwise to dismantle the 2010 reform before the first returns are evaluated” it was a theme repeated by members of the legislature AND, unfortunately, members of the media.

But wait a minute: Didn’t the Chamber use the exact same argument in 2008 about letting tax reform take affect so that it can be evaluated before it is changed?  Yes, as we see in the 2008 piece in PBN referenced above.  They also did it in 2009, when there was a strong push to repeal or reform the Flat Tax for high income earners. That is where the line “give the cure time to work” comes from. ( Of course in 2009, we were still ranked in 48th place by CNBC).

Why does it matter?  Because if the Chamber and the powerful corporate special interests are allowed to pull the wool over the media and the politicians eyes every year by saying “hey, we just implemented this last year, let’s give it a shot” most people are good natured enough to say “ well, sure, why not? We’ve got to try SOMETHING.”  Well, we’ve been giving them their shot for the better part of a decade, and if only people would remember that they keep using the same argument that “this time, things will work out” then maybe we won’t fall for the sales job. Again. Maybe?  Hopefully? Hello? Bueller? Bueller? Bueller?

Look, I get it.  Ferris Bueller is an endearing kid.  He’s funny, likeable, smart and in a 1980’s John Hughes movie kind of way showing a safe way to “fight the power.”  But it isn’t real.  And neither is the line of argument put forward by the corporate class in Rhode Island that we need to “stay the course” or “give the cure time to work” on austerity.  Hopefully Rhode Island can turn things around – but we will never do it by continuing to run the same plays and chase ideas that continue to drive out economy deeper into a ditch while enriching those at the top of the economic ladder.  You want a cure that works? We can start by stopping doing the things we know that don’t work.

Progress Report: Well-Being vs. Business Friendly; Barry’s Free PR Scheme Backfires; Go Jamestowners


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Beavertail in Jamestown. (Photo by Bob Plain)

I’m glad Ted Nesi stumbled upon the American Human Development Index, which indicates Rhode Island is the 11th best state as far as “well-being” is measured. It’s a nice contrast to the drone of voices who chime on and on about how unfriendly to business CNBC thinks the Ocean State is.

I haven’t studied it too close but there’s a pretty obvious inverse correlation between the two rankings – states that are more friendly to business tend not to score too high in the well-being rankings, and vice versa. Not that it’s an either/or proposition … but if we’re to invest our shared resources to improve either the Ocean State’s well-being or business friendliness, I know which way I’d vote…

Unfortunately, though, we might not being as well on the well-being scale as this index suggests … or at least there is competing data. A new Kids Count report indicates Rhode Island is 25th nationally for child well-being.

Ed Fitzpatrick on Barry Hinckley’s business plan of running for office to garner free pr: “Hinckley’s message clearly was not an idealistic call to public service. No one is going to confuse his “Free PR” speech with JFK’s “Ask not” speech. If anything, it was cynical. And while we absolutely do need new people and new ideas here in Rhode Island, we definitely do not need people running for public office to benefit themselves, their unions or their businesses. We have too many of those already.”

Hinckley also got some free pr on the national stage … I’m sure this is just what he had in mind.

Congrats to the two Jamestowners who are in DC this week lobbying for new legislation to curb climate change.

Who Protects Our Freedom


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“What do they have supremacy over?”
“…I’m assuming you’re familiar with natural rights? Everyone has a natural right to life, liberty and property. Whether a gov’t exists to suppress those rights doesn’t invalidate them….”

While reviewing the comment thread from a previous post, I came across the comment above. I was thunderstruck. This is an incredibly fatuous statement. Just mind-boggling, really. It displays a nearly-complete ignorance of history and how the real world has worked over the past few thousand years.

OK, let’s start with work. We’ll start here because, let’s face it, most of our time is devoted to working. So let’s say the government completely stays out of all employer-employee relationships. What do we think would happen? For the vast, vast majority of the population, I suspect the 70 hour workweek would come back into fashion. Pay rates would plummet, given the lack of minimum wage standards. Child labor would be acceptable. No pensions, no health care, no vacations, no paid time off, no sick leave. Work or get fired. Don’t work the way management thinks you should? Get fired. Say something against management? Get fired. Economic downturn? Get fired. No OSHA standards. Hurt in an industrial/workplace accident? Get fired. Building catches fire? Die, because the exits are locked to prevent employees from taking unauthorized breaks. Try to unionize? Get fired. Go on strike? Get your head beaten in by management-hired thugs strike-breakers. Then get fired.

What about the free market? Won’t some firms try to compete by offering better conditions? Probably not, because the owners are all colluding. Legally. Anyone of them steps out of line, the other owners retaliate. What about start-ups? Don’t exist, because they’re crushed or bought out by the collusion of existing companies.

Don’t know about you, but those conditions sound pretty repressive. With nary a government repression in sight. How do I know this? Because I’m describing the actual working conditions most people experienced in the 1880s., back when men were free.  Before government started ‘interfering’ with the sacred employer-employee relationship, before government started messing with the sacred right of each individual to enter into a contract.

And no, this wouldn’t happen overnight, but we’d get there. How do I know? Because we’re well on the road already. A lot of this is already happening. In a lot of companies, a 60-hour week is expected. Don’t want to do it? You find yourself with plummeting review ratings until you’re shown the door. IOW, you get fired. Vacation? Sure, you get it, in theory. Just don’t actually try to  take it. If you do, be on email and make the conference calls. Raise? What’s that? Health care? Disappearing. Pension? Please, you’re joking, right? Locked fire escapes? Happened in a chicken-processing plant in Hamlet, NC, in 1991. Yes, 1991, not 1891. A lot of low-end jobs don’t have sick leave. Can’t work because you’re sick? Don’t get paid. Do it too often and you’re fired. Talk union? See the response to resistance to 60-hour week. Payscale? It’s called ‘salary benchmarking’. Companies trade salary info all the time to make sure they’re not overpaying. Overtime pay? Walmart has been caught forcing employees to work after they punch out. IOW, no pay at all, let alone time-and-a-half, as the law states.

OK, some of these things remain pipe-dream fantasies of management, but the list of those is pretty short. We’re not quite back to the 1880s, but we’re getting there, and management will continue to push us in that direction as long as it can.

Believe it or not, much of the time, government is the only thing protecting liberty. Look, some of you need to read some history, like the thousand years between the fall of Rome and 1500 to understand the rise of monarchies. How were monarchies able to gain power over the local feudal nobility? In part, by guaranteeing the freedoms of towns, and their inhabitants. Townspeople and monarch colluded against the local nobles. Because towns had money, the monarchs were able to pay more soldiers than the nobility.

Then read the history from 1500 to the present, to see how individual freedoms came into existence. In case you’ve forgotten, the US government was founded in order to act as a guarantor of individual liberties against the British monarchy. But then, fourscore and 10 years later, with the central government of the US either too far away, too distracted, too weak, or too unwilling to get involved, a new class of ‘feudal nobility’ came into existence right here in the US of A. You can call them “Titans of Industry” or you can call them “Robber Barons”, but the principle is very much the same. And note: ‘baron’ is a term for a local, feudal noble, so the choice of word is apt, and the analogy of these barons to their Mediaeval predecessors is perfectly accurate.

Why do the “Titans of Industry” hate big government? Because it’s the only entity that can stand up to them. The people are powerless on their own. The government is the only agent that can protect the liberties of the individual. The idea that the market will discipline them is Econ 101 fantasy. Sure, it’s supposed to happen, but it doesn’t. Not until some entity (i.e. government) steps in and forces businesses to respect the rights of the individual.

Without government protections, your precious liberties would disappear, usurped by local tyrants. Why would this happen?  Because, as Thucydides noted 2,400 years ago, “The strong do what they can. The weak suffer what they must.”

So, spare me Libertarian, or Free-Market fantasy. Go read some history. Then go out and work in the real world. When you have some actual experience, then maybe we’ll talk.

Sheldon Rips Cato Flack Over SuperPAC Spending


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His son may be in trouble with him at home, but in Washington D.C. it’s the corporate lobbyists and apologists who have drawn the ire of Senator Sheldon Whitehouse.

At a congressional hearing on Tuesday called “Restoring Our Democracy” which focused on how to make special interests more accountable in the political process, Whitehouse took Ilya Shapiro of the Cato Institute to the proverbial woodshed when he not-at-all-surprisingly suggested that Sheldon’s DISCLOSE Act put too high a burden on SuperPACs.

Watch the video, courtesy of PCCC:

The highlight is when, in talking about a disabled veteran he met recently, Whitehouse put some perspective on the different type of sacrifices expected of Americans to protect our country’s principles.

“We had asked that you man to go to Afghanistan and we sent him down a road that had an improvised explosive devise under it that blew both his legs off,” said the senator. “If we can ask that young man to do that we can ask the Koch brothers to put up with some impolite blogging.”

Contrasting BI Times, Projo Pieces on Island Flights


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A view of the Coast Guard Station on the west side of Block Island. (photo by Bob Plain)

Both the biggest and smallest newspapers in Rhode Island weighed in last week on whether or not the federal government should subsidize private sector flights to Block Island. Interestingly, it was New Shoreham’s paper of record – not the state’s – that thought to make an economic argument on behalf of Rhode Island.

“And why, more than anything else, is RIAC sponsoring Cape Air, a company that started in Massachusetts and now flies all over the globe, over homegrown New England Airlines?,” asked the Block Island Times editorial (reprinted in the ProJo, I should note). It goes on:

Why not give the $900,000 in federal funds, and another $250,000 in state support, to our homestate company, instead? Why not encourage the local airline to fly high? The jobs and money this service would bring should stay with a Rhode Island company.

The New England Airlines crew already know how to handle the tricky island landing strip, already know how to service the Islander airplanes that Cape Air would have to buy to fly here. And they’re here for us, year round, when we’re sick, when we need medications, when the ferry’s not running, when time is of the essence, and when we simply want some Chinese food flown over. They’re a lifeline service, and we need them.

The Projo, on the other hand, makes no economic argument at all. Instead – and I’m not making this up – they say spending $900,000 federal transportation dollars to help a private company succeed in the local marketplace is a good idea because the elite will probably appreciate a way to avoid the “colorful” people who take the ferry.

Seriously, this is their argument. You can read it for yourself here. Or just trust this excerpt as the gist of it:

We suspect that those who fly to Block Island will be considerably less overtly colorful than those on the Block Island Ferry. Indeed, that’s one reason the proposal for service to Block Island from Green sounds so appealing to some folks, especially to the affluent who can afford it. [The] focus was less on locals than on out-of-staters, even if leveraged-buyout specialists planning to build gigantic summer houses might rival people behaving badly on the ferry as threats to Block Island’s allure.

Where to begin with this one…

First, given what has been going on in Rhode Island as of late, the Providence Journal editorial board might want to be more reticent in advocating for the public sector to pick winners in the private sector. Secondly, there are literally at least 900,000 better ways Rhode Island could use $900,000 in transportation dollars than by subsidizing air travel to Block Island.

But the truly abhorrent angle of the Projo’s piece is that the typically-conservative editorial board is actually advocating for economic redistribution – a force it often claims to disdain. The difference is in this case wealth would be being transferred to the elite, rather than the middle class.

While $900,000 in federal transportation dollars might not seem like a lot and few may care how easy or hard it is for the affluent to get to their vacation locale, the difference in these two editorials is worth noting for when the Projo eventually weighs in on an issue that matters to you … how much can we trust their opinion if the tiny little Block Island Times was able to out-think the editorial board of the mighty Providence Journal when it comes to a no-brainer for local business like this issue.

Progress Report: Doherty’s Decision on DISCLOSE Act Driven by Party Politics, Chafee and Narragansetts


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In trying to defend taking a political donation from, of all organizations, Citizens United – famous for the SCOTUS decision but also known for its hit job movie on Hillary Clinton, Brendan Doherty’s campaign says Sheldon Whitehouse’s DISCLOSE Act “clearly is designed to provide an advantage to one side of the political spectrum.”

Wait, what? Really? It is? I’d like to know how, Brendan … Are you trafficking in the lie that unions are exempt from it? Or do you just believe that Republicans benefit more than Democrats when it comes to secret money and shadow messengers in the political process? And if it’s the latter – which is true, by the way, Republicans do benefit more than Democrats from secret money and shadow messengers in politics – why would that affect your support of it? I suppose because Brendan Doherty is already siding with Republicans over Rhode Islanders.

Meet Sam Lovett and Charlie Tsonos … two Democrats vying for one East Providence seat in the state House of Representatives.

Gina Raimondo defends herself and her pension-gutting efforts against Bob Walsh’s boasting that the law is on the side of the retirees whose benefits she slashed … unlike Walsh, Raimondo didn’t offer a prediction, but she did indicate what might be the state’s defense: the pension fund was 48 percent funded and the economy here was bad. Okay, but a judge might not care that you didn’t want to raise taxes on Rhode Island’s richest residents…

This is not how you want your the fancy marriage proposal you planned for your vacation on Block Island to go down.

We’re super happy that Gov Chafee will meet with the Narragansett Indian Tribe, but super bummed that a simple meeting with the gov is the benchmark for victory for native Rhode Islanders. It’s really sad and unfair that, if there is a full-fledged casino in Rhode Island, it won’t be theirs…

And speaking of latent racism … a Romney adviser says President Obama “fully appreciate” America’s “Anglo-Saxon heritage.”

And speaking of Romney … he seems to be pulling a page out of Anthony Gemma’s social networking playbook.

Don’t Make It Worse for Jobless Rhode Islanders


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What’s crazier than a state with 11% unemployment? How about a state with 11% unemployment laying off 57 frontline workers at the Department of Labor and Training, cutting the services the unemployed depend on every day?

Yeah, that’s crazier. Yet that’s exactly what the state is doing, with mass layoffs scheduled to take effect July 28.

If you think this is crazy, too, please join unemployed Rhode Islanders, DLT employees, and other advocates this Wednesday, July 25th at 4 p.m. for an informational picket and press event. Stand with us in front of the Department of Labor and Training (1511 Pontiac Ave., Cranston) to tell our leaders to stop making life even harder for Rhode Islanders struggling with unemployment.

The DLT is already struggling to keep up with the flood of claims and demand for job placement training, and with over 60,000 unemployed Rhode Islanders and the second highest unemployment rate in the country, a deep cut in services will devastate those most hurt by the economic downturn. So please join us Wednesday to ask one simple question:”11%…layoffs…really?”


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