Here’s Why You Should Vote This November


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The deadline for voter registration is October 11, and this short Vlogbrothers video will hopefully get you in the mood:

If you don’t know Vlogbrothers, that’s unfortunate, but they do a number of cool things, such as this series called “Crash Course” and I’ll link you to their video on Capitalism and Socialism. Rhode Islanders will no doubt laugh about one of these, in light of the Tobon-San Bento race.

I know earlier this year I mentioned how I didn’t bother to vote in the Democratic primary for U.S. President because I thought it didn’t matter this time around (I’m still not convinced). But this pretty much demolishes a lot of the myths and falsities people have towards voting, and I think it’s useful.

Registration form to vote in Rhode Island. Need to be in by October 7th. So do yourself a favor and say “Friday”.

Form to request a mail ballot (which are due by October 16th). Automatic mail ballot application for “permanently disable or incapacitated voter[s]“.  Mail ballot request for the Central Falls special election.

Mike Riley: Columnist Tom Sgouros Is a Communist


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communist, I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn

I gather that Mike Riley’s campaign has decided it won’t comment to RIFuture.  I find this shocking.  Back when I had a column that appeared in the Narragansett Times, Mike Riley was one of my regular correspondents.  As I’m sure you can imagine, much of the mail I received about my column was thoughtful material, the kind of missives that make a writer stop and reconsider his positions due to the unexpected viewpoints and hitherto unknown data points contained in them.  Mike’s were no exception.

Herewith a sample of his fan mail:

Dr Mr Sgouros,
Your recent communist diatribe in the “communist times” revealed a giant gap in your knowledge of pensions and education. You couldn’t be more wrong or more communist. People like you need to be educated in some other country. Preferably Venezuela.
Michael G Riley

Dear Tom Sgouros,
I dont understand why the Narragansett Times prints any of your lunatic ravings.For a look at what a true intellectual might say and a capitalist newspaper might print ,I have attached a recent note from Brian Bishop.
Michael G Riley
Narragansett

Morning Hugo, that article on banks and hedge funds was truly pathetic

That last one is the entire note, except it also had a stirring quote from Friedrich von Hayek indicating that true freedom includes the freedom to make mistakes, even to starve.

Needless to say, his prose style and trenchant observations made him one of my treasured regular correspondents.  His notes to me always arrived addressed to “communist” so I’d know who it was from.  When he announced his run for office, he sent out an invite to join his network on LinkedIn:

communist, I'd like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn
A note to me from Michael Riley

A second, similar, note with a somewhat more traditional salutation arrived shortly after.

One time in 2009, I found myself at an event at a bar in Narragansett that turned out to be in the same plaza as Riley’s office.  I happened to speak there with an acquaintance of his, who offered to go tell him I was in the area, and did.  Sadly, Mike was apparently too busy to come meet me, so I still have never met him in person.

So that’s Mike Riley for you: tolerant of opposing viewpoints, humble about his own, committed to reasoned discussion as the route to moving our polity forward.  I couldn’t be more sincere about my support for him.

Progress Report: Romney False Appeals to Middle Class; True the Vote Update; Taveras v. Raimondo; Mark Binder


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

Presidential challengers almost always prevail over the incumbent in the first debate of the campaign, and to that end Mitt Romney and Barack Obama did not buck tradition as they faced off last night. But winning the Wednesday night battle might may come with some strings attached for the Republican candidate.

Despite his empty rhetoric about trickle down government (a meaningless phrase, by the way) Romney continually invoked the ideals of trickle up economics in his attempt to woo voters. The guy who deplores the 47 percent and thinks corporations are people made overtures to the middle class all night long … if you think anything about a Mitt Romney administration would benefit the middle class rather than the 1 percent, I’ve got some swamp land in Florida to sell you, and I’ll bet Dems use this flip-flop to their advantage throughout the rest of the race.

But that’s just one take … here are a slew of others, none so favorable to the president as mine…

The ProJo gets wise to the shady ways of True the Vote, a tea party-started group that is trying to purge voter rolls.

Ted Nesi on how close the polls show Angel Taveras and Gina Raimondo, the odds-on-favorites to be the next governor of Rhode Island: “they’re exactly tied at 57.9% statewide and exactly tied at 59.3% among Democrats. Raimondo’s approval rating among union households is slightly higher than Taveras’s, but Taveras has a bit more room to grow since fewer voters have a negative opinion of him and more don’t know him at all.”

Frequent RI Future contributor Mark Binder has turned to a former friend of his opponent Gordon Fox to run his campaign, according to GoLocal.

“I’m not going to say there’s a racial angle, but I’m not going to rule it out,” said James Vincent, president of the Providence chapter of the NAACP told the ProJo about embattled RIPTA head Charles Odimgbe’s suspension.

Planned Parenthood and local Dems tied Brendan Doherty to the Republican-fuled war against women. He attended a Women for Doherty event at the Westin, while outside liberal activists held a Women Are Watching counter-event.

Call me crazy, but I don’t think the fact that Claus von Bulow was accused of poisoning his wife in a Newport mansion necessarily makes it a more desirable place to own.

In the name of all things sacred in New England, please let Curt Schilling keep his bloody sock.

On this day in 1970, Janis Joplin died way too young … how can you not love a woman who sings with this much soul

Why High Stakes Tests Shouldn’t Grade Students


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A broad coalition of education activists and defenders of the less fortunate will attend the Board of Regents meeting tonight to ask the public education oversight committee to reconsider a new rule that would require high school students to pass a standardized test – traditionally used for grading school performance, not student – in order to graduate.

“The proposed revisions have been described to the public as an abandonment of the universally decried three-tier diploma system,” said a letter sent to the Regents by the coalition. “However, the public is largely unaware that they propose to substitute a two-tier system through a Regent’s endorsement which would, for all intents and purposes, yet again effectively label as ‘not proficient’ those students with unendorsed diplomas based on their standardized testing score.”

The letter goes on to read:

According to 2010 NECAP scores, this group would once again include the overwhelming majority of students who are non-white, poor, have disabilities or are English language learners.

Given the significance of these changes and their potential impact on the most vulnerable youth of Rhode Island, it is critical that the public have further opportunity to comment on the new proposal through public hearings so that the intended and unintended consequences of these regulations are fully understood and addressed.

Writing in GoLocalProv, Aaron Regunberg describes why using high-stakes testing for a graduation requirement is such a bad idea:

Last year, 71% of African American students and 70% of Latino students in Rhode Island scored less than partially proficient on one of the NECAP tests and so would not have graduated. And the effects would have been even more serious among other student subgroups—86% of students with IEPs (special education students) and a full 94% of students with Current Limited English Proficiencies would have failed to graduate. It should be clear to most readers that any regulation that puts this many students at risk for failure to graduate is beyond unfair. It puts the entire weight of educational accountability and responsibility on the shoulders of individual students, many of whom have been academically underserved since elementary school and have not been provided with the resources necessary to address their weaknesses in test-taking.

And Providence Business News reported recently that the gap between the haves and the have-nots in high-stakes testing results is increasing:

While the statewide proficiency improved, the NECAP results showed that achievement gaps separating many groups of students widened. Gaps between black and white students, Hispanic and white students, English and non-English learners and the gaps between economically disadvantaged students and non-economically disadvantaged students widened at all three grade levels.

“Although I am pleased by the statewide improvements on the 2012 NECAP Science assessments, the persistent achievement gaps across all grade levels remain a significant concern that we will work to address,” David V. Abbott, acting commissioner of elementary and secondary education, said in prepared remarks.

The Regents meet today at 4 p.m. at the Department of Education headquarters at 255 Westminster Street in room 501.