Athiest ‘Found Common Ground with Religion’

Author Chris Stedman will speak at Bryant University at 7PM on Wednesday, November 28. Copies of his book, “Faitheist: How an Atheist Found Common Ground with the Religious” will be available for sale, with proceeds going to benefit Habitat for Humanity of Rhode Island-Greater Providence. The event, co-sponsored by Humanists of Rhode Island  will be held in the Bryant Interfaith Center. The public is cordially invited to attend.

Having endured intolerance as a gay Christian and then as an atheist interfaith activist, Stedman now argues for respectful dialogue between atheists and believers and cooperation in social action between secular and interfaith communities. He is the Assistant Humanist Chaplain at Harvard University, Values in Action Coordinator at the Humanist Community at Harvard and author of “Non-Prophet Status,”  a blog dedicated to atheist-interfaith engagement.

Stedman earned his MA in Religion from the University of Chicago and served on the Leadership Team of the Common Ground Campaign, a response to anti-Muslim rhetoric and violence surrounding the Park51 controversy. He also served as a Content Developer for the Interfaith Youth Corps and now sits on the Board of Directors of the interfaith global development organization World Faith and advises the “Challenge the Gap” charitable initiative of the Foundation Beyond Belief.

The Bryant University campus is located at 1500 Douglas Pike in Smithfield, RI. Campus sponsors include Literary and Cultural Studies, History and Social Sciences, Applied Psychology, the Women’s Center, the College of Arts and Sciences and the Interfaith Center.

RI – What Went Wrong: Tax Cuts for the Affluent


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In the previous installment I discussed the devastation wrought by massive austerity, which was the principle cause of Rhode Island’s terrible jobs picture.  The traditional justification from austerity apologists is that those public sector cuts were necessary, and Rhode Island was forced to make those layoffs. Of course, this argument makes no sense in Rhode Island not just because the cutbacks began before the second Bush recession but also because the government found the money for a huge income tax cut for the rich, cutting the top rate from 9.9% to 5.99%.  This brings me to the subject of today’s column: taxes.

As I noted in the first column, the bottom fell out of the Rhode Island economy in late 2007, nearly a year before the second Bush recession began. Perhaps it is just a curious coincidence that this happened as the effect of the income tax cuts for the wealthy passed in 2006 began to kick in, but I suspect not.  Indeed, there is considerable evidence that it was these tax cuts that triggered the collapse of our economy.

The details of the tax cuts are slightly complicated. The original tax cut passed in 2006 and imposed an alternate flat tax rate that you could choose to pay instead of the traditional tax brackets. This rate started at 8% and fell by 0.5 percentage per year, hitting 6% in 2010, but in 2010, the government overhauled the tax code again in a tax cut aimed primarily at the upper middle class. You can see the three different rate schemes in the graph below.

Rhode Island tax rates before the 2006 flat tax, the rates after the flat tax (the flat tax, which decreased from 8% in 2006 to 6% in 2010, is shown with the 2010 6% rate), and the current tax rates.

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of these tax cuts is that they were pushed largely by Democrats, an act of conservatism that elated the Wall St. Journal’s editorial board.  Although they are often called the Carcieri tax cuts, and he vigorously supported them, much of the impetus came from General Assembly Democrats like Speaker of the House William Murphy (D-West Warwick) and Majority Leader Gordon Fox (D-Providence).  Fox predicted that “this new tax rate, as it did in Massachusetts, is certain to create new jobs, spur economic development, put money back in taxpayers’ pockets, and otherwise bring Rhode Island to a position of twenty-first century economic leadership in the region and, indeed, in the country.”  To say that did not happen is a severe understatement.

Income tax cuts for the wealthy at the national level provide mild, if inefficient, stimulus for the economy because they are offset by increasing the national debt. (Of course, there are much better ways to spend our nation’s money.) At the state level, however, it’s a different story. Because state taxes are deductible from national taxes, which tax the wealthy at a higher marginal rate, state level income tax cuts for the wealthy result in increasing national income taxes. The tax cuts also made it harder for Rhode Island to capture revenue from Rhode Island residents who have income in other states. Because so many wealthy Rhode Islanders work in Massachusetts, this is a serious issue. States can only tax out of state income if their tax rate is higher than the tax rate in the other state. So lowering Rhode Island’s income tax rate for the wealthy results in Rhode Island collecting less revenue from other states and other states collecting more revenue from Rhode Island, on top of sending more taxes to Washington. The net result is a considerable flow of capital out of the state, which is not good for the economy.

The real devastation from income tax cuts for the rich, though, comes from the spending cuts and property tax hikes that offset them.  The previous section discussed the spending cuts, and how they accelerated after the tax cuts.  The next section deals with the property tax hikes.

Drinking Liberally Hosts “Sock It to Homelessness”


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In a fitting follow up to Bob Plain’s five part series  “Homeless Like Me,”  Drinking Liberally Providence will showcase the important work of the RI Coalition for the Homeless tomorrow night, Wednesday November 28 from 7pm – 9pm at Wild Colonial Tavern.  Participants are encouraged to bring new pairs or packages of socks to donate to the Coalition to help their clients as we head into the harsh winter months.

2012 was a powerful and important year for the RI Coalition for the Homeless because of the landmark passage of the Homeless Bill of Rights, the first bill in the nation to prohibit discrimination of individuals and families experiencing homelessness.

Come learn more about the Coalition’s tireless work to end homelessness in Rhode Island at our next DL and help out the homeless by donating pairs of socks or making cash or check donations to help those most in need as we head into the winter months. Donations may also be made online at www.rihomeless.org.

Drinking Liberally organizers also encourage participants to not only bring sock donations but to wear their own liberal statement socks with loads of flair. There may even be a prize for most creative sock.  Let us know you’re coming by joining our Facebook event. 
What: Sock It to Homelessness with DL PVD
When: November 28 7-9 pm
Where: Wild Colonial, 250 South Water St, PVD
Why: To celebrate the RI Homeless Bill of Rights & to help constituents in desperate need of socks to keep warm this winter

Are We Getting Worked Up Over the Tree Again?


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1987 Rockefeller Center Tree (via Wikimedia Commons, © by James G. Howes, 1987.)

It seems there’s nothing we enjoy more than a good ol’ fashioned religion in the public square debate here in Rhode Island. And, once again, WPRO has come for The Tree. Due to the un-Christian manner in which so-called “Christians” behaved last time, Governor Lincoln Chafee has declined to host a tree lighting ceremony.* I think this is sort of lesson: if you want something to continue, don’t behave like jerks during it.

Personally, I’m weary of the whole damn thing. Okay, obviously, it’s a Christmas tree. People ain’t exactly throwing fir trees up to celebrate the Fourth of July. But the whole issue is surreal. John DePetro crashes the 2011 lighting singing “O Christmas Tree”, not realizing that the song itself is a repackaging of a completely secular song, “O Tannenbaum” (lit. “O Fir Tree”). “Keep Christ in Christmas” they say, but no one is complaining that the word “holiday” has ceased to mean “holy day” and instead just refers to any old day off.

Secularization isn’t just something you can use when it’s convenient. It’s not alright to declare a crucifix a perfectly secular monument to the dead of all creeds, but say that a tree can’t stand in for the celebration of a host of religions. The doublethink here is astounding.

A fir tree by any other name would smell as sweet. I’m sure that Mr. DePetro and his adherents would be horrified to learn that in Russia the tree was almost completely secularized under the Soviets. Laugh to yourself at the idea of these folks crowning their trees with the Red Star of communism for Novy God. But there you go, a symbol depends on the eye of the beholder. I mean, the Vatican didn’t even have a tree until 1982.

Here’s the great thing about Christmas; even an atheist like me can celebrate it (and atheists & non-Christians have been for years). Some people hate the stress of the Christmas season, but the whole idea of it has really affected American culture. There was a good point made by Hank Green of the Vlogbrothers about the holiday shopping season; yeah, it’s sort of symbol of rampant consumerism; but can you really get angry at people for wanting to go out and buy gifts for people?

This is the most altruistic part of the year, between Thanksgiving and Christmas. People get all dopey and cheery, all the music starts to be happy and kind of sappy. I mean, people get annoyed because things are too nice. That’s a pretty sweet problem to have.

I kind of don’t want to end this with a downer thought, but here it is: maybe conservatives are losing because they get worked up about things like what a tree is called and not worked up at all when someone says something terrible about rape, the poor, or anyone not white. Sweating the small stuff, ignoring the big stuff.

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*Update: It was announced that Governor Chafee will in fact continue with the tree lighting as normal, and the tree will remain a “Holiday Tree”.

Will DePetro, Tobin Incite Holiday Hate This Season


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I’m a little disappointed that Gov. Chafee is attempting to sidestep a skirmish with John DePetro and Bishop Tobin. Call it a holiday tree and let these two continue to alienate themselves from mainstream Rhode Island by acting like dogmatic religious bullies out of touch with the concept of equality.

Last year, Tobin likened Chafee to the innkeeper who turned away Jesus’ parents. A more apt historical comparison would be to say that Tobin and DePetro acted like the Romans who sentenced and tortured Jesus to death.

As a practical and reasonable matter – which of course has nothing to do with what DePetro and Tobin do and say – of course the public sector should call such decorations holiday trees rather than Christmas trees. There’s no church/state separation issue, but one term honors that American value and the other doesn’t. Perhaps more importantly, one term is more inherently more inclusive than the other.

What in God’s name is wrong with the Catholic Church when its highest local official chastises the governor for being inclusive! Catholicism in Rhode Island is fast becoming famous for its aversion to inclusion. No one is flocking to the church because it doesn’t respect gay people or other people’s beliefs. God bless the Church for all the good it does, but this crap is sinking it like a stone.

Catholicism, if it wants to survive, should recruit a spokesman more like Daniel Berrigan – who, by the way, used to summer on Block Island – and less like John DePetro, who’s the meanest person in our marketplace of ideas.

Check out his latest column; the only time he takes a break from being bigot is to pick on the governor’s teenage son. This, folks, is not to be confused with political commentary!! On the day before Thanksgiving, he used his radio show to chide poor people for using food stamps to buy a holiday meal. This is stuff that would make Scrooge blush.

We reported in August that the first time he allegedly “propositioned a co-worker who filed a sexual harassment suit against him was in a bus on the way to a rally to defend Christmas at the State House.” Yep, this is Christmas’ unofficial spokesperson in Rhode Island. Good luck with that one, Christmas…

But God bless DePetro too, for he is also the loudest voice for the local conservative movement too, making him the best tool progressives have in their political tool belt these days.

Every time he tries to incite a culture war, he further alienates the local conservative movement from mainstream Rhode Island. Even Don Carcieri, another fiscally-conservative Catholic from East Greenwich, was wise enough to call it a holiday tree and move on.

Far from being frustrated with him, partisan progressives should love DePetro, for he is a recipe for Republican disaster! My advice to anyone who want to foil the trickle-downers is to buy an ad on his show to help ensure that he stays the voice of the right in Rhode Island! To that end, in a sort of politically perverse way, I’m kinda hoping DePetro and Bishop Tobin incite another Holiday Hatefest.

 

ALEC Membership in RI Reduced by a Third


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Is the era of ALEC in the Ocean State coming to an end? It certainly looks like it.

It may have seemed for a short while that 2012 was going to be a banner year for American Legislative Exchange Council here. Rep. Jon Brien, a Democrat and a member of the House leadership team, was added to the right wing bill mill’s board of directors and a one in five state legislators were members.

But things haven’t gone so well for ALEC here in Rhode Island since then.

Not only did Brien lose his bid for reelection – twice, in fact, once in the primary and again in a write-in campaign in the general election – but Sen. Frank Maher, an Exeter Republican who was the other state ALEC chair, lost too. That means ALEC’s two primary points of contact to the General Assembly are no longer members of the General Assembly – talk about cutting off the head.

Brien and Maher weren’t the only local ALEC members to suffer defeat. So did Republicans Larry Ehrhardt, Dan Reilly and Glen Shibley. Add to that list Michael Savage who didn’t seek reelection and ALEC lost 6 members in the state legislature in this election. That’s a reduction of 25 percent.

If you factor in the two legislators who dropped out back in the spring – Sens. John Tassoni and Walter Felag – ALEC’s membership in the General Assembly has decreased by a third since news broke that Brien was on the board of directors.

Rhode Island isn’t the only state where ALEC took an electoral licking. In nearby New Hampshire, five of the 31 ALEC members lost reelection. In Minnesota, 11 of the 26 ALEC members lost and in Arizona 14 ALEC members lost.

While ALEC is down here, it might not be out. Conservative Democrat William Walaska could keep the RI ALEC/DINO tradition going, and look for Doreen Costa to assume the mantle from Brien in the House.