Why Won’t MassResistance Defend Itself Publicly


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I wrote a pair of articles (Reason, Bigotry on Display at Marriage Hearing and Tobin Aligns With Hate Group to Oppose Equality) that explored the sordid background of the Catholic Church’s new ally in their quixotic quest to deny consenting adults their right to marry who they choose. I called particular attention to Brian Camenker of the group MassResistance, a certified Southern Poverty Law Center anti-homosexual hate group. The SPLC documented a series of bigoted, hateful comments by Camenker, which Camenker, apparently denies.

I say apparently because in response to my posts Camenker wrote vigorous denials, but in the form of an email to members of his group, not on any public forum. Those who are not already members of Massresistance would not have had access to Camenker’s comments on my articles. In fact, the only way I heard about his response at all is through Gina Miller of RenewAmerica, a conservative website that functions on the intellectual level of Glenn Beck. This raises the question: why is Camenker afraid to publicly air his denials and content only to run damage control among the faithful? Could it be that his denials will not withstand public scrutiny?

Gina Miller is on Camenker’s mailing list, and in her article entitled Pray for MassResistance and marriage in Rhode Island she quotes liberally from his response to my posts. I’ll let interested readers follow the link to his defense, such as it is, and instead concentrate on one important paragraph near the end:

MassResistance has been a pro-family group serving people with traditional values in Massachusetts and other states for over 18 years. We are proud of our record of supporting marriage and family, and will stand by everything we’ve ever said or written.

Right Wing Watch documented Camenker’s appearance yesterday on the Sally Rios radio show, a propaganda arm of the American Family Association,  where the MassResistance leader and spokesman claimed that there is no proof that transgender and homosexual kids suffer bullying and harassment. He also doubted whether transgender and homosexual kids exist at all, apparently believing that LGBTQ teens are either lying or delusional about their sexual orientation.

Camenker, then, is the kind of person and MassResistance is the kind of group that Bishop Thomas Tobin, NOM-RI, the Knights of Columbus and countless other church leaders have aligned themselves with: people who actively work against the safety of our schoolchildren, denying reality in the process.

Decent people would be ashamed of such an association.

Join The Movement: Marijuana Strategy Session


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The strategy for developing effective and safe marijuana reform is now underway. And we need your help.

The Coalition for Marijuana Regulation will be holding two important strategy meetings this week to help supporters develop effective testimonies for the upcoming bill hearing and plan actions to build support for the bill. The first meeting will be on Friday (2/22) from 2PM-4PM, and the second will be on Saturday (2/23) from 2:30PM-4:30PM, both in the Community Room of Rochambeau Library (708 Hope St.). Come to the meeting that best fits your schedule.

Please contact rebecca.e.mcgoldrick@gmail.com for further inquiries.

Pew On Payday Loans: They Don’t Help Consumers


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“Payday loans fail to work as advertised,” concludes a new report from the Pew Charitable Trust.

The predatory practice of payday lending has been a highly charged issue for several legislative sessions. Standing in the way of reform is House Speaker Gordon Fox’s loyalty to former speaker Bill Murphy, who has been hired as an industry lobbyist to make the exact kinds of claims that the Pew report rejects.

Reform is important to progressives because the loans take advantage of impoverished, desperate people who mistakenly think a payday loan can help their situation. The new report shows they don’t.

“Many of these borrowers ultimately turn to the same options they could have used instead of payday loans to finally pay off the loans, including getting help from friends or family, selling or pawning personal possessions, or taking out another type of loan,” according to an overview of the new report. “Seventy-eight percent of borrowers rely on lenders for accurate information, but the stated price tag for an average $375, two-week loan bears little resemblance to the actual cost of more than $500 over the five months of debt that the average user experiences.”

Fox has said he is skeptical of reform because there are no other alternatives to payday loans. In fact, there are three “short term, small dollar” loans available in Rhode Island that have vastly lower interest rates than payday loans.

The Providence Journal had an excellent story on payday loan reform in which Fox was quoted as being open to compromise. My question would be: if his reasons for supporting the practice aren’t legitimate (as evidenced by the previous paragraph) why is a compromise the appropriate fix?

John Joyce and Cade Tompkins’ Chair


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Today is John Joyce’s memorial service. He died way too young at age 50 and was a bona fide friend and hero to the people on the streets.

His job, his mission in life, was to connect with the homeless people of Providence. Just to connect with them. After food, water and warmth connection is the most important human need and John Joyce figured if we couldn’t provide the first three he would provide the fourth.

Also today, I saw this short article in the New York Times. It’s about Providence resident and art curator Cade Tomkins. Like Joyce, Tompkins also caters to a specific demographic in Providence. But it isn’t the homeless…

Ms. Tompkins has upholstered a chaise longue with fabric by Serena Perrone, who makes silk-screened photolithographs that meld images recalling Japanese Edo woodcuts with domestic Western objects and architecture. The fabric is called Biwa, after a lake in Japan, and it is hand-printed to order by Ryan Parker and Shelby Donnelly, technicians for the artists, for $495 a yard with a 12-yard minimum.

That’s almost $6,000 for the material alone for a chair that will probably not be sat in all that much. Such a sum could easily provide food, water and warmth for many of Joyce’s constituents.

I don’t know Cade Tomkins, and I definitely do not mean to imply she is doing anything wrong by making an expensive chair. My honest guess is that she is a wonderful person and it surely a beautiful chair.

Whether you want to sit in it or not, that super expensive chair is a really important component of Rhode Island’s economy. So are the homeless, like them or not.

If you can afford to buy this chair, please support a modest income tax increase so Rhode Island can keep John Joyce’s work alive now that he isn’t. What good is it anyways to look at a super beautiful chair at home if you have to see people freezing to death on the way to the Capital Grille?

Why I Am Running


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The first question that most folks ask me when I tell them that I’m running for mayor of Woonsocket is, “Are you crazy or just a glutton for punishment?”

Well, watching the degradation of our once thriving city certainly drives me nuts, but I don’t think I’m a masochist, so, I guess that that’s a yes and a no.

First, I love Woonsocket, and I am proud to have been raised and live here.

Our government – almost by its very nature – is a very reactionary beast

Now, I’m not saying that every problem we face is foreseeable, the disappearance of $10 million from Woonsocket’s School Budget that precipitated the activation of the Woonsocket Budget Commission being a prime example of this, but if we fail to plan for foreseeable problems, we will have fewer resources available to deal with the unforeseeable issues when they materialize. Our leaders definitely need to think on their feet, but it it important to not get caught flat-footed on easily recognized future issues. It is more important than ever for our leaders to have a vision for the future of our municipalities and state, and a plan that is guided by the voice of the people.

Voter participation in Woonsocket is atrocious

This, I believe, is due to many factors, but  I will outline two of them here.

One, the biggest – some may say only – voting bloc in Woonsocket is the elderly. Our parents and grandparents are clearly still very invested in the political process, but it seems that our youth and minority populations have given up on the political process, and who can blame them? You can only be marginalized for so long before you become disenfranchised. Our leaders have, quite frankly, pandered to the elderly population at the cost of every other potential voter in Woonsocket. If the youth and minority population wants to be heard and have their concerns addressed, the only option is to speak up at city council and school committee meetings, and at the polls. At the end of the day, whether you’re young or old, black or white, liberal or conservative, I think we can agree that what we want is a safe, prosperous community that attracts good families and businesses, and allows them to thrive and succeed.

Two, nothing seems to change for the better, no matter who we elect.

This fact has stopped the participation of some of the staunchest advocates of our political process. How often have we heard the refrain, “Why vote when nothing ever changes?” I think that this is largely due to the ideological approaches to government by both of the major parties. The left wants to raise taxes, the right wants to cut spending and services. In Woonsocket’s case, both things are happening.

Now, I’m no economist, but if taxes go up, there should be a corresponding increase in services, and if services are cut, taxes should go down. Woonsocket  seems to be in a Twilight Zone episode where taxes and services are inversely proportional. That said, I believe that we can certainly be more prudent and efficient in how we spend the little revenue that we do have, but, like any business owner will tell you, you don’t have to sell more widgets to make more money, you should first reduce your overhead.

What we need in a leader

We need a leader  that will break the mold of the old-school approaches to solving financial crisises, which are clearly not working. One only has to look to the City of Braddock, Pennsylvania and Mayor John Fetterman to see examples of how new approaches can revitalize failing cities and towns.

We need a leader that can reinvigorate our young people, and in a city that was built by immigrants, we definitely need to embrace and include those growing populations in the process.One of the biggest strengths of this city, state, and country is our diversity of cultures, creeds, and ideologies. We need to capitalize on that.

We need a leader that has a plan, but that plan needs to be guided by what the residents of Woonsocket want to see in their city and government. I’ll add that, just because someone doesn’t vote – or doesn’t vote for you – doesn’t mean that they are not constituents. To that end, I will begin a listening tour of the city in March  to hear the concerns and ideas of citizens and business owners alike.

There is a lot of negativity about Woonsocket, from within and without. We need to recognize our successes and potentials and put much more focus on those.

Most importantly, we, as citizens, must realize that the successes and failures of our cities, towns, states, and countries do not rest solely on the backs of our elected leaders. We are just as responsible for every outcome, good or bad. For better or worse, we are all in this together, so let’s come together and start watching our neighbors backs.

I urge all Woonsocket residents that have given up on or never participated the process to register to vote, because this November, you will see a very different mayoral candidate on the ballot.

For updates on the campaign, you can follow my blog, like my facebook page, and follow me on Twitter @DAFisherRI.

Remembering John Joyce


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If a place like Heaven exists, I would liked to have been there when John Joyce checked in the other day.

“So you overcame inner demons and homelessness to become a 24-hour-a-day advocate and activist for the most downtrodden people in all of society,” St. Peter would have noted approvingly while perusing Joyce’s impressive karmic resume.

And if the Almighty’s criteria is anything like mine, then John Joyce gets the fluffiest corner cloud on the heavenly block. “We’ve reserved a special suite for you, Mr. Joyce,” St. Peter would say with a smile as he shakes Joyce’s hand with a respect reserved for only the most deserving residents. “Your new neighbors Gandhi and Mother Teresa will show you the way.”

I didn’t know John Joyce all that well but I knew him well enough to know that he exemplified almost everything that, to my mind, makes someone good – from the meta to the micro. His life was dedicated to social justice and he never, ever missed an opportunity to let someone know that he cared.

His famous farewell – “be safe” – spoke to both his intentions and his experiences. I don’t believe he cared if anyone was happy until everyone was safe. And damn near every time he delivered that line to me I was forced to remember that there are people out there who can’t afford to take even their personal safety for granted. It was more than a pleasantry, it was a powerful political statement.

My guess is younger John Joyce would never imagine maturing into an activist, but he’s probably among the most noteworthy progressive crusaders Rhode Island has known in a long time. He cut his chops political chops during the Tent City movement in Providence, when a group of homeless people set up their own attempt at utopia on a vacant city lot. He was an influential figure behind the scenes with Occupy Providence. He’s a co-founder of the Rhode Island Homeless Advocacy Project. He authored and ushered-through the nation’s first ever Homeless Bill of Rights.

He spent his days both mingling with the least fortunate and fighting the most powerful. There were times I’d see him taking care of a dirty drunk on Westminster Street in the morning, then in the afternoon I’d see him giving hell to a stuffed suit at the State House. He had all the wrong friends and all the right enemies.

Yet, I can’t recall ever not seeing that signature smile on his face. He lived through and worked every day with the most impoverished situations in Rhode Island and he seemingly never stopped smiling. Even when he told me he had terminal cancer, he still wore that same fuck-you smile. It takes a special kind of soul to wear a shit-eating grin when discussing your own impending death.

That was his gift. He looked even death in the face and smiled. No wonder he was able to beat the streets.

Whether there’s a heaven or not, I don’t worry at all for my friend John Joyce. He’s a survivor and he’ll be just fine where ever he is now. Rhode Island, on the other hand, lost an irreplaceable activist last week and one of our all-time great progressive heroes.

Dave Fisher To Run for Woonsocket Mayor


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Dave Fisher, campaign manager for congressional candidate Abel Collins and former editor at ecoRI.org, announced on a new blog today that he plans to run for mayor of Woonsocket. The site is called Dave Fisher for Mayor of Woonsocket.

“I really believe we can stop the downward slide of the city of Woonsocket by providing some new leadership and fresh ideas at the local level,” he said in a YouTube video posted to the blog. “It pains me to see the decline of this city that I grew up in that I have so much pride in.”

He also speaks of recreating a culture that values diversity, arts and public education. He does not mention if he will seek the support of the Democratic Party, which is traditionally conservative in Woonsocket. Fisher managed Collins campaign for CD1. Collins ran as an independent.

In his first blog post, he takes aim at current Mayor Leo Fontaine.

Fisher is best known as a local progressive journalist who has authored several posts for RI Future and many for EcoRI, where he served as an editor prior to working for Collins.

Business Community Gets Behind Marriage Equality


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From big city chief executives to small town chambers of commerce, the Rhode Island business community supports marriage equality, too.

“This is about competitiveness and creating an economic climate that allows Rhode Island to attract the best and brightest talent and employers,” said Alan Hassenfeld, former CEO of Pawtucket-based Hasbro, in a statement released today. “To be competitive, a state must create an equitable, fair and respectful environment for all of its citizens. From a business point of view, passing marriage equality just makes good sense.”

Rhode Islanders United for Marriage Equality announced today that “In recognition of the significant and positive impact marriage equality will have on the Ocean State’s economy, leaders from across the state’s business community today announced the launch of Rhode Island Business Leaders for Marriage Equality.

The most politically significant member might well be the Newport County Chamber of Commerce’s support. This means Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed will have to choose between her religion and her constituent’s economic interests when she weighs whether or not to support same sex marriage.

“The Newport County Chamber of Commerce said it best: Without marriage equality, Rhode Island puts itself at a significant economic disadvantage by not recognizing and respecting all loving, committed couples in the Ocean State,” Sally Lapides, president of Residential Properties Ltd, said in a statement. “Ours is the only New England state without marriage equality, and Rhode Island firms are losing business. That’s why we need the General Assembly to pass this important legislation.”

Another influential member of the business group for marriage equality is Providence Journal publisher Howard Sutton.

You can see the entire list here and pledge your support.

Why Leaving RI To Save Tax Dollars Is A Bad Investment


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Anyone who leaves Rhode Island for a better life, god bless. Anyone who leaves to save money, good riddance. And to anyone who would confuse the two, get real.

As the progressive left in the Ocean State calls on the General Assembly to reverse the Carcieri-era tax breaks for the rich, the best defense the right has come up with is that the affluent will move away if we ask them to pay their fair share. While I’m fairly confident most folks are smart enough not to make such life-altering decisions based on the singular factor of tax rates, for those of you who aren’t, here’s a personal story for you:

When I was in elementary school, my parents split up and my dad lost his job. My mom, who worked at Bostitch, could no longer afford our big fancy house and our affluent lifestyle in the suburbs of East Greenwich. So she had a choice: she could either move us to a different community, where her meager salary would go much farther, or we could continue to struggle to get by in EG.

My mom, easily the wisest social scientist I have ever known, decided to keep us here. We moved to a smaller house but stayed in town. From our new home, I could almost see Warwick from the back yard, it was right there on the other side of Post Road less than a half mile away.

We could have moved there, too, and at a fraction of the cost. But my mom wanted to keep us in East Greenwich schools, which were already regarded as head and shoulders better than our neighboring communities. (This was the first generation in 100 years of Bostitch employees who didn’t by and large live in East Greenwich … now the manufacturing plant is still here but is virtually devoid of jobs.)

I’m quite pleased with my mom’s decision to keep us in East Greenwich even though it cost her more A LOT more to do so. So is she, as are my brother and sister. Interestingly, the four of us are pretty socially, politically and economically diverse, and perhaps the one thing we all agree on is that staying here was well worth the investment.

Now, you can argue that East Greenwich to Warwick isn’t the same as Rhode Island to Massachusetts. But you can’t argue that it’s cheaper to live in East Greenwich than it is in Warwick – and that is the argument conservatives are making on migration; not that wealth will cross state lines because it is better elsewhere, but because it is cheaper.

If wealth is moving to neighboring states because it is better there, then Rhode Island has a problem. But if we’re losing wealthy residents because it’s cheaper there, that’s not as bad … Ask anyone in my family and they will tell you those who would make such a short-sighted decision might not be destined to be wealthy forever…

The End of Cod: RI Loses A Natural Resource Economy


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The good old days of the fishing economy off the Grand Bank.

When we think of the Northeast, natural resource economies might not instantly come to mind. But of course the ocean has played a central role to the Ocean State’s economy since the days of Roger Williams. Rhode Island’s rich fishing history has faded significantly in recent decades as the collapse of the cod fisheries has caused severe declines in catch limits.

Reductions of 77% in the Gulf of Maine and 61% off Cape Georges are in order. Many fishermen will lose their jobs. Coastal communities will likely suffer serious economic problems, even if they have developed something of a tourist economy; the ones that haven’t will struggle much more.

Letters to the editor and interviews with workers in recent weeks have demonstrated the deep angst fishing reductions are causing. Take this recent letter to the editor in the Journal. The writer, a fisherman and Ph.D. student working on fisheries, says the reductions reject what his eyes tell him–that there are lots of fish in the sea, forget what the computer models say. The writer struggles with what this means for his family, his future, and his personal identity.

What does it mean to lose a regional identity based around natural resources? Again, while this might not define the Rhode Island economy to the extent it did 50 years ago, for communities in New England that still have active fishing economies, the cultural change can be as devastating as the economic struggles.

As a historian of natural resource economies in the American West, I’ve seen miners in towns like Butte, Montana and Leadville, Colorado struggle to adapt to closure of mines, holding on to their mining identity while other cities in Montana and Colorado create vibrant tourist economies. In my home state of Oregon, loggers turned out of their jobs in the 1980s and 1990s have also found it difficult to thrive in an economy now recast around tourism and high-tech industry. Pockets of poverty surround the supposed hipster paradise portrayed in the TV show Portlandia.

A significant number of loggers and their now-grown children have created a new way to live off the land: by growing marijuana or producing crystal methamphetamine under the forest cover. Ranchers around the West find themselves selling their cows and property, unable to compete with big industrial cattle operations and instead dividing their property into housing developments.

There’s no easy answer to the economic or cultural adjustments required when people get thrown out of their job by resource depletion, globalization, or other developments out of their control. Loggers blamed environmentalists, even though environmental regulations played a relatively small role in the timber industry’s decline. Ranchers blame government regulations on grazing national forest land and now fishing communities blame government bureaucrats and arbitrary regulations.

Again, the loss of cultural identity through work is a hard blow to take. But there is precedent for the federal government to assist workers who lose their jobs because of environmental restrictions. The 1978 expansion of California’s Redwood National Park led to the unemployment of loggers. Rather than leave them to their fate without government assistance, labor unions, environmentalists, and the federal government created the Redwood Employee Protection Program which provided significant payments to workers displaced by the shuttered mills. They received direct payments from the federal government until 1984 to build a bridge until they could find other work. The generosity of this was controversial–President Carter himself was quite skeptical when he signed the bill. And in many ways it didn’t work that well. There were battles over who should qualify–were the mills shutting down because of a lack of timber or because of globalization and mechanization? Moreover, there were some disappearing funds and management issues. We don’t need to get into these details now. What’s notable though is that at least one time the federal government decided to expand the welfare state, however tentatively, to workers put out of work in order to save rare resources.

Lift A Glass With Drinking Liberally, Young Democrats of RI


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2013 has become a year of new faces and old favorites.  We saw President Obama sworn in for a second term, *Senator* Elizabeth Warren, and now…a newly re-organized Young Democrats of Rhode Island (YDRI)!

Young Democrats of Rhode Island are  back and better than ever!  To celebrate, Drinking Liberally welcomes a new slate of young leaders to speak about their work in 2013 and beyond.

So join us and lift a glass to liberal politics. Come meet the board of YDRI, including newly elected State Senator Adam Satchell. Learn more about our plans to advocate for the issues young progressives care about and how you can make an impact in our upcoming campaigns! No matter what your age, please join us at the Wild Colonial this Wednesday for good politics and a good time. We’re all young at heart, right?

What: Drinking Liberally with Senator Adam Satchell & YDRI
When: Wednesday February 20, 2013 7-9pm
Where: Wild Colonial, 250 South Water Street Providence 02903
RSVP on Facebook today!
https://www.facebook.com/events/504930979557947/

Hope to see you Wednesday!

Caution: Plastic Bag Bans Will Not Make You Sick


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Never underestimate the ability of the corporate media to come up with a ridiculous reason for why common sense environmentalism should be ignored. The latest example: plastic bag bans make people sick.

“Rhode Island’s leaders have a new Public Enemy No. 1: plastic bags,” proclaims WPRI blogger Ted Nesi. “But is this bit of feel-good policymaking actually bad for public health?”

In reverse order: No, plastic bag bans don’t make people sick – anymore than anything else used for food storage and not cleaned properly. No, this isn’t feel good policy – it will actually go a long way to cleaning up Narragansett Bay and help the aquatic ecosystem thrive. And, no, RI doesn’t have a new public enemy – the enemy is still the corporate forces that prevent the public from having a rational debate about anything that doesn’t line their wallets.

Nesi uses a post by National Journal editor, American Enterprise Institute fellow and arch conservative Ramesh Ponnuru to show that reusable bags might be dangerous. The scare tactic says that people are getting sick because they are using unwashed reusable bags to cargo raw meat and fish. Nevermind that Ponnuru is a climate change denier who authors articles with headlines such as “Why Republicans Should Ignore Obama” and “Why a Debt-Ceiling Fight Is Good for the Country,” it’s just a ridiculous argument to make. It’s the same logic that says we shouldn’t ban guns because some people get struck by lightening.

In fact, the Washington Post’s WonkBlog did a piece on the study’s illogical conclusions. It says the study is “certainly suggestive. But according to Tomás Aragón, an epidemiologist at UC Berkeley and health officer for the city of San Francisco, these graphs don’t prove nearly as much as you might think.”

In a memo (pdf) released earlier this week, Aragón explained that this is an example of the “ecological fallacy.” In order to establish a link between the bag ban and illnesses, the authors would have to show that the same people who are using reusable bags are also the ones getting sick. This study doesn’t do that. Aragón also points out that emergency-room data can be very incomplete—under an alternate measure, there’s been no rise in E. coli at all.

Aragón also offers an alternative hypothesis for the recent rise in deaths related to intestinal infections. A large portion of the cases in San Francisco involve C. difficile enterocolitis, a disease that’s often coded as food-borne illness in hospitals. And this disease has become more common in lots of places since 2005, all around the United States, Canada, and Europe (for yet-unexplained reasons). “The increase in San Francisco,” he notes, “probably reflects this international increase.”

Injured Eagle Recovering Slow; CAT Scan Today


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Photo courtesy of Wildlife Rehabilitators Association of Rhode Island.

The injured bald eagle is still recovering in wildlife rehab in Saunderstown. Unfortunately, her recovery is going “slower than we had hoped,” said Kristin Flether, the executive director of the Wildlife Rehabilitators Association of Rhode Island.

The eagle was shot and found at the Johnson Landfill last week. State and federal officials are investigating.

“She is still not self feeding,” Fletcher said, noting that renowned local wildlife veterinarian Meredith Bird believes the eagle has lead poisoning frm the buckshot and may also have some “neurological issues.”

Fletcher added, “there may be more at play here.”  The eagle has a CAT scan scheduled for today at 2pm.

Eleanor, as the two-year-old female bald eagle is affectionately and unofficially being called, is eating a vitamin powder mixed with water called Carnivore Care. But they’ve been offering her whiting donated from Galilee “with the heads still on,” said Fletcher, but Eleanor isn’t interested.

While this is the first injured eagle the Wildlife Rehabilitators Association of Rhode Island have tended to, it’s by no means the state’s only bald eagle. Chris Raithel, a wildlife biologist with DEM, estimated there are between 10 and 20 bald eagles in Rhode Island this winter. They winter in Rhode Island from as far away as Canada, or the deep south.

“In the early 1980’s, when I first started bird watching, it was unusual to see even one,” he said. This winter, 6 have been spotted at one time on the East Providence Reservoir.

Like other carnivorous birds, bald eagle’s population declined drastically in the 1960’s and 70’s when farmers used DDT to spray crops. A generation after outlawing DDT, eagles, osprey, falcons and pelicans are all making comebacks. They are living evidence that environmental regulation works.

A Bald Eagle flying over Greenwich Cove. (Photo by Jeff Stevens)

“You can see them almost any place at any time,” Raithel said. Some of their more common locales include the Seekonk River near Swan Point Cemetery, 100 Acre Pond in Barrington, Indian Lake in South Kingstown and I saw one over Greenwich Cove just a few weeks ago.

“They prey on fish, ducks and gulls and they tend to hang around where the pickings are good,” he said. “They also scavenge. If a deer dies, they will eat that. They can be seen at fish processing plants.”

The state’s lone known nesting pair has been living over an island on the Scituate Reservoir watershed for about 10 years. Their nest can be seen from Route 116, Raithel said. “It’s been a highly productive pair,” Raithel said. “Every year they have reared young successfully.”

Another view of the bald eagle flying over Greenwich Cove. (Photo by Jeff Stevens)

New York Times Calls Foul On ‘Flight Of Earls’ Myth


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A sculpture in Ireland depicts the orginal “Flight of the Earls” during which some affluent Irish in the early 1600’s left for mainland Europe to recruit sympathisers against the British crown.

Can we finally put to rest the false idea that the rich will leave Rhode Island if the state raises taxes? The Earls aren’t fleeing the Ocean State, they flock here. We’ve got the best beaches and we treat our rich like they are royalty.

And even if we only had the best beaches, the New York Times this weekend threw more cold water on the tired old talking point that there will be a wealth exodus if we make the affluent pay their fair share.

It’s an article of faith among low-tax advocates that income tax increases aimed at the rich simply drive them away … That, at least, is what low-tax advocates want us to think, and on its face, it seems to make sense. But it’s not the case. It turns out that a large majority of people move for far more compelling reasons, like jobs, the cost of housing, family ties or a warmer climate. At least three recent academic studies have demonstrated that the number of people who move for tax reasons is negligible, even among the wealthy.

Yes, Rhode Island is going through a scary population decline. But it’s not because the rich are leaving Newport for Westport or Greenport. It’s because middle class folks can’t find jobs here anymore. This study of California shows that while the convention wisdom has been that rich people leave the Golden State because taxes are too high, it turns out that it’s actually the middle and low-income people who make up most of the out-migration.

From 2005 to 2011, California lost 158 people with household incomes under $20,000 for every 100 who arrived, and 165 for every 100 people with household incomes between $20,000 and $40,000. In contrast, just slightly more people with household incomes in the $100,000-$200,000 range left than came to California (103 out per 100 in), and California actually gained a hair more people in the $200,000+ range than it lost (99 out per 100 in). The rich aren’t leaving California, but the poor and the middle class are.

Most Progressive POTUS


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Good thing there is no such thing as President’s Day; whole notion of a national holiday to honor our commenders-in-chief seems a bit un-American to me. The good news is the legal reason for the day off is for George Washington’s birthday, who deserves his own holiday far less than does Abraham Lincoln.

Yeah, Washington was the first and a fearless general, but just because he came clean about cutting down the cherry tree does not entirely absolve his environmental crime. Lincoln, on the other hand, ended America’s greatest atrocity: slavery. He was also the first to implement an income tax, he invested in public transportation and was working on perhaps the biggest government-backed economic redevelopment program in the history of the United States: the Reconstruction.

It’s easy to argue that Lincoln was the greatest president of all time. It’s also easy to argue that while he was a Republican, in many ways, he fits the modern definition of a political progressive. But does that mean he was the greatest progressive president? Perhaps. But here are few other American presidents who deserve consideration as well…

Teddy Roosevelt

Any debate about the most progressive president of the United States has to start with Teddy Roosevelt. During his tenure as chief executive he advocated for environmental conservation, he dealt fairly and sometimes favorably with organized labor and he sought to break up many of the corporate monopolies that were concentrating power and squeezing the middle class. His Square Deal suite of domestic policy laws is the namesake of all future progressive domestic policy proposals. Although he began his career as a Republican, he literally set the standard for the modern movement with the Bull Moose party, officially called the Progressive Party.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Not everything FDR did was progressive (he detained Japanese Americans during WWII, for example) but the New Deal sure was.

It not only put thousands of Americans to work building much-needed communal infrastructure and amenities. But it also created Social Security, the US Housing Authority, the Wagner Act, Fair Labor Standards and the Works Progress Administration. Together, these efforts helped America to claw the country out of the depression and build a society that would continue to prosper until we ceased investing in it.

Harry Truman

He followed FDR and his Fair Deal extended the consumer protections of the Square Deal and New Deal. While some of it never made it into law, it did set the tone for the post-war progressive era of consumer and middle class protections.

John Quincy Adams

The sixth president and son of the second, this Harvard and Brown prof took office in 1825 taking the oath with his hand on the Constitution rather than a Bible. He was a strong believer in high taxes, public education and infrastructure investment. He was friendly to the indigenous people of North America, which played a significant role in his lackluster tenure as president.

Jimmy Carter

You laughed at him for wearing sweaters, but it turns out that had we listened to his progressive advice on resource management and foreign oil our economy would be in much better shape today.

Barack Obama???

He coddled big banks but passed near-universal health care … our current president’s progressive credentials will hinge upon his actions taxes, climate change, equality and privacy.

Our Stories: Rhode Island Human Library Project


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I’ve always been fascinated with hearing people’s stories.  To learn about another person’s experiences and history is to begin to truly understand who they are.  I’ve always considered peoples’ previous learned experiences and the circumstances from which they came as the fundamental foundation for their existing belief system.

Rhode Islanders will have the opportunity to hear one another’s stories as Barrington Public Library, East Providence Public Library, and Providence Community Library are collaborating to create a Human Library in Rhode Island on Sunday, March 3rd from 1-5pm (snow date March 10th) at Rochambeau Library, 708 Hope St., Providence. The Human Library Rhode Island is a living, breathing library where humans are the books and the stories are their lives.  Just as memoirs and autobiographies teach us to see the humanity in people different from us, the human books tell of their own lived experience, breaking down assumptions, biases, and misunderstanding with every word.

Based on a Danish project, now with worldwide participation, the Human Library‘s aim is to allow people to interact with other members of their community with whom they might not otherwise have contact, or who they might have preconceptions about but want to understand. This is a great opportunity to bring Rhode Islanders together in the public library for an afternoon of conversation, discovery, and growth.

Here are a few samples of what you could hear:

Immigrant or Outsider?
I grew up in an environment of low-tolerance for Mexicans and personally experienced prejudice as a child. I have been made to feel like an outsider in childhood and as a young adult. I also grew up watching some of my friends snatched and deported to Mexico. I thought that this was an injustice; and it made me sensitive to how it feels to lose someone you are close to. I am interested in learning what makes someone insensitive and anti-immigrant. More importantly, I would like to help change anti-immigrant sentiments in someone and provide a better understanding of what it is like to be an outsider.

Masks
I was born with a birthmark that covers my right cheek. Growing up, I learned to deal with the cruelty, shame and isolation that come with being so obviously different. For 12 years, I wore a heavy make to cover the birthmark, and I lived in hiding for those terrible years. When I was 29, I removed the make-up and began the journey to living and loving who I am. That journey continues and it continues to heal me and to heal others as well. I would like to share this story and this journey because I am now an open book.

Searching for Meaning in Outside War
I am a retired U.S. Navy Captain and current high school math teacher. I love the United States Navy. I think it is one of America’s greatest institutions, one which gave meaning to my life for 25 years. I do not, however, love militarism and I do not love war. I am a pacifist. In a highly militarized society, I have come to believe that war is never a good solution or even a necessary one. It is not the kind of meaning I want to define my life. As a teacher, I find meaning in doing very small but substantive good. I can make a small but positive difference every day. This is how I want to define my life. This is how I want to be remembered.

For more information, visit: http://www.humanlibraryrhodeisland.com/; or, email: humanlibraryri@provcomlib.org.  Funding for this project was generously provided by the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities, and the Friends groups of the three library systems.

Thousands Rally For Action On Keystone, Climate Change


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Forward on Climate marchers pass the White House
Forward on Climate marchers pass the White House
Forward on Climate marchers pass the White House.

WASHINGTON, DC — Organizers estimated that 50,000 people took to the streets of Washington DC today as a broad coalition of progressive groups came together to press the Obama administration to kill the KeystoneXL pipeline and make good on promises of action on climate change.

By 11am, buses were pulling up to the Mall near the Washington Monument, and groups of activists were streaming into rally area with signs, banners, and even a fifty foot long fabric pipeline emblazoned with “Just say no to Keystone.” One particularly striking moment came as group of marchers, accompanied on a mandolin, broke into “This Land is Your Land” as they passed in front of the White House. You can watch it here:

Environmental activist Hilton Kelley, winner of the 2011 Goldman Prize for his work fighting pollution, described to RI Future the multitude of environmental toxins the KeystoneXL pipeline would bring to its terminus in his native city of Port Arthur, Texas. He expressed hope that the rally would help convince President Obama to block construction.

Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, who delivered a powerful speech at the rally, told RI Future of his particular concerns for our state.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at Forward on Climate rally. (Photo by Jack McDaid.)

“A lot of very knowledgeable people on this subject have said that if we get into those tar sands and start burning them, it’s game over on climate change,” he said. “Climate change sounds like it’s a million miles away and very general, but it comes home to roost in Rhode Island in very big ways.”

“Carbon pollution really dramatically hits the oceans,” said Whitehouse. “A lot of people remember the famous Hurricane of 1938? There is ten inches of sea level rise measured at the Newport tidal gauge since the 1930s. So, if the same storm were to hit again, there’s ten inches more sea, which would presumably stack up in a storm surge to do even more damage.”

“Three to six feet of increase in my children’s lifetimes, think of what that does to the South County coastal ponds. Think about what that does to low-lying areas like Barrington which don’t see themselves as coastal because they’re not really on the coast, but they’re low-lying, up the Bay,” said Whitehouse.

“Because sea level rise will impact us very significantly, this is a big deal for us, we can’t be messing around with carbon pollution and pretend it’s not a Rhode Island issue.”

Following speeches by representatives from the many groups in the coalition which organized the rally (video highlights available on the Sierra Club site, marchers set off on an hour-long walk up 17th Street and then across Pennsylvania Avenue, where they were funneled through construction fencing around the still-being-dismantled viewing stands from President Obama’s inauguration.

More photos available on Flickr stream here.

Fluffy Snow Friend or Foe


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Admit it, we all welcome snow
First flurries cast a friendly glow
That smooth the edges of our world
A frozen patchwork quilt unfurled

Snowflakes kiss our smiling faces
Chopping wood for fireplaces
Because we know snow will deceive
A welcomed guest that just won’t leave

Wind-blown flurries accumulate
Roads whiten at a rapid rate
Cars collide on spinning tires
Bitter cold snaps brittle wires

Blizzard-whistling through the night
Crackling flames our only light
We pray the storm will finally end
Farewell to a foul-weather friend

c2013pn

Poem: Love Is In The Air


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 If Cupid flies through certain zones
He’d best watch out for killer drones
The message they send isn’t love
But rather death from high above

A military strategy
On which so many disagree
Let’s clear the air when Cupid flies
And try this plan for compromise

Suppose the government designs
Drones that could fire Valentines
Instead of blasting body parts
Each bomb releases bright red hearts

Fine perfume from the South of France
Rose petals, chocolates, silk underpants
And a potent dose of Viagra mist
Should disarm any terrorists

c2013pn

Sunday DC Climate Rally To Feature Sen. Whitehouse

Bill McKibben of 350.org
Bill McKibben of 350.org.  Photo by Joshua Lopez – Project Survival Media

Organizers of Sunday’s “Forward on Climate Rally” in Washington, DC, offered a preview of the event and stressed the critical importance of action by the Obama administration to block the Keystone XL pipeline, the rally’s central focus.

“This will be the largest climate rally ever in this country,” said Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org. He predicted attendance of around 20,000 people, with 150 buses from 31 states converging on DC for the event, scheduled to kick off Sunday at noon near the Washington Monument.

The four-hour event was organized by a coalition including the Sierra Club, 350.org, Hip Hop Caucus, Environment America, League of Conservation Voters, and scores of other progressive organizations, and will feature speakers — including RI Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse — and a “human pipeline” threading down 15th Street to the White House.

McKibben hoped strong turnout would prompt the administration to “do something substantive,” about  the threat posed by the high-carbon oil the pipeline would bring. “We just learned this week that Arctic ice volume dropped 80% since 1980. This is no time for half measures. If we’re serious about climate change, we need to start leaving carbon in the ground.”

Using Keystone oil would be “lighting a fuse on a carbon bomb,” said Van Jones, leader of “Rebuild the Dream” and a former Obama advisor. “I know the passion this President has for this issue, and how tough the politics are,” Jones said, noting that accountability for the decision would ultimately rest with Obama.

“Canceling the Keystone XL pipeline would be a powerful legacy,” McKibben added.

Reporter Matt Wald of the NY Times posed a question about the effectiveness of unilateral US action. “Canada is a foreign country,” he said. “What makes you think they won’t just ship it to their west coast?”

McKibben cited developments over the last year, as Canadian activists have worked to introduce constraints that would impact financial viability. “It’s clear now that Keystone XL is the last option,” he said.

Susan Casey-Lefkowitz, of the Natural Resources Defense Council agreed, adding that this was the first major tar sands pipeline to deep water. “Developing tar sands depends on Keystone XL,” she said.


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