Gallagher And Gun Control


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Stand-up “comic” Gallagher demonstrates how not to prepare a watermelon for consumption.

Ever tried to pry out a nail with a screwdriver or pave a driveway with plastic resin? No? That’s because you’re smart enough to use the right tool for the right job. Which is why the “hammers, knives and baseball bats kill more people than guns, but they’re not regulated” argument used by Second Amendment absolutists is so ridiculously laughable.

On it’s face, the argument seems plausible. Hammers, knives, and baseball bats are, in fact, used more frequently as weapons in assault and homicide cases, and  are considered deadly weapons, but only when they are used IMPROPERLY. One could also throw cars and most industrial chemicals into the mix with the aforementioned tools, but they are regulated to some degree, and the rights to use them can be rescinded if a person or business is found to be using them improperly.

Guns are deadly weapons when used PROPERLY. In fact, their primary – some might say only – function is the incapacitation and killing of things.

Try slicing a canteloupe with a shotgun. You’ll wind up with a mess that can only be cleaned up by rags or a vacuum cleaner, which, by the way, could also be used as deadly weapons. The wrong tool for fruit preparation does nothing but create a mess. This has been proven ad nauseum by once popular 80’s stand-up/prop comic Gallagher.

Try hammering a nail with a handgun. Chances are the nail will have to be removed with a crowbar (the right tool). I suppose you could use your teeth (the wrong tool), but your orthodontist may advise against this. You might also have to be driven to the hospital after your ‘handgun as hammer’ experiment. I’d suggest that you use an automobile (the right tool) rather than a hot air balloon (the wrong tool).

Try hitting the game winning base hit for your weekend softball game with a gas-powered carbine rifle. You’ll probably wind up with a dribbler down the third base line that will get you picked off before you make it halfway to first. When you decide that your swing needs some work, I’d suggest a trip to the batting cages (right tool) rather than a trip to the deli (wrong tool).

I am not anti-gun. I think that reasonable, responsible adults should be allowed to own firearms, but reasonable, responsible adults should also support reasonable, responsible gun registration and regulation.

Lost in the disingenous din of debate on gun control is any talk of the responsibility of manufacturers. Reasonable gun control needs to start at the manufacturer level. How’s this for a reasonable gun control law: Firearm retailers may only carry one display/test model of any particular weapon, and if a purchase is made, the gun is only shipped to the dealer when the customer has passed a background check and mental health assessment.

With enough thought and creativity, just about anything can be used as a deadly weapon, but firearms are only useful for one thing: inflicting harm on – or causing the death of – another living thing. Let’s keep this fact in mind when we talk about regulating guns, and stop equating the intended application of firearms with the unintended application of other tools.

Boston Globe Says No To NECAP Requirement


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An editorial in today’s Boston Globe recommends that Rhode Island not use the NECAP test as a graduation requirement.

While Education Commissioner Deborah Gist keeps comparing the NECAP to Massachusetts MCAT, the state’s biggest newspaper agree with what Tom Sgouros has been writing about on RI Future:

The fundamental problem, though, is that the test wasn’t originally designed to be a graduation requirement and isn’t suited for that purpose. Schools need more high standards and accountability, and the NECAP was designed not to evaluate individual students’ proficiency, but to rank the quality of the schools they attend. Unlike tests meant primarily for student assessment, such as the MCAS in Massachusetts, the NECAP expects a certain portion of test-takers to fail. Research suggests that percentage will likely come from low-income, working-class neighborhoods — the students who are least likely to return for a fifth year of high school, even if skipping it means going without a diploma.

The editorial also lauds the Providence Student Union for raising attention to the issue:

The Providence Student Union, a student-led advocacy group, last month organized an event at which 50 prominent Rhode Islanders took a shortened version of the math NECAP. Sixty percent of the test-takers — among them elected officials, attorneys, scientists, engineers, reporters, college professors, and directors of leading nonprofits — failed to score at least “partially proficient,” the standard education officials have set for graduation. Under the new rules, many of those 50 successful individuals would not have been allowed to graduate.

Crucial Questions For Raimondo


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There are many important issues that Ted Siedle of Forbes raises about Gina Raimondo and what he calls her pension overhaul – avoiding the loaded term reform so often used by the local media.

Here are two that I’ve been asking on this blog for some time now.

One is that she is employing a very high-risk strategy that will definitely benefit Wall Street hedge fund managers and venture capitalists and might also be good for Rhode Island – though he and other experts are skeptical. Siedle told Buddy Cianci earlier this week that Warren Buffett has a “very public” $1 million bet that the S&P Index will outperform these more costly and riskier investments – in other words, Warren Buffett thinks Raimondo is wrong. Siedle says the state is paying more to money managers for the right to take this risk.

This is an issue with special resonance for progressives, as most of us strongly feel a giant problem with Rhode Island’s economy and American capitalism in general is that Wall Street comes first and everyone else gets in line according to how well they serve Wall Street’s interest.

The other issue, which has been raised locally, is that some members of Engage RI may have a financial stake in pension reform. See question 18 of his 22 Tough Questions For Rhode Island’s Pension ‘Reform’ Treasurer:

Do any of the contributors to Engage Rhode Island have any financial relationship, direct or indirect, with any of the investment managers of the pension? For example, do any contributors to Engage Rhode Island have assets managed by, or an ownership interest in, any of the pension’s managers or any fund managed by these managers?

These are both uber-important questions that all Rhode Islanders should want answered.

Raimondo doesn’t want these questions answered. Please re-read this post I wrote on December 13. In it, I point out that one the very same day in the Providence Journal, Raimondo tells Mike Stanton that she feels it’s okay for Engage RI members to be anonymous and Kathy Gregg quotes her as saying, “it is more important than ever that [a] treasurer bend over backwards to be transparent and open with our investors.”

So I made a public records request to Raimondo’s office on Jan. 8 asking for all of Raimondo’s communications with Engage RI members. I got a letter from Mark Dingley 15 days later, the treasurer’s legal counsel, informing me they wouldn’t even consider my request, unless I give them $435 first. Here’s what he wrote to me:

I would estimate that Search and retrieval will require thirty (30) hours at Fifteen Dollars ($15.00) per hour with the first hour free. See Rl. Gen. Laws  38-2-463), Accordingly, kindly provide pre-payment of Four Hundred Thirty-five Dolîars ($435.00).

Please be advised that payment does not guarantee that the records you have requested constitute  public records (in Whole 0r iu part, i.e., redacted), but only authorizes this Office to conduct its Search and retrieval to determine if responsive records exist, and if so, Whether said records are public records. Should actual Search, retrievàl, and copying fees exceed pre-payment, this office will advise you to seek your authorization before continuing. Should your pre-payment exceed actual Search, retrieval, and  copying, you will, of course, be reimbursed.

Given the voluminous nature of your public records request, the time for this office to respond is extended an additional twenty (20) business days as set forth in Rl. Gen. Laws  38-2-3(e). Notwithstanding this extension, the time period for this office to respond to your request is also tolled as ofthe date of this letter pending pre-payment and authorization.

Sadly for me, RI Future doesn’t yet enjoy such access to capital. But if you want to help us get to the bottom of this, please make a donation here. If I’m able to raise the $435, I’ll send Raimondo a check and we can begin the process of getting some answers.

Man Arrested After 27 Years of Solitude, Burglarly


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This is incredible. Christopher Thomas Knight went into the Maine woods in about 1986, two years after graduating high school, and wasn’t seen for 27 years. In that time, he committed over 1000 burglaries, according to his and police estimates. Seems like all of it was basically to survive. In fact, a legend was built up about a hermit who was stealing from the people in the area Knight lived in.

Why he went into the wilderness? He doesn’t know. And neither do we. What his fate will be in the Maine judicial system is also unknown, though Knight has been extremely cooperative.

The details are interesting. He had a stack of money, some of it moldy, stored in case he needed to go buy something from a store. He didn’t use anything shiny, for fear it would attract attention. This means he hadn’t seen an image of himself for 27 years, except for his reflection in the water a few times. And he never built a fire, even in the cold Maine winters.

Making It In America


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As many RI Future readers may already know, I joined House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer and other House Democrats to announce the Make it in America plan – a comprehensive series of legislative proposals that will help reinvigorate American manufacturing and put men and women across America back to work in the kinds of good-paying jobs that built this great country’s middle class.

This agenda also includes a bill that I have introduced, the Make it in America Manufacturing Act, that establishes a competitive block grant program that provides small to medium-sized manufacturers with resources to retool their factories and retrain their workers to compete in a global economy.

I believe strongly that if we want to get our economy back on the right track, we have to start making things again in this country. That’s why, yesterday, I spoke on the House floor and highlighted the importance of Congress working to pass the commonsense proposals that are included in the Make it in America plan – a video of my speech is embedded below.

I hope you’ll join me in working to make sure that Congress acts soon on these pragmatic, progressive ideas for getting America back to work. Click here to visit the official Make it in America website and learn more right now.

State Bank Idea Is Back (As A Bill This Time)


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Photo courtesy of Governing Magazine, circa 2012.

Kim Kalunian writes that Rep. Charlene Lima has introduced legislation, at the request of Keven McKenna, to create a state-owned bank in Rhode Island – a movement that is gaining traction across the country.

The bill states that the purpose of the bank would be “to protect the financial welfare and economic vitality of the citizens of Rhode Island, to obtain credit and support the functions of state government, to create jobs and improve the general welfare of the state of Rhode Island.” Anchor Rising’s Monique Chartier reacted predictably.

I’ve previously written about a Rhode Island state bank before, to the chagrin of state bank supporters. The example everyone points to is the Bank of North Dakota (BND), since that’s actually the only example. North Dakota is the only place where a state bank has been tried. But, as has been pointed out to me, Rhode Island of 2013 is a different place than North Dakota of 1919 (when the BND was founded, McKenna says 1908 in Kalunian’s article). And I think there’s something to be said for that.

The major thing to me, 1919 North Dakota’s state bank wasn’t hatched by a lawyer talking to their representative. North Dakota’s state bank was part of a platform created by socialists and populists within the North Dakota Republican Party, called the Nonpartisan League (this is why you need to watch political names). These were highly popular farmer socialists and populists, who managed to control both houses of the North Dakotan legislature and governor’s office and pushed through the creation of the bank as well as a state-run mill and grain elevator and a railroad, and also banned corporate farming. That deep-red North Dakota continues to hold onto most of these socialist legacies may prove that they’re red in more ways than one.

2013 Rhode Island contains no such socialist/populist movement, much less one that is politically organized enough to seize both houses of the legislature and the governor’s office. It also lacks a single dominant jobs sector like North Dakota’s agricultural economy of early 1900s. Virtually all of North Dakota’s economic structures put in place were to benefit farmers; the bank to provide credit, the mill and grain elevator to create a market for produce, and the railroad to get produce to market, plus a number of other laws like hail insurance or the ban on corporate farming.

The point is that all of these addressed a perceived need for North Dakotans. Read the history sections of the bank or the mill and elevator. It’s essentially “North Dakotans had a problem, and our business is how they solved it.” There are serious abuses in the banking system; robosigning, usurious payday lending, etc., but it’s not clear that a state bank is the necessary solution. Both bank and mill neglect to mention their political origins, nor the fact that following their creation, they were attacked by corporate forces for being experimental. They survived these assaults, but only by dint of the Great Depression making their need more apparent then ever.

So what about a state-run bank in RI?

The major function of a state-run bank would be to act as the state’s coffers; it would be where all our deposits are kept. Now, this probably would have a decent effect on our state’s economy, we’d no longer be financing foreign banks with state money, which is what we currently do. However, pulling our deposits out of those banks could have a disastrous effect on the banking system in Rhode Island. The other thing is to look at North Dakota; bankers punished North Dakota for establishing the state bank, purposefully causing trouble for state borrowing by driving up interest rates. Given that the banking system is perhaps more unaccountable today than it was in 1919, it’s highly conceivable Wall Street would react just as negatively in 2013. North Dakota spent many years in difficulty as its socialist and conservative Republican Party factions battled for control of the state and party.

Therefore, it might be more conceivable and less politically damaging to look at where there’s problems and gaps in the Rhode Island economy (a process itself which has been done numerous times with varying degrees of success), and think about establishing state-run enterprise there if no private enterprise currently exists. Yes, this would be risky. But Rhode Island is going to have to come to grips with the idea that its gambling revenue is going to decline in the coming years. Enterprise that pays profits into the state’s general fund could be a massive boon to the state government, especially if it lands upon an untapped market.

But for any of this to be politically viable, you’ll need a Nonpartisan League-type of organization; which would demonstrate far more cooperation and organization than any faction within any political party has ever shown in this state’s history. So, to establish a state-run enterprise in Rhode Island you’ll need at least two things: a (necessarily theoretical) model built on Rhode Island conditions and an organized political grouping with the muscle to make it a reality. It’s not impossible, it’s just implausible.