John DePetro hypes a “miracle” in N. Providence


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Mary in North Providence 01
Mary?

A piece by Ethan Shorey on the Valley Breeze website this morning provided radio shock jock John DePetro a full three hours of material.

According to Shorey, “Brian Trambowicz was driving by the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary one day this summer when he says that Mary, the mother of Jesus, presented herself to him.”

DePetro, who is now apparently the arbiter of what constitutes a miracle, claims to completely believe that Mary has appeared in North Providence, and spent Friday morning directing people to the church. The weather worked against him, as the pouring rain kept people in their cars or under umbrellas as they strained their eyes trying to see the figure of Mary in what appears to be some sort of stain on the cross itself.

Of course, DePetro used this suspect apparition to go after some of his favorite targets, like Governor Lincoln Chafee, the liberal secular media and prominent local atheists who I won’t bother to name.

I arrived on site and took some pictures and talked to the very nice people who came out in the rain for a glimpse of something transcendent. Some people were very impressed, others seem to be trying to convince themselves that they should be impressed, and still others seemed mostly confused by the thing. To me this all had the feel of the familiar, because I was at another Marian apparition in 2003 at Milton Hospital in Milton, Massachusetts and this event felt similar in many ways.

Many people are unprepared for how slight and unimpressive apparitions are. In the Valley Breeze it was reported that “Trambowicz said the image of Mary “jumped out” at him as he was passing the church and praying, as is often his habit. The image looked like it was just inches from his face, he said.” Perhaps this was Trambowicz’s experience, but the actual cross bearing the image is distant, hard to see, and dark.

At gatherings like this people help each other to see the image, the way people might try to help each other see the shapes in one of those computer generated “Magic Eye” images or the full effect of an optical illusion. Related to this is a second process that happens at these events: people staring intently start seeing other images and other sights.

More than once I heard people say that it looked like Mary was holding the baby Jesus, or rosary beads, or that her head was slowly turning. One man on the DePetro show claimed to see three other images on the cross beam, these were the children of Fatima, said the caller, referring to a Church sanctioned miracle from 1917.

Of course, what we are truly seeing in this cross is the same thing that lets us see animals in clouds or faces in rock formations. This is pareidolia, “a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant.” When we add our natural inclination towards pareidolia with our need to see what we want to see, the effect can be quite compelling.

Knowing all this would not necessarily stop the faithful from seeing and believing, nor does it stop unscrupulous radio show trolls like DePetro from trying to turn this odd little story into a second Lourdes. All morning DePetro pathetically coached his listeners as to what they should be seeing, and outright doubted the religious faith of anyone who expressed the slightest doubt. He was encouraging mobs of people to stand outside a church on a rainy day and look up into the sky, and people did (including me, of course.)

Later in the show DePetro had to lay off a little, because of a funeral planned at the church for 11am. Traffic is always bad on Mineral Spring Avenue, and cars were slowing down as people craned their necks to see what they could see (which from a moving car isn’t much. How could Trambowicz have seen this if he was “driving by” as he claims?) The funeral was going to have a hard time navigating from the service to the gravesite if the crowd continued to swell.

One other thing that happens at such apparitions is that people wonder exactly why Mary might be appearing. In Milton observers were convinced that it was about abortion, because she appeared at a hospital. In Rhode Island, she appeared at a church that bears her name, on its 100th anniversary. Is she here for the birthday party? Or perhaps she appeared to chastise Mayor Charles Lombardi, or Governor Lincoln Chafee, because of their supposedly wicked, secular ways. Contrary to this, there are the conspiracy theories. Isn’t it a coincidence, said someone, that it happened on the church’s anniversary? Couldn’t this be faked somehow by church officials?

Meanwhile, even as DePetro pushed hard to validate this less than impressive and rapidly vanishing miracle, he still rails against immigrants and social justice and works for a station that gleefully accepts advertising from a high interest loan company preying on poverty. He still stands silent and accused in a pending sexual misconduct case and his ugly views on race, class, women and LGBTQ people continue to pollute the airwaves and the Internet.

What better defender of the faith could the public wish for?

Of course the truth is, as the picture that accompanies this piece shows, that the image on the cross doesn’t look that much like anything, never mind the mother of God. A close look reveals it to be some sort of stain which from far away, with vision blurred, might look like a veiled woman holding something, but up close the vision falls apart.

And so it is with all miracles. The closer you look, the less impressive they are.

As for the people who stand out in the rain staring into the sky seeking a hint of the divine, they unfortunately too often end up much like John DePetro: All wet.

 

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‘Choose Life’ license plates fund misinformation


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1005572_548223295216563_1852073928_nNARAL Pro-Choice America has issued a not entirely surprising follow up to its report on so-called “crisis pregnancy centers” (CPCs) in Virginia that should give pause to Rhode Island legislators and citizens who supported the “Choose Life” license plate bill (wisely vetoed by Governor Chafee) that would have provided funds to similar organizations in our own state. NARAL sent women undercover into Virginia CPCs and recorded counselors telling women that “the birth-control pill causes breast cancer and that condoms ‘don’t work.’

Centers like these receive funding from a variety of sources including “Choose Life” license plates available through the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles. [Governor] Ken Cuccinelli – whose anti-choice activism has helped shut down legitimate women’s health clinics across the state – has said he was the “proud sponsor” of the legislation behind the license plates when he served in the State Senate.

Highlights from the recording include the following insane lies and admissions:

Condoms are “naturally porous” and do not protect against STDs.

Women who have taken the birth-control pill for four years prior to their first pregnancy have a 46% increased risk of breast cancer.

Having an abortion will damage all of your future relationships.

“I try to talk women out of taking birth control.”

If you have an abortion, you will see that child’s soul again in the future: “At the end of the world you’re gonna know that was my child that I choose to kill.”

Though the audio recordings made by NARAL are new, their previous reports, are not. It has long been well known that CPCs give out medically unreliable and dangerous information. Under the active guidance of Senate President M Teresa Paiva Weed the “Choose Life” license plate legislation was passed in Rhode Island with a last second change in the bill substituting a crisis pregnancy center for the Knights of Columbus while the Senate Committee was in the midst of soliciting public commentary.

This amounts to practical, if not actually illegal legislative misconduct, but importantly this shows that real oversight and commentary was not wanted: Despite knowing how dangerous CPCs are to the health and wellbeing of Rhode Island women, anti-choice legislators pushed this legislation through anyway.

Crisis Pregnancy Centers, are essentially practicing medicine without a license. These places are distributing false and potentially deadly information to young women who are at the most vulnerable point in their lives. Instead of supporting these places with public funding the General Assembly should be looking into ways to hold these centers accountable, and shutting them down if they are in the business of giving out false medical information.

Thankfully, Rhode Island has avoided the pitfall of funding such places… for now.

Why churches can’t engage in political activity


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IRS Tax Code, Section 501©(3):

A tax-exempt religious organization is a legal entity or vehicle created and operated exclusively for religious purposes, no part of the net earnings of which insures to the benefit of any private individual, no substantial part of the activities of which is carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence legislation, and which does not participate in or interfere in any political campaign on behalf of any candidate for public office.

shchurch62012
Sacred Heart Church in Woonsocket

In 1954 Senator (later president) Lyndon B Johnson suggested that in exchange for sweeping tax exceptions, churches would be prohibited from endorsing or opposing political candidates.  The Council for Secular Humanism, in a landmark report, estimated that churches in America avoid paying at a minimum $71 billion in taxes.  This amounts to a huge subsidy for religious groups in America, a subsidy we pay whether we are religious or not.

The Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), a right wing theocratic legal defense organization, objects to the prohibition on clerical electoral advocacy. They maintain that churches should still be immune to taxation, but should not have to sacrifice their First Amendment rights to free speech to do so. Each year the ADF organizes Pulpit Freedom Sunday, a date for clergy across the country to violate this prohibition and openly challenge the IRS on this issue. As part of this action ministers send videos of their open violation of the law to the IRS, hoping to provoke a court case that the ADF can use to have the law stricken down.

The IRS has only sporadically enforced the law, and there are very few cases of the IRS going after a mainline Christian church. In fact, there is only one example of such a church losing its tax exempt status: “The Church at Pierce Creek in Binghamton, N.Y., lost its tax-exempt status in 1995 after the IRS determined it had violated federal tax law by publishing a full-page ad in USA Today in late October of 1992 advising people that voting for presidential candidate Bill Clinton was a sin. The church sued in federal court to regain its tax-exempt status but lost in federal district court. A federal appellate court later upheld the ruling denying the church tax-exempt status.”

For the most part, the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) has toed the line in this regard. The structure of the RCC is different from Protestant churches. Think of Protestant churches as a string of little franchises, with independent owners acting as they please within the confines of their conscience and faith. An IRS investigation and fine against one tiny church will not result in cases against other churches because there is no direct relation between them.

The RCC is different. The RCC maintains a top down pyramidal structure and all the churches and related property are financially connected. The priests are, in a sense, employees of the local bishops, who are in turn employees of the Pope, who acts as CEO. Were a case to be opened against a Catholic priest, and it was determined that the priest was following the edicts of his bishop, then other churches and other priests could be fairly investigated, and the entirety of the Catholic Church in the United States could possibly lose its tax free status.

High profile right wing religious advocate Mike Huckabee recently maintained that churches should voluntarily give up their tax free status so that they can move more forcibly into the public arena. Though this would be a bold and honest move on the part of religious institutions, remember that we’re talking $71 billion here. Few institutions are that bold or honest.

As Steve Siebold wrote on the Huffington Post, “Imagine how much food that could buy to feed the hungry, or how it could help those less fortunate. This might be acceptable if the church was actually encouraging strategies to reduce human suffering, irresponsible behavior that harms others, ending violence in our neighborhoods and other critical issues. Churches do not serve the common good; they propagate ancient supernatural mythology that brainwashes people into believing the unbelievable and impedes social and scientific progress.”

One last point: The IRS tax code is federal in nature, but city and state governments have expanded the tax free status of churches in other ways as well. “All 50 US states and the District of Columbia exempt churches from paying property tax. Donations to churches are tax-deductible.”

With all this in mind it is difficult to know what exactly motivates Father Brian Sistare in Woonsocket. Certainly, as his Twitter feed suggests, Sistare is extremely conservative in his views. It is possible that the closer ties being formed by Evangelical and Roman Catholic churches over issues like LGBTQ and reproductive rights have allowed priests like Sistare to feel comfortable violating the prohibition on politicking from the pulpit.

Certainly the evidence of emails from Sistare threatening to influence upcoming elections is a troublesome thing. If his actual sermons make good on this threat, then the IRS should certainly investigate and remedy the situation.

Of course, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence could always start paying federal, state and local taxes, in which case no one could complain at all.

Priest to legislators: I will campaign against you from church


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sistareA Catholic priest is said to have sent an email to legislators who voted for same sex marriage threatening to use his bully pulpit as a church leader to get them unelected.

“I’m praying for each of you, that you turn back to God,” said an email purportedly from Father Brian Sistare, who is now the priest at Sacred Heart in Woonsocket. “I’m also going to let my Parish know exactly how you voted, so come re-election time, you will not be re-elected.”

As non-profit entities, churches are legally forbidden from engaging in political campaign activity.

The email was sent to the 26 state senators who voted for marriage equality and was signed and seemingly sent by Sistare. Sistare, who was a priest at St. Rocco Church in Johnston at the time, did not return a call for comment earlier this week to RI Future and has since declined to comment to other media outlets as well.

Sistare is said to have told married gay parishoners that he would not serve them communion unless they ended their marriages. Divorce is considered a sin to devout Catholics but the church does have an annulment process.

Here’s the full email sent to state senators:

Dear RI Senators who voted for “marriage” between members of the same sex,

       Yesterday was a very sad day for our little state of Rhode Island.  I’m still shocked that each of you took it upon yourself to take the place of God and redefine what He has established.  Marriage has always been understood as the union between one man and one woman.  This is a 5,000 year old fact!  I’m wondering what you will do when a mother comes to you and asks to be married to her son, or a cousin wants to marry her first cousin, or when a man wants to marry 2 or 3 women, or a human being wants to marry his animal?  What will you do, now that you have decided that Marriage is no longer a sacred union between one man and one woman?
        For those of you Senators who are baptized Catholics, I invite you to go to the Sacrament of Confession to receive God’s Mercy and Forgiveness for your grave sin of voting against God yesterday, so you’ll be able to receive Holy Communion again in the Catholic Church.
        For those of you who claim to be a disciple of Jesus Christ, I also invite you to repentance in your own faith tradition; and to those who claim no religious affiliation, I pray that you also see the error of your ways.
        Your decision yesterday will have a lot of consequences on those of us who hold God’s definition of Marriage between one man and one woman.  Already my Pastor from my hometown of Westerly is being accused by a confirmed lesbian, of violating the tax exempt status of the Catholic Church for telling his parishioners to contact Senator Algiere about his upcoming vote – unfortunately, Senator Algiere, you betrayed your own Catholic Faith and your constituents in voting for sodomy yesterday.  Also, my little niece Giana was coming out of school the other day when her fellow 4 year old classmate remarked to her that 2 women could marry.  Thankfully, my niece told the little boy the TRUTH that this isn’t the case, that Marriage is only between one man and one woman.
        I’m praying for each of you, that you turn back to God.  I’m also going to let my Parish know exactly how you voted, so come re-election time, you will not be re-elected.
Fr. Sistare
St. Rocco Church
Johnston, RI

Kristina Fox elected president of YDRI


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras confers with Kristina Fox, who is flanked by Young Dems Alex Morash and Aaron Regunberg.
Providence Mayor Angel Taveras confers with Kristina Fox, who is flanked by Young Dems Alex Morash and Aaron Regunberg.

Kristina Fox, erstwhile of Ocean State Action and a champion for so many progressive causes, is the newly elected president of the Young Democrats of Rhode Island. I caught up with her on Facebook earlier today as she was waiting at TF Green to fly to the Young Democrats national conference in San Antonio, Texas.

Here’s most of our conversation:

Hi Kristina, and congrats on being elected president of the Young Democrats of Rhode Island!
Thank you, Bob! I’m quite excited and honored to be the new President of YDRI
I’m excited for you and the Young Dems! Can you tell me a little bit about your organization? What do you do, and why?
I’m happy to! YDRI is an organization made up of young folks (young defined as less than 36 yrs old) who work to improve and empower our RI community in keeping with the principles of the Democratic party: equality, diversity and inclusiveness. All of us became involved with YDRI because we care deeply about RI, and want to ensure that we get back on the path to success. As wonderful as our home is, there’s a lot of unjust things happening. We want to change that.
So, why limit your group to those under 36 years old (says the 39-yr-old)? why do young Democrats caucus like this without us old folks?
The age limit is set by the national YDA charter. Age is no barrier to being part of the movement though! As I’m fond of saying, we mean “young at heart” as well.
So what do the YDRI do? Other than meet and talk politics…
Right now our top priority is building building building up our membership! We want young dems from Woonsocket to Westerly involved in our work. To that effect, we’ll be having an event at the Galilee Beach Club in Narragansett on Monday August 19th. It kicks off at 6:30pm. I’m really looking forward to it
Me too … I love Galilee! What a nice place for young Democrats to converge! Did I see there is a South County chapter now, too?
We’re working on starting a SoCo chapter. This event at GBC is a kick off for that. A great group of women have been instrumental in organizing this: Abby Godino, Danielle Dirocco and Ann Little. Ann is also the YDRI Women’s Caucus Chair
I look forward to meeting up with you liberal whippersnappers at the beach! How do you plan to make a difference politically?
I’m glad that you’ll be joining us!
Most importantly we want to empower and involve young folks in the political process. Unemployment, affordable housing, access to quality affordable health care, work supports, education, civil rights: these issues, and a whole host of others, deeply impact young Rhode Islanders. Yet, for the most part, we aren’t at the table when decisions are made. That needs to change. When we make our voices heard, we have a better RI.
Your group seems not only young but also pretty progressive?
Young people overall tend to be more politically progressive. YDRI is proud to be a deep shade of blue
Do you have many centrist Dems in your ranks? Or, let me propose this hypothetical: what if a 28-year-old Doc Corvese-type wanted to be a member of the YDRI … would he or she be welcome?
Like the general Dem party, we’re a big tent. If a person identifies as a Democrat, that person is 100% welcome in YDRI. A twentysomething self-identified Democrat who doesn’t believe in marriage equality, a woman’s reproductive rights or tax equity? I’d love to have tea with this person and understand where they’re coming from.
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Then she had to board her plane. Congrats Kristina and have fun in San Antonio … here’s hoping next year’s Young Democrats convention is held in Providence or Newport (or both).

Barrington affordable housing project lives


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Credit Bill Rupp, Barrington Patch.
Credit Bill Rupp, Barrington Patch.

Good for the Barrington Planning Board for unanimously approving a controversial affording housing project.

I think.

“Multiple conditions” were placed on the project, according to the Providence Journal, including that at least 10 of the 40 units only have one bedroom. This condition would effectively limit the number of families with children that could live in the proposed Palmer Pointe development.

Barrington Patch reported that the applicants, the East Bay Community Development Corporation, will need to reassess the project. “Three representatives for EBCDC … were very pleased with the outcome, although [housing consultant Frank] Spinella said: ‘We need to determine whether it remains feasible with the conditions.'”

The proposed affordable housing project was controversial because an organized group in this upper-income suburb don’t think it’s fair that poor people get to live in subsidized housing in their community, and that the new development would increase traffic.

Barrington, nicknamed Borrington, has the highest real estate value, median income and NECAP scores in the state. It’s also been pretty good at keeping affordable housing projects out of town. State law requires there be 527 units of designated affordable housing but there are only 160.

Upper Narragansett Bay, aka the Providence River

The Providence River doesn’t technically become Narragansett Bay until Conimicut Light in Warwick, but for all aesthetic, commercial and ecological purposes it’s brackish water – a mix of salt and fresh water – that we manage as part of The Bay.

If you aren’t familiar with it from the water, this is what it looks like:

And some pictures:

pvd narragansett bay
Downcity, Providence from the upper reaches of The Bay.
And here's downtown as seen from behind the Field's Point windfarm.
And here’s downtown as seen from behind the Field’s Point windfarm.
Field's Point wind farm
Field’s Point wind farm
fields point wind farm
Field’s Point wind farm

There are two lighthouses in the Providence River/upper Bay area:

Ponham Light is in East Providence.
Ponham Light is in East Providence.
Conimicut Light, in Warwick, is where the Providence River technically gives way to Narragansett Bay.
Conimicut Light, in Warwick, is where the Providence River technically gives way to Narragansett Bay.

These next few pictures are of a giant road salt pile at Field’s Point that I fear is probably contributing to the pollution in Narragansett Bay. The salt probably isn’t as bad as whatever the salt is mixed with.

salt pile1 fields point salt pile skyline1 fields point salt pile2 fields point

Judge: Ed. Board should discuss NECAPs in public


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acluThe Board of Education must discuss the NECAP high stakes graduation requirement in public or not at all, a judge ruled yesterday after the ACLU appealed the board’s decision to discuss the politically-charged issue at a private “retreat” rather than at a public meeting.

“This is an important victory for the public and for transparency in government,” said Steven Brown, executive director of the RI ACLU.
It’s also an important victory for the broad coalition asking the Board to reconsider using the NECAP as a graduation requirement. The group, which ranges from organized inner city students to suburban parents to a majority of state legislators, has waged a high profile campaign that has drawn significant attention to the problems with using the NECAP test as a graduation requirement. Civil libertarians say high stakes testing unfairly favors the affluent, while psychometricians say the NECAP wasn’t designed to test individual assessment.
It’s also a important loss for board chairwoman Eva Mancuso as it is the second time in as many weeks as she’s been front and center in an issue flouting the public interest. Recently, Governor Chafee nominated her to oversee higher education in Rhode Island but she withdrew from contention because public board members are not allowed to be given jobs with the organizations they presided over.

 

Gay Catholics in Woonsocket denied communion

Pierre Laveillee, left, and Lew Pryeor are legally married gay Catholics who were told they could no longer receive communion.
Pierre Laveillee, left, and Lew Pryeor are legally married gay Catholics who were told they could no longer receive communion.

While many gay Rhode Islanders gained a new right last week, Lew Pryeor and Pierre Leveillee lost one yesterday.

The Catholic couple from Woonsocket was told by their priest, Rev. Brian Sistare of Sacred Heart, that he would  no longer give them communion at Sunday service.

“I have been a Catholic all my life,” Pryeor told me yesterday after he was informed of Sistare’s decision to deny them the sacrament. “I like to go to church and light a candle for my family. Now, I feel like I can’t do that anymore.”

Pryeor and Leveillee have been together for 34 years and were married in 2007. The couple moved to Woonsocket two years ago. He said they were always accepted at the other local Catholic churches they have attended in Warwick and West Warwick over the years.

His new church in Woonsocket, Pryor said, “is pushing people away when they should be reaching out. They may not agree with me, but they shouldn’t throw rocks at me.”

The couple will leave Sacred Heart and look for a more accepting Catholic church in Woonsocket.

Pryeor went to Sacred Heart on Monday to talk to Sistare about his politically conservative sermons. After suggesting that Sistare not alienate parishioners with the priest’s personal politics,  Pryeor said Sistare informed him that he would not give him communion anymore because his marriage to Leveillee is not recognized by the church.

Pryor said the priest told him he would give him communion if he ended his marriage to Laveilee.

Sistare, who could not immediately be reached for comment, is new at Sacred Heart, said Pryeor, who has been taking issue with his new priest’s politically-charged sermons.

Pryeor been posting on Facebook about Sistare’s sermons. From Sunday, July 28:

ok pierre and i went to church today .. new young priest at the Sacred heart church . Instead of saying how we all should follow the ways of the Pope, reaching out to everyone , He talked about the Governor again.. All right already not everyone likes Chafee but instead of showing negativity towards someone due to their beliefs try to reach out to those that are lost are needing help.

And this from Sunday, August 3:

mass was ok today but What political party was my priest refering to as a party that is wrong for thinking the rich should give up some of there money.

Pryeor and Leveillee have been congregants at Sacred Heart since moving to Woonsocket two years ago. Pryeor organized the annual church festival. They live one block from the church and bring their grandchildren to mass. Pryeor said he and Leveillee have been congregants at Catholic churches in both Warwick and West Warwick before moving to Woonsocket and their relationship and their love has always been accepted by other priests.

Other gay couple who attend Sacred Heart have posted on Pryeor’s Facebook posts that they, too, have been told they would not be offered communion.

Catholics believe that the Sacrament of Communion – eating unleavened bread blessed by a priest – is akin to eating the body of Jesus, who they believe is the son of god born of a virgin birth.  Devout Catholics believe communion should not be given to sinners until they repent.

The church has a legal right to deny anyone any part of their ritual it sees fit. But preaching politics from the pulpit may be another matter. As a tax-exempt organization, church’s have a legal obligation not to use their non-profit status to push its leaders’ personal politics on its parishioners.

Sistare is also a part of the campus ministry at Mount St. Charles Academy in Woonsocket. He’s also on Twitter, where he follows many conservative politicians and FOX News personalities. In January,  tweeted this to Gov. Chaffee:

@LincolnChafee Do RI a favor & go take a job w/ Abomination adm. in DC. Will have to answer to God w/ your support of abortion and sodomy!

Of spying and genocide


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A couple of days ago, WIRED ran a story: Lawmakers Who Upheld NSA Phone Spying Received Double the Defense Industry Cash. After reading the WIRED post I posted this on the Occupy Providence Facebook page:

A case in point: Jim Langevin supports spying. Bribed to the tune of $119,750, he is near the top of the list of those supported by the defense and intelligence industry.

Of the top 10 defense payola recipients only one House member — Rep. Jim Moran (D-Virginia) — voted to end the NSA spy-on-the-People program.
Of the top 10 defense payola recipients only one House member — Rep. Jim Moran (D-Virginia) — voted to end the NSA spying program.

Most of us have been so indoctrinated that we barely notice that our corrupt electoral system and pervasive scare-mongering are the vehicles that bring us Orwell’s 1984 with its Perpetual War and its Big-Brother-Is-Watching-You.  However that may be, I am not the only one with Orwell on my mind. Almost at the same time, I had an email exchange with a friend in a thread — re: Obama and Orwell — that he started with:

The White House then condemned Amash/Conyers this way: “This blunt approach is not the product of an informed, open, or deliberative process.” What a multi-level masterpiece of Orwellian political deceit that sentence is. The highly surgical Amash/Conyers amendment – which would eliminate a single, specific NSA program of indiscriminate domestic spying – is a “blunt approach,” but the Obama NSA’s bulk, indiscriminate collection of all Americans’ telephone records is not a “blunt approach.” Even worse: Amash/Conyers – a House bill debated in public and then voted on in public – is not an “open or deliberative process,” as opposed to the Obama administration’s secret spying activities and the secret court that blesses its secret interpretations of law, which is “open and deliberative.”

It’s impressive that anyone can write a statement like the one that came from the Obama White House without dying of shame or giggles.

My reply:

I agree. In fact, my impression of Obama’s Climate Action Plan is the same. Here are a couple of red flags.

I came across this in the plan:

In 2012 the President set a goal to issue permits for 10 gigawatts of renewables on public lands by the end of the year. The Department of the Interior achieved this goal ahead of schedule and the President has directed it to permit an additional 10 gigawatts by 2020.

It turns out that this represents less than 0.05% of total US power consumption, way smaller than the accuracy with which this total is known.

Then there was this in the plan:

Natural Gas. Burning natural gas is about one-half as carbon-intensive as coal, which can make it a critical bridge fuel for many countries as the world transitions to even cleaner sources of energy. Toward that end, the Obama Administration is partnering with states and private companies to exchange lessons learned with our international partners on responsible development of natural gas resources.

This is highly misleading. “Burning” ignores extraction. It’s not known how much methane escapes in the process, but it may be a couple of percent. Methane is two orders more effective as a greenhouse gas, although it decays with a decay time on the order of a decade.

If I were a reviewer of a scientific paper with these characteristics, and had little time, I’d tell the editor: “Hey, bro/sis, don’t publish this crap until you get a full report and these and similar issues have been addressed.”

Should a plan upon which the survival of a large fraction of the biosphere depends be judged by anything less than scientific standards?

Where in the plan are we being told that, if we continue along the current trajectory, humanity will within 20 years have put the amount of CO2 it can “safely” put into the atmosphere by 2050?

Where does this plan mention that the US per capita produces five times the global average of CO2 and that we have to cut our fossil fuel habit by roughly 90%, unless we claim US exceptionalism?

I ran some of these comments by the local (New England) head of the EPA. The discussion was interesting. First, this federal cheerleader tried to convince me that I was focussing on only a tiny detail of the plan. I admitted that that was indeed the case, and replied: “Suppose I have a grad student who wrote a paper that I presented at a conference about the solution of a problem. I ‘d be less than amused to find out that I used precious time talking about 0.05% details.”

He changed course, and said that the alternative, namely scaring the population, was a bad idea. If the situations were less serious, it would have been fun to see him squirm.

Conclusion, as Orwell said: “Political language […] is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give the appearance of solidity to pure wind.”

The email exchange ended with this comment of my friend:

I am getting more and more convinced that humans really are no different from any animal whose predators disappear for some reason so that their population runs wild and they destroy their ecosystem. In fact, we are far worse in that we are destroying the entire planet.

Your EPA guy is afraid of scaring people? Ask him to watch this Duck and Cover movie made to warn children about how to protect themselves from atomic bombs! If we can show this to kids, surely we can talk about global warming…

My closing sigh:

This particular EPA guy undoubtedly is one of the enlightened souls. How do you fight these clowns?

Maybe this exchange between physicists is a little too condensed for a general audience;  let me provide some further explanation. In Sustainable Energy — without the hot air David McKay presents a graph showing that globally we produce five tons COequivalent per person year. (“Equivalent” means that other green house gasses, such as methane, have been replaced by the amount of CO2 that has the same warming effect.) In the US per capita we produce five times the global average.

According to Bill McKibben’s Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math, we can put no more than 600 giga tons of CO2 into the atmosphere by mid-century if we want to keep global warming under 2°C.  McKay writes that we were dumping 34 giga tons into the atmosphere in 2000. At that long-surpassed rate mankind will have exhausted its total allotment in 20 years. In other words, mankind today has to cut its rate in half globally to get to 2050 within the maybe-safe limit.

Is it a surprise that the US has been sabotaging Kyoto Protocol, the Durban Platform, the Copenhagen Accord on so on, if our rate of energy usage is about five times the global average? Clearly, if we have to cut our consumption by close to 90% today, tomorrow we’ll need an even bigger cut.  It sounds as if climate plan is to suspend the laws of physics given that “the American way of life is not negotiable.”

The war criminal of the previous administration whom I just quoted also advanced a One-Percent Doctrine: “If there’s a 1% chance that Pakistani scientists are helping al-Qaeda build or develop a nuclear weapon, we have to treat it as a certainty in terms of our response. It’s not about our analysis … It’s about our response.”

Let’s apply this “wisdom” to the issue of methane escaping during natural gas extraction. This might be a controversial topic, but should we not deal with the future of the globe according to a One-Percent Doctrine and pay attention to statements like the following?

Compared to coal, the footprint of shale gas is at least 20% greater and perhaps more than twice as great on the 20-year horizon and is comparable when compared over 100 years.

Maybe some like to believe the America’s Natural Gas Alliance in its critique of the Cornell paper, Methane and Greenhouse-Gas Footprint of Natural Gas from Shale Formations, the origin of the quote above.

Obviously, the One-Percent Doctrine is just that: yet another perpetual-war ploy to further the interests of the 1%. That may have been the previous administration, but I remain to be convinced that the current White House  with its All of the Above approach is not just more of the same presented with better PR. “Fool me once, shame on you; fool, … uh,  …, uh, …”

Why should we trust a White House climate plan that sweeps problems under the rug when recognizing them would not go over well with its fossil fuel paymasters?  Why should we rely on a plan, brainlessly echoed in the national media, that presents less-than-0.05% effects as part of the action? Is the White House treading carefully so as not to scare the kids or is it ignoring reality in its attempt to perpetuate US Dreams of Empire?

Other electoral changes that work (Part 13 of MMP RI)


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Currently, for a party to be recognized by the state, they must collect signatures totaling 5% or more of either the Presidential vote or the Gubernatorial vote (whichever was more recent). Then, in the next election, to maintain their party status, they have to win 5% of the vote in that category, and then every four years win 5% again.

That threshold is designed to keep third parties from being recognized. Plurality, winner-takes-all voting schemes like Rhode Island’s practically force voters to vote strategically and over time reduce the amount of parties down to two. Lowering the threshold to a more manageable number like 2% of the vote would be a start. Alternatively, the requirement could be 5% of the Gubernatorial vote and then a requirement to win 5% in any statewide race. Another would be to keep the signature requirement and an interval after a reasonable period of time to force that collection again (however, this would mean that Republicans and Democrats were forced to do this as well). Finally, dropping the signature requirement altogether and making sure that parties met a set number of requirements could also open up our party system.

Instant Runoff Voting (IRV)

I’ve mentioned this before, and the General Assembly passed the Voter Choice Act in 2011 to study IRV. The study commission was due to report on May 1, 2013; but a House bill by Rep. Blazejewski (a member of the commission) was passed on July 3rd to move the date to November 1st. Don’t ask me how that works.

IRV allows voters to rank their choice of candidates, preventing the spoiler effect that third party candidates and independents can have (as a result, IRV systems foster multiple parties). In an MMP system, it could greatly change how district seats are awarded. In Rhode Island, this could ultimately mean the end of Democratic dominance in the districts.

Revamp Election Day

Election Day sucks. A working Tuesday is a terrible day to hold an election. Miss it because you were sick or had work, and you have to wait two years (and no guarantee it’ll be the same election then. Beyond early voting and extended voting times, one of my favorite suggestions was to turn Election Day into a week-long paid-holiday/celebration, complete with things like parades and fireworks. Considering it’s the part of our democracy that’s the most democratic, I think that’s a good idea.

Stop/Reduce Gerrymandering

Gerrymandering can create a way for a party to cling to power even when it should’ve been defeated. This problem is endemic across the United States, but it’s only receives attention in the run-up to redistricting, during redistricting, and in the immediate aftermath. While MMP ostensibly works to counteract gerrymandering, how districts are drawn is a better solution, since it works across electoral systems.

Bipartisan commissions bother me, since incumbents always have a reason to draw themselves safe districts. Independent commissions also bother me, since legislators are pretty good at finding a way to work around nominal independence. I don’t have a very good solution, but the shortest-splitline algorithm seems like a promising way to counteract it; though it leads to districts that often ignore geographical features and boundaries. I’ll let this YouTube video explain it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kUS9uvYyn3A

 

This is Part 13 of the MMP RI series, which posits what Rhode Island’s political landscape would look like if we had switched to a mixed-member proportional representation (MMP) system in 2002. Part 12 (a revisiting of the 2010 election based on Attorney General election results) is available here. Part 14 ends this series.

NK fire fighters win at Labor Relation Board


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nk fireThe North Kingstown Town Council bargained in bad faith with local fire fighters when it imposed 24 hour shifts without negotiations, according to a leaked decision by the state Labor Relations Board. Town Council President and Labor Relations Board member Liz Dolan confirmed the leak to NK Patch this morning saying, “From the town’s perspective, we were totally expecting this.”

The NK Town Council imposed 24 hour shifts on the fire fighters after they were unable to negotiate a new contract with them. Dolan told Patch the Council had the authority to do so under the Town Charter. She also said it is rare that the Labor Relations Board is overturned. Dolan recused herself from the Labor Relations Board vote.

“We will appeal it and we will ask the District Court judge for a stay,” she told Patch.

North Kingstown, a middle class suburb with traditionally very contentious local politics, has taken a decidedly anti-organized labor approach to balancing its budget. Last summer, the School Committee outsourced its custodial staff to a private company from Tennessee. The custodians have re-organized as a collective bargaining unit, and it is still unclear if the switch will save money.

NK also hired infamous anti-labor lawyer Dan Kinder to act as its legal counsel. Kinder is best known for successfully defending East Providence against allegations that its cost-cutting measures violated collective bargaining agreements, but he cost the taxpayers of EP more than a million dollars in doing so.

The 24-hour schedule for fire fighters would mean an additional 728 hours a year along with an average $5 an hour pay cut. The fire fighters, who had agreed to less severe pay cuts, are seeking $1.4 million in damages from the town.

Last week fire fighter and union president Ray Furtado tweeted, “Through July 23, 2013, amount of unpaid wages to @NK_Fire members nearing $2.1 million due to Unfair Labor Practice (ULP) @IAFFNewsDesk.”

 

Hedge fund investment good, but for who?


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ginaThere is a difference between a thing having a good effect and a thing being a net good.

Take hedge funds, for example. They do produce a good outcome, in that they manage against investment risk. But that doesn’t mean that investing in hedge funds is a net good for the state’s pension fund.  Mike Stanton’s Sunday blockbuster on Rhode Island’s hedge fund gamble points out that there are lots of competing goods going on here.

Hedge funds do manage investment risk, there’s no doubt about that. But this management strategy has required a massive divestment from our workforce and a transfer of that wealth to Wall Street.

Ted Seidle writes, “paying huge pension fees to Wall Street hasn’t hurt the Treasurer’s campaign fundraising efforts.”

It’s reasonable to assume hedge fund managers would be willing to underwrite pension reform if reform means they make tons of money on the deal. Billionaire hedge fund manager John Arnold underwrote pension reform in Rhode Island with massive donations to Engage RI and now he is investing in pension reform in California, Reuters reports.

Apples to Twinkies: Cicilline on subsidy reform

DSC04357The Rhode Island Public Interest Research Group (RI PERG) released a report this morning during a press conference at Hope Market in Lippitt Park in Providence revealing that agricultural subsidies pay for twenty Twinkies, but only half an apple, per taxpayer. The report, entitled “” finds that since 1995, $19 billion in tax money has subsidized junk food ingredients versus only $688 million for apples. According to RI PIRG canvasser Corinne Winter, most fruits and vegetables grown in Rhode Island are considered “specialty crops” by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) meaning that Rhode Island is eligible for only a tiny fraction of taxpayer funded farm subsidies.

This kind of tax subsidy has a direct impact on issues like obesity, especially considering that nearly $17 billion has been spent since 1995, on “,” according to Winter.

Congressman David Cicilline was at the press conference to speak to a sizable crowd (and woefully inadequate press) on the subject. He pointed to a Republican congress more beholden to corporate welfare through farm subsidies than to supporting important programs like SNAP that help feed people across the nation.

“If you are looking for an example of congressional disfunction” the Congressman said, “the Farm Bill is a very good place to start.”

For decades the Farm Bill has lead to a set of distorted incentives in food production.

It could not be clearer: Our nation’s agricultural policies are explicitly subsidizing the production and purchasing of unhealthy foods instead of fruits and vegetables.

This year, says Cicilline, Republicans in Congress have “doubled down on this strategy and made it even worse.”

The first version of the Republican’s proposed Farm Bill increased these unhealthy subsidies, and to pay for them they proposed defunding the essential SNAP program by $20 billion and wanted to cut what few subsidies actually exist for healthy fruits and vegetables. This bill failed, but Republican leadership are now forwarding another bill that cuts programs designed to provide low-income families with access to nutritious foods completely.

So much for family values.

Jesse Rye, managing director of Farm Fresh Rhode Island said that the SNAP program “is such an important program to so many Rhode Island citizens and it’s really critical to the health and well being of our state. [Farm Fresh RI] pilot[s] a program at farmer’s markets that incentivizes SNAP benefits usage at farmer’s markets so that when someone comes to a market like this, and takes their SNAP benefit cards, they get 40% of a bonus on top of whatever the value of their card is.”

“People are happy,” continued Rye, “to go to a farmer’s market and get healthy, fresh food right from their farmers.”

You can watch the press conference in its entirety below:

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Finding our pride


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This week saw the launch of the Rhode Island Foundation’s “It’s All in Our Backyard” campaign, which is targeted at boosting Rhode Island’s self-confidence and “use individual success stories to make points about the Rhode Island economy.” The videos on the campaign’s website highlight businesses and innovation within the state’s economic sector; and as far as advertisements go they’re pretty good overviews of each of the highlighted groups. You can also watch the Foundation’s Neil Steinberg and Jessica David chat with Ted Nesi on WPRI about it (starting at ~12:20).

It’s way too soon to say whether this will have an impact, but I just don’t think it’ll do much to instill the sense of pride of place that it’s aiming for. I’m personally not a fan of the slogan, which is a bit twee for my taste, and reminds me a bit of “NIMBY” (not in my backyard). So while all these thoughts were sort of bubbling around in my head, this popped up on my Facebook newsfeed:

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That’s from the Kentucky for Kentucky which is promoting the slogan “Kentucky Kicks Ass” in opposition to Kentucky’s official “Unbridled Spirit” slogan. In the interview with Nesi, David refers to this “very grassroots” campaign when asked what stood out among the different campaigns they looked at.

Personally, I think the Kentucky Kicks Ass campaign is a very effective campaign, mainly because it explores what Kentucky is, rather than what Kentucky has. The (so far) materialist focus of It’s All in Our Backyard won’t inspire reflexive pride in Rhode Islanders. And we need it; watch this clip from WPRI’s The Rhode Show discussing the campaign:

Once he gets past the “it’s small” angle, Will Gilbert just starts listing places we’re close to; New York and Boston. That’s great for New York or Boston, but if I want to visit those places, why am I coming to Rhode Island? there are places in Massachusetts? What’s going to inspire me?

It’s not going to be discussing our economy at all. It’s simply failing too many people for that to ever be a believable message. Especially when facing the doom-and-gloom messaging that gets action on economic issues, “It’s All in Our Backyard” is flying into serious headwinds; as the observers The Journal gathered said. This isn’t going to “move the needle” or change our position on those big business “friendliness” rankings. Of course, that’s more ambitious than what the Backyard campaign is reaching for.

I’d rather we face those issues head-on. Rhode Island isn’t a place that’s afraid to shy from debate. We should acknowledge that we’ve long been a place for the dissident. We should also acknowledge that we’ve faced long odds before and triumphed. That we are even a state is an incredible feat, given the designs Massachusetts had on gaining the Narragansett Bay combined with intrigue among our founders. We were a haven for pirates, and our most celebrated act of rebellion against British authority was aimed at protecting our smuggling operations. It’s often our moments of defiance that define us as a people.

What’s the most prideful moment of the last week? It was August 1st, as Rhode Islanders turned out to watch their loved ones marry, regardless of their gender; and in opposition to what the vast majority of other states allow. Rhode Islanders counter-protested hate group members who flew in. That’s the kind of state that makes me proud to belong to. Other Rhode Islanders may disagree, but it wouldn’t be Rhode Island if they didn’t.

Perhaps I’m being a bit harsh on the Backyard campaign. With its limited focus on business, they’ve left a gap for something like the Kentucky Kicks Ass campaign; unofficial, out there, and lower to the ground. One that celebrates Rhode Island while also acknowledging our dark side.

Hate groups not welcome


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DSC04172There’s been a lot written on this site and elsewhere about what makes Rhode Island so great. The Rhode Island Foundation has even launched It’s All In Our Backyard, “an internal marketing campaign designed to change the way Rhode Islanders talk about their state” because, they say, the “state has a self-esteem problem.”

In this spirit I’d like to share an observation that occurred to me yesterday as I covered various marriage equality celebrations throughout the state:

Rhode Island is great, because we don’t have hard-core hate groups, they have to be imported.

Think back to the marriage equality hearings that took place at the State House earlier this year. Many people spoke passionately for and against the marriage equality bills. Those opposed to the bills on deeply religious grounds, whether we agree with their theology or not, were for the most part not motivated by hate, but by faith.

When the Faith Alliance, a coalition of various religious groups, was formed to oppose marriage equality here in our state, only one member organization had the distinct “honor” of being cited by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as an actual, certified hate group: MassResistance. As their name implies, MassResistance is from Massachusetts. Sure, the Faith Alliance was organized by the National Organization for Marriage, but that’s also an out of town organization. Other members, including local chapters of the Knights of Columbus, the Hispanic Coalition of Pastors and Ministers and even the Catholic Church might have hateful members, but their primary mission is not one of hate.

Mark Potok, senior fellow with the SPLC confirmed this for me when he said, “it is highly unusual for the Catholic Church to work with groups like MassResistance.”

Yesterday the Westboro Baptist Church (WBC), a crazed religious cult best known for picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in our foreign wars, came to Rhode Island to protest the first day same-sex marriages licenses were to be issued.

They came from Kansas. All four of them.

In response to yet another visit from an out of town hate group, Rhode Islanders responded the best way they could: they partied. Hundreds of Rhode Islanders, united in the spirit of tolerance, acceptance and equality, sent the WBC back to Kansas with their tail between their legs by singing, dancing, dressing in costumes and displaying humorous and mocking signs. Our message was clear: In Rhode Island, expressing intolerance and hate makes you an object of ridicule.

The WBC did our state a favor by coming to town yesterday. There are some people in this state who might have wanted to protest the arrival of marriage equality, but to do so they would have had to stand side by side with the WBC. As I tried to point out in my posts concerning the Faith Alliance and MassResistance, we are, rightly or wrongly, measured in part by the company we keep. As long as the WBC clown car was in town, unintentionally mocking those opposed to marriage equality, our local anti-marriage equality response had to be muted. Even our most vocal and local purveyors of hate (and they are out there, as you know) knew better than to appear to be aligned with the WBC.

Perhaps the WBC’s appearance here in Rhode Island even gave some marriage equality opponents something to think about regarding their attitudes towards the LGBTQ community. (Perhaps not.)

Groups like MassResistance and the Westboro Baptist Church, when they do come to Rhode Island to spread their noxious filth, should not be ignored by reasonable and responsible people. The Rhode Island Council of Churches (RICC) issued a statement to the press on Tuesday appealing “to the media to ignore the Westboro protests as the tangential and irrelevant phenomena that they are.” I could not agree more with the spirit of the RICC’s statement, but in practical terms, when reasonable and responsible people fail to counter and cover the WBC, only the unreasonable and irresponsible are left.

In yesterday’s celebrations and counter-protests, people of good character modeled decent behaviors for those who might be less inclined to act responsibly in reaction to the WBC’s presence. Large groups of people can sometimes become unwieldy and dangerous things, but one factor that can minimize the risk of a crowd becoming a mob is the presence of strong leaders and responsible participants. Another factor that tends to reign in bad behavior is cameras. People act and speak differently if they suspect their behaviors might be broadcast to the world. Yesterday’s counter actions in response to the WBC were the height of civility and peace because the people participating were at their core civil and peaceful, but also because those who might have more sinister motivations found their ideas lost in the crowd.

Hate needs to be actively countered and exposed to sunlight, lest it fester and grow.

We in Rhode Island should be proud because yesterday we as a people demonstrated decency in the face of indecency, love in the face of hate and laughter in the face of insult.

Good job, Rhode Island.

Looking for oxygen in Narragansett Bay


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insomniacsRampant beach closures are bad for business but Rhode Islanders should be equally concerned with the potential for another fish kill this summer, said Save The Bay Baykeeper Tom Kutcher as he and a team from Brown University took water samples from around the upper Bay to monitor the oxygen levels in the water.

The group calls themselves the Insomniacs, because they used to do their research at night, and their work is critical if the Ocean State is to know when the oxygen levels in Narragansett Bay get low enough to leave millions of fish dead, as happened in 2003 in Greenwich Bay.

“All it will take is a school of blues to chase a school of pogies into a low oxygen zone and trap them there for a few hours and we could see another fish kill,” Kutcher said. “The conditions are as bad as they were but we aren’t seeing that big signal that gets everyone’s attention. Why should we wait for the fish to die? Let’s take action.”

DEM and URI officials told me the same thing last week.

Beach closures and hypoxia, the scientific term for low oxygen events, are part and parcel of the same environmental problems. They are both fueled by heavy rains, hot weather and stagnant water mixed with high levels of sewage and suburban runoff. Beaches close because of bacteria levels in The Bay are harmful to humans, but some of that same pollution, namely lawn fertilizers and pet poop, also causes rampant underwater plant growth. When those floating plants die, they sink to the bottom and starve Narragansett Bay of oxygen. When Narragansett Bay doesn’t have sufficient oxygen – as has been the case this summer – fish die.

David Murray, an environmental science professor from Brown University who leads the Insomniac team, helped design a meticulous monitoring system in order to stave off a disaster like Greenwich Bay experienced in 2003 when more than a million fish died because of low oxygen levels in The Bay.

His group tests 25 different spots on the upper Narragansett Bay – from the Seekonk River to Conimicut Point in Warwick. At each spot they slowly lower a $20,000 piece of equipment from the surface to the bottom. The monitoring machine is attached to a laptop, and it instantly communicates the oxygen levels in the water.

Another group, the Day Trippers, similarly monitors the East Bay. URI and state researchers use semi-permanent buoys to take similar readings in the West Bay and lower Bay. Everyone’s research says the same thing: increasingly hypoxic waters pose a major threat to sea life in Narragansett Bay ecosystem, and by extension the Ocean State economy.

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Video: Marriage party at Providence City Hall


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Video from the Marriage Equality celebration held outside Providence City Hall today from 8:30am to 9:30am.

Marriage celebrations at City Hall, State House


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DSC04154At least three different events were planned to celebrate Marriage Equality today, the first day marriage licenses for same-sex couples were to be made available at City Halls throughout the state. Many gathered not only to celebrate greater acceptance and tolerance of same-sex couples in Rhode Island, but to counter-protest the odious and hateful Westboro Baptist Church, who kept their promise to display their colorful, insulting and soul damaging signs at locations throughout Rhode Island.

There were three times as many media present as Westboro Baptist Church protesters, which is testament to their ability to generate controversy. The trick it seems, is to ignore them, but is that really possible? I’ve been giving this a lot of thought and I’m not sure.

The main objective of the pro-equality celebrations and counter-protests was to present a cheerful and positive message about love, acceptance, tolerance and equality, and that was achieved. Organizer Mikaela Vento, who hoped to avoid negativity in today’s actions commented that, “It’s not really a celebration anymore, it’s become a counter-protest. But at least people are smiling and laughing.”

Sure, some of the signs on the side of equality and love crossed the line of good taste and blasphemy, but the event(s) were entirely peaceful. This is Rhode Island, after all. We invented tolerance, and the only thing we won’t tolerate is intolerance.

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Surprise visits were made by the Pope, pirates, Xena and extra-terrestrials.

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Congratulations to Zach and Gary, the first couple to get their marriage license at Providence City Hall this morning.

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Like a star-spangled butterfly of hate

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A happy couple with wedding license in hand.

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Xena bangs a drum for love and equality.

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Equality and Atheism

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Some of the signs were very subtle.

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Some of the signs were extremely tasteful.

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The real Captain America would be on the side of love and equality.

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These guys came prepared

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and, I might add, Rhode Island.

Why the response to Trayvon Martin falls short


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TrayvonThe death of Trayvon Martin and acquittal of his murderer, George Zimmerman, unleashed widespread discussion and protest of racism in America. The response has been rightful outrage; protestors filling streets and indignant polemics filling the media. Yet a lion’s share of the response misses the mark.

Trayvon Martin’s death, like most all instances of racism, resulted from the structural racism which exists in the United States—income, education, incarceration, voting inequality, etc. Systemic, pervasive racial inequality inevitably breeds racist behavior. But, in a manner both common and pernicious, most of the response has ‘individualized’ racism, reducing the problem to the depraved attitudes of George Zimmerman and other racists like him. The problem becomes just Zimmerman; the grand remedy is nationwide attitude reform. Any course of action that individualizes racism as such is circular, leading directly back to where we stand today. If we are serious about stopping the rushing stream of Trayvon Martins, a different conceptualization of racism and a different action plan is necessary.

Most of the mass outcry at Trayvon Martin’s murder and Zimmerman’s acquittal has treated racism as an individual problem. The limitations of the demands and the proposed program to fight racism both treat racism as an individual attitude rather than a systemic ideology rooted in material inequalities.

In example, the nearly singular demand expressed by the outraged has been a guilty verdict, to lock Zimmerman up. Op-ed after op-ed, tweet after tweet, and speech after speech blasted the Florida justice system. Here most of the outrage stops. Zimmerman is a racist who must be imprisoned, and perhaps the acquitting jury members share some of the responsibility as well. The call on the Obama administration to prosecute Zimmerman on civil rights grounds has been far and away the most resounding and organized response, quickly amassing over one million signatures. Overwhelmingly, anti-racists have directed their rage at Zimmerman the individual.

Even when the discussion has moved beyond Zimmerman, the outraged have generally kept racism at the level of the individual. The common plan of action to combat further racism has been to promote self-reflection on racism amongst racist individuals everywhere. President Obama summarized this strategy in his widely celebrated speech on the matter. Obama concluded,
“And then, finally, I think it’s going to be important for all of us to do some soul-searching. There has been talk about should we convene a conversation on race… [A]sk yourself your own questions about, am I wringing as much bias out of myself as I can? Am I judging people as much as I can, based on not the color of their skin, but the content of their character? That would, I think, be an appropriate exercise in the wake of this tragedy.”

The remedy is to ‘wring bias’ out of people, to question our individual attitudes. In the same vein, perhaps the most trendy social media response was to declare ‘I am not Trayvon Martin’. Turning the traditional ‘I am’ rally cry of unity on its head, the ‘I am not’ strategy focuses on stimulating discussion of ‘racial privilege’. Like Obama’s conclusion, the implied solution is to cleanse racists’ attitudes through sober discussion. While there hasn’t yet been anything akin to the Million Man March, we have certainly seen a Million Man Recognition of Racial Privilege of sorts in the past weeks.

Both responses are fine starting points. Zimmerman should be imprisoned as a matter of justice and racism’s omnipresence in American society needs to be talked about. But stopping there, as most of the conversation has, is not only stunted but also politically harmful. To imply that racism is merely a free-floating cancer in the minds of individuals and can be eradicated through widespread individual persuasion is to condemn the anti-racist movement to failure.

The problem with the individual-centric response is that racism is an ideology inextricably rooted in the material racial inequality of American society. Rather than existing simply in the realm of ideas, ideologies such as racism exist as a means for individuals to interpret and explain material realities. That is, ideologies help us understand the world around us. As the great historian of American racism, Barbara Fields, writes,

“Ideology is a distillate of experience. Where the experience is lacking, so is the ideology that only the missing experience could call into being…An ideology must be constantly created and verified in social life; if it is not, it dies. Ideology is not a set of attitudes that people can ‘have’ as they have a cold, and throw off the same way. Human beings live in human societies by negotiating a certain social terrain, whose map they keep alive in their minds by the collective, ritual repetition of the activities they must carry out in order to negotiate the terrain.”

Racism in the United States is an ideology that helps ‘negotiate’ the country’s drastic racial inequality. In a country with such great inequality along racial lines, racism as an ideology is profoundly powerful in explaining the ‘social terrain’. As long as this inequality exists, along with a class with an interest in exploiting it (think Fox News), racism as an ideology is not likely to disappear.

An isolated maniac thus did not alone murder Trayvon Martin. The rampant racial inequality in our society that engenders racial prejudice, along with Zimmerman, ultimately shares responsibility. Zimmerman reacted in fear and hate towards an African-American just as thousands of other Americans do each day, just as our unequal society encourages them to do. In a society that disproportionately criminalizes, impoverishes, imprisons, and generally oppresses African-Americans, an ideology of racism which understands African-Americans as ‘underclass’ criminals readily flourishes. Zimmerman looked at the world around him, one in which African-Americans are disproportionately criminalized and impoverished, and the ideology of racism made sense. When he saw Martin walking home, his instincts sprung to action and he committed racist murder.

Most of the outraged responses fall short because they fail to address these root causes of racist violence. If racist violence such as Zimmerman’s were an isolated phenomenon, a mere conviction would be sufficient. Racist violence—physical, economic, and psychological—is, however, an every-minute occurrence in America. Discussion of racism in America is vital, but discussion is only worth the action it precipitates. A political strategy of discussion that will convert American racists is bound to leave American racism safely intact. A political strategy of merely discussing ‘privilege’ in hope that racist White Americans recognize and denounce their racism is bound to leave American racism safely intact. Any political program that treats racism as a mere idea or attitude, detached from our country’s racialized slums, prisons, schools, etc, is bound to leave American racism safely intact.

To truly fight racism in America and to stop future racist brutalities like the murder of Trayvon Martin, we must focus our energies on ending the sweeping racial inequalities that generate George Zimmermans. For example, we must channel our outrage at ending the racist criminal justice system. For as long as one in three African-American men are imprisoned in their lifetimes, there will be racism and more Trayvon Martins. We must channel our outrage at fighting for decent jobs and full employment in African-American communities. For as long as African-American unemployment is more than twice that of white unemployment, and as long as African-American poverty rates nearly triple those of whites, there will be racism and more Trayvon Martins. We must channel our outrage at fighting for decent public schools in African-American communities. For as long as only roughly one-half of all male minority students graduate high school on time, there will be racism and more Trayvon Martins. We must channel our outrage at fighting the attack on voting rights. For as long as thirteen percent of all African-American men have lost the right to vote, there will be racism and more Trayvon Martins. So on and so forth.

The list is potentially long, the conclusion the same: racial inequalities must be uprooted to end racist behavior. Racism is an ideology that flourishes in unequal societies. Like any ideology, its mass appeal is in its ability to help members of society navigate their everyday reality, and its reproduction cannot occur if this reality fundamentally changes. Fighting racist behavior without fighting America’s material racial inequalities is akin to prescribing Tylenol instead of radiation for a cancer patient. George Zimmerman should be imprisoned. However, those interested in ending such racism must make demands that would dismantle nation-wide racial inequities. We need to have a wide-ranging discussion of racism in America. However, the endgame cannot be individual catharsis or moral exposé in recognizing racial privilege. Instead, our discussion must focus on why racial inequalities exist and how we are going to organize to collectively vanquish them. Continuing to discuss racism as an individual problem keeps the struggle on the American elite’s preferred terms, deflecting culpability from society’s policy-makers and leaving social structures unquestioned.

Those of us outraged must not let Trayvon Martin’s death be in vain. Let’s talk far and wide about the deep societal inequalities that cause racist injustices like Trayvon’s every day in America. In Trayvon’s name, let’s organize far and wide and fight for an end to the racial inequalities that exist at the very core of American society.


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