Living legend John Lewis coming to Rhode Island


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john-lewisGeorgia Congressman John Lewis, a living legend of the Civil Rights Movement, is coming to the Ocean State to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Providence chapter of the NAACP, according to a press release from the group.

“Congressman Lewis, from the state of Georgia, is the only living person who marched and spoke with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the march on Washington in 1963.  He has endured beatings, arrests and vilification as he has fought for equal rights for all citizens of our great country,” said chapter President Jim Vincent in the email.

The event is Friday, Nov 1 at 5:30 at the Providence Marriott. You can buy tickets here.

John Lewis is an American hero. He rode with the Freedom Riders and marched with Martin Luther King. He led 600 activists across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama for which he withstood a beating from the state police. He was arrested 40 times for standing up to unjust laws.

Read this great NPR story on Congressman Lewis and watch this great video of him speaking at the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington:

And while you’re at it, watch this video I made of my trip with the Providence NAACP to see him speak:

And here are the other people who will be honored at the event:

James Diossa– Mayor, Central Falls who will receive the Medgar Evers Award

Rossi Harris– Magistrate, RI Family Court who will receive the Thurgood Marshall Award

Melissa Husband- Executive Director, Community Action Partnership of Providence will receive the Martin Luther King, Jr. Award

Alisha Pina– Reporter, Providence Journal who will be presented with the George S. Lima Award

Lisa Ranglin– President, RI Black Business Association will be awarded the Rosa Parks Award

Misty Wilson– DARE, Ban the Box Campaign will be awarded the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Award

Jimmy Winters– Newport Housing Hotline will be awarded the Joseph G. LeCount Award

NECAP discussions tonight: different sides in different cities


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Tonight Rhode Island will discuss the NECAP graduation requirement. Supporters will be in Providence with Deborah Gist and the young Republicans while the loyal opposition is holding a panel discussion at Warwick City Hall at 6:30. While the timing is coincidence, it is a nice metaphor for what happens when the state decides it doesn’t want to host the debate: the debate still happens, it just becomes fragmented.

Leslie Nielsen Nothing to See Here

 

Are Rhode Island Republicans gun nuts?

gunnutOne of the most interesting outcomes to the Rhode Island Republican Party raffling off a semi-automatic machine gun is that it shows how truly disparate the different wings of the conservative movement in the Ocean State are.

For example, while Justin Katz posted this on Twitter: “Memo to RI conservatives: Stand against the prudes’ moral bullying. It will only continue to expand.”

Meanwhile, the Rhode Island Young Republicans posted this to Facebook:

Eight emails have hit my inbox today re: the insensitivity of the RI GOP’s semi automatic gun raffle, and some new attendees’ concerns re: attending a republican event tomorrow. PLEASE note that the YRs are not beholden to the state party, have no funding from them (all of our events are self-funded or sponsored by the Roosevelt Society), and tend to have a very different tone. The only connection is that by charter, the chairman (me) sits on their E-board (although to be honest, we’ve only had one e-board meeting since we came into existence, so impact is non existent). Tomorrow night with Commissioner Gist is NOT a RI GOP event. We look forward to continuing to promote the big tent philosophy, and being the next generation’s problem solvers (Lord knows we have a lot to work with).

It seems both the Democratic and Republican parties are suffering from somewhat similar ideological rifts on how to handle the politics of guns.

Math versus morality


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enron pension“The pension reform debate is … a dispute over which members of society will have to make sacrifices and which ones will not,” Rolling Stone magazine’s Matt Taibbi tells GoLocalProv.

Long before Ted Seidle parsed pension cuts as a wealth transfer from Rhode Islanders to hedge fund managers, this was the non-labor left’s biggest issue with the struggle to save public sector retirement security by taking money away from public sector retirees. It is inherently wrong to ask the people who played by the rules (labor) to fit the bill for those who didn’t (management).

I would argue that Raimondo’s star power, bolstered by anonymous out-of-town money and an adoring local media unwittingly conspired to make a very regressive pension reform proposal seem the only sensible thing to support. There is math component to the political problem that is pension reform in that a deficit exists. But the morality part is what we do about that. All too often in today’s political climate, very powerful people spend a lot of money saying the way to fix this deficit is to take from the poor and give to the rich.

Personally, I’d much prefer to live in a financially bankrupt society than a morally bankrupt one and by foisting all the responsibility on retirees, Rhode Island legislators may have made prudent moves away from the former, but they also made foolish leaps toward the latter.

Here’s Taibbi’s response in GoLocal:

For the record, I appreciate Treasurer Raimondo’s thorough response. I understand this is a tough issue and there are heated opinions on all sides. She was gracious enough to speak to me at some length before the article came out, and she did so probably knowing that the article was going to be critical. She clearly believes she is pursuing the correct policies and the fact that she was and is willing to openly engage critics in discussions about those policies is absolutely to her credit.

However, nothing in the response released by her spokesperson Joy Fox yesterday makes me believe that we got the story wrong.

Raimondo dismisses me and her union critics as politically and ideologically motivated, which is fine and understandable. But she doesn’t acknowledge that her own decisions and policies are similarly political and ideological. She presents herself as merely a technocrat who “puts politics aside” to do what’s best for Rhode Island.

But this is wrong on its face. The pension reform debate is the ultimate political and ideological argument. It’s a bitter fight over resources, a dispute over which members of society will have to make sacrifices and which ones will not.

The advocates of pension reform, not just in Rhode Island but across the country, believe that ordinary public workers — teachers, police, firemen — are inherently overcompensated, politically over-empowered by unions, and receive unsustainably high incomes and benefits. They also believe that the solution to the nation’s fiscal problems lay in asking these workers to make the first financial sacrifices — something Raimondo (like other politicians in other states) often describes as “making tough choices.” (By coincidence, these tough choices also seem quite often to involve privatizing large amounts of public retirement money into the hands of the financiers who stand behind these politician-advocates of pension reform.)

All of this falls in line with certain trends in political thought nationwide. A lot of people these days genuinely believe we must invest in employers first and foremost, and that ordinary wage-earners, public or private, are essentially drains on the bottom line, whose benefits especially are luxuries we can’t afford.

It would be silly to deny that a lot of people find this ideology convincing. But it’s certainly an ideology. That’s why it’s disingenuous when Treasurer Raimondo describes my article as political propaganda, when she had no such reservations about the public relations efforts of organizations like EngageRI and the Manhattan Institute, groups that not only supported her politically, but which have clear financial interests in this debate. But this a common tactic, dismissing critics of pension reform as ideologues clouded by frustration and unreason, while pension reform itself — well, that’s just math.

Having interviewed public workers in Rhode Island and in many other states, I know that state employees on the whole are absolutely willing to make sacrifices, if they’re needed to help states get out of fiscal crises. What they resent is being told they’re the cause of these crises and that the size of the sacrifices they must make is beyond debate and just mathematical fact. Time and again, when they ask questions about the reform plans, they’re dismissed as recalcitrant ideologues unwilling to accept reality. This is condescending and I think they’re right to be angry about it. Talking about omitting facts, most of these people haven’t been told even part of the story about the widespread crime and fraud in the mortgage/finance sector that caused the crash and put the retirement savings of people all over the country in jeopardy. Going forward, they were also not told about things like high management fees, the role of consultants and placement agents, and other such dubious nooks and crannies of pension reform.

All of which is a long-winded way of saying that I think politicians like Raimondo would do better to stop pretending that pension reform is somehow not about politics. This whole thing is political, on all sides.

And here is the comment from Raimondo’s spokeswoman Joy Fox he was responding to:

This is clearly a political propaganda piece driven by the critics of pension reform, including those who are paid by local labor leaders to discredit the state’s reforms and its investment policies. The author does not appear to have a clear understanding of the 2011 pension process and its goals, and conveniently omits many important facts.

The Treasurer stands by the work of the General Assembly to provide retirement security for hardworking public employees and retirees.

This story also unfortunately glosses over what actually happens to people when leaders do not make tough choices. The retirees of the City of Central Falls saw their pensions cut in half. Leaders do not want the same to happen again to public employees and retirees in the state system.

In 2011, Rhode Island had a choice. It could have done nothing and been dishonest about its problem. Instead, Rhode Island leaders came together, courageously put politics aside, and made the tough decision to protect the retirements of hard working public employees and retirees.”

It is important to remember:
– The treasurer fought to always keep a defined benefit pension, and always respected collective bargaining.
– Reform passed overwhelmingly in a Democrat-controlled General Assembly
– There were countless hours of labor-attended pension advisory group meetings, legislative hearings and town hall-style meetings with the Treasurer and Governor
– All but one vote to approve the hedge funds were unanimous. The only vote to approve hedge funds that was not unanimous was due to one abstention – again, showing strong SIC support to execute this investment strategy.