RIPDA announces legislative endorsements


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cropped-ripdalogoThe Rhode Island Progressive Democrats last night voted to endorse 17 candidates in General Assembly elections. Here’s the list of the 17 candidates (only six men!) from around Rhode Island who earned their endorsement:

  • Edie Ajello, Providence, House District 1
  • Joe Almeida, Providence, House District 12
  • Dave Bennett, Warwick, House District 20
  • Lauren Carson, Newport, House District 75
  • Maria Cimini, Providence, House District 7
  • Cathie Cool Rumsey, Charlestown, Richmond, Hopkinton, Exeter, West Greenwich, Senate District 34
  • Doris De Los Santos, Providence, N. Providence, Senate District 7
  • Dave Fasteson, Smithfield, North Providence, Johnston, Senate District 22
  • Linda Finn, Middletown, Portsmouth, House District 72
  • Gayle Goldin, Providence, Senate District 3
  • Shelby Maldonado, Central Falls, House District 56
  • Margaux Morisseau, Coventry, Foster, Scituate, West Greenwich, Senate District 21
  • Aaron Regunberg, Providence, House District 4
  • Adam Satchell, West Warwick, Senate District 9
  • Jennifer Siciliano, Warwick, House District 22 (Frank Ferri’s seat)
  • Teresa Tanzi, Narragansett, Peacedale, Wakefield, House District 34
  • Larry Valencia, Richmond, Exeter, Hopkington, House District 39
Here’s their full press release:

Being a real Democrat in the General Assembly is not easy. The Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate both oppose a woman’s right to choose and received endorsements from Right to Life last election cycle. In 2012, they also both received endorsements from the NRA, who gave them A ratings and thousands of dollars of illegal campaign contributions over the course of their careers. Both of them are staunchly opposed to repealing the 2006 income tax cuts for the rich. On far too many core issues, the leadership of the General Assembly Democrats sides with the national Republican Party over the national Democratic Party. But the candidates we have endorsed fight for true Democratic Party values.

The battle between the two wings of the Rhode Island Democratic Party is often characterized as part of the national battle between the progressive wing and the Wall Street wing. We do not see it that way. The issues that divide the Democrats in the General Assembly—issues like reproductive rights, gun safety, and tax fairness—are issues where the national party is united.

When choosing endorsements, we looked for real Democrats who stand with the national Democratic Party on most core values. A few of our endorsees might not be considered particularly liberal in other states, but each one is a real Democrat. We are proud to support them in the battle to return our state to the basic Democratic Party values Rhode Islanders support so strongly.

Following these principles, we have chosen the following seventeen real Democrats, most of them facing competitive races, for our endorsement:

How to protect your riparian dream from climate change


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Remember what Hurricane Sandy did to the Jersey Shore? One day that will happen here in Rhode Island, too.

Hurricane Senady damage in Westerly. Next storm could be much worse. Image courtesy: FEMA
Hurricane Sandy damage in Westerly. Next storm could be much worse. Image courtesy: FEMA

“We’re planning for a sea level rise of 3-5 feet by 2100 – this could mean that within the lifetime of people born today, Rhode Island’s oceans might rise enough to swallow the beaches as we know them now,” said Laura Dwyer, spokeswoman for the state Coastal Resources Management Council. “Natural hazards like Sandy have also inflicted significant damage to homes and infrastructure along the coast.”

But CRMC is doing more than just offering up doomsday scenarios for beach bums and coastal property owners. The state agency tasked with protecting and managing the shoreline has also partnered with the URI Coastal Resources Center to create the:

Rhode Island Coastal Property Guide

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Screen shot of Rhode Island Coastal Property Guide. (click on the image to check out the site)

It’s a 30-page booklet in the form of a webpage that explains the potential dangers and ecological realities to living the dream of owning ocean-front property. It’s also a handy checklist of everything you need to know to make sure your riparian slice of the American Dream is as safe – and as legal – as possible.

“People who live at the coast or own businesses there are telling me more and more that they are worried about what’s going to happen to their properties, and they want to know what to do about the impacts we are seeing from storms and sea level rise,” said Grover Fugate, CRMC executive director. “The guide gives people practical ways they can start adapting to these significant impacts associated with living near the shore.”

For example, the guide can help you glean if your property requires flood insurance (hint: if you think you need to check this out, there’s a good chance it does) and how one can – and cannot – protect their investment from a catastrophic weather event. (If it doesn’t seem like this would be good news for Rhode Island realtors, think again.)

“Rising sea level and extreme weather events resulting from global warming will have a significant impact on Rhode Island in the years to come,” said URI Graduate School of Oceanography Dean Bruce Corliss. “The Rhode Island Property Guide will provide timely and valuable information for residents and businesses to address these threats and is the result of the ongoing collaboration between URI CRC, CRMC, and Rhode Island Sea Grant to address the needs of Rhode Island’s coastal communities.”

A logic lesson for Justin Katz


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justin_katzOver at the Current/Anchor, Justin Katz has written a, I don’t know what to call it really, but let’s call it a rebuttal, to a piece I wrote here on RI Future on RIILE, a local nativist hate group that on Friday held a protest against refugee children being housed in Rhode Island. Note that this rally was held despite the fact that there is no evidence whatsoever that any such refugee children are coming to Rhode Island. The entire rally was based on fear and conspiracy theory.

Katz begins his piece rather elliptically, talking about how people of one time can’t be easily pigeon-holed into the societies of the past, given the obvious differences in politics and social mores. “Would Theodore Roosevelt,” Katz asks, “call himself a ‘progressive’ if he’d been born in 1958 instead of 1858?” Katz seems to indicate that counterfactual speculations have obvious limits, and that “it’s wise to be wary” of those who indulge in such speculation.

Then Katz goes on to unwisely speculate that if I were alive in a different time and place, I’d be something akin to a Nazi propagandist.

This exercise in pseudo-intellectual name calling would be funny, if I thought for a second that Katz was kidding, but he isn’t, and that’s really sad.

In writing his logical Gordian Knot, Katz composes lines such as, “I’d suggest, for example, that the real heirs of past oppressors are not the people who might share specific policy ideas with them or who are other than the Others whom the oppressors oppressed.”

To which I can only reply, “What the hell are you talking about?”

When Katz finally gets to the meat of his critique, he concentrates on the logical fallacies I supposedly committed in constructing my piece. For instance, by citing the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as an authority on hate groups, I supposedly made an argument from authority, because as Katz points out, “In reality, the SPLC is a progressive hatchet organization whose work has inspired at least one terroristic shooting.”

In fact, however, I made no such argument from authority. I presented the fact that, “The Southern Poverty Law Center has identified both FAIR and ALIPAC as Nativist hate groups based on their rhetoric.” I then went on to present some of the evidence that the SPLC presented in favor of their determination. I never said that FAIR and ALIPAC were hate groups because the SPLC said so, I presented the reader evidence (and links to further evidence) so the reader could make that determination (or not) for themselves.

Based on the evidence presented, and based on the fact that RIILE has close associations to both groups and espouses similar rhetoric, I made the claim that RIILE is also a nativist hate group.

Ah, Katz might say, rubbing his hands gleefully before attacking his keyboard, ‘But you made the fallacy of guilt by association! Just because someone is closely associated with someone else and espouses the same point of view, that doesn’t mean you can paint them with the same brush!’ (Note: the previous actions and quote by Katz were dramatizations, not actual actions or quotes.)

Katz would have you believe that I claimed RIILE is a bad group because of its ties to ALIPAC and FAIR, which are bad groups. This isn’t the case. RIILE is bad because of its ugly rhetoric, racism and policy positions, and I point out the association with ALIPAC and FAIR to show that such local groups don’t just crop up out of nowhere, they are supported by national movements. In other words, that racism and misanthropy you’re seeing at the border is being spread to our state by national hate groups preying on the fearful and gullible, the very people who make up the ranks of RIILE.

But what’s funniest about Katz’s paragraph on guilt by association is the fact that he commits that very fallacy himself in the paragraph’s first line. “In reality, the SPLC is a progressive hatchet organization whose work has inspired at least one terroristic shooting.”  Why should the SPLC be guilty of a crime committed by a gunman who picked his target off their website? Isn’t that the exact same kind of guilt by association Katz is complaining about? (Assuming of course, that Katz understands what guilt by association really is.) I’m sure Katz would never suggest that the Catholic Church, in taking a strong stand against abortion, is guilty by association of the murder of Dr. Tiller.

Katz later accuses me of an ad hominem attack when I wrote:

These then, are the people in Rhode Island who lack compassion, are ruled by fear and susceptible to nonsensical conspiracy theory. These are the people who see a humanitarian crisis and respond with thinly veiled racism, stupidity and xenophobia. These are, without a doubt, the very worst people Rhode Island has to offer, and I find solace in the fact that they are not only small in spirit, but small in number and small in support.

These are not ad hominem attacks. These are judgments I made, based on the evidence as I saw it. I presented evidence for each of the claims I made, and then plainly stated the claims. I didn’t say that the members of RIILE at the State House rally were flatulent, or on drugs, or mentally unstable. These statements, whether they were true or false, would have been beside the point, and therefore ad hominem. I was precise in my attack, and presented evidence for every charge.

Katz’s charge of argumentum ad populum, the idea that members of RIILE are wrong because they are in the minority, is also misapplied. I did not say that RIILE was wrong because they are in the minority, I said that I am glad that their opinions reflect a minority of Rhode Islanders. That members of RIILE are wrong is beside the point.

Katz’s last attack was to accuse me of dehumanizing my opponents:

On the thin gruel of his logical fallacies, Ahlquist insists that these Rhode Islanders with whom he disagrees are:

  • not only misapplying their compassion, but completely devoid of it, as if inhuman
  • overwhelmed with fear and lies
  • primal in their racism, intellectually deformed, and fearful of fellow human beings as of a foreign species

The key point, here, isn’t exactly that Ahlquist’s rhetoric finds an eerie echo in the works of other propagandists who have targeted different minorities throughout history, but that he arrives there through tribal thinking that affirms his own sense of moral superiority. These are the evil Other, whereas he is a moral exemplar.

I do not think of myself as a moral exemplar, but I do try to speak with a clear moral voice. Whatever my failings as a person may be, like all people, I have the right to articulate my moral judgments, and if I sometimes fail to live up to the high standards I have set for myself, that makes me like everyone else on this planet:

Human.

I never said that members of RIILE were “inhuman,” I never said that they were “the evil Other” and I never called the members of RIILE “contemptibly subhuman.” These are the words Katz chose for me. The words I used were, “fearful, mean-spirited person,” “people… who lack compassion” and “the very worst people Rhode Island has to offer.”

I was careful to call members of RIILE persons and people because they are not monsters, they are in fact very, very human. People are not always nice. They are not always compassionate, brave or rigorous in their thinking. Sometimes they are mean-spirited, fearful and stupid.

***

I suspect, sadly, that Katz reacted as strongly as he did because of his own religious intolerance. Towards the end of his piece, Katz writes:

I don’t know if the zealotry with which [Ahlquist] seeks to use government to impose his atheism as the one true religion means that he would have been equally zealous in persecuting religious minorities when some other worldview held the reins of power.

Here Katz makes his ultimate argument. He hints at this throughout, but wraps it up here:

Steve Ahlquist is an evil atheist and if transplanted back in time, he would be a Nazi propagandist, or worse.

Talk about dehumanizing.

Since Katz is so keen on logical fallacies, how about these: Reductio ad Hitlerum, and Godwin’s Law.

Making campaign finance reform a bit more sexy


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(Source: The New Yorker, 2012)

Outside a hot live music spot in Wilmington, NC, I excitedly talked to friends about getting folks to call their state senators and demand electronic filing of campaign finance reports. “I’d rather stick a fork in my eye,” one of my new friends said laughing. And there it was, the reality of things, the nitty gritty of campaign finance reform seemed excruciatingly dull to them.

Vice President Biden recently spoke about this conundrum associated with another important topic, voter suppression, during his appearance at Netroots Nation 2014. “…the most precious right Americans possess is the unfettered access to the ballot box…it is not as sexy, it is not as immediately heart-wrenching…,” Biden proclaimed. But for those of us who see the importance of such reforms, the question is: How can we make it a bit more sexy and heart-wrenching?

The Short Game

Don’t bet on simple transparency narratives alone doing anything meaningful. My inbox is flooded with fundraising emails touting the Koch Brothers influence on the political process – it may triple donations but seems to do little else. Let’s do more to connect the dots between contributions and legislative action/inaction. Short attention spans require accurate and quick but deeper narratives that may spark further interest and engagement. Supporting the development of phone apps that do this is a critical next step to making things more visually attractive and understandable. A great app that has many of these features is Open States. Download it!

Rhode Island is ahead of the curve on assuring candidates and committees file their campaign data electronically, but there are many states that are still flooding their election boards with paper reports. If you’re in one of those states (e.g. North Carolina), make sure campaigns are required to file data electronically. It’s the only way that our future apps will be able to quickly crunch the numbers.

The Long Game

The fluid challenges facing mainstream newspapers threatens the future of investigative journalism, the kind that gets your heart throbbing in the face of corruption and abuse of power. The apps above might be useful, but we will always need a vibrant journalistic community to inspire us to use those apps! Let’s vote with our dollar and invest in solid journalism.

Lastly, let’s not forget that any reform rests on an educated and engaged citizenry. One of my favorite quotes from President Jefferson addresses this:

“I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society, but the people themselves: and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is, not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education. This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power” (1820).

If your favored candidate for any office this fall doesn’t have a well-articulated position on assuring an enlightened society, they’re no good. Some of us learn about political engagement in home, most of us learn about it in school. The long game requires an inspiring and thorough education in civics and history.

The Last Step

This last step completes a formula for making campaign finance reform a bit more sexy: Hold elected officials accountable with your vote. Make sure every candidate you ever vote for has a well-articulated education plan and a specific position on a robust civics program.

And finally support Senator Whitehouse’s DISCLOSE Act. It’s common sense legislation from the great state of Rhode Island.