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.

Why is Nick Mattiello scared of Maria Cimini?


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Maria Cimini

Maria CiminiWhen it comes to championing progressive causes, no one in the Rhode Island General Assembly is any braver than Providence Rep. Maria Cimini.

For years, she has lead the charge – against the richest special interest group in Rhode Island – for a less regressive income tax structure. And this year she valiantly defended on the House floor during the late-night budget bill debate, the Providence hotel house keepers – some of whom live in her district – as House leadership effectively nixed their effort to implement a city-wide hotel-industry minimum wage. She’s always standing up for the poor and standing up to the powerful.

Such progressive bravery has won Cimini not just the respect of this blog, but also the ire of House Speaker Nick Mattiello. He tells the Providence Journal he’s backing Cimini’s primary opponent because she didn’t back him for speaker, didn’t apologize for that and because she doesn’t agree with him on policy.

According to the ProJo Mattiello said, “Representative Cimini didn’t support me for speaker and never came to me to indicate she would support me in the future. She didn’t ask for my support in her race and Dan McKiernan did come and ask. Like me, he is a moderate, and his political viewpoints are more in line with the voters of his district and the state of Rhode Island.”

Mattiello is wrong to use his considerable political influence to settle Smith Hill vendettas. And the people of District 7 deserve a legislator elected based on his or her merits, not their loyalty to House leadership.

On the other hand, if he thinks his trickle-down economic policies represent the Elmhurst area of Providence better than Cimini has done, well then it’s his right to oppose her reelection.

But Maria Cimini deserves strong progressive support for her steadfast allegiance to working class Rhode Island. She’s fought hard against high stakes testing and she fact-checked Ken Block (when ). She’s been a champion for tax equity and a higher minimum wage. And she may need our help depending on how adamantly Speaker Mattiello works against her.

Wingmen: Should RI be a sanctuary state?


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wingmenWith immigration in the news, Rapp, Katz and I took up the issue on NBC 10 Wingmen last week. For me, human safety and compassion should generally always trump financial concerns. “Do we want to be the kind of country that says to children, sorry stay in your war-torn country, we don’t want to raise taxes,” I asked, I thought rhetorically.

But of course, that’s the exact society Katz would like to foster. “Rhode Island can’t handle an influx of illegal immigrants at this point,” he said, noting that Rhode Island is attracting immigration here with certain progressive policies. He thinks illegal immigrants will put a burden on schools and other social services.

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

Pro-Palestine rally and vigil in Burnside Park


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DSC_3419About 125 people gathered in Burnside Park on Saturday “in protest of the massacre in Gaza” and to “stand in solidarity with Palestine in the face of civilian murders and generations of systematic oppression.” It is hoped that intensifying public pressure on Israel will “end the occupation.” The description of the event continued:

As of late Tuesday, over 200 Palestinians have been killed and 1500 Palestinians have been wounded, the majority of whom are women and children. Without pressure, the Israeli regime has proven time and time again that it will continue such massacres as we see in Gaza now, and continue the decades of systematic ethnic cleansing, military occupation and apartheid policies.

Take to the streets to stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people and to demand an end to our Rhode Island officials’ silence on the violence, a condemnation of attacks on civilians, and the cessation of military aid to Israel.

Perhaps the most emotional part of the rally was a reading of the names of those who have died in Palestine as Israel continues to pursue military solutions to the crisis.

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Racist rhetoric from anti-immigration group RIILE


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HateRIILE (Rhode Islanders For Immigration Law Enforcement) is a nativist hate group.

The inspiration for RIILE and a big help in organizing the group was FAIR, (Federation for American Immigration Reform) according to a June 29, 2008 ProJo piece by Karen Lee Ziner. Sandra Gunn, FAIR’s Eastern field rep, “came to Pawtucket… at the invitation of William ‘Terry’ Gorman, a 68-year-old retired postal worker and member of FAIR since 1997. Gorman, increasingly frustrated, wanted to organize his own local campaign against illegal immigration. Gorman and his wife were among the eight people at the organizational meeting on Feb. 28, 2006, of Rhode Islanders for Immigration Law Enforcement. Gunn provided start-up strategy, literature from FAIR and advice to the new members, Gorman said.”

On Friday, July 18, 2014 RIILE organized a protest against the large number of refugee children crossing the border. The action at the Rhode Island State House was at the behest of ALIPAC (Americans for Legal Immigration PAC). The protest drew about two dozen people and consisted of Terry Gorman and others speaking to a tiny crowd of rapidly dwindling reporters.

The Southern Poverty Law Center has identified both FAIR and ALIPAC as Nativist hate groups based on their rhetoric, and there is little to differentiate RIILE, though the SPLC has not made the determination that RIILE is a hate group.

The SPLC website says of FAIR: “Although FAIR maintains a veneer of legitimacy that has allowed its principals to testify in Congress and lobby the federal government, this veneer hides much ugliness. FAIR leaders have ties to white supremacist groups and eugenicists and have made many racist statements. Its advertisements have been rejected because of racist content. FAIR’s founder, John Tanton, has expressed his wish that America remain a majority-white population: a goal to be achieved, presumably, by limiting the number of nonwhites who enter the country.”

ALIPAC’s president, William Gheen, recently asked his members to mail their used underwear to members of congress and to the refugee children crossing the border, saying “Instead of using our tax money to buy illegals 42,000 pairs of new underwear, we would like to send the illegals and DC politicians a message by mailing them our used underwear, and some of our pairs are in really bad shape due to the bad economy and all of the jobs illegal immigrants are taking from Americans.” In an open letter to the SPLC, Gheen complained about being labeled a hate group.

On Friday, here in Rhode Island, Terry Gorman talked for nearly an hour in a rambling, conspiracy fueled screed warning of disease, economic cataclysm and possible terrorist incursions as a result of offering aid to the thousands of undocumented refugee children arriving at our borders. Gorman blamed the recent gang violence in Providence on “illegals” with no evidence to support his claims.

And then there were the conspiracy theories. According to Gorman, as many as four hundred refugee children may have been flown into Rhode Island on a pair C-130’s and then bused to secret locations throughout our state on the day of the rally. Gorman has heard this rumor on Facebook and claims the information is solid, but is not at liberty to reveal his source. Obama and Chafee, says Gorman, are working together to destroy Rhode Island and destroy the United States.

In an hour of unbelievable statements, the most over-the-top was when Terry Gorman said that if he knew that there was a busload of refugee children leaving Quonsett airport, he would lay down in front of the bus to prevent the children from finding shelter in our state. Gorman is the kind of person who sees news reports of unhinged Americans screaming at frightened, hungry busloads of children and imagines how cool it would be to join them at the front lines. He is a fearful, mean-spirited person.

Unfortunately, Terry Gorman was not alone. Joining him behind the podium was Gorman’s daughter-in-law and executive director of RIILE, Karen Gorman; Larry Girouard, of Rhode Island Taxpayers; Rhue Reese, Republican challenger to Representative Jim Langevin; John Carnavale, Republican running for Secretary of State; right-wing radio host Lee Ann Sennick; Mike Daz, who runs an organization in nearby Massachusetts called Overpasses for America and Monique Chartier, who writes for Anchor Rising and is associated with the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity. Mark Zaccaria, the Republican challenger to Senator Jack Reed, wished he could have been there, but had a prior engagement.

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.

The arguments made during the rally can be heard in the statements of people not directly associated with the groups represented. State representative Peter Palumbo demonstrated once again that he has no problem bullying children when he wrote a letter to Governor Chafee asking that refugee children be turned away from our state. (Palumbo, it should be remembered, once called my niece, Jessica Ahlquist, an “evil little thing” and a “pawn star” on the John DePetro Show simultaneously dehumanizing and sexualizing a sixteen year old girl.) Palumbo argued that the state simply can’t afford to help out hungry children, sentiments echoed by Gorman, Chartier and others at the rally.

Meanwhile, Bishop Thomas Tobin has taken a powerful stand against such hate. Speaking as the leader of the Providence Diocese, Tobin said, “If the refugee children come to Rhode Island, I hope and pray that all the members of our community will work together, in a thoughtful and compassionate way, to welcome them and care for them to the very best of our ability.” Tobin added, “Certainly the children should not be the object of our political scorn. As a starting point, in our public discussions, let’s avoid the negative rhetoric that serves only to inflame passions and divide the community.”

Let that sink in: Children should not be the object of our political scorn. Then compare that statement to this:

The full video of Gorman’s hate rally can be seen here. Warning: it will turn the stomach of decent people. (This video and the one above were shot by Adam Miner.)

Here’s the ad for the rally RIILE ran on Craig’sList:

RIILE CraigsList

New immigration detainer policy protects fundamental rights


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scomm5_0The policy of “detain first, investigate later” practiced by federal immigration officials no longer applies in Rhode Island now that the state Department of Corrections must stop honoring immigration detainers issued without probable cause.

In a significant victory for the rights of immigrants and the due process rights of all Rhode Islanders, Governor Chafee on Thursday issued a new policy stopping the DOC from relying on immigration detainers to hold people who otherwise should be released. These detainers requested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement are generally issued with no judicial oversight and keep people in jail simply because the agency wants to investigate them.

Now, ICE must abide by the same rules as any other law enforcement agency and obtain a warrant if it wants the state to detain someone in jail.

This welcomed policy shift is in recognition of a federal court ruling in which U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. found that holding individuals in jail based on these detainers is likely unconstitutional. That ruling was issued in an ACLU case on behalf of Rhode Island resident Ada Morales who, despite being a U.S. citizen, was twice unlawfully held in jail on the basis of erroneous immigration detainers.

Unfortunately, Ms. Morales is not the only person to be wrongly detained nationwide, but since Judge McConnell’s decision, other courts have issued similar rulings and over 130 local and state governments across the country have voluntarily adopted policies, like the new Rhode Island policy, of no longer honoring ICE detainers that are issued without judicial authorization.

By becoming the latest state to reject ICE’s indiscriminate detainer practices, Rhode Island has stood up for its residents and ensured they are secure in their fundamental right to live free from the fear of unwarranted detention.

Omar Bah: Rhode Island is heaven


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Book_Review-624x453I wandered tonight by accident into a lecture at the Rochambeau Library in Providence that offered a unique vision on life here in Rhode Island. While a poll conducted in April indicated that Rhode Islanders are the “least proud” of their state and pundits have written endlessly about why that should be the case, highlighting all the things that make Rhode Island a supposedly terrible place, Gambian journalist Omar Bah has a different view.

Rhode Island, says Bah, is heaven.

“Life in Gambia was hell,” said Bah to the too few people who came out to his lecture, where he was talking about his book, Africa’s Hell on Earth, “I lived in a country where people were treated as second class. No rights, no freedom of expression, for the first twenty-six years of my life.”

Bah’s book is his message. It is also a celebration of freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, rights denied him in his home country of Gambia. Bah started as a young journalist, writing about the corruption and brutality of the regime of Gambian President Yahya Jammeh, a totalitarian despot who once said that he had allowed “too much expression” in the country.

While people starve, Gambia’s president drives in a fleet of cars valued at $300,000, according to Bah. There is one television station allowed in the entire country, a propaganda arm of the government. At a student led protest rally, 14 students were shot dead by the military. Bah once saw a pregnant woman in need of medical attention taken to the hospital by donkey cart, where she and her baby died screaming in the waiting room.

“If you are hungry, you die hungry,” says Bah. “If you are sick, you die sick. If you are hopeless, you die without hope.”

Growing up, Bah saw education as his best chance at a good life, but also realized that when you don’t live in a just society, you have to take action, however you can. Bah chose to write about what he saw, becoming a journalist. Reporting on the evils of a despotic dictatorship is dangerous. Bah was arrested several times, and even tortured while imprisoned. Eventually events reached the point where Bah had no choice but to flee the country.

Stopped on a bus at the border of Senegal, Bah was identified by a soldier and had a gun pointed directly at him. His life was effectively over, his future one of prison, torture and probable death, but the soldier was a classmate of Bah’s from over a decade previous. On that bus, soldier and journalist recognized each other and the soldier, in a dangerous breach of orders, let Bah cross the border to freedom. Bah began his new life as a refugee even as his wife, Teddi Jallow, was threatened and harassed by the dictator’s police back home.

Granted refugee status by the United States government, Bah came to Rhode Island. “I came from the smallest country in Africa to the smallest state in America,” said Bah, “I am living the American dream because of the opportunities I have here.”

Today, seven years after arriving in Rhode Island, Omar Bah lives with his wife and his mother, who have also been granted refugee status and has two sons, both born in this country. He still agitates for human rights in Gambia and the rest of the world. He does so even though it puts his extended family at some risk. When the president of Gambia came to New York for a visit to the United Nations, Bah lead a protest outside the dictator’s hotel. Bah’s family was threatened for his actions.

Bah will not be silenced by threats. “Educating one person is enough. Any act of revolution starts with one person.”

Rep. Palumbo version of sympathy for immigrant children


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palumboIn a letter to Governor Chafee, Rep. Peter Palumbo (D-Cranston) reports that he has “nothing but sympathy” for the immigrant children flooding our southern border. He apparently means that quite literally. And his sympathy extends only as far as telling his press liaison to type those words for him in a letter he, ahem, wrote to the governor. The children in question are apparently worth zero expense or effort beyond that, in his eyes.

So what, exactly, is his sympathy worth? And why does he bother to express it this way? The truth is that Rep. Palumbo appears to have a heart of stone, like so many of the protesters who have gathered this week to shout angry words at children fleeing violence in their home countries. (And, in one case, at a bunch of children on a bus taking them to a YMCA summer camp, but hey it was just an oversight.) Palumbo, however, wants to pretend otherwise by covering it up with pretty words. But pretty words alone never took care of a child, not one from Honduras, nor one from Cranston. When accompanied by tender care, pretty words can be a lovely thing, but when accompanied by a cold shoulder, they are just embarrassing.

I am, from time to time, impatient with people who imagine that there is no financial justification for good public policy. Care for the poor and disabled, attention to the youngest and most vulnerable children, being good stewards of the environment, cleaning up toxins, don’t have to be justified by weepy appeals to heartstrings. These are, more often than not, policies that easily cost less than the results of ignoring them.

But pointing out that a policy is not just the right thing to do, but also saves money, is a far cry from thinking that saving money is the only possible justification for public policy. There are times when the right thing to do costs money. That doesn’t mean it is not the right thing to do.

For a variety of reasons, a humanitarian crisis is in full swing on our southern border. It is not clear to me exactly what the cause is for the dramatic increase in unaccompanied children coming across the border, and it seems not really clear to anyone at this point. But it is clear to me that denying the existence of the crisis and denying that our nation — and our state — has the capacity to aid those children, is heartless and cruel. We are still among the richest countries on the planet. We are not talking here about deploying troops or air strikes or our navy. We are talking about feeding and housing children who seem to need that kind of help and are already here among us. If we can’t do that, then what kind of country are we?

Rep Palumbo’s letter is here.

Olon Reeder’s Fix for the State’s Ailing Economy


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olonOlon Reeder, a slight-figured, unassuming, behind-the-scenes kinda guy, has been quietly improving the quality of life in northern Rhode Island for decades as a public affair adviser for the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council.

With his years of working in the public sector, as legislative assistant with the Rhode Island General Assembly in the mid-to-late 1970s, with the Garrahy administration, state agencies and with small businesses, he’s authored a nontraditional economic development policy paper he hopes will be considered in next year’s Rhode Island General Assembly debate as to how to create a more vibrant business environment in the Ocean State.

Over the years, Reeder, President of Reeder Associates, a Southern New England-based public relations and multi-media communications company, has seen state lawmakers and its economic development agency attempt to compete with surrounding states, just going after “larger, trendy, projects to turn the economy around. “Smaller companies would always get the short end of the stick, because they were not seen as a viable economic generator,” he says, stressing that this perception is inaccurate.

In recent years economic development solutions to fix the state’s ailing economy have been floated for public debate by lawmakers, economic development professionals or by large corporations. Today, Reeder, with almost 40 years of in the public and private sectors, calls on state lawmakers to consider his proposal when they focus on economic reform in next year’s session. More needs to be done, says the small businessperson who is a Native Rhode islander.

It’s almost like Mr. Reeder goes to Smith Hill, to take on the establishment to be heard.

“We are at a critical crossroads where we must overcome our negatives attitudes and start taking actions ourselves if we all want our state and our lives to become successful,” Reeder wrote in a recently-released policy statement detailing his suggested economic development action agenda, as how to improve the state’s long term quality of life, through investing in people, communities and small businesses.

He calls for tying lifelong education to grow the economy. “Brain power is a key element driving worldwide demands and economic activity today, through the convergence of non stop knowledge, creative economy, enterprise and innovation, art-design connections, which all start with lifelong learning,” he says.

He says personal empowerment creates the environment for change “Empowerment encourages, and develops the skills for, self-sufficiency, giving people the abilities and knowledge that will allow them to overcome obstacles in life or work environment and ultimately, help them develop within themselves or in the society,” he says.

Companies are constantly replacing full-time employees, he said, and now relying upon independent contractors, where people who once counted on a steady pay check are now being left to fend for themselves in a hyper-competitive self employed market. These individuals are oftentimes forgotten by policy makers.

Based on 2011 figures from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, in Rhode Island, there re over 73 thousand self employed contributing over $3 billion annually to the state’s economy. Most self employed are hired out of necessity, are done so locally and through word of mouth. Because freelancers depend so much on self promotion to get their jobs, they must focus on the local markets, along with showcasing their diverse personal talents, marketing their skills to business owners in their community, along trying to compete with others for opportunities.

Reeder recognizes the importance of valuing our places, spaces and communities, to grow business. “More than ever, people must be connected to where we live, work, play, stay and travel. People expect places and spaces they interact with daily to be vibrant, active, socially appealing, culturally stimulating and help them in improving their quality of life, especially with their physical and mental health,” he says.

Reeder notes active living communities provide opportunities for people of all ages and abilities to engage in routine daily physical activity, he says, like pedestrian and bicycle friendly design, access to intermodal transportation, mixed use development, ample recreation, walkable neighborhoods, access to fresh and healthy foods and commerce centers. This philosophy must be included in any state economic development plan.

“Our economic revitalization is relevant to healthy and sustainable communities because active living communities encourage individuals to be more physically active, improving health by lowering citizens’ risk for health conditions, adds Reeder. “Active living communities create enhance quality of life, attract business and knowledge workers, and contribute to ongoing economic development,” he says.

Reeder stresses that technology is a must, as people are now “required” to have 24/7 365 access to the Internet and must now communicate through social media to live, work, and transact personal activity, he calls for providing everyone with free online access “as a necessity of our 21st century lifestyles.”

Finally, Reeder thinks “Demand Driven Experiences” are necessary for not only reinventing our state’s manufacturing, but in changing our self attitudes about how Rhode Islanders see themselves, ultimately affecting expectations others may have about the perception of Rhode Island as the worst place for business.

“Because people no longer buy things for their personal benefit, they want enhancements to fulfill missing elements of their lives,” adds Reeder, noting that experiences are crucial for businesses and locations as a branding and marketing tool, especially with efforts in Rhode Island attracting people to live and travel here for our entertainment, food and lifestyles.”

“Using our experiences to effectively promote market and give an iconic brand, we must also stay true to the “real Rhode Island,” to our proud independent and working class heritage, the ethnic and cultural diversity in our state, and preserving our unique natural resources,” he says.

State lawmakers are moving in the right direction to make Rhode Island a more business-friendly place to operate. Reeder continues his efforts to get his voice heard by General Assembly leadership, state policy makers, business groups, even gubernatorial candidates. Hopefully, they will choose to closely listen to Reeder’s nontraditional approach to economic development and to small business owners who know their specific needs to operate successfully.

A call for a better world: An interfaith vigil for peace


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Reverend Donald Anderson
Reverend Donald Anderson

Leaders of a variety of religious traditions gathered Tuesday, July 15 in Manning Chapel at Brown University to reflect upon the escalating violence between Israel and Palestine in recent weeks. Organizer Marty Cooper, of the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island, called the event an opportunity to “honor the sanctity of life with a moment of reflection.”

Prayers and songs were offered. Swami Yogatmananda, of the Vendanta Society of Rhode Island, declared that escalating violence worldwide is not because of religion as religion does not condone violence. Bishop Nicholas Knisely, of the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island, prayed that God would soften the hearts of the leaders on all sides of the conflict.

Actual political solutions to the crisis were not discussed, the speakers seemed more interested in spiritual consensus than in declaring sides in the war. The Israeli/Palestine conflict being rooted deeply in religion, the ability of religious leaders, especially leaders so far removed geographically from the conflict, to affect events seems awfully limited, but perhaps similar calls for peace can be made worldwide and can ultimately ease tensions.

That a message of this sort should emanate from Rhode Island, the birthplace of religious liberty, is appropriate. Here, we settled our religious differences by accepting separation of church and state and establishing a neutral, secular state that respects all religious and nonreligious traditions equally. Those pushing for more religion in their government need only look to the Middle East to see the dangers of such mixing.

Below please find the full video of all the speakers.

Reverend Dr. Donald Anderson, Executive Minister, RI State Council of Churches

Sister Mary Reilly, RSM

Rabbi Barry Dolinger, Congregation Beth Shalom, Providence

Imam Farid Ansari, Council for Muslim Advancement

Father John Kiley, Senior Priest, Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence

Swami Yogatmananda, Vendanta Society of Rhode Island

Rabbi Elan Babchuck, Temple Emanu-El

Bishop Nicolas Knisely, The Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island

Cantor Judith Seplowin, Temple Beth-El, Providence

Marty Cooper, Community Relations Council, Jewish Alliance of Greater RI

Cantor Judith Seplowin, Temple Beth-El, Providence

Reverend Dr. Donald Anderson, Executive Minister, RI State Council of Churches

DSC_3313 Sister Mary Reilly

DSC_3318 Rabbi Barry Dolinger

DSC_3319 Imam Farid Ansari

DSC_3325 Father John Kiley

DSC_3332 Swami Yogatmananda

DSC_3335 Rabbi Elan Babchuck

DSC_3339 Bishop Thomas Knisely

DSC_3351 Cantor Judith Seplowin

DSC_3355 Marty Cooper

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Frank Caprio runs for redemption, just found a political party


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Turns out I was right when I said there’s only one true Democrat running for General Treasurer.

Recently, I angered some people by declaring in RI Future and Progressive Charlestown that, among the three contenders for the Democratic Party’s endorsement for General Treasurer, only one – Seth Magaziner – was really and truly a Democrat.

Frank Caprio tweet
In 2012, Caprio rooted for Mitt Romney to beat President Obama

declared the other two – Frank Caprio and Ernie Almonte – to be impostors who, at best, deserved to be called DINOs (“Democrats in Name Only).

I noted that both men failed the state by taking no effective action to stop the state public pension crisis before it reached the critical point. Both men – Caprio as General Treasurer and Almonte as Auditor General – not only could have acted, but had the duty to do so.

I also catalogued the words and deeds of Caprio and Almonte that betrayed core Democratic principles and, in some instances, were dishonorable.

More than a few people criticized me for being too harsh. But, as events have shown, I was right.

On June 22, for no good reason, the Democratic State Convention party regulars voted overwhelmingly to follow instructions and endorse Frank Caprio.

The Convention majority seemed ready to overlook his terrible 2010 campaign, capped by Caprio telling President Barack Obama to “take his endorsement and shove it.”

As his tweet shows, Caprio remained angry at the President two years later, and seemed to want President Obama to lose his 2012 bid for re-election. I wonder if Caprio voted for Romney instead of the President.

There was willingness to ignore Caprio’s 2012 disaffiliation from the party and long delay in deciding to run for redemption as a Democrat. Those delegates seemed ready to ignore just about everything other than the orders they received from the Party leadership.

Caprio himself admitted during his acceptance speech at the convention that he did indeed screw up royally in the 2010 election and promised not to let the Party down again. It was all about him and his quest for validation. All very nice if being a bad campaigner was Caprio’s only offense.

But, as the days went by, we learned that not only did Caprio actively consider running as a Republican in 2010 before finally deciding to run as a conservative Democrat, but that he did it again in 2014!

He actually met with Republican Party leadership to discuss running on the Republican ticket in 2014 as well. Only later, months after declaring his intention to run, he re-affiliated as a Democrat and publicly said he was running as a Democrat. This was after his brother David became the pick to become new state Democratic Chair, providing Frank Caprio with a path of least resistance and the inside track to the perception of institutional forgiveness.

What kind of Democrat does this? And what kind of Democrats can ignore all these facts and back a guy like Frank Caprio for such an important job as general treasurer.

Ernie Almonte, erstwhile Democratic contender for general treasurer, isn’t any better than Caprio.

I called out Almonte for his failure to sound the alarm on the state pension system when he was Auditor General and I noted the terrible things Almonte said in 2012 right after he declared his intention to run for Governor in 2014. He was caught on video parroting Mitt Romney’s anti-working people screed and calling for broad cuts in Social Security and Medicare while preserving tax breaks for the rich.

It turns out that Ernie Almonte was also being approached by the Republican Party to run on their ticket for General Treasurer in 2014 while he was campaigning for the Party’s endorsement.

GOP State Chair Mark Smiley said the party even went so far as to hold a slot for Almonte right up until the declaration deadline for candidates. He said that the Republicans were a much better fit for Almonte. This may be the first time Smiley and I are agreed on a political question.

When declaration day came, Almonte filed his declaration as neither a Republican nor a Democrat and will instead run as an independent.

There is no candidate officially representing the GOP, but I think either Caprio or Almonte still fits that bill. Indeed, Almonte attended the GOP state committee meeting and, while not formally endorsed, Chairman Mark Smiley has said that Almonte is their candidate in the race and has the backing of GOP party leadership.

Almonte has already won the approval of famed Tea Party Republican Representative Doreen Costa.

If Caprio does manage to convince Democrat voters in the September primary to pick him over the true Democrat Seth Magaziner, that would set up a November battle between him and “independent” Republican-except-in-name Ernie Almonte that could look alarmingly like 2010.

Actually, a Caprio-Almonte battle in November could be even worse because then we would have two candidates who are all about ambition and their own reinvented identities, devoid of real ideas or principles, but all about denying their pasts and painting themselves as “nice guys” who understand and care about working families, all evidence to the contrary.

But there’s an alternative, and that’s Seth Magaziner.

Here’s a short list of reasons why Seth is the clear choice:

  • Life-long Democrat
  • Backing of state and national democrats such as Bill Clinton, Deval Patrick, Patrick Kennedy, Liz Roberts, TEN democratic city and town committees, the majority of labor unions to endorse thus far, RI-NOW…
  • Activist investor who has proven he can beat the market while also standing up to big-banks to lower fees and fight predatory financial practices like systemic foreclosure.
  • Only candidate in the race to have testified at the state and federal level about the dangers of predatory financial services such as payday lending and pawn shop check cashing.

There’s plenty of time between now and primary day in September for Democrats to come to their senses.

NAACP lays out five point plan to reduce gun violence


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“Yesterday we gave out hotdogs and hamburgers at Chad Brown,” said speaker Kobi Dennis, of Project Night Vision and other programs aimed at curbing inner city violence, “That was fun, but guess what? That was for the kids. This is grown-up time right now.”

Jim Vincent, RI NAACP
Jim Vincent, RI NAACP

Grown-up time means Jim Vincent, president of the Rhode Island NAACP, calling a news conference on the steps of the Garrahy Judicial Complex in response to a drive-by shooting in Chad Brown late Tuesday night in which five people were injured. The NAACP, in consultation with other neighborhood groups, issued a “Call to Action,” demanding that Providence Mayor Angel Taveras call a leadership conference to discuss solutions to a problem that is putting families and children at risk.

Kobi Dennis
Kobi Dennis

In addition to the leadership conference the NAACP also called upon Governor Chafee  to direct the Governor’s Workforce Board “to establish targeted workforce development programs” in neighborhoods with high unemployment. As bad as the unemployment crisis in Rhode Island seems to be, in certain communities the unemployment rate is as high as 40%.

Vincent also wants Mayor Taveras to “evaluate the Providence Recreation Department to determine its effectiveness in providing recreation and youth development services to increase its relevancy.” Giving kids something to do can keep them off the streets, out of trouble and out of harm’s way. The cost of doing this is always less than the cost of bullets ripping through bodies.

Vincent also wants 15% of the Google settlement money. This would provide about $30 million “to support youth development and ex-offender training and employment programming,” a real investment in our communities.

Lastly, the NAACP wants the Public Safety Commission to “establish a community liaison to connect high crime neighborhoods with the police department to help prevent wars and provide mediation support.”

Not in attendance Monday afternoon were Mayor Taveras, who is running for Governor, or Governor Chafee, who has declined to run for reelection. Gubernatorial candidate Clay Pell attended, as did Providence Mayoral candidates Brett Smiley and Jorge Elorza. Republican candidate for Attorney General, Dawson Hodges, was also on hand.

One wonders why Taveras declined to attend. What did he have to do that was more important than listening to citizens of his city with proposed solutions to the violence tearing through our communities? Taveras was present the day before, speaking to the crowd at the Community Cook-Out, but that event was for the kids, right? The violence in Chad Brown and elsewhere in Providence is a problem that should concern us statewide. The person who leads the state, who wants to sit at the head of the adult table, needs to be able to show real leadership in times of crisis.

And that means, at the very least, showing up.

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Smoke Shop Raid: 11 years later


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smoke shopJuly 14 is a sacred day to the indigenous people of Rhode Island. It was on this day in 2003 that Governor Don Carcieri sent state troopers to raid the three-day-old smoke shop because the Narragansett Tribe was flouting Rhode Island tobacco laws. Some 51 police officers were deployed to the make-shift, tin building along a rural stretch of old Route 2. A rumble ensued and tribal elders were arrested.

And so every July 14 the tribal offices, the health center and the daycare at the Narragansett Indian Reservation are all closed. But the public is welcome to the site of the now-infamous Smoke Shop Raid.

They asked me not to shoot video of the ceremony itself (so you’ll have to go next year to see what that’s all about!) but here’s my best attempt to tell the Narragansett’s side of this story:

Fighting bullets with hot dogs


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DSC_2694Too often we in Providence, and more broadly we in Rhode Island, react to the gun violence tearing apart our communities as an issue specifically confined to the inner city.

The problem does not impact the vast majority of us, because we don’t live in the projects, and our concern is only brought to bear if the victim tugs at our hearts, as in the case of Aynis Vargas, the twelve year old killed last year at a party outside her apartment or if the crime is particularly careless and violent, as in the drive by shooting that rocked the Chad Brown section of Providence last Tuesday night. Five people were hospitalized, fortunately no one was killed.

DSC_2675The problem of gun violence in our neighborhoods is a problem for all of Rhode Islanders. The safety of all our children is of paramount importance, and in a state so small there is no way to pretend that the problem is too far away or too intractable for us to make a difference. If Rhode Island can come together as one community with a willingness to make real, substantive changes in the way we deal with poverty, crime, violence and guns, we can and will improve the lives of all our brothers and sisters.

DSC_2853I was pleased to hear about Diana Garlington’s Community Cook-Out for Non-Violence, held in the Chad Brown Projects and described as “an informal event” where “anyone whose life has been impacted by violence will have the opportunity to speak” and”everyone is invited.” I was pleased to see people from South Providence, the East Side and other parts of Providence gather in peace and celebration at an event where children were playing, neighbors were laughing and food was shared.

DSC_2791Officers were on hand from both the state and Providence Police, and of course, this being an election year, the candidates were out pleading their cases to the crowd. Mayor Taveras made a last-hour appearance and spoke briefly to the crowd. Sighted at the event were mayoral candidates Brett Smiley, Michael Solomon and Jorge Elorza. In addition to Taveras, gubernatorial candidate Gina Raimondo and candidate for State Secretary Nellie Gorbea were the statewide candidates in attendence. Several members of the Providence City Council and some of their opponents were on hand as was House candidate Aaron Regunberg, but conspicuous by their absence were the vast majority of the General Assembly, including Speaker Mattiello and Senate President Paiva-Weed. Under their leadership the General Assembly seems unable to acknowledge, never mind deal with the issue of gun violence.

DSC_2725But this was not a political event. This was a community event, designed to bring people together in peace so as to begin changing the conversation around violence and community. Several times people told me that events like this need to be held on a regular basis, not just in reaction to some tragic event. Moreover, leaders and members of communities throughout Rhode Island need to start making time in their schedules to attend these events. It’s only by going to these events and meeting the residents that we can learn that the people here want exactly what we all want: a safe place to raise our children.

This was a great event, and I hope to cover more of these, under better circumstances, in the future.

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Hearing tonight on extending Providence tax breaks


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Providence-City-HallProperty taxes are very high in Providence.  Each year, homeowners must pay 1.925% of the value of their homes to the city.  At 3.375%, the rate on apartments is even higher, and at 3.675%, the rate on commercial property is higher still.  But when the wealthiest developers build big projects, the story tends to go a little differently.

Often, the city arranges something called a “Tax Stabilization Agreement” or TSA. Basically, the idea is that the property won’t have to pay most of its taxes for the first few years, but ultimately, it will start paying the full rate. In practice, though, the latter part sometimes doesn’t always happen.

Recently, the General Assembly decided to unilaterally extend a slew of these tax breaks, costing the city millions. Now, the developers behind several beautiful Downtown buildings are asking for more extensions on four of their TSAs.

The City Council must resist the urge to extend these deals. The case for TSAs rests on the premise that the development would not happen without big tax breaks. The idea is that these deals make the city money in the long run by creating development that would never have happened otherwise. (Whether this is actually true is a matter of some debate.)

But when it comes to extending TSAs, this is no longer a concern.  It cannot be argued that the development would not happen–because it already has.

Downtown needs development badly. I have great respect for the work developers have done to revitalize Providence. But when it comes to taking millions of dollars in additional tax breaks from a cash-strapped city, from a city that has slashed pensions, closed schools, cut the police force, and sent property taxes to obscene heights—that is too much.  The city has so many more important priorities to spend those precious dollars on.

A few years ago, a request like this would have flown through, but so many City Councillors have extensive concerns with this proposal that we have a real chance of stopping the tax break extensions.  There will be a public hearing at 5:30pm tonight in the City Council chambers on the third floor of City Hall.  I hope to see many of you there.

 

What’s wrong with supply-side economics


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supply-side economicsWhile zipping through Netflix the other night, I came across a movie about bootleggers–that I wouldn‘t really recommend. As I watched, however, something became very clear.

Demand.

Supply-side economists have this totally absurd notion that supply will create its own demand. That has to be one of the stupidest things I have ever heard. Why are there no Wal-Mart’s in the Yukon territory? Why did buggy-whip manufacturers go belly-up after the auto-mobile became popular? Why are there no stores that sell only items related to Reformation Theology?

Seems like a Wal-Mart should be enough of an attraction to create its own demand. Right?

Seems like a plentiful supply of quality buggy-whips should have enough appeal to create its own demand. Right?

And lots of books and pictures of Thomas Cramner, well, obviously, this is a supply that has to create its own demand. Right?

But then you have Prohibition. What happened there? Supply disappeared, at least in theory. So demand collapsed, because nothing is ever driven by demand. Right?

Except just the opposite happened. Demand created the supply. Just like illegal drugs. With sufficient demand, someone, and even lots of someones, will take great risks to produce a supply.

And yet, star-level economists, especially at the U Chicago insist that demand has no role in economic performance. Cut taxes, cut regulations, free the supply side and demand will follow. It HAS to! Our theory says it will! So it will be so!

Stop me if you’ve heard this one: my grandfather lived through the Depression. He had a line that held more wisdom than all of the collected works of the U Chicago school. My granddaddy had no illusions about “Good Old Days”, when it was all simpler. His line was “Sure, a loaf of bread only cost a nickel. But what the hell. You didn’t have a nickel.”

And there you have it. No matter how cheap a thing, people won’t buy it if a) they don’t want it (see Whips, Buggy above); or b) they don’t have any money.

Which leads to the current state of the economy. Five full years after the crash, a lot of people still don’t have jobs. Or, if they do, they are low-level service jobs that pay between minimum and maybe $10/per hour. $10 per hour grosses just shy of $21k per year. Can you rent for $400 per month? Can you keep a car on the road for $400 per month? Maybe that will cover gas, but you also MUST factor repairs and routine maintenance into that. Can you eat decently on $400 per month? And that means, you know, fresh fruits and veggies. Yes, you can get by on boxed mac-and-cheese, but that takes a horrible toll on your body. So we’re down to something like $500 per month discretionary. (Taking a month as 4.3 weeks). Not saying that’s not enough to get by on. It is. I know because I’ve done it (adjusting for inflation). But let me tell you, don’t plan on buying much.

And there, exactly, is the rub. I get so sick of people who say that employers have the right and the obligation to drive wages into the ground. And then say that workers should be thrilled to have any job,at any wage, no matter how pathetically low. Have to free up the job creators!

But what good does that do? Job creators are more free now than they have been in generations. They’re making huge profits. They’re sitting on piles and piles of money. So, they’re free*. Why don’t they create jobs? Or why don’t they create jobs that pay people a decent wage? Why is there a need to stockpile even more money?
Look, Henry Ford was a Nazi sympathizer. That is not a slur. It’s an historical fact. Go read anything about him and you will find out that he was so virulently anti-communist that he thought the Nazi government was a good thing, at least before the onset of WWII and the Final Solution. He figured out that it was a good idea to pay workers more than starvation wages. He realized that by paying his workers a good wage, he was creating customers.

In other words, he was creating demand for his products. In other words, paying workers more, and making a smaller profit, was in his best self-interest.

We are primed for a terrific natural economic experiment. Massachusetts is going to raise its minimum wage, gradually, to $11 per hour by 2017. The first increase is to $9/hour as of 1/1/15. Since Mass and RI currently have the same minimum wage, this means that millions of jobs will be fleeing from Mass, crossing the border into RI to take advantage of the lower wage. And it means that Mass will be plunged into economic darkness and decay because, everyone knows that a higher–and increasing—minimum wage will cost millions f jobs. By 2018, Mass will look like Detroit on a grand scale.

Everyone knows this. Just like everyone knows that millions of Rhode Islanders have fled to low-tax places like North Dakota and Wyoming. Because that’s what Econ 101 says.

Well, maybe those people should have stuck around for Econ 201, or 301. Maybe they’d have learned there’s more to the story.

And: assuming that my “predictions” don’t come true, and that the economy in Mass actually improves, I will expect a personal apology from every single person who says I’m wrong.

Because, fact of the matter, a higher minimum wage will stimulate demand. People will have money. They will buy more. That means companies will hire more people. And the virtuous cycle continues. If you want proof of this, cross the border into Canada, where the minimum wage is currently $11./hour. And then cross back. It’s like going from a First World country into a Third World country. When you cross back into the US, that is.

And if you don’t believe me, how about this guy?

The curious case of the missing U. Penn dissertation


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proquest

Even though her publishing company says she is free to share his U Penn dissertation on teacher evaluations in Rhode Island, Commissioner of Education Deborah Gist, who based her research on her work here, said she won’t lift the embargo on her research.

“I have already spent more time on this than I have or care to spend,” Gist told me in an email today. “Figuring out how and when the embargo will be lifted and then making changes to the paperwork that I submitted to the university and ProQuest two years ago is a distraction from the work of improving educational opportunities for children in Rhode Island, which is what matters to me. My dissertation will be public when it is made public by those who currently hold the embargo.”

ProQuest, the publishing company used by the University of Pennsylvania to publish dissertations, said Gist can release the embargo, or her own version, if she likes.

“If she wanted to lift it,” said ProQuest customer service representative Sara Schreiber, “we would gladly do that.”

Schreiber added, “It’s her work. We are just the publishing company. We don’t own it or have any copyright to it.”

Teachers and union leaders have renewed a call for Gist to release her dissertation – “An Ocean State Voyage: A Leadership Case Study of Creating an Evaluation System with, and for, Teachers” – which she based on her working relationship with teachers implementing performance evaluations.

Those evaluations were pared back legislatively this year and friction about the issue became public when this website published a heated email exchange between Gist and North Kingstown state Senator James Sheehan, a high school teacher, who has persistently called for her to release the dissertation.

“You are mistaken in your understanding of the process,” Gist said to Sheehan in one of the emails. “I apologize for any confusion, but to be very clear I did not implement nor can I end the embargo. That action was taken by ProQuest, the organization that manages dissertations for the University of Pennsylvania. Contrary to what you stated, it is not ‘self imposed.'”

Later in the exchange, Sheehan said, “I am weary of the run-around and verbal obfuscations. Unfortunately, this request is generally representative of your leadership in my experience. I wish you well. But, I look forward to new leadership with the incoming governor.”

ProQuest said the dissertation would be published on September 9, 2015, unless Gist requests the embargo be extended.

Gist completed her doctorate in education in August of 2012, and requested a two year embargo, according to ProQuest. But they did not receive her dissertation until September 2013, according to Schreiber. Since June of 2013, Wendy Holmes, a URI professor emeritus in Art History and education activist, has been trying to read Gist’s research. In November 2013, she authored this post.

Tu-Quyen Nguyen, a graduate student registrar at U Penn, wrote in a June 21013 email in June to Holmes that Gist’s dissertation made it to the publisher a year late. He wrote:

Unfortunately, Deborah’s dissertation was mailed in a box that was never received by ProQuest. I discovered this in January 2013 when another student inquired about their dissertation publishing. I have notified the affected students and am working with ProQuest to have the missing dissertation re-submitted to ProQuest ASAP.

In order to resubmit the dissertations to ProQuest, affected students need to complete the publication agreement form again so that I can resubmit everything to ProQuest. I had initially notified Deborah in January 2013 by sending an email to her school email (the only email address we have on file for her), which, I found out yesterday from her program that she no longer uses. The program coordinator, Martha Williams, is now working with Deborah to submit the required publication agreement forms so that we can resubmit everything.

The reason why her dissertation is not available at the Penn VanPelt Library is because that copy is currently on my desk waiting for microfilm from ProQuest.

She also wrote: “Dr. Deborah Gist’s dissertation was successfully submitted to ProQuest on June 20th 2013,” two months prior to when ProQuest said they received it.

Nick Okrent, a librarian at the Van Pelt library at U Penn said in a separate June, 2013 email to Holmes that dissertation embargoes are “fairly common.”

“Many dissertations at Penn are currently under embargo,” he wrote in the email. “Some people are worried that making their dissertation public will hurt their chances of using their dissertation as a first book. Others are worried about patentable discoveries or privacy issues. One can speculate about the reasons for requesting an embargo, but the only way to ascertain the real reason is to ask the author of the dissertation.”

In November, 2013, Gist told RI Future she requested the embargo because she was having “hard time writing” about the incidents relating to her work between 2009 and 2011. An academic adviser suggested a public embargo might alleviate immediate ramifications of her research.

“And indeed it did help me write about my work,” she said.

Seekonk on Saturday: Hobby Lobby protest


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hobbylobbyboycott

The Secular Coalition for Massachusetts is planning a protest outside Hobby Lobby, 165 Highland Ave in Seekonk tomorrow, July 12, from 10am-2pm to call for a boycott against the company that elevated the fictional religious rights of corporations above the real world rights of women to make their own decisions regarding reproductive healthcare.

This is the second such protest in the Rhode Island area, the first having been held last Saturday in Warwick which attracted between 65 and 125 people and, in concert with similar protests across the country, gathered national attention.

Come out and take a stand for women’s rights and against corporate personhood.


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