RI congressional delegation shows no leadership on Middle East


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middle-eastDo RI Future readers have any idea of what is happening the Middle East? Have you heard enough from congressmen Cicilline or Langevin or senators Reed or Whitehouse on the Middle East turmoil and US policy? Have you heard anything from them on the nuclear treaty with Iran,  which the entire Congress will soon vote on. Such a big issue and nothing but silence from our delegation.

I haven’t heard anything, but I would like something.

Why are we supporting the incessant Saudi bombing of Yemen by supplying the Saudis with the weapons, bombs, and intelligence used to kill thousands of innocents and destroyed their entire infrastructure? Why are we now cozying up to al-Qaeda in Syria and supporting groups who were formerly labeled as “terrorist” groups. I am sure most readers do not have a clue as to what we are doing and why we are doing it.

Where are representatives Cicilline and Langevin and senators Reed and Whitehouse on these issues? Nothing but silence from them, and I find their silence deafening. Shouldn’t “leaders” be holding town meetings with voters to explain the happenings, and to answer the many questions voters may have?

I call upon our congressional delegation to be “leaders” and come to us in town meetings with an explanation. Don’t be afraid; we won’t bite.  It is amazing; they spend millions to gain a position of leadership then are afraid to lead. Show us some leadership and courage, for a change.

Lessons from Sally Gabb’s South


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“The civil rights movement did not spring up whole cloth in 1960. Rosa Parks was not an isolated individual too tired to stand on the bus. She belonged to a network of political and social justice organizers who had worked for several decades laying the groundwork for the sixties and seventies. The older experienced foot soldiers for social and economic justice gave us the advantage of history.”- Sally Gabb

Sally Gabb told me she recently wrote a chapter in a book; she died earlier this summer.  After her passing, I started looking for her writings. I heard in a movie, “You can still learn from someone when they’re gone.” It’s true.

The late Sally Gabb, a human rights activist, journalist and teacher, always talked about the importance of working in community to achieve change and connection. I connected with Sally and her wife Beth at our Unitarian-Universalist congregation, Bell Street Chapel in Providence’s West End. She was fascinated by the role of the unconscious in our actions, and was leery of big talk that overlooked the day to day work that makes experiences real and connected (and hard to achieve).

As she told Options Magazine, “While it’s great that stores like Target sell shirts that proclaim “girl power,” we need to make sure such commercial hijacking of slogans doesn’t invalidate actual work – politically, socially, legally – to achieve an end to discrimination against women.”

In the book Sally contributed to, Voices from the Underground:Insider Histories of the Vietnam Era Underground Press, she recounted successes and struggles at an alternative paper, The Great Speckled Bird, she and other radicals wrote for in 1970s Atlanta. At its peak the paper had over 3,000 mail subscriptions and 20,000 circulation copies per issue. Topics ranged from music culture to foreign policy, from the Black Panther Party to desegregation, from socialist politics to feminism.

She wrote, “The Bird’s midwives were, naturally, a collection of current or former graduate students. Who else has been so groomed to take themselves so seriously? Budding historians philosophers they were, mostly men, with women in the shadows, women on the brink of bursting forth to be heard. They were men and women joined by a certain lesson: The South.”

For Sally, what made The Bird fascinating was it’s struggle to run itself like the ideals it professed- attempts at collective leadership, independent leftist politics, shared work (from the tedious task of labeling to strategy brainstorming), the Progressive stream of Southern history, rock and roll, gay liberation, anti-war.

“Atlanta police, for various reasons,” according to the New Georgia Encyclopedia, “arrested people selling the newspaper on street corners, on charges ranging from jaywalking to distributing pornographic material. City building and fire inspectors routinely visited the house on Fourteenth Street in which the staff worked, and schools banned the publication from their campuses. In 1972 the Bird’s offices were firebombed.”

The Bird was an attempt, as she put it, to “run an enterprise against capitalism.” It was collectively run, and tasks were rotated but not everyone agreed on all issues- political or design. Sally notes, “We did establish policies that would draw the line at advertising that blatantly contradicted our politics. The choices weren’t easy however. The Bird was heavily supported by advertisements from so-called “Hippie Capitalism” – the clothing stores, head shops, and music related businesses that knew they could reach consumers through our pages. Such advertisements often appealed to traditional male domination, and to the view that women exist as sex objects for men.” I’m reminded of the back pages of the defunct Providence Phoenix.

Looking back, she said there were some things very naïve about the work – but she was proud to have documented labor struggles, desegregation, the fight for a more equitable workplace (in the paper’s office and without), and to work with a group to create a community, however imperfect, committed to documenting and encouraging radical change. She was perhaps most proud to learn from and interview long-time labor and civil rights organizers who had been working for change in the South since the Depression.

After the Bird, Sally worked at a Lesbian Print Collective before “her life’s work of adult education.” I’m still learning from Sally.

Healthcare workers fight for $15 in Rhode Island


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SEIU 15  009Over 150 front line medical caregivers rallied on Newport Avenue in Pawtucket yesterday afternoon to demand a minimum wage of $15. The timing and location of the event was carefully considered.

It was the 50th anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid. The location, near Slater Park, is around the corner from two healthcare providers, ARC of Blackstone Valley, which provides services to adults with developmental disabilities and the Pawtucket Center, a Genesis Heath Care skilled nursing facility.

The rally was also just two miles from the Massachusetts border, where home care workers recently won a minimum wage of $15 to be phased in over the next few years. Rhode Island does not pay nearly as much.

SEIU 1199, representing the healthcare workers, released figures showing that at Pawtucket Skilled Nursing & Rehab, the starting rate is $11.75. 63 percent of workers make less than $15. At ARC of Blackstone Valley many direct care staffers earn $10.75 and 94 percent earn less than $15. Meanwhile, two miles up the street, a caregiver could find a job paying $15.

I spoke with two women whose adult, disabled children are cared for at ARC of Blackstone Valley. Both attested to the excellent care their families receive and to the need for paying better wages. The caregivers at ARC are like family, said Pat, whose daughter Rachel has many special care requirements.

Two women who work as personal care attendants in Massachusetts also addressed the rally. Deborah Hahn said, “…if Massachusetts PCAs can win $15, if New York fast food workers can win $15, you can too.”

This event is seen as part of the “expanding #fightfor15 movement” which has been defying expectations and scoring significant wins in recent weeks. The healthcare workers were joined at the rally by a host of labor and community groups, including the AFL-CIO, Unite Here! 217, Jobs with Justice, Fuerza Laboral, NEARI, Teamsters 251, UNAP, UFCW 328, and the RI Progressive Democrats.  State Representatives David Bennett, Mary Duffy Messier and Scott Slater were also on hand.

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Prison is about re-socialization, not corrections


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The ACI

The ACIImagine a herd of sheep on the range, with each animal going off in a different direction and doing their own thing. It would be a rancher’s worst nightmare, and would surely make the business of ranching far more difficult. Prisoners are not sheep, but the prison guards that watch over us wouldn’t mind if we were.

The guards find it easier when inmates are re-socialized into something easy to control. Such institutionalized prisoners are ideal for the efficient locking up of human beings. This type of person will more mindlessly goes about their day. Prisons use the process of re-socialization as a means of  control and conformity. It strips away a person’s former identity and allows institutional agents to remold us how they see fit. But the end product is institutionalized inmates bound for recidivism.

The prison system may be less unruly and easier to operate as a business, and the lucrative business of incarceration may even prosper with its growing prison population. But is that the real intention of prison? Is it for the inmate, or for society? If society is truly concerned with fixing the corrections system, then more effort must be made towards the business of “corrections” as opposed to the business of institutional re-socialization..

Institutionalization may be good for prison business, but it is bad for society. Most prisoners are eventually released back into society, and usually much worse for the wear. Most of these former inmates find themselves “uncorrected” – unable to find work, still unskilled, and worst of all, unreformed. Unfortunately, these people end up back in jail, and re-socialization is never that difficult the second time around for the recidivist.

The Harlem Strut jazzes up Providence


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Beehive-Jazz-ClubJazz is the music that my soul turns to as a default. I went through a classic rock phase, did the whole punk/ska thing, I even enjoy some classical/orchestral on the side, but my heart explodes whenever I listen to some old time jazz. When I hear the opening notes of John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme or journey through the labyrinth of Dave Brubeck’s Time Out!, something inside me bursts like a firecracker in the night.

On August 8 at 2 PM, local youth ages 12-18 will be holding a free jazz concert, “The Harlem Strut, at the Providence Public Library Main Branch at 150 Empire Street. Under the musical direction of  Lynne Jackson and Michael Palter and the artistic direction of Robb Dimmick, these twelve musicians come from a variety of backgrounds and include students Trinity Academy for the Performing Arts (TAPA), having spent six hours a day rehearsing in anticipation of the event.

For more information, interested parties can contact Ray Rickman at Rickman@RickmanGroup.com or 401-421-0606.

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Rhode Island joins Bernie Sanders nationwide event


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Lauren Niedel

About 40 of the estimated 100,000 people across the country at house parties for Bernie Sanders were crammed into the standing room only function room at Pinewood Pub and Pizza in Chepachet, Rhode Island last night in hopes of electing the independent Vermont senator, who identifies as a socialist, president of the United States.

This was Sanders’ largest organizing event in a grassroots campaign that has surprised pundits.

Lauren Niedel of the Progressive Democrats of Rhode Island, coordinated this event. She welcomed the crowd to what she called “the official launch of the Bernie Sanders Campaign.”

“RI is not the epicenter of Presidential politics,” said Niedel, “but New Hampshire is, and we’re not too far away.” She discussed Sanders’ 12 point plan, his strong stance on climate change and the environment, his call for a $15 minimum wage, and getting money out of politics by overturning Citizen’s United.

In answer to a concern about Sanders on guns and gun control, Niedel pointed out that Sanders has a D- rating from the NRA (National Rifle Association).

An Internet slowdown at the restaurant combined with overloaded servers made it difficult to start the livestream of Sanders’ talk. The room devolved into a couple dozen conversations when suddenly Sanders voice could be heard from the speakers saying, “We have to combat institutional racism in this country.”

That’s not a bad place to start the stream.

Sanders’ mantra in this speech was “enough is enough.” He called for a path to citizenship and comprehensive immigration reform. He called for Medicare for all – a single payer system. “The only way we can take on the billionaire class is when we put together a strong grass roots movement,” he said. “That’s what I mean by political revolution.”

Sanders’ simple message and blunt delivery resonated with those in the room. There was applause and cheers throughout.

“When we stand together there is nothing, nothing, nothing we cannot accomplish,” said Sanders, towards the end. A woman from off camera gave Sanders a photograph of Gandhi, but the room is so loud and energized I couldn’t hear what she said. The earlier conversations had resumed, with more animation and at a higher volume.

Niedel got the room under control, and asked people to rise one at a time, to explain what it is about Sanders that’s captured their imagination and makes them want to work for his underdog campaign. The answers are revealing.

“When I heard Bernie Sanders speak, it rang true. Here’s my voice.”

“I think Bernie is probably our last shot, to be honest. A man with integrity. I figure I’ll throw my weight behind him and hope for the best.”

‘I’m for the people. I want to keep power away from corporations.”

“We have a 15 year old going to college in a few years and we’re still paying off student loans for us.”

“He’s real. I like what he says. It’s about time somebody stood up for the middle class and those that can’t stand up for themselves.”

“He’s one of the first to talk about ending hunger and ending income inequality.”

“I saw the filibuster in 2010 and it moved my heart, moved my spirit.”

“My grandson asked me what I was doing. I said I was researching Bernie Sanders. He asked me why I don’t just watch it on the news? And that smacked me in the head. How do you explain to a 12 year old that the media is bought?”

“He speaks to the values that most people in this country believe in.”

“Bernie is saying all the things that I want to hear.”

“I’m a recovering Republican. After the bank crisis I had an awakening. The system had been corrupted by big money. I really like Bernie’s message. He’s not selling himself.”

“In my life I have mostly voted for the lesser of two evils. I like what Bernie is saying.”

“He’s our last chance.”

On the subject of Hillary, people were sure of one thing. They don’t really trust her.

“We need an alternative to Hillary.”

“I would love to have a woman for President, but I just can’t trust Hillary.”

“When I learned about Hillary and Monsanto, that totally turned me off.”

“Sometimes you make a few too many compromises, and I think that’s the case with Hillary.”

“Hillary has Wall St. written all over her.”

An interesting series of comments turned into a conversation about Sanders’ identification as a socialist.

“I’m a long time socialist, first time socialist voter. If Bernie could lean a little further to the left, I’d be stoked.”

“Bernie needs to find another word (besides Socialism). Like Humanity. Humanist.”

“Socialist is a negative tag. He’s a Humanist.”

“What it really means is that he wants everybody to have a living wage. This is what socialism is.”

“The biggest socialism in this country is the biggest rip off: corporate welfare.”

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Rep. Abney selected for prestigious legislative leadership program


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State Representative Marvin L. Abney (D- District 73) has been chosen to become one of the Council of State Governments’ Henry Toll Fellows for 2015.

Photo courtesy of http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/representatives/Abney/default.aspx
Photo courtesy of http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/representatives/Abney/default.aspx

The Toll Fellowship is a leadership development program, named for the founder of CSG, Henry Walcott Toll. Each year, the program selects 48 officials from all three branches of government, and brings them to Lexington, KY, for what the program calls an “intellectual boot camp.”

Over the course of the six-day, five-night program, fellows will attend sessions that are designed to stimulate personal assessment and growth, as well as provide networking opportunities. Previous years have included sessions on leadership personality assessment, media training, adaptive leadership, and other topics. Abney stated in a press release that these sessions are important because legislators must know their strengths and weaknesses.

“My state is in the middle of rebuilding after the last recession,” he said. “Other legislators have survived similar environments and are doing well for their district and state. I simply want to learn from successful legislators. I believe that the more time I spend learning the craft of being an effective legislator, the less precious time I will spend on ineffective measures and policies.”

The 2015 class that Abney will join represents 33 states and Puerto Rico. There are 35 members from the legislative branch, four from the judiciary, and nine from the executive. Those who are interested in the program must go through an application process, which is reviewed by a nine-member committee of state leaders.

“Public service is vital in a free and democratic society,” Abney said. “I believe that public servants should strive to get better at their craft every day. The Henry Toll Fellowship Program provides that opportunity.”

Abney will attend the program from Aug. 28-Sept. 2.

“The Toll Fellowship remains the oldest and most prestigious of all leadership development programs for elected officials,” CSG executive director and CEO David Adkins said. “Its impact is profound and the quality is renowned. As a Toll Fellow from 1993, I know first hand the impact the program has on elected officials.”

ABLE Act gives disabled children funds for their future


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Only a few days after the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, Rhode Island instituted a new law that will allow families of children with disabilities to create a tax-free investment account to help financially support them when they reach adulthood. Governor Gina Raimondo signed the “Achieving a Better Life Experience,” or ABLE Act, into law on Wednesday afternoon at the Cornerstone School in Cranston.

Representative Robert Nardolillo, an Republican from District 28, and Senator Adam Satchell, a Democrat from District 9, sponsored the bipartisan act. Both legislators said that they decided to take on the bill because of their experiences with disabled children and their families. Satchell, who is a guidance teacher in the West Warwick, said that he works with disabled children all day, and has done so for years, even before he started teaching.

Rep. Robert Nardolillo
Rep. Robert Nardolillo

“I grew up next to a little boy who was disabled, and I learned a lot from him and from his family about the struggles that they go through,” he said. “I have friends who have a disabled child. So, working with the disabled has been something that I really wanted to do from the second I got elected.”

Satchell said that in West Warwick, schools are trying to bring the disabled population back in from outside placement. This move has given him the opportunity to work with both disabled and non-disabled students in the same room, in character education activities, teaching children how to respect and be kind to everyone.

“We have disabled individuals in the classroom, and its awesome to see the little kids helping their friend who can’t speak. They come up to me and say “Oh can I help this one, can I work with that one,” and it’s just awesome to see,” he said.

Having spoken with parents of these children, Satchell said that one of their biggest worries is what will happen when their children are not in school anymore. The ABLE program will hopefully quell that concern, and give parents the funds to send their children to adult daycare, or obtain job training.

While on his campaign trail, Nardolillo also spoke with parents of disabled children in his district, and decided to take on the act to help them.

“When I thought about what would be important to me to be important to me, to begin my session with, I concentrated on why I’m campaigning to be a legislator, and that’s public service,” he said. “You reflect on all the stories you heard going door to door. I’m a huge supporter of small business and trying to find jobs, but I’m a family man too.”

Nardolillo said that while speaking with these families, he realized that their children are their sole concern. When he began the session, he was looking for legislation that would have a positive and lasting impact on these families. While there is still more work to be done, and regulations that must be implemented, Nardolillo believes that this is a positive first step in the right direction.

The ABLE Act allows familes to put in $14,000 in state sanctioned accounts each year, with a $100,000 cap. This money is not taxed, and can be put towards a disabled child’s future, when they age out of the school system. Nardolillo added that these funds become even more important when a disabled individual wants to begin working.

Gov. Raimondo shaking hands with Cornerstone students
Gov. Raimondo shaking hands with Cornerstone students

“They want to work. They enjoy being out there, and socializing, and we all do,” he said. “We all love our jobs and like to socialize and everything, and this is a nice gateway. It opens the door to that, and that’s a special thing too.”

Both Satchell and Nardolillo also remarked that they anticipate no negative effects on the economy once the act is implemented, only positive ones.

“I can’t imagine what the negative impact of something like this would cause,” Nardolillo said. “Any time you offer someone opportunity, and you offer them a protection with an account like this, that allows them to put assets aside to protect their future, it’s hard for me to find a negative in that, it really is.”

“It wouldn’t have a negative effect on the economy, because a lot of these people basically have no assets to receive some of these services,” Satchell added. “If these people had any money, they weren’t using it, because if they have that money, and they have those assets, they run the risk of losing their programming.”

Before signing the act, Governor Raimondo gave her own remarks, saying that the ABLE accounts give Rhode Islanders the agency they deserve.

“This is about allowing people to have opportunity and independence, and fulfillment in their lives,” she said. “With these ABLE accounts, it will allow everybody to have some measure of independence, which is what people deserve.”

General Treasurer Seth Magaziner was also involved in the crafting of the bill, and said that he took a personal interest because his girlfriend’s brother was born with Down syndrome. Magaziner mentioned that he has seen the difficulties that their family has encountered trying to transition his girlfriend’s brother, named Peter, into adult life.

“Children who suffer from disabilities are just as deserving of a rich and fulfilling life than those children who are fortunate enough to pursue higher education,” he said. “Under this new law, our state will provide an affordable, tax-efficient savings plan to help families save for the costs of helping a child with disabilities make the transition into adulthood.”

A visit to the Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health


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Erin Basler Francis, Shayna Parker, Kira Manser & Bisquit

The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health is unique. There is nothing else like it on the East Coast, you would have to travel to San Francisco or Portland, Oregon to find anything similar. The Center describes themselves as “a sexuality education and training organization that works to reduce sexual shame, challenge misinformation, & advance the field of sexuality.”

sexual-pleasure-fundraiser-e1436866775479Regular readers will have noticed that RI Future has been running an advertisement for the Center’s fundraiser, “An Affair to Remember” and so I took this opportunity to visit the Center to meet the staff and learn about what services are offered.

Programs Manager Kira Manser gave me a tour of the space. Erin Basler Francis, content and brand manager for the Center and operations manager Shayna Parker were on hand to answer my questions. Bisquit the Cat kept a watchful eye on us all. I immediately felt that I had entered a safe and welcoming space.

20150729_105355At the Center you will find one of the largest libraries on the subject of sexuality in New England, with comfortable chairs on which to park yourself to do some reading and research. I immediately recognized the importance of such a resource as a journalist, since it is often difficult to find objective data on contentious subjects that deal with sexuality online, but here you will find both a well stocked library and professional help in navigating subjects often fraught with misinformation.

20150729_105427Manser then showed me a large collection of sex toys and aids. These items are not for sale, they are for instructional purposes. Often times when someone purchases such an item, they do so without understanding that some products are not as safe as others. To make this point Manser showed me some Kegel balls with cotton strings attached. The cotton can absorb moisture and become a place for bacteria to take root. It is better, she said, to use a product where the string is coated in washable silicon.

The Center provides professional development training in sexuality for those working in the fields of health care, counseling and education. They have a monthly discussion group for people living with cancer, cancer survivors and their partners wanting to reclaim their sexuality. The Center holds these discussions in conjunction with the Gloria Gemma Foundation.

Other workshops offered at the Center concentrate on the safe use of lubes, vibrators and sex toys, sexual techniques, or maximizing sexual pleasure for yourself and your partner(s).

The fundraiser, An Affair to Remember, is an effort to get the Center on more solid financial footing as they seek to expand their offerings. The evening will feature partying and drinks, and an art installation, “A Place at the Table,” inspired by feminist artist Judy Chicago’s “The Dinner Party.” The Center has invited artists to design plates “inspired by important historical moments and themes in the field of sexuality” and the “final pieces will be displayed together on a banquet-style table, each with a place mat, cup, napkin and utensils.”

Erin Basler Francis told me that the artwork she’s seen so far has been amazing. I am very excited to see it for myself. The event will be held on Saturday, September 19, 2015 from 6:00-9:00pm at the Fête in Providence (103 Dike Street).

The Center for Sexual Pleasure and Health is located at 250 Main St #1, Pawtucket, RI and is open Tuesday through Saturday 12-6pm and by appointment. Rhode Island is lucky to have such a resource. As an added bonus, not only is the staff knowledgeable about issues of sexual pleasure and health, they know more than a little about comics and geek culture. Very cool.

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How to bring the unions to the stadium opposition


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Build RI is a labor-management partnership between a variety of trade unions.

My colleague Steve Ahlquist previously posted a great story covering the two meetings on July 27 about the proposed construction of the taxpayer-subsidized stadium. One point that was made at the Providence meeting, worth expanding on here, is the issue of the construction trade unions, which have endorsed this project. This piece will make an effort to appeal to both the general membership and leadership of these unions, who will prove to be some of the most important allies in this struggle and, on the other hand, will perhaps be the make-or-break of this deal.

It is important to empathize with the membership, they are facing a massive drop in employment and job sites, with a huge percentage of the rank-and-file out of work. This project would create jobs for a large swathe of their members, something I do not begrudge them for.

But this is a decision I do not think they have properly contemplated. First, while the governor has previously eluded to a hiring push that would target minority workers, the current contractor participating in this project, Gilbane, has one of the worst records of minority hiring in the nation. That is an important issue to discuss because the disenfranchisement of minority workers is a vital one.

Second, and perhaps more importantly, this stadium could generate short-term gains on one project but may in fact kill development in the I-195 land in the near future. As Kate Bramson reported on May 2, any and all further construction hinges on a super-permit that would install a stormwater mitigation mechanism at the proposed open park.  Bramson wrote in that piece:

The master permit hinges on a plan to use parkland within the 195 district for stormwater mitigation. Builders are required to treat a percentage of stormwater on parcels they develop. However, if they can’t meet the entire stormwater requirement on a parcel, the master permit allows them to gain credit from the parkland’s treatment of stormwater.

Given the tides and ebbs of Rhode Island politics, this could end up killing future development on the I-195 corridor for up to five years. And on top of that, recall that the federal government also will need to be involved, prolonging the wait. That of course translates out to a much greater amount of time for unemployed union members to remain so. Between an extended waiting period and a traffic-clogging stadium, potential developers in the bio-med and education sectors might take their business elsewhere, keeping that land vacant for a very long time.

Bucking the trend and opposing an endorsement that has already been made by the union is always a tremendously problematic issue, no doubt. It takes courage, gumption, and being versed in the relevant documentary records so to make a cogent case. I would refer interested parties especially to this slideshow produced already by the I-195 Commission, an outline of proposed development by landscape architects that every taxpayer in the state already funded. Just to re-iterate, the state has already paid three times for this land.  First, we paid for the de-comissioning and demolition of the old I-195 highway. Second, we paid to have it zoned and developed by the federal government. Third, we paid for the aforementioned landscape architects and other planners to work out the schematics of the park.

If this ballpark scheme goes through, it will cost taxpayers another three times. First they will need to pay for the stadium’s construction. Second they will pay to re-design the sewer and highway system to accommodate the stadium. Third we need to re-develop another parcel of land as a park should the government refuse to accept the idea of a smaller park on the grounds of the stadium.

There is simply too much risk as opposed to reward in this idea and organized labor should rethink their position, not so to undermine their standing but to promote and improve their reputation. This week Boston Mayor Martin Walsh rejected the move to finance the 2024 Olympics with Beantown tax monies, causing their bid for the Games to be voided. That move has probably bought Walsh another term in office and could very well give him a future bid for higher office. The unions in Rhode Island would be wise to take such logic into consideration. To be clear, I am no opponent of labor unions, I am a member of one and was an eyewitness to the Illinois Caterpillar strike in the 1990’s. But this project, should it come to pass due to labor’s support, will be seen by many as a black mark on its record and will be fantastic fare for union busters on both sides of the aisle.

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Disability forum exposes inaccessibility, discrimination across state programs


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If you thought that riding RIPTA, or receiving food benefits was difficult, imagine trying to do it with a disability. That’s what was talked about Tuesday afternoon when the Governor’s Commission on Disabilities held a public forum at the Warwick Public Library, where those in the disabled community could voice their concerns about accessibility across the state.

Forum attendees waiting to hear testimony
Forum attendees waiting to hear testimony

The forum hosted a number of healthcare professionals, who specialize in a number of care outlets for disabled patients. Different groups that were represented included the Disability Law Center, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the Ocean State Center for Independent Living, and the Office of Rehabilitation Services, among others. But, rather than the professionals taking up the time to speak, many community members came forward, expressing how they believe Rhode Island can do better in terms of accessibility.

Barbara Henry, a blind woman who cannot drive, frequents RIPTA, which has proven problematic for her on more than one occasion.

“When the bus pulls up, I have no idea what bus it is,” she said. “They do not announce the bus, and I feel they really discriminate against anyone who is visually impaired, or print disabled, or anything for that matter.”

Henry’s problems have ranged from not knowing that a stop had been changed, to dealing with the newly renovated Kennedy Plaza, which she said is not accessible at all. While the stop names are in braille, the bus numbers that go through those stops are not, and the bus drivers do not announce which bus they are driving.

“My bus stop is G, but my bus number is 33,” she said. “There’s the 33, the 56, and the 54 that go out of that one stop. There’s nothing in braille that indicates that. If you were standing there, I would have to come up to you, and ask, “What bus is this?” And when the bus pulls up, there’s no audio announcement.”

Henry, who advocated, in her own words, “like hell,” for braille at Kennedy Plaza, feels as though her community is not taken seriously. Henry said that she attends the RIPTA community meetings, advocating for other blind people, because there is nothing tactile for them to process when they are finding their stop, not even a map.

“Since it’s been open since January, I’m still trying to process, make a mental map, of where everything is. They didn’t make any type of map or anything,” she said.

When Kennedy Plaza reopened earlier this year, RIPTA staff were there to assist passengers and direct them where to go, but Henry said that there was nobody to specifically help disabled riders.

Henry said that these issues don’t just affect blind people, though. Many other disabled riders struggle with RIPTA, including those who are deaf, autistic, or impaired in some other fashion. Such treatment has lead Henry to believe that RIPTA discriminates against the disabled.

“I truly, truly believe, that they do discriminate against the disabled,” she said. “I feel that my safety is placed at risk.”

Kristin Clark went to the forum to represent her friend, who is disabled and experienced mistreatment and belligerent service at the hands of the Wakefield SNAP office when trying to get certified for her benefits. Clark’s friend, who was not named, went into her local Wakefield office rather than conducting a phone interview with the main Providence office.

“The staff apparently relies on phone interviews, even though they are told they can come into offices to do the recertification,” Clark said. “When she came into the office, she was treated very badly, and very hostilely, and was told several times that SNAP would be cancelled for her, and that she would have to pay back what they said was an overpayment, and now she’s left not knowing what her situation is.”

Clark added that Rhode Island Housing has been helpful for her friend and her son, who is also disabled, because she is part of section 8 housing. SNAP, on the other hand, has caused a whole host of problems for her. Clark has even spoken to Congressman Jim Langevin’s (D- District 2), who looked into the problem and asked that they also speak to the Department of Health. When her friend called, the Department of Health was not only rude to her again, but also defended the SNAP office’s treatment towards her.

“By the end of the call, my friend was just a mess, and as of right now, has no idea what her situation is,” she said. “She does not know if she’s cancelled, she does not know if somebody is going to come after her for that money that they say she was overpaid, she does not know if, come Aug. 1, if she is going to have any SNAP benefits.”

Raffi Jansezian, a staff member for the GCD, explained how their office plans to move forward with these issues.

“After all the forums are done after this week, and after all the transcripts are finalized, I’ll be going through them, personally reading them as well as running different focus groups to analyze the transcripts, to figure out which problems are coming up over and over again,” he said.

Once that process is completed, they then move to begin writing solutions for these pressing issues into legislation, and create laws that can benefit everyone who has been affected and come to them to voice their concerns.

Jansezian added that Governor Gina Raimondo has shown “fantastic” support for the GCD, and that they have already made some strides towards what they hope to accomplish.

Public opposition to downtown stadium builds


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Rochambeau Library

It was by far the biggest meeting I had ever seen at Rochambeau Library, and bigger than any crowd I have seen at any of the PawSox listening tours. The crowd filled the room and overflowed into the halls. About 125 people attended the Providence Campaign Against the Stadium organizational meeting in Providence Monday night. Organizers Sam Bell, Sharon Steele, Tim Empke and Suzanne Mark conducted a meeting to recruit help in defeating the building of a new PawSox stadium in Providence.

Those in attendance were unhappy with elected officials who have decided to reserve judgement and not come out against giving the PawSox owners taxpayer monies and/or tax breaks. They also came out because they are strongly in favor of keeping the land in question true to its original intention as a public park open to all. The consensus seems to be that the vast majority of Rhode Islanders are opposed to any kind of stadium deal, and that elected officials such as Governor Gina Raimondo, Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello and Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed are not listening to their constituents even as they negotiate in secret with PawSox management.

Part of the campaign’s strategy has been collecting signatures to pressure the Providence City Council into rejecting any kind of tax deal for the Stadium. Enough signatures have been collected to force the City Council to take up the issue and the campaign is actively collecting the signatures needed to put the stadium initiative on the ballot. If Providence rejects the stadium, then the stadium cannot be built.

However, Mayor Jorge Elorza has joined state elected officials in not taking any kind of stand against the stadium, adopting the same wait-and-see attitude. This annoyed many of those who were at the Rochambeau meeting, who feel that the East Side helped to elect the Mayor, and that he should be more receptive to the opinions of voters than to the interests of out of state millionaires.

If eight members of the Providence City Council come out strongly against the deal, the stadium is a dead issue, but there is a catch. The General Assembly has the power to rewrite local laws and over ride the Providence City Council or the voters of Providence. They have done so in the past when referendums threaten corporate interests. Last year the General Assembly passed legislation (as a budget amendment to avoid public commentary) taking away the rights of cities and towns to set their own minimum wages as a gift to The Procaccianti Group, which runs several hotels downtown and around the world.

The Campaign organizers thought this scenario unlikely.

After the main meeting the group separated into several working groups, concentrating on different aspects of the campaign.

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Jeff White, Sydney McKenna and Dan Rea

By way of contrast, two hours earlier the PawSox sales team was in the Barrington Town Hall as part of their ongoing “listening tour” to be held in every city and town in Rhode island. Charles Steinberg, who usually conducts these meetings since the death of Jim Skeffington, was not on hand because he was helping with the celebrations around the induction of Pedro Martinez into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

This left the sales duties to organizer Sydney McKenna, special assistant to Larry Lucchino Dan Rea III and Red Sox accountant Jeff White.

Things did not go great.

The crowd of about 40 people were forced to submit all questions in writing before hand under the watchful eyes of two hired police officers. No one spoke up in favor of the stadium, many people spoke out against it. Former Attorney General Arlene Violet was in attendance, and she pounded the speakers with tough questions, often speaking up out of turn to make her points. It was the only way to express an opinion to the room given the format of the meeting.

Violet pushed back hard against the contention that nearly 50 percent of those attending PawSox games come from out of state. She asked where the numbers Jeff White was putting out were coming from. White said that the PawSox have been polling those coming to the game for the past five weeks.

When Violet countered that the poll lacked any kind of validity, White scowled. Sydney McKenna, former campaign manager for talk show host Buddy Cianci’s bid for Mayor of Providence commented that she missed having Violet on the radio.

After the meeting a Barrington native told me he felt insulted by the sales team. He was disgusted by their disregard of the public’s opinion and by what he considered to be the combative nature of Jeff White.

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Tuesday to Tuesday: RI Future’s arts and entertainment calendar

grafitti-1RIFuture is a fine institution that has made important contributions to the Rhode Island news culture as the ProJo has shrunk in both scope and talent while the news channels have become more corporatized. It is our hope that this new feature – the ‘Tuesday to Tuesday Arts and Entertainment Calendar’ will bring a lighter side to the fare. As we move into the dog days of summer, I’m open to tips and press releases regarding the events you or someone you know may be holding in the next few weeks. Feel free to e-mail data to me at andrew.james.stewart.rhode.island@gmail.com.

MY PICKS
Here is my selection of events that you should definitely consider checking out this week.

  • 7/28
    Get Out! Cardboard Rockets at Providence Children’s Museum, 1-3 pm, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person
    Something fun to do with the kids and probably a minor refresher on the basic physics of aviation.
  • 7/29
    Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5
    Why not try out something new and help a working-class instructor at the same time. I do not subscribe to the theology underlying yoga itself, but the exercises and poses are helping me overcome some back issues and are worth checking out.
  • 7/30
    CAPOTE at Warwick Public Library, 7 pm, Free -or- Movies on the Block: BLADE RUNNER at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free
    This one is a tough call, so I will advise both, it depends on where you located in the state. CAPOTE is a fantastic retelling of how the true crime novel In Cold Blood was composed by the titular author, whereas BLADE RUNNER remains one of the greatest visions of the future in the past three decades, a film I rank with STAR WARS as the best science fiction pictures in American history.
  • 7/31
    RI Peoples Assembly: Emancipation Day Festival at Temple of Music Roger Williams Park, 12:25, Free -and- Food Truck Fridays at Carousel Village in Roger Williams Park, 5 pm, Free admission
    Take a trip over to Roger Williams Park and help some local businessmen by sampling their great food along with celebrating the end of American slavery. The two are located essentially next to each other, so it is an easy task.
  • 8/1
    August Gallery Reception at AS220 Galleries, 5 pm, Free
    AS220 continues to be one of the great centers of art in the Providence area and this is a great opportunity to take in some of their new works.
  • 8/2
    THE EMPIRE REVUE PRESENTS “THE OCEAN SHOW” at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $10
    A comedy-music spectacular about the ocean blue, including a selection of seafaring tunes. What’s to dislike?
  • 8/3
    “THE SOCIAL AVENGER” A reading written and directed by LENNY SCHWARTZ at Arctic Playhouse, 8 pm, $10
    Lenny Schwartz is a prolific and versatile writer who has put his talent to work in a variety of genres and this should be a great night.
  • 8/4
    Rhode Island International Festival Opening Night at PPAC, 7 pm, $15/$50 for Gala Event also
    The weeklong RIIFF is a mainstay of RI film culture and opening night is usually a great event to attend.  Tickets can be purchased here.

7/28
Get Out! Cardboard Rockets at Providence Children’s Museum, 1-3 pm, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Native Giant, Neutrinos, Eric and the Nothing, Pyramid at Psychic Readings, 9 pm-1 am, $6

Armageddon Shop Presents: Windhand, Pilgram, and Second Grave at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm-1 am, $10

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

7/29
Blithewold’s Summer Concert Series: Music at Sunset at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 5 pm, Member $7, Non-Member $10

Wheels at Work: Ambulance at Providence Children’s Museum, 10 am, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Vinyasa Yoga with Julie Shore at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, Noon-1 pm, $5

Open Level Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30-8 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Empty Vessels – La Luna – Terror Eyes – Take Nothing, Leave Everything at AS220 Main Stage, 9pm, $7

7/30
CAPOTE at Warwick Public Library, 7 pm, Free

Summer Concert Series presented by ALEX AND ANI at Carolyn’s Sakonnet Vineyard, 6 pm, $10

newportFILM Outdoors! WHAT HAPPENED, MISS SIMONE? at Doris Duke’s Rough Point, 8:30 pm (sunset), Free (Sugg. donation $5)

Newport BridgeFest at Queen Anne Square, 8 am-Midnight, Free

Yoga in the Garden at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 11 am, $10 member, $15 non-member Pre-paid 1-month unlimited pass

Introduction to Mat Cutting at AS220 Media Arts, 6 pm, $65

Evening Yoga at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:15 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 7 pm, Pay what you can

Holiday Music, No Hands, Worst Gift, 14 Foot 1 at Psychic Readings, 9:30 pm, $6

Movies on the Block: BLADE RUNNER at Grants Block, 7:30 pm, Free

7/31
Family Fun Friday: Rolie Polie Guacamole at Blithewold Mansion Gardens & Arboretum, 11 am, Included with admission

Food Truck Fridays at Carousel Village in Roger Williams Park, 5 pm, Free admission

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 7 pm, Pay what you can

Sun Bears, Prism, Skunk Jesus, and Hungry Freaks at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

8/1
Stars and Night Sky at Providence Children’s Museum, 10 am, Free with Museum admission of $9.00 per person

ALEX AND ANI Sunday Jazz Series at Carolyn’s Sakonnet Vinyard, 1 pm, $10 per car

Manton Avenue Project Presents “Go Team!: The Sports Plays” at AS220’s Blackbox, 2 pm, Pay what you can

Traditional Irish Music Session at AS220 Bar & FOO(D), 4 pm, Free

August Gallery Reception at AS220 Galleries, 5 pm, Free
AS220 Main Gallery at 115 Empire St.: Sonny With a Chance of Clouds: New Photographs by James “Sonny” Walker & BITTER/SWEET: New Photographs by Brittany Marcoux
OPEN WINDOW: Girl Talk: New Paintings by Sarah Samways
CABINET OF CURIOSITIES: Embroidered Stories: New Work by Chloe Cooper
AS220 Project Space at 93 Mathewson St.: Bird’s Eye View: New Work by Mara Metcalf
AS220 Reading Room: FAB ACADEMY Year End Review
Resident’s Gallery @131 Washington St.: Upcycled Life: new work by Steve Duque

Top 5 Fiend Presents: Morris & The East Coast, The Quins, Wild Sun at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

Improv Jones at AS220 Black Box, 10 pm, $5

RI Peoples Assembly: Emancipation Day Festival at Temple of Music Roger Williams Park, 12:25, Free

8/2
Core Workout with Daniel Shea at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 9 am, $5

Beginner Ballet at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 10:30, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

Intermediate Ballet w/ Stephanie Albanese at 95 Empire Dance Studio, Noon, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

THE EMPIRE REVUE PRESENTS “THE OCEAN SHOW” at AS220 Main Stage, 8 pm, $10

I Eat Rocks / Mis(s)invader / Sauna Heat / Vanilla Function at Aurora, 9 pm, $5 (18+)

8/3
Intermediate/Advanced Modern Dance at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 6:30 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

TOP 5 FIEND PRESENTS: Warbler Roost, Accidental Seabirds, Community Center, John Faraone at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, $7

“THE SOCIAL AVENGER” A reading written and directed by LENNY SCHWARTZ at Arctic Playhouse, 8 pm, $10

8/4
Rhode Island International Festival Opening Night at PPAC, 7 pm, $15/$50 for Gala Event also

Stretch & Strength at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 12-1 pm, $5

Open Life Drawing at AS220, 6 pm-8:30, $6

Intermediate Ballet Class with Danielle Davidson at AS220 Live Arts Dance Studio, 7:15 pm-8:45 pm, $13 per class/$60 for 6 classes

OPEN Sewing Circle * a night of making things * at Psychic Readings, 9 pm, Free

wichita, small talk, he heard footsteps at AS220 Main Stage, 9 pm, $6

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Post Office dedicated to Sister Ann Keefe


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DSC_6687Sister Ann Keefe “was not a saint, she was better than that. She was human,” said her sister Kathy Keefe to an impressive crowd of 200 people at the newly christened Sister Ann Keefe Post Office at 820 Elmwood in Providence. Sister Ann, a community activist who started or helped to start nearly two dozen organizations in the service of social justice, including the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, ¡City Arts! for Youth and AIDS Care Ocean State died earlier this year from brain cancer. She was 62. The post office, located in South Providence, a community that Sister Ann served so passionately during her lifetime, was named in her honor.

US Representative David Cicilline introduced the legislation that began the process of renaming the building in Sister Ann’s honor in February. In the present political climate, said Cicilline, even getting a bill like this passed presented difficulties. Representative James Langevin cosponsored the bill, and Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Jack Reed pursued the legislation in the Senate. Ultimately, President Barrack Obama signed H.R. 651 into law in May. Thus, the Sister Ann Keefe Post Office became the first US Post Office named for a nun.

Senators Whitehouse and Reed were not at the dedication ceremony, having been called back to Washington to vote on a transportation/infrastructure bill, but Cicilline and Langevin, along with other many elected officials, were eager to put in an appearance at the event, a tribute to Sister Ann’s influence.

The best parts of the dedication ceremony were the tributes from Sister Ann’s family and the community she served. Her biological sister, Mary Blanchet, read a letter to Sister Ann, recalling memories from their lives. Another sister, Kathy Keefe, read a poem from A.A. Milne.

Elijah Matthews read an award winning poem written by his sister, Victoria Matthews about Sister Ann. Elijah was introduced by his mother, Pamela Matthews. Victoria Matthews was at a sorority event out of town. Elijah’s reading of the poem earned a well deserved standing ovation.

The ¡City Arts! Bucket Drummers and the Saint Michael’s Community Choir provided the music.

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¡City Arts! Bucket Drummers

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Elijah & Pamela Matthews
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Mary Blanchet and Kathy Keefe
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Jorge Elorza

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James Langevin
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David Cicilline

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‘Birth Of A Grammar With Noam Chomsky’ and summer blockbuster culture


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YOUTUBE PICWe are now through July and, to that extent, the almost done with entire summer movie season.  With releases like ‘Mad Max’ and ‘Jurassic World,’ we have seen a plethora of by-the-numbers blockbusters that all seem strangely familiar.  This is not an accident; rather, there is a basic grammar and vocabulary that defines the programming of any and all action films.  As early as the works of Abel Gance, it was understood that editorial tricks could be used to manipulate viewers and generate reactions on a psychological level.  This was later codified by the Soviet film makers Lev Kuleshov and Sergei Eisenstein, whose work remains extremely tenable despite the collapse of the USSR.  Kuleshov’s experiments demonstrated the way audiences react and insinuate their own interpretations into viewing materials when they have no real reason to do so, whereas Eisenstein formulated his theory of the montage using the Hegelian-Marxist dialectic to describe film in the context of historical materialism.

The first true American blockbuster was without any doubt the DW Griffith film ‘Birth of a Nation.’  Released in May 1915, it was the first multi-reel epic film that broke every previous convention, going beyond the usual length and breadth of the 15-minute short films and tackling one of the greatest blood baths in American history, the Civil War.  But Griffith also created a picture that would do great harm to our society for decades.  The second half of the picture retells the story of Reconstruction as a debacle, featuring black men as imbeciles, mixed-ethnicity ‘mulattoes’ as sexual beasts, and the Ku Klux Klan as heroic defenders of Southern female virtue.  As a result of the film’s release, the Klan saw its ranks explode and the civil rights movement’s gains were set back decades.

Several months ago, I had the opportunity to sit down with MIT linguist Dr. Noam Chomsky.  Based off the work of Warren Buckland, Michel Colin, and others, there is now a veritable sub-branch of cinema studies that has taken prior work dealing with the semiotics of cinema and re-written the genre using the Chomskyan theories of transformative generative grammar.  The resulting conversation is quite instructive to our own dialogue about race and racism in America as well as our thought process regarding what we would now call the summer blockbuster.

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What’s the deal with the Iran deal?


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Flag_of_Iran.svgThis week there has been a flood of commentary about the Iran deal. The liberal side of the aisle sees this as a major achievement for the Obama administration, a feat that will stand alongside his rapprochement with Cuba as part of his lasting legacy. On the conservative side of the aisle, this is the apocalypse itself and Obama has doomed us all to a nuclear armageddon.

However, anyone with a grip on even a small shred of reality, regardless of political standing, should be able to see that both sides are lying through their teeth and this whole production has been one long charade that has caused unnecessary suffering for only one group of people, the general population of Iran. When the US instigated a series of sanctions against Iran, the supreme leader and president never were forced into austerity, they remained quite well-off and could rely on a host of luxuries provided by a variety of sources. Instead, it was the everyday people of Iran who suffered. I happened to be acquainted some time ago with an Iranian emigre whose father died due to taking a batch of medication that was of inferior grade, something that could have been avoided had the sanctions regimen not been in place. What did his government do so that his father deserved to die?

The reality is not ultimately simple, but the truth is much more easy to digest than the lunacy being fed to us by both CNN and Fox News. However, to understand this, we need to hold a thorough discussion of the international context in which this occurs and include in it a critical view of our connection to Israel. As a forewarning, those who believe that Israel and the Jews in general are running the show will find no comfort here, I do not see a grand conspiracy where the Jewish State controls American policy. In fact, I see it as the exact opposite, Israel and its leadership act solely on the allowance of the United States and have always only gone as far as Washington will allow them. After the devastation in Gaza last summer, Benjamin Netanyahu’s stunt speaking to Congress last spring behind Obama’s back, and the election of a deeply reactionary government in Israel shortly thereafter, the Israelis may be finding themselves more and more recieving support only in the neoconservative halls of power in the District of Columbia, but the puppet master of all things speaks with an American accent, not a Hebrew one.

  1. What is to be gained from Iran?
    Prior to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the Iranian Shah was one of America and Israel’s closest allies in the region, something that dated back to 1953 coup, instigated by the British Petroleum oil firm and coordinated by the Central Intelligence Agency. As our ally, Iran was a major source of petroleum products and helped alleviate the strain on the American economy caused by the Arab oil embargo of 1973. By reopening our oil trade with Iran, it would drastically affect oil markets worldwide. Furthermore, unlike Saudi Arabia, with its cruel and totalitarian Wahhabi theocracy, Iran is a metropolitan society, with high degree of education and cultural diversity that will enrich the exchange of ideas and thinkers. There have also been analysts who have noted that the influx of Iranian energy products will undermine Russia, which currently is a major player in the European market, something that plays into the wider geopolitical designs of the what could be called the ‘Brzezinski plan’ that Obama and the Democratic Party subscribe to. Whereas the neoconservatives and Republicans are intent on creating a sort of ‘boots on the ground’ empire in the Middle East to allegedly ‘foster democracy’ (read: create a Levantine Monroe doctrine), the Democrats have been following a much more intricate plan for about four decades now. Zbigniew Brzezinski, the National Security advisor under Jimmy Carter, is a Polish-born political scientist whose major goal was first freeing his homeland from Communism and then undermining Russia’s ability to assert itself as a global power. The recent events in Ukraine and other moves against Russia in the past few years can be understood in this context as elements of the Brzezinski plan.
  2. Does Iran hate Jews?
    In a word, no. It is fundamentally heretical to the Shia school of Islam that the Iranians follow because Jews and Christians are protected by the Koran as ‘People of the Book’. Dr. Siamak Morsadegh, an Iranian and a Jew, is a democratically-elected member of the Majlis, the Iranian parliament, and a practicing physician. Iran has a small minority of Jews that are allowed to practice their religion freely in a community dating back to the time of Cyrus the Great.

    2005_1223_iran_faith_600
    Iranian Jew praying in Shiraz.

    However, Iran does have a stated opposition to Zionism and the actions of the State of Israel. In order to properly discuss this, we need to unpack the term Zionism and distinguish it from Judaism as a religion.
    Zionism was formalized as a secular political ideology in 1897 by the Austro-Hungarian journalist Theodor Herzl as a reaction to the anti-Semitic Dreyfus Affair in France. Over the next two decades, various ideas and proposals were floated for the location of a Jewish homeland, including Uganda and Argentina. However, at the end of the First World War, the Zionist movement engaged first France and then Great Britain in a series of discussions that ultimately led to them serving as a proxy colonial army for the Europeans in historic Palestine, a major port on the Mediterranean of the then-crumbling Ottoman Empire. After the formalization of the Balfour Declaration, the Zionist movement engaged in a 30-year effort that included the organs of a modern state and the dispossession of the native indigenous people, the Palestinian Arabs, from the land. It should be noted here that the pre-Zionist Jewish community of Palestine, the Old Yishuv, viewed Zionism as a heretical trend and opposed it on religious and ethical grounds. With the coming of the Second World War and the Nazi persecution of European Jewry, the Zionist movement saw their opportunity to take advantage of the situation and make a final claim for statehood. In 1948, the United Nations granted the Zionists a partition of over 50% of the total landmass of historic Palestine. In the wake of the declaration of the State of Israel, the various Zionist militia movements engaged in a brutal series of ethnic cleansings of the Palestinians, which included rape, murder, and theft of both property and land, a tragedy the Palestinians today call the Nakba. Since 1948, the Israeli government has engaged in a continued regime of repression that has included multiple wars and occupations of lands. Since 1967, despite the protestations of the Old Yishuv and outside resistance by groups like the Orthodox Jewish Neturei Karta sect, Israel has effectively turned what was once a secular atheist movement into a religious one through what is called the settler movement. After illegally dispossessing Arabs of their lands, the IDF will then build small cities, illegal under international law, and install as residents messianic Israelis who believe they will hasten the coming of the Messiah by creating a wider Jewish nation-state. This is in direct violation of Israeli and international laws.
    That Iran would oppose such a state of affairs is not by definition anti-Semitic. Anti-Semitism has classically been defined as an irrational hatred or fear of Jews, traditionally related to either Christian blood libel prejudices or conspiracy theories about the role of Jews in international finance or governance. What the Iranians oppose is a series of socio-political moves made by the Israeli government that brutalizes the livelihood of Muslim and Christian Palestinians. Consider this statement by Ayatollah Khomeini himself:

  3. Does Iran want to destroy Israel?
    The Iranians, despite their rhetoric for the masses, have a very clear record at the UN, the body that created Israel, one that indicates they recognize Israel. Every year, there is a vote taken for a motion on the resolution of the Palestine Question. And every year, Iran votes along with the rest of the world for the following resolution: Israel shall continue to exist at peace with its neighbors within its pre-June 1967 borders. Of course, Israel and America consistently reject this, thus extending the conflict, but Iran is tacitly recognizing Israel as a state every time it casts these votes. And regardless of the political propaganda, the UN is where things actually count in terms of international law.
  4. Does Iran support terrorism?
    This is a loaded question because terrorism as a concept itself is loaded. The actions of the raiders at the Boston Tea Party can be termed as terrorist. In the First Red Scare, labor union agitators were called terrorists. There is a saying that one man’s terrorist is another’s freedom fighter. Instead of being superficial, we need to discriminate between those who commit what we could call external violence and those who commit internal violence. I would use as an example of external perpetrators al-Queda or ISIL, groups that cross national boundaries and commit acts that are targeted towards civilians that serve narcissistic and reactionary ends.
    However, Iran is pigeonholed for giving support and training to Hizbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza. What makes these two groups different is they generally are involved in acts of violence within their own territory or proportional response to military attacks by a foreign power. In fact, the European Union, New Zealand and the United Kingdom list the armed wing of Hizbollah as terrorists but do not list the civic governance branch as such. One of the more notable instances of violence Hizbollah has perpetrated was the bombing of a Marines barracks in 1983. That was an act perpetrated inside Lebanon by Hizbollah, who are native to the country. And to complicate matters further, at the time Lebanon was ruled by the fascist Gemayel family that had previously collaborated with Gen. Ariel Sharon in the murder of innocent Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. I do not revel in the murder of Marines and should note here that my father, as a Navy officer, was nearly deployed as a response to the bombing. But the United States was propping up a reactionary quisling regime that had participated in genocidal acts. Under international law, people under repression have the right to take up arms and attack military targets that give aid to their oppressors. That’s not my personal preference and certainly not something I love, but the truth is often a bitter pill to swallow. When the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese blew up military outposts during the Tet Offensive and killed Americans who were aiding the likewise puppet government we had installed in South Vietnam, millions of people on both sides of the Iron Curtain, including here in America, were not calling it terrorism, they hoped that finally the American government would wake up to reality and accept that the Vietnamese people were in totality opposed to our designs for Indochina.
    In the case of Hamas, the situation is again the same. As a side-note of some importance, it needs to be understood that the Western media has for a long time now labelled a whole slew of groups with wildly different programs and agendas as ‘Hamas’. When I refer to Hamas, I am referring to the government elected democratically by the people of Gaza in 2006, an organization that is not regarded as terrorists by Russia, Norway, Switzerland, Brazil, Turkey, China, and Qatar. What’s more, if we are honest, the fault for the fostering of Hamas is not with Iran, it is with Israel and America! The revelations by WikiLeaks have made extremely clear that the United States and Mossad funneled monies and resources to Hamas beginning in the 1980’s intentionally so to undermine the secular Palestine Liberation Organization and Yasser Arafat. The reason for this is simple, the greatest threat to American hegemony in the region has always been a secular Arab nationalism in a vein not unlike the ideology of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress. As such, the policy has always been to exploit religious divides and hope they will foster division. In fact, the opposite has come to pass. Hamas was elected in 2006 by both Christians and Muslims in Gaza because the people had become so disgusted with the corruption, servility, and ineptitude of Yasser Arafat’s Fatah Party, which had become so unbearably compromised by the mid-1990’s and the Oslo accords that the late secular scholar Edward Said could not bear to attend the historic signing on the White House lawn between Yitzak Rabin and Arafat, overseen by the gloating Bill Clinton. Since that time, Gaza has been under a blockade of such depravity that the restrictions imposed on Cuba look like a vacation. Again, Hamas has not broken international laws, they have engaged in offensive violence against military opponents in the field of combat. During last year’s Operation Protective Edge, while the IDF was dropping munitions on anything and everything that moved, the Hamas fighters were only engaging with IDF soldiers. And as for the so-called ‘rockets’ that Hamas is raining down on Israelis, an unidentified Israeli official told Dan Williams of Reuters that they are ‘pipes, basically’. These projectiles are in fact home-made implements shot up in the air from inside what British Prime Minister David Cameron called ‘a prison camp’ that are meant as alarms calling for help, the people are saying ‘we are dying, please, save us’. So again, the comparison can be accurately made with the Vietnamese. We are again dealing with a national liberation movement that is intent on relieving itself of occupation and brutalization by a force which has broken international and its own laws to enact a reign of terror.
    There is only one thing different here between the Vietnamese and their Soviet sponsors and Hizbollah, Hamas, and their Iranian sponsors, one thing that cuts to the core of the issue: the Vietnamese were atheist Communists while the Lebanese and Palestinians are Muslim Islamists. And that is a fact that perhaps leaves the reader with a deeply disturbing and painful realization about themselves.
  5. Do the Iranians desire a regime change?
    There does exist a level of state oppression within Iran, that is inherent in any state. However, the Iranians remember the US-sponsored brutality of the Shah very well, so they have absolutely zero interest in returning to the good graces of the Americans by accepting a hand-picked puppet. For the foreseeable future, Iran will retain the Islamic Revolution and remain loyal to it.
  6. Is Iran building a nuclear weapon?
    No. To begin with, they have devoted multiple years to promulgating a theological verdict that the atomic bomb is un-Islamic. Second, they are not insane, Iran is within reach of the many nuclear bombs that Israel has stockpiled at their atomic outpost at Dimona. If they were even trying to build a bomb, the Israelis would reduce them to smithereens within minutes. Third, both Israeli and American intelligence agencies have made clear in both classified and unclassified reports that there is no threat of a nuclear weapon being built by Tehran. Iran is a signatory of the Non-Proliferation Treaty, which does allow for the creation of nuclear power and non-weapons grade atomic materials, such as those used in medical technologies. On the other hand, the traditional protests against nuclear power in general still apply, like a risk for accidents like those at Fukushima or Chernobyl or questions regarding the disposal of nuclear waste, but they are not building the weapon of ultimate destruction.

Of course, the reaction has been nuclear from Netanyahu.

image1Ted Cruz, for example, has tried to add an amendment to any agreement that would require Iran recognize Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state (meaning a polity that explicitly denies rights to non-Jews such as the Christian, Muslim, and atheist Palestinians). And because the Republicans have split the Congress, it could very well come to pass that this deal could get sunk. And if that were to happen, both sides of the Bush/Clinton 2.0 ticket are adamant hawks who would be willing to bomb Iran. Of course, it is also becoming clear that the two candidates who have essentially bought their party’s nominations are failing dismally with primary voters. Jeb Bush is unable to distance himself from the neocons that defined the cabinets of his father and his brother while embracing the Tea Party, whereas Hillary Clinton is falling apart due in no small part to Bernie Sanders, who surprisingly packed an Arizona convention center to the gills last weekend. I remain skeptical of Sanders for a variety of reasons, but unless the status quo is upturned, this very good deal with Iran could be foiled, resulting in further victimization of the Iranian people.

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How a hotel developer divided organized labor in Rhode Island


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Providence City Hall
Providence City Hall

Michael Sabitoni, business manager for the RI Laborers’ District Council, was perhaps a bit misleading when he rhetorically asked RI NPR reporter Ian Donnis, “Why pick on this one — we didn’t even build yet — when I got 50 percent unemployment in the Building Trades?”

Sabitoni was referring to Unite Here Local 217’s efforts to delay the construction of a proposed hotel on Fountain Street. Building a new hotel would provide much needed jobs to the building trades. The proposed hotel is to be paid for and built by The Procaccianti Group (TPG), a company that runs two hotels in downtown Providence: the Renaissance and the Hilton.

Unite Here Local 217 has been in a fight with TPG for a union, fair wages and a contract for over three years. These two hotels pay the lowest wages, demand the most work, and treat employees worse than any other hotels in Providence.

In short, TPG’s treatment of labor in Providence has been nothing short of disgraceful, and at times has been monstrous.

Short of a strike, one of the most powerful weapon a union has is a boycott. Unite Here Local 217 has called for a boycott of TPG hotels until such a time as TPG begins to sit down and work out a contract with hotel workers that ensures decent wages, decent working conditions and respect.

Geroge Nee, president of the RI AFL-CIO, knows the power of boycotts. In a story Nee tells often, he famously came to Rhode Island in 1971 to help organize a successful lettuce boycott for the United Farm Workers of America.

Boycotts are difficult to enforce. With a boycott you’re asking all those in support of workers to change their buying habits. Sometimes you’re even asking workers, businesses and supporters to suffer economic privation as they avoid purchasing needed commodities.

Boycotts depend on worker solidarity.

Union busters know that strikes and boycotts can be broken as soon as workers become hungry enough. Tactics include waiting out the workers, or playing one set of workers against another. Few people are going to honor a boycott when their kids can’t be fed and their mortgage can’t be paid.

When Sabitoni said to WPRI‘s Dan McGowan, “We cannot wait any longer. We need jobs and we need them now,” he was basically admitting that for his people, the boycott is over. They were too hungry to wait anymore.

Solidarity, like a chain, is only as strong as it’s weakest link.

[I reached out to Nee and Sabotoni for comment, and haven’t heard back from either of them yet, but this post will be updated if they chose to respond.]

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Citizens protest wage increases in time of austerity


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Jonathan Wormer
Jonathan Wormer

The meeting held at 8:30am on Friday morning to hear public commentary on Governor Gina Raimondo‘s proposed salary increases for six state department director posts was predictably not well intended. Four people showed up to speak out against the Governor’s proposal. Only Jon Duffy, the co-chair of Governor Raimondo’s transition team, spoke in favor of the pay increase.

Jonathan Wormer, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, laid out the case for increasing the salaries of the directors of the departments of Mental Health, Retardation & Hospitals; Business Regulation; Environmental Management; Human Services; Labor & Training and Transportation to $135,000, a raise of between $5 and $34 thousand.

Raimondo 002
Gina Raimondo

Most of the speakers wondered how the Governor could justify a pay increase given that she has made big moves in the course of her political career to cut both public sector employee pensions and Medicaid. As for the idea that such pay increases are necessary to attract the talent the job positions require, Todd Sandahl pointed out that these jobs are already filled.

“Are they planning to leave?” asked Sandahl.

Kevin Loontjens of Coventry questioned the idea of comparing the salaries to those for similar positions in Massachusetts and Connecticut. Loontjens said that states like New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine and Delaware are better comparisons because the are more similar to Rhode Island in terms of population size and tax base.

The meeting was recorded and a transcript will be provided to the Governor for her perusal. She could save herself the trouble and watch the video below:

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Ed Achorn must think ProJo readers are stupid


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Duh, I tied my shoes on my own today!
Duh, I tied my shoes on my own today!

It never ceases to amaze me how stupid Edward Achorn thinks Providence Journal readers are.  Never mind the fact that there is a gigantic conflict of interests to have the Vice President also serving as Editor of the Editorial pages, therefore insuring the paper toes the company line.  Let’s leave out the fact he publishes his pro-charter school nonsense while his wife just ironically is employed by the charter school lobby.  And disregard the fact he prints climate change denial epistles, homo/transphobic rants, racist nonsense, and blatantly-obvious talking points for the lunatic-fringe of the Republican Party that stopped being conservative and became delusional years ago all in the name of ‘balance’.  Let’s just focus for one second on how plain stupid he thinks people are.

On July 23, the Providence Journal printed an ode to the First Amendment and how that dastardly Obama is going to destroy free speech via the IRS.  Leaving aside the grammatical issues of having a one-sentence paragraph, Mr. Objectivity treated us to this nugget of honesty:

Judicial Watch, a nonpartisan educational foundation, recently obtained information showing that the IRS wanted to go even further than thwarting the activities of conservative groups: some in the agency appear to have wanted to criminalize them.

However, anyone with movable digits and the brain capacity of a tomato can easily visit the website of said organization and read this:

Judicial Watch, Inc., a conservative, non-partisan educational foundation, promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law. Through its educational endeavors, Judicial Watch advocates high standards of ethics and morality in our nation’s public life and seeks to ensure that political and judicial officials do not abuse the powers entrusted to them by the American people. Judicial Watch fulfills its educational mission through litigation, investigations, and public outreach. [Emphasis added.]

There’s shooting fish in a barrel and then there is just obvious laziness on top of lying on top of expecting your readers to never use Google.

Let’s examine, for just a moment, the issue of race.  On July 15, the ProJo ran an editorial called EASE AND INTEGRITY that was loaded with dog-whistles and codewords.  The editorial superficially was supposed to take on a recent bill proposed by Rep. Cicilline in the Congress that would automatically register voters at the DMV.  But then comes this Pulitzer-worthy paragraph:

At the same time, any move to change voter registration procedures must be approached first and foremost with a focus on ensuring the integrity of our elections. Are the motor vehicle departments in Rhode Island and other states up to the task of handling far more instances in which people want to register to vote? And if they are, are proper safeguards in place to prevent duplication, fraud or the registration of non-citizens to vote?

Voter fraud was totally debunked years ago.  The Washington Post (not exactly a Leninist rag) launched an investigation and found 31 credible instances of voter fraud out of one billion American ballots cast.  Yes, billion with a B.  Of course, just to drive it home and get rid of any doubt, Edward R. Murrow Jr. added this for spice:

It is in the narrow interest of politicians to covet votes, whether they are legal ones or not. What would be greatly in the nation’s interest is to make sure all legal voters may readily participate, and — something advocated less often, perhaps, by politicians — that they have a solid grounding in civics and history.

It is an established fact that the voter identification laws that have been passed in this country are targeted towards low-income populations that have neither the time nor resources to obtain a driver’s license, and, as irony would have it, a majority of those people are black or brown folks.  Those folks also tend to have been disenfranchised by the education system also and might not have the stellar training in civics and history that Mr. Achorn has.  Heaven forbid that these great unwashed masses of negroes and people from Spanish not have memorized the Federalist Papers like Mr. Pulitzer-nominated Journalist.  Of course, if he were to consult the Federalist Papers, he might be amazed at this ditty in Paper 52 (numbered 51 in the Dawson edition used by Wikipedia, 52 in my Penguin edition):

The definition of the right of suffrage is very justly regarded as a fundamental article of republican Government. It was incumbent on the Convention, therefore, to define and establish this right in the Constitution. To have left it open for the occasional regulation of the Congress, would have been improper for the reason just mentioned. To have submitted it to the Legislative discretion of the States, would have been improper for the same reason; and for the additional reason that it would have rendered too dependent on the State Governments, that branch of the Federal Government which ought to be dependent on the People alone…  As far as we can draw any conclusion from it, it must be that if the People…have been able under all these disadvantages to retain any liberty whatever, the advantage of biennial elections would secure to them every degree of liberty, which might depend on a due connection between their Representatives and themselves.

Or perhaps Number 58/59?

Nothing can be more evident, than that an exclusive power of regulating elections for the National Government, in the hands of the State Legislatures, would leave the existence of the Union entirely at their mercy. They could at any moment annihilate it, by neglecting to provide for the choice of persons to administer its affairs. It is to little purpose to say, that a neglect or omission of this kind would not be likely to take place. The constitutional possibility of the thing, without an equivalent for the risk, is an unanswerable objection. Nor has any satisfactory reason been yet assigned for incurring that risk. The extravagant surmises of a distempered jealousy, can never be dignified with that character. If we are in a humor to presume abuses of power, it is as fair to presume them on the part of the State Governments, as on the part of the General Government. And as it is more consonant to the rules of a just theory, to trust the Union with the care of its own existence, than to transfer that care to any other hands, if abuses of power are to be hazarded on the one side or on the other, it is more rational to hazard them where the power would naturally be placed, than where it would unnaturally be placed.

Leaving the era prior to the invention of the steam engine and turning to more recent events, consider this Letter to the Editor submitted on December 8:

When Martin Luther King Jr. gave his epic speech in Washington, he saved his fondest dream for his children — that they would be judged by the content of their character and not by the color of their skin.
Character, King understood, has absolutely nothing to do with wealth, fame, skin color, education, gender or much else.
He also knew that those of good character do good things. They respect others. They respect others’ property. They are honest. They don’t cheat, steal or lie. They work hard. This is what King believed fervently.
As we watch the racial ugliness unfold in our country, let us not look at the color of the actors’ skin. Let us look at the content of their character and make our judgments.

This was written when people across the nation were flooding the streets to protest the deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Akai Gurley, and thousands of other black and brown men who were killed by police brutality.  Even if the writer was well-intentioned, which I do not doubt, the idea is totally ahistorical.  Anyone who has read any legitimate biography of Dr. King knows full well that, at the end of his life, he had found the Democratic Party politicking of his earlier days simply useless.  At the end of his life, having spent many years secretly communicating and socializing with Malcolm X, King was moving in a decidedly Leftward trajectory.  He had become a vocal critic of not just Vietnam but American imperial endeavors across the globe, saying at Riverside Church in New York on April 4, 1967, one year to the day before his own death:

During the past ten years we have seen emerge a pattern of suppression which now has justified the presence of U.S. military “advisors” in Venezuela. This need to maintain social stability for our investments accounts for the counter-revolutionary action of American forces in Guatemala. It tells why American helicopters are being used against guerrillas in Colombia and why American napalm and green beret forces have already been active against rebels in Peru….As I have walked among the desperate, rejected and angry young men I have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve their problems. I have tried to offer them my deepest compassion while maintaining my conviction that social change comes most meaningfully through nonviolent action. But they asked-and rightly so-what about Vietnam? They asked if our own nation wasn’t using massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about the changes it wanted. Their questions hit home, and I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today-my own government.

As he moved boldly through his final year, King again and again sounded less and less like Gandhi and more and more like the late Minister X, if not Amilcar Cabral.  He went as far as embracing a form of Black Pride that is certainly the opposite of the sentiments expressed by the aforementioned Letter to the Editor.  For heaven’s sake, Martin Luther King, Jr. was murdered shortly after offering a speech of support to a sanitation worker’s labor strike and while he was in the midst of planning a march against poverty that would have challenged not just Jim Crow but capitalism itself as a form of oppression!  Of course, something bordering on veracity would totally fly in the face of the traditional narrative of hyper-pacifist King that Edward Achorn is happy to traffic in, a slur against the man’s memory that is itself racist.  The image of a pacific-to-no-limit King gives white people a narrative that says legitimate protests from people of color must always be non-violent, must always be within the confines of what the power structure approves, and must never include even basic elements of ethnic pride and self-defense.  In other words, dem uppity thugs are wrong because Dr. King said play nice!

Let us now consider the ProJo’s history of trafficking in transphobia.  On June 5 of this year, Achorn printed this lovely epistle by Fr. Roman R. Manchester:

I find it repugnant that so many people, especially in the media, have capitulated to gender-bender ideology, and have acquiesced to Bruce Jenner’s desire to be called “Caitlyn” and are referring to him as “her” (“Jenner to world: ‘Call me Caitlyn,'” news June 2).
Have you all gone mad? This may come as a surprisingly blunt statement of the obvious, but Bruce Jenner is not a woman. He is a mentally ill man who thinks that he is a woman, and he cannot become a woman anymore than he can become a kangaroo. No amount of surgery, hormone therapy, makeup, and women’s clothing will ever change his Y-chromosome into an X-chromosome.
As a seriously ill man, Bruce Jenner deserves our compassion, not our mindless, sycophantic patronage. He needs psychiatric treatment and spiritual counseling. Yet, the herd-mentality of our day is a decidedly anti-intellectual one, and is prone to fantasy and moral equivocation.

Never mind the fact that the good Father has no certification as a psychologist, that it is profoundly unprofessional for a man of the cloth to publicly call another person mentally ill, or that gender dysphoria is a certified medical condition.  Let’s just consider that, while Ms. Jenner has plenty of money to absorb her tears, not all trans folks do likewise.  The homicide and suicide rates of trans people are galling, as are the rates of substance abuse, homelessness, and assault/battery.  Mr. Achorn has thrown gasoline on the flames without any shame and does not have to worry because he is too busy reading the baseball encyclopedia to worry about the trans folk whose assailants are given moral support by his Editorial page.

Let’s close with climate change denial, something everyone from Pope Francis to Noam Chomsky agrees exists.  On May 4, the energy industry apparatchik Tom Harris wrote this:

Reports such as those of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change illustrate that debate rages in the scientific community about the causes of climate change. Scientists cannot even agree on whether warming or cooling lies ahead, let alone the degree to which we affect it. Yet climate campaigners assert that “the science is settled.” We know with certainty, they claim, that our carbon dioxide emissions will cause a planetary emergency unless we radically change our ways.

This is just plain silliness.  There is no denying at this point that climate change is real.  As proof, I present the findings of that oh-so-commie-pinko outfit, the US Navy!  The Navy has been devoting significant effort to the tracking of global warming for decades and wrote in a 2010 report:

A preponderance of global observational evidence shows the Arctic Ocean is losing sea ice, global temperatures are warming, sea level is rising, large landfast ice sheets (Greenland and Antarctic) are losing ice mass, and precipitation patterns are changing.  While there has been criticism on the details of the methods and results found in reports published by the IPCC and other entities, the Navy acknowledges that climate change is a national security challenge with strategic implications for the Navy.

Who’d have thunk it, the military that the ProJo acclaims as the vanguards of all that is great about the United States has said conclusively that a large swathe of articles he prints about climate issues are complete nonsense!

Ultimately Achorn will object and say all these things were done in the name of ‘objectivity.’ But under such auspices, one is forced to wonder if he would have given substantial column inches to Goebbels.

Cicilline introduces LGBT protection bill in Congress


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Congressman David Cicilline (D- RI) announced historic legislation to expand upon the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and provide protections for the LGBT community in several areas, including public accommodations, housing, employment, federal funding, education, credit, and jury service. Announced in Washington, D.C., the bill, known as the Equality Act, has been introduced in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. There are 157 original cosponsors to the bill in the House, and 40 in the Senate.

Congressman David Cicilline, courtesy of http://today.brown.edu/node/10602
Congressman David Cicilline, courtesy of http://today.brown.edu/node/10602

“In most states, you can get married on Saturday, post your wedding photos to Facebook on Sunday, and then get fired on Monday just because of who you are. This is completely wrong,” Cicilline said in a press conference. “Fairness and equality are core American values. No American citizen should ever have to live their lives in fear of discrimination.”

Currently, there are 31 states where it is legal to discriminate against someone based on their sexual orientation, and deny them services, employment, or housing.

Cicilline, who is one of seven openly gay members of Congress, added that the Equality Act is common sense legislation that will help to resolve the current patchwork of anti-discrimination laws all over the country.

“Partial equality is not acceptable. It’s time for a comprehensive bill that protects LGBT Americans,” he said.

The Human Rights Campaign, a non-partisan LGBT advocacy group, found that 63 percent of LGBT individuals have been the targets of discrimination in their personal lives. LGBT students have also been made to feel unsafe at school- 82 percent have been verbally harassed, while 38 percent have been physically harassed.

Other members of Congress spoke on the bill as well. Senator Tammy Baldwin (D- WI) said that she believes America is ready for such a comprehensive step.

“No American should be at risk of being fired, evicted from their home, or denied services because of who they are, or who they love,” she said. “We also need to make sure that every American has a fair chance to earn a living and provide for their families.”

Senator Cory Booker (D- NJ), said the act is based on purely American values, even if the reason for its existence isn’t very American at all.

“This legislation that we are introducing is something that resonates with the best of who we are as a nation,” he said. “But the need for this legislation reflects the worst of who we are.”

Representative John Lewis (D-GA) said the act is long overdue, and provides justice for LGBT Americans. He said it will provide them dignity and respect, without fear of being denied things they need for being who they are. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer (D-MD) echoed these sentiments, saying that he hopes that Congress will take immediate action to pass the bill.

Many outside of government were invited to come share their stories about how they have been denied services just for being gay or transgender. One couple’s pediatrician would not treat their daughter just because they were lesbians, while a transgender man from Texas was fired from his job after being “outed.” Many advocacy groups showed their support as well, including the Human Rights Campaign, the Center for American Progress, and the National Center for Transgender Equality.

“This is a national problem that needs a national solution, and the Equality Act is that solution,” said Winnie Satchelberg, the Executive Vice President of the Center for American Progress.

Only 19 states provide employment and housing protections for LGBT Americans. 17 states prohibit public accommodation discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity, and four prohibit it based solely upon sexual orientation. Prohibitions for education discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity exist in 14 states.


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