Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Panhandling, Talk Radio, Flooding

Bob Whitcomb, Contributor

Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Panhandling, Talk Radio, Flooding

Bob Whitcomb
Fewer arrests, more crime; WikiLeaks a Putin organ; coastal evacuations

 

There’s probably still plenty of racism in America, though not nearly as much as in most of the rest of the world. When Black Lives Matter and other groups denounce the high rate of  arrests of African-Americans and Hispanics, they ignore the disproportionate rate at which people in those communities commit crimes – most often against people in their own groups simply because they’re the most available victims.

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The complainers also seem to forget that when they demand that police ease up on arrests they are issuing an open invitation for criminals and potential criminals to engage in bad behavior.

 

Of course, police officers must be trained to treat everyone fairly and with dignity,  to understand constitutional and other legal rights and to have all possible knowledge and sensitivity about various communities. Still, their main duty is to maintain law and order so that  people  can go about their lives with reasonable confidence that they won’t be harassed, robbed, assaulted or killed. Society is very fragile, and it doesn’t take many bad guys to tear it apart.

 

#BLM
What conservative economist and writer Thomas Sowell, an African-American, wrote in a recent column about immigration headlined “Will Orlando Change Anything?’’ seems more broadly germane:

 

“Probably most people in most groups are decent. But if 85 percent of the people in Group A present no serious problems and 95 percent of the people in Group B present no serious problems, that means you can expect three times as many serious problems … from Group A.’’

 

Minority groups will be the biggest victims if police are compelled to substantially reduce their arrests in minority neighborhoods, many of which, let us remember, are loaded with guns.
 

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Providence officials must be willing to take on the ACLU and  address the ever-more-serious panhandling and loitering problem in Providence. It seems obvious that the city’s failure to stop this epidemic is drawing in more panhandlers in what is not really a freedom-of-speech issue but  a public-disorder one. These people are causing traffic problems, littering and harassing citizens just trying to go about their business.  And, of course, hurting the economy. Time to enforce common-sense ordinances. Go up to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary.

 

 

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Increasingly it appears that Julian Assange, of Wikileaks, is effectively an agent of Vladimir Putin’s Russian police state. He only exposes secrets of democracies, America in particular. He leaves Putin and China alone, and indeed WikiLeaks hacks seem heavily focused on undermining the United States and its ability to constrain the power-hungry Putin’s expansionist dreams. Of course, Assange also knows that, unlike in his cyberwar against the United States, to turn on Putin could end up getting himself killed.

 

Edward Snowden
Then there’s the  narcissistic U.S.  traitor Edward Snowden, who handed Putin’s regime (and the Chinese) a trove of American security secrets. He’d like to leave Moscow, where he fled, and return to the United States. He may realize that, now that he has betrayed his country and given the Russians all that they asked for, his value to them is worthless, and that as with Kim Philby, the infamous British defector, his life in Moscow as a kept man whom even his hosts disdain will be increasingly unpleasant.

 

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It’s hard to think of a more pathetic secretary of state than the vain (in two meanings of the word) John Kerry, with his soft, timid “warnings,’’ which lead to nothing, to the Russians and Chinese not to continue to do what they continue to do – expand through military force, cyberattacks and other means. To look at his face, with its multiple facelifts, and to hear his empty rhetoric is to see and hear how far American credibility has fallen in the past few years. The dictators are of course polite to him as he mouths ingratiating words but they must laugh at him behind his back.

 

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Rep. Gallison
There seems to be a problem with some legislators in Rhode Island setting up and then making money off  “nonprofit’’ organizations. Sometimes it’s difficult to figure out how much these organizations have done for the general public, as opposed to the personal finances of the politicians. Ex-state Rep. Ray Gallison (who ran Alternative Educational Programming) and Providence City Councilor Kevin Jackson (who ran the Providence Cobras youth sports group) are recent examples of people who  apparently  could not succeed in the “real world’’ so they went into the “nonprofit’ world instead, aided by their political connections.

 

But then too few smart people run for public office. Our fault!

 

The Rhode Island secretary of state’s office, the Department of the Attorney General and the Rhode Island State Police need more manpower to better supervise ‘’nonprofits,’’ some of which seem to exist mostly to employ their managements.

 

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I am old enough to well remember the 1959 version of Ben Hur, starring the comically over-acting Charlton Heston. It had terrific special effects, most famously Hollywood’s most legendary chariot race.

 

The team that made the  new version, just out, and so far a flop, had the benefit of computer-generated special effects. That’s fine, but I feel  a pang that some of the very physical craft of stunt men (and other animals) and others in old-fashioned movie teams is no longer necessary, and that the charming occasional anachronisms and other pre-computer-generated mistakes will no longer be in most big movies.

 

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I had to drive to  and from Virginia in the last few days for a wedding. I usually listen to NPR while driving if I can find an outlet, which is not always possible in the wilds of, say,  central Pennsylvania. The other talk stuff is almost entirely right-wing and/or religious talk radio. There is very little left-wing, aka “progressive,’’ talk.  Indeed when the Tea Party types complain about the “Mainstream Media,’’ I’d retort that Fox News and other Republican Party outlets are the  real “Mainstream Media.’’

 

Talk Radio
It always strikes me as curious that such shows have such followings because there is virtually no real dialogue or provision of,  or exchange of, new information. The people who call in are simply those who want the soothing sounds of an echo chamber. There’s rarely any indication that they want to learn anything. The radio chains that broadcast these shows want a reliable and zealous audience that will fluctuate little because its members’ opinions (and conspiracy theories – always good for ratings!) don’t change, Not for them John Maynard Keynes’s famous riposte: “When the facts change, I change my opinion. What do you do, Sir?’’

 

There are, again, a few progressive shows but their audiences are not reliable enough for advertisers. Further, the billionaire owners of the radio chains may like the Rush Limbaugh/Tea Party, et al., shows because their ideology promotes more tax cuts for the rich.

 

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The most recent Louisiana floods raise again the issue of what to with people living in places increasingly prone to  fresh- and saltwater flooding  (and in some places drought) because of global warming.  I think it’s becoming  obvious that many areas, including much of Louisiana, will have to be permanently evacuated.

 

Much closer to home, as Hurricane Bob proved in 1991, the upper part of Buzzards Bay is very vulnerable. Bob drove a 15-foot storm surge into Wareham and Bourne, doing great damage. And the South County, R.I., barrier beaches are imperiled. I can foresee a time, even in my remaining lifetime, when government, in part compelled by insurance companies, orders thousands or even millions of people to leave their coastal houses for good.

 

For an example of how structures on the water can be made relatively flood-proof see  what the IYRS School of Technology and Trades plans for a new building in Newport.  (IYRS stands for International Yacht Restoration School.) Read the story in the Providence Business News at this link:

 

 

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A visit to an International House of Pancakes displays one reason why American healthcare costs are so high: You see in these places crowds of very obese  and  yet quite young people gorging themselves on vast quantities of hugely fattening food. Of course Medicaid and Medicare pay for the results (diabetes, heart disease and so on) and send the bill to the taxpayers.

 

Changing behavior is still too little appreciated in the debate about healthcare. That holds true for other, if often related, areas too. Consider the vast socio-economic pathologies created by American society’s suicidal tolerance of so many women having babies out of wedlock, with many of the sperm donors taking no responsibility for the children they helped create.

 

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I am writing this in a cheap motel in Frackville, Pa., which, although it’s in fracking country, is mostly notable for a nearly empty shopping mall on a low mountain and a few wind turbines. It has that slightly spooky quality of so many inland post-industrial towns and cities. It’s named after founder Daniel Frack, and not the drilling technology that has so far failed to restore it to its circa-1900 prosperity. Frackville in places has a melancholic beauty, including the Edward Hopper-ish place I’m writing this in. – at least when the setting sun makes it glow.


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