Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: 38 Studios is More Sloth and Stupidity than Corruption

Bob Whitcomb, Contributor

Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: 38 Studios is More Sloth and Stupidity than Corruption

Bob Whitcomb
38 Studios is more sloth and stupidity than corruption; jewel of a landscape; reviewed on the road

 

There may well have been corruption in the 38 Studios disaster. Certainly the roles of dubious fixer/lobbyist/lawyer Michael Corso and the now jailed former Rhode House Speaker Gordon Fox and their allies need further investigation or at least exposure, and I wish that all the legal information about this outrage had been released.

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But stupidity and sloth seem to be the major factors in the plus-$100 million (with interest) disaster, not out-and-out corruption. Maybe the desire of the powers that be to avoid being revealed as slobs has more to do with keeping the full files of this case secret than anything else.

 

For the fact is that if the legislators (such as then state representative and now state Atty. Gen. Peter Kilmartin) who voted in 2010 for  a package of $125 million  in state loan guarantees, $75 million of which turned out to be  for one untested video-game company, had bestirred themselves to  look into the legislation and then to call a few venture capitalists and ask them what they thought of what most would  have seen as an idiotic investment, and then displayed a little courage to reject the deal against the wishes of legislative leaders, this outrage never would have happened.

 

Governor Don Carcieri
The failure of legislators time and again to do any research on what they’re asked to vote on and to follow, without little information and  no courage, in lockstep the directions of legislative leaders is, to say the least, a problem. Of course that then Gov. Donald Carcieri,  a former high-level backslapper at Old Stone Bank (RIP) and Cookson America, was enthusiastically pushing  the deal, complete with photo ops with Curt Schilling, also helped set the table for the catastrophe.

 

Making the whole thing more irritating is the knowledge that if  the state had spent the equivalent of the $75 million bond guarantee for 38 Studios on some  substantial projects – e.g., fixing bridges, filling potholes, picking up more roadside trash, repairing state-owed buildings, vocational training or even marketing the state as a tourist mecca – then a wide range of Rhode Islanders could have benefitted and not just the likes of Michael Corso. Or backed bonds of some small but promising Rhode Island-based companies that already had revenues, of all things.

 

Also, the not-yet-laid-off members of the news media at the time that 38 Studios was proposed could have done a better job in asking investment experts their opinion of this absurd deal. Boston, a major venture-capital center, is just up the road.

 

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Many readers may know the exquisite landscape around Allens Pond, in South Dartmouth, Mass. The mix of very fertile farmland, marsh, river, pond,  beautiful beaches on Buzzards Bay and lovely modest old houses is one of the treasures of our region, But, as in any such area, there are always intense development pressures.  In this case, challenges include a proposal for a 38-lot subdivision.

 

A coalition of groups, led by the Buzzards Bay Coalition and the Dartmouth Natural Resources Trust (dnrt.org), are trying to raise money and jump through a complicated series of legal and financial hoops to preserve one of the few stretches of  rural coastal landscape in the Northeast megalopolis. Good luck to them!

 

 

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Get ready for more violations of your privacy. Come October, those gantries over the Massachusetts Turnpike will start capturing data not only for billing you for tolls but also for information on how fast you’re going.  But wait! There’s more! Data collected via the gantries could be used to determine when and where you get on or exit  the highway on your way to visit, say, a secret lover or to rob a bank.

 

Of course, the gantries also mean that the toll collectors will be laid off.

 

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation will have to work out assorted legal issues regarding privacy. But one thing is clear, we are more and more living in a surveillance society enabled by technology and intensified by fear of such threats as terrorism.

 

In the not too distant future your activities on every major state or federal route will be followed and recorded. I’d guess that hackers will  soon get into these systems and steal from you too.

 

So it’s yet another way in which technology has helped and hurt us. The Internet, for example, has made communications much faster  and easier and information (albeit much of it erroneous) so much easier to access. But it has also lowered wages for many, destroyed whole industries, abetted massive intellectual-property theft and acts as a Petri dish for terrorists, perverts and conmen.

 

That’s not to mention that it has encouraged more superficial thinking and has had the presumably unexpected effect of decreasing (through distraction) the retention of  accurate general knowledge that people in a democracy should have even as it cozily isolates them in  opinion echo chambers.

 

 

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Donald Trump
Donald Trump is an oaf, and his criticism of Khizr Khan for denouncing  the politician/mogul at the Democratic National Convention was not well done (though his tone and words were much less strident than the news media made them out to be). The Khans’ son died heroically fighting for the United States in Iraq. But Mr. Trump’s question on why Mrs. Khan didn’t speak at the convention as she stood at the podium next to her husband (although she spoke to the media the next day), raised a point.

 

"If you look at his wife, she was standing there. She had nothing to say. She probably, maybe she wasn't allowed to have anything to say. You tell me, but plenty of people have written that she was extremely quiet, and it looked like she had nothing to say," Mr. Trump said.

 

Donald Trump, in his trademarked incoherent way,  reminded more than a few people of the generally lowly position of women in Muslim nations. That is just one of many problems in Islam – especially Wahhabism, a very barbaric version of 7th Century Islam cooked up  in  the 18th Century. Wahhabism is a deeply bigoted and brutal sect that is particularly alluring to the sickos who comprise the so-called Islamic State. (I do have an affection for the mysticism of Sufi Muslims and the worldliness and tolerance of Ismaili Muslims.)

 

Much of the Islamic world is a swamp of  brutality,  bigotry, corruption and ignorance. It desperately needs its own Reformation. Until then, Mr. Khan and other urbane Muslims with education and some money will continue to move to the United States, which, thank God, is not yet Islamic.  Sharia law and the U.S. Constitution are incompatible.

 

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“What are we going to do about all these little newspapers?’’ Lisa Wilson of Scripps Howard News Service asked me once as I sat in her office on Madison Avenue in Manhattan about 20 years  ago as the Web started swallowing journalism. People want “free actionable  information’’ but ultimately there is no such thing. People must be paid to  gather and verify information; it’s hard work of which local newspapers still do more than any other outlets.

 

Thus it was sad to hear of the travails of The Rutland Herald, established in 1794 and for many years a rigorous and fair reporter of the passing scene in Vermont generally and the central Green Mountain State in particular.

 

Other media have reported that its paychecks have been bouncing and freelancers not getting paid. (Many journalists live hand to mouth as it is.)

 

The Herald has reduced its print editions to four days a week to save money. (I suspect that The Providence Journal will do a similar thing.)  As usual in such cases,  pollyannish publishers point to a rise in  their newspapers’ digital traffic, but digital doesn’t do much to keep the wolf from the door unless you’re The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal.

 

So Vermonters will get less useful information about what their political and other institutions are up to. Happily, Vermont’s civic culture is more honest than most states’ – so far.

 

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There was a lovely little story headlined  “An interior reflection: Silence is power,’’

In The Washington Post the other day about how a young entrepreneur in New York leaves the office on most work days to walk and sit quietly in a nearby park and think. Most of us need more such stretches of silence in this loud and gyrating world. Please hit this link to read the article


Rhode Island’s 50 Wealthiest and Most Influential - 2015 Edition

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