Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Our Mini-South Station; Pentagon vs. Flooding; Sexy Storms; Better MSF

Bob Whitcomb, Contributor

Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Our Mini-South Station; Pentagon vs. Flooding; Sexy Storms; Better MSF

Bob Whitcomb
Our mini-South Station; Pentagon vs. flooding; sexy storms; better MSF and condoms than Mother Teresa

 

Terrific transportation improvements in Boston in the last 20 years because of the Big Dig and the creation of the South Station intermodal transportation complex have helped make Greater Boston richer. A key element has been the expansion and uniting of train and bus service at South Station. (Linking  that facility with North Station via a direct MBTA train line would help expand the progress.)

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

 

Yes, these projects are expensive, but, as with the improvements in subway service in New York under Mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg, the economic benefits of more efficient and pleasant transportation  are impressive.

 

Traffic
Thus kudos to the Rhode Island Department of Transportation for working to create a sort of mini-version of the South Station public-transportation center in and around Providence’s Amtrak/MBTA station. The few bad things that happened with the revival of much of downtown Providence starting in the ‘80s included moving the train station up the hill to across from the State House and what was then called the Bonanza Bus Terminal way north of downtown to a gritty, windswept, pedestrian-unfriendly area next to Route 95. Stupid moves for a city that wants to be walkable.

 

Well, the train station is stuck  where it is but building a bus station complex right next to it would make public transportation a lot easier in Providence, which would boost its economy and quality of life. That a lot of younger adults avoid driving and the number of old people who  can’t or won’t drive is rapidly increasing, mean that the numbers who want to use public transportation can only swell.

 

As part of all this, there should be very frequent nonstop RIPTA shuttle buses to and from the new intermodal center to Green Airport, barring a big expansion in MBTA train service there from the Providence  train station.

 

The RIDOT’s project will help pull  more businesses and shoppers to Providence from a large swath of southeastern Massachusetts and eastern Connecticut.

 

Full speed ahead on this project.

 

xxx

 

Ferry Service
In other transportation news: My wife and I were on Block Island for a (bravely scheduled) wedding last weekend, though not for as long as we had hoped. While we were able to take in a big outdoor pre-wedding picnic on a spectacular heath from which you can often see Montauk Point, we had to leave hours before the wedding, scheduled for late Sunday afternoon, because the ferry folks told us that the last  trip for the next few days would leave soon because of concerns about Post-Tropical Storm Hermine.  As it turned out, the trip, while a bit bouncy at the start as we moved out of the harbor,  was pleasant enough.

 

There were on board a few somewhat oafish morning beer drinkers – a tribe traditionally associated with Interstate Navigation Co.’s ferries, but fewer than I remember from our first trips on the service, way back in the late ‘70s.  None threw up.

 

The trip reminded us of how dependent islanders are on the weather: However high tech they are they are, they must obey Mother Nature more  than most people. While this can be inconvenient, it’s also edifying (teaching patience and respect for, and sometimes fear of, Mother Nature) and adds some drama to programmed lives.

 

September has the best weather of the year, except when it has the worst, during those rare but memorable visits from hurricanes.  By the way, there’s something exciting about the  sexy term “tropical storm’’ up here that gets people’s attention. Thus even though Hermine was a post-tropical storm as she dawdled south of New England in the first part of this week, the National Weather Service kept using the phrase “Tropical Storm Warning’’ for the New England coastal areas being affected.

 

That’s because after Hurricane Sandy, in 2012, became an extra-tropical storm some people ignored the warnings as she slammed into the Jersey Shore. So the NWS decided to keep the ominous if misleading word “tropical’’ this time around, though Hermine by any other name  (such as “gale’’) would be as windy.

 

xxx

 

Flooding in the Point Section of Newport
Here’s an example of how a large part of the Republican Party has embraced ignorance and wishful thinking (and I am not just talking about its presidential nomination of a sociopath, against, sadly, a Democratic candidate with more baggage than a luggage company).

 

While senior military officials are urging the government to help them address global warming’s threats to national security, the GOP-controlled House, many members of which are proud ignoramuses about science,  history and other increasingly ignored matters, are blocking a broad program to address the security threats posed by such effects of global warming as rising seas. These threats are already very visible in such places as Norfolk, Va., where officials at the world’s largest naval base are trying to protect the facilities from  increasing flooding.

 

The New York Times, in a Sept. 3 story headlined “Flooding of Coast, Caused by Global Warming, Has Already Begun,’’ notes that “the Obama administration  has been  pushing federal agencies, including the Pentagon, to take more aggressive steps {to address rising  seas}. But without action in Congress, experts say that these efforts fall far short of what is required.’’

 

But then, as retired Rear Admiral David Titley, a former Navy chief oceanographer who now runs a climate center at Pennsylvania State University, told The Times: “In the country,  certainly in the Congress, it hasn’t really resonated ---  the billions and perhaps trillions of dollars that we would need to spend if we want to live on the coast like we’re living today.’’

 

xxx

 

“It is not true that suffering ennobles the character; happiness does that sometimes, but suffering, for the most part, makes men petty and vindictive.”

-- W. Somerset Maugham

 

 

Mother Theresa
The late Mother Teresa has been made a saint. That’s the Catholic Church’s business, but a lot of us think wish that she had used her fame mostly to lobby for truly effective humanitarian aid by nongovernmental and governmental organizations in teeming places like Kolkata (formerly called Calcutta),  which she encouraged to be even more teeming. The poor there need  Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) a lot more than Mother Teresa’s sort of charity work, which included substandard medical care. 

 

Where she probably did the most damage was in fighting artificial birth control in grossly overpopulated Kolkata. The out-of-control population there causes vast human suffering and environmental devastation but her Catholic theology told her, in effect, to encourage her impoverished clientele to have even more babies. She was an impressive promoter of certain kinds of  selflessness and Catholicism but her stand against birth control and her glorification of suffering may have done more harm than good.

 

 

XXX

 

The evidence has been mounting this past week that Russian dictator Vladimir Putin has ordered a massive campaign to undermine Western democracies in general and the U.S. in  particular. He’s doing  this, among other ways, though hacking and disrupting the Internet with the aim of using disinformation and confusion to damage the credibility and effectiveness of our democratic institutions, including elections.

 

We need to know much more clearly than we have heard so far from the overly diplomatic (i.e., timid?) Barack Obama that we are defending ourselves in this war by another name by the murderous, larcenous Putin, aided and abetted by his flunkies at Wikileaks.

 

xxx

 

Such unpleasantness further confirms me in the view that the Internet  has, overall, been bad for American society  – so far. I’ve been working on the World Wide Web almost since its invention and on computers since 1968 and so I say this with sadness: The Internet is damaging large parts of civil society (and destroying well-paying jobs). It has been more effective in spreading lies, misinformation and exhibitionism/narcissism than in advancing knowledge and enlightenment, at least in America. But reality bites, and many of us (obviously including me) must now live on it much of the time.  Maybe technological and other advances will fix some of these problems  -- someday.

 

xxx

 

Zika's Growing Threat
See Sept. 1 Boston Globe article, “In Pa., boomers see the American Dream slipping away,’’ on the effects of globalization and computerization (both good for stockholders and senior execs but not  for most American workers) on parts of what had been the middle class.

 

 

xxx

 

As I feared, in the panic to kill mosquitoes that spread the Zika virus, authorities are sloppily killing multitudes of bees. Without pollination, we starve. See this South Carolina story:  READ HERE


Rhode Island's Best Communities 2016

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.