Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Wind is Blowing, China, and Free Speech at Colleges

Bob Whitcomb, Contributor

Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Wind is Blowing, China, and Free Speech at Colleges

Bob Whitcomb
Good news in the wind; China’s long arm; free speech at colleges; Cambridge icon

 

It’s too bad that it has taken so long, but the completion of Deepwater Wind’s five-turbine wind farm off Block Island is very good news for New England.

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The facility, expected to start producing electricity in  November, will mean that a little more of New England’s electricity will come from the region’s own sources and  that we might be able to use a little less natural gas from fracking.  Fracking, contrary to the corporate publicity, does not slow global warming because the process releases so much methane from the fracking sites.  And the Block Island project will help reduce air pollution:  The island’s electricity has been produced by unavoidably dirty diesel fuel.

 

Further, success in getting this project up will boost, by example, much bigger offshore windpower projects planned for  nearby waters,  most notably between the eastern tip of Long Island and Martha’s Vineyard. Eventually, this should dramatically improve the reliability of our electricity and in the long run cut its cost as windpower technology improves.

 

Homegrown in RI
As usual with such projects in places like Block Island, Deepwater Wind had to fend off some affluent summer people who were offended that they’d have to look at wind turbines (which many folks think are beautiful) on their horizon.  Most famously, a group of very few rich people in Osterville, Mass., led by Bill Koch (of the Koch Brothers) have managed to block the big Cape Wind project, which was to go up in middle of Nantucket Sound,  although the project has been supported by a large majority of the  Massachusetts public. Yet again,  a few privileged NIMBYs have sabotaged the public interest. (I co-wrote (with Wendy Williams) a book  about that controversy, called Cape Wind, later made into a movie called Cape Spin.)

 

The Obama administration and some states, including Rhode Island and Massachusetts have, to their credit, enacted laws and regulations to encourage offshore wind. This is especially attractive in the Northeast, with its reliable breezes and shallow water extending a lot further offshore than you see off the West Coast.

 

The Europeans have long embraced offshore windpower, for environmental reasons and to reduce reliance on fossil-fuel imports, especially from an increasingly aggressive Russia.

 

I predict that many current offshore-windpower foes will come to tolerate and even like the turbines’  curious beauty. And the fishermen will  come to love them because fish congregate in the supports of such structures.

 

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“The bourgeoisie will sell us the rope with which we’ll hang them,’’ Lenin, that old wag, liked to say. I thought about that the other day when reading about how agents of China’s police state are threatening Canadians of Chinese origin who criticize the Communist Party dictatorship  of President Xi Jinping, which does not respect the rule of law and engages in such practices as torture.

 

The regime’s thuggish actions in Canada (and the U.S.) include threatening to go after relatives still living in China, cyberterrorism and menacing phone calls. See “Chinese-Canadians Fear China’s Rising Clout Is Muzzling Them,’’ in the Aug. 27 New York Times. And Beijing uses its economic clout in Canada and the U.S.  to pressure business interests and public officials to suppress criticism of the Chinese government.

 

Data being attacked by China
Some Chinese-Americans have long complained about these things. But the Chinese regime has many highly paid American lobbyists in Washington to promote its interests. And some U.S. colleges and other institutions compromise their integrity  by participating in such tools of Beijing as the Confucius Institute; one such place is the otherwise admirable Bryant University. Meanwhile, Chinese science and technology students who come to college in America are urged to steal as much U.S. intellectual property as they can when they’re here.

 

There were fond hopes that U.S.-Chinese trade expansion would be win-win and that these ties would help liberalize Chinese society. In fact,  besides hollowing out some major parts of the U.S. economy and cut American wages, it has strengthened the dictatorship and helped fund Chinese militarized expansionism, most notably in the South China Sea. It’s past time to get realistic about China: Its leaders most certainly do not wish us well.

 

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A sign of more realism about the nature of big-nation dictatorships, however, is  the German government’s plan to give itself the right to reintroduce the military draft, which could result in expanding its armed forces to 600,000 people from the current 178,000. The aim of this is to help discourage Russia from further aggression in the wake of its seizure of part of Georgia, all of Crimea, which is part of Ukraine, continued attacks on eastern Ukraine and threats against the Baltic Republics. The expanded military would also perhaps be useful against terrorist threats from ISIS and other Islamic murderers.

 

 

We seem to have to keep relearning that the only thing that bullies respect is power and the will to use it. Kudos to German Chancellor Angela Merkel for starting to put the latest relearning into effect.

 

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Bravo to University of Chicago President Robert Zimmer  (formerly provost at Brown) and his colleagues for pushing back against the idea that college should be a place for students to escape the challenging ideas and emotions of the  real world. The university’s dean of students, John Ellison, put out a statement saying:

 

“Our commitment to academic freedom means that we do not support so-called trigger warnings, we do not cancel invited speakers because their topics might prove controversial, and we do not condone the creation of intellectual ‘safe spaces’ where individuals can retreat from ideas and perspectives at odds with their own.’’

 

It will be interesting to see how many New England colleges and universities join in this stout defense of intellectual freedom – a freedom that used to be a given at most of the prestigious American colleges and universities. Will Brown again let a controversial invited speaker be shouted down?

 

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Out of Town News, Cambridge, MA
A sad sign of the times for print?

 

The City of Cambridge, Mass.,  may force the famous Out of Town News business from its eccentric little building in the middle of Harvard Square in order to “repurpose’’ the building as a public space. (Waiting room with news-crawl screens, public bathrooms?) This may force the business, beloved by browsers looking for publications from around the world for so many years, to close.

 

The structure, actually a kiosk built in 1928, was built at Zero (!) Harvard Square, as an entrance building for the Harvard Square subway station. In 1981, it was moved slightly and renovated. Out of Town News, which opened at Harvard Square in 1955, has been in the kiosk since 1984.

 

The business is one of the centers of New England, a lively urban space where all sorts of people congregate – not just local academics. I hope that the business stays where it is, letting many thousands of  patrons and visitors  a year continue  to get a sense of what’s going on around the world by reading on paper,  still more congenial for many  people than reading on a screen.

 

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I’m looking forward to seeing a documentary movie called One Big Home, about the gigantic, show-off summer places that have been going up in the past 30 years in such summer places as  Nantucket, Martha’s Vineyard and the Hamptons.  The filmmaker is Thomas Bena, who, The Boston Globe reports, has been waging a “campaign to curb the size of new construction and preserve the pastoral quality’’ of the Vineyard.

 

Which reminds me of where so much of the summer-place money comes from: Wall Street. In the old days, most money came from people making or otherwise dealing with  physical things, such as steel.  But since the ‘80s, money manipulation has ruled.  We very much need bankers and the like to, among many other things, help start and expand companies and, all in all,  to lubricate the economy, but finance’s share of the economy  (and personal wealth) has gotten  way out of whack. Thus you see  so many of the rich young people in The Sunday New York Times wedding announcements  working for investment banks and hedge funds (those dubious creatures). The husband of Chelsea Clinton, Marc Mezvinsky, an investment banker and co-founder of the hedge fund Eaglevale Partners, is an example.

 

I doubt that for so many of the self-perpetuating elite to work on Wall Street is a sign of American socio-economic health. But in any event,  they pretty much own Washington and so they’ll probably maintain their favored position.

 

Atlantic Mills
Kudos to William Morgan for his splendid piece in GoLocalProv about Providence’s decayed but still beautiful  and architecturally strange Atlantic Mills. My own favorite of old mills around here is those stone mills in Fall River (“Spindle City’’), especially when the setting sun shines on them.

 

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Many decades after you leave your school-going days, you might still feel a pain in your stomach about now from the anxiety of returning to class, with fear of other students usually stronger than fear of new teachers.

 

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"Our fear of death is like our fear that summer will be short, but when we have had our swing of pleasure, our fill of fruit, and our swelter of heat, we say we have had our day."


--   John Donne, 1620


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