Robert Whitcomb: No Smoking Downtown; Dems at Sea; Blasting Offshore

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Robert Whitcomb: No Smoking Downtown; Dems at Sea; Blasting Offshore

Robert Whitcomb
"No price is set on the lavish summer;

 June may be had by the poorest comer."


--  James Russell Lowell

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The new ordinance banning smoking outdoors in  part of downtown Providence reflects the confusions and hypocrisies of American policies regarding tobacco and some other drugs (such as alcohol). On the one hand we say that smoking is very unhealthy and leads to many thousands of deaths a year and vast health expenses, on the other hand, tobacco products are legal and pull in billions of dollars a year in tax money. (Some argue that smoking, by causing early and often fast deaths,  actually saves on overall national health costs: Fewer of those too-expensive old folks who take so long to expire.)

 

I think that the new ordinance isn’t a bad idea. It may extend a few lives, including of those people who must breathe in second-hand smoke in situations such as waiting for buses at Kennedy Plaza. And there will be fewer cigarette butts and other smoking-related litter on the streets and sidewalks.

 

Smoking banned downtown
Smoking is self-medication for many mentally ill people, many, perhaps most of whom suffer from intense anxiety. Thus, assuming that the Providence police are willing and able to enforce the smoking ban, you might find fewer insane people hanging around downtown scaring some “normal people’’.  That, presumably, would be good for most retail and other businesses. But in our unfortunate era of deinstitutionalization, where will the mentally ill go? I’d guess that many will simply move to the edge of  downtown, to join the ones below my window at the corner of Orms and Charles streets.

 

Now back to the scarier substance-abuse problem – opiate addiction and lethal overdoses.

 

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I was not at all surprised that young Jon Ossoff narrowly lost the 6th District Georgia congressional race to Republican Karen Handel last Tuesday. The traditionally very Red district, another triumphant example of ruthless Republican gerrymandering, was still the  GOP’s to lose, whatever the many millions of dollars the Democrats pumped in.

 

It will take a while to deconstruct the vote, but I suspect that the Democrats did not get quite the turnout that they’d hoped for. This would be another example of why, although in many national polls a majority of the public backs what are basically Democratic positions on health care and other big issues, the GOP, aided by the state legislatures doing the gerrymandering of congressional districts,  does so well in campaigns.

 

Consider the failure of the young, who lean heavily Democratic, to vote while people in their 50s and older vote heavily -- most often for Republicans. That may continue as long as the GOP doesn't threaten their Medicare and Social Security.

 

Democrats leadership troubles
The sloth of younger and thus Democratic-leaning voters in midterm congressional elections gets to the heart of the party’s problems. Consider, for example, that only 17 percent of Americans 18-24 voted in the 2014 elections, compared with 59 percent of those 65 and over!  So the former should stop whining about the triumph of the corrupt Trump plutocracy.

 

The older (or just old) Tea Party types (mostly men) who comprise, for example, the little group who denounce me every week in the Facebook comments at the bottom of this column, do vote. And some or most are retired and have plenty of time to denounce “socialists’’  and “elitists” in social-media posts while they take a break from the Fox News echo chambers. God bless ‘em! At least they’re not passive.

 

Meanwhile, Democratic strategists must be wondering if they should have poured a lot more money into a special South Carolina congressional race, in another intensely gerrymandered and traditionally  very Republican district. Democrat Archie Parnell came very close last Tuesday to winning that contest. He may have been a better candidate than the somewhat callow  and too-mild Mr. Ossoff, who perhaps should have taken on the Trump regime with much more energy.

 

The underlying demographic changes favor the Democrats but maybe they don’t deserve to win because so many of the folks calling themselves Democrats are too lazy to take 20 minutes to show up at the polls every couple of years.

 

Oh yes, and the Democrats urgently need new leaders in the U.S. House.  Number 1: Nancy Pelosi, 77, should retire as their leader – now! The party needs new faces to present to the public.  

 

They desperately require leaders with inspirational talents, organizational ability and pragmatism. They need to eloquently promote the interests of lower-and-middle-income people and push back hard against the plutocracy now in charge in the White House and in the Capitol.

 

Meanwhile, some Democrats may be secretly hoping for a recession. Given the realities of business cycles (the current business expansion is very old) and other factors – among them China’s economic woes, Brexit and inflated technology stock prices -- they may well get it next year. Ten percent unemployment would give the Democrats control of Congress in 2018, probably by a landslide.

 

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The Trump administration, in a sleeping bag with the oil and natural-gas sector, wants to hand out permits for large-scale seismic blasting up and down the Atlantic coast, from Delaware to Florida, to detect the presence of fossil fuel. Such  blasting can injure or even kill such intelligent mammals  as whales and dolphins   and other marine animals.
 

 

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A plan to help maintain the 17-acre Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, in downtown Boston, may be an example for upkeep of other public parks. Since property owners near the Greenway   obviously benefit more than most people from this amenity, they’ve agreed to pay $1 million a year in a voluntary tax on the big buildings along the Greenway via a  Business Improvement District that would defray the bulk of  yearly maintenance. The idea is to let the state reduce its spending on the park to $750,000 a year by 2020 from the current $2 million.

 

User taxes, including highway tolls, are very fair. You benefit; you pay.

 

India Point Park, in Providence, is  an example of where similar arrangements could be made to better maintain public spaces and save on local and state government spending. Certainly the Downtown Providence Improvement District has done fine work in making “Downcity’’  a lot more presentable than it was a couple of decades ago.

 

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President Donald Trump
President Trump’s latest tweet about North Korea: “While I greatly appreciate the efforts of President Xi & China to help with North Korea. It has not worked out. At least I know China tried!” Is he being sarcastic, sycophantic or just idiotic? China is keeping alive the murderous, truly evil North Korean regime. It has no interest in undermining it. Last year, Mr. Trump frequently said how terrible China was. But since taking office, he’s been making nice with its dictatorship.

 

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If you want to know who the prime  historical villains are in our exorbitantly expensive and convoluted health-care ‘’system,’’ look no further than the American Medical Association’s support, starting in the ‘40s,  for a fee-for-service, private- insurance company model that would maximize physicians’ incomes. In tandem were the AMA’s successful efforts to prevent the creation of  the sort of universal, government-backed health system that virtually all other developed nations have – and better health.

 

This system has ensured that American physicians are the world’s highest paid although medical outcomes lag behind most other developed nations. Of course, in the ‘60s Medicare and Medicaid came along. But Medicare, trapped in  the traditional fee-for-service model, was for decades a bonanza for doctors, until federal cost containment efforts in recent years.

 

Yes, it was all about the money.

 

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Anti-Republican lunatic James Hodgkinson, who shot at a group of GOP politicians at  a park in Alexandria, Va., gravely injuring House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, had 200 rounds of ammunition in a storage unit. That’s the sort of thing you’d expect in a nation whose gun laws are written by the National Rifle Association and their paymasters in the weapons biz, in collaboration with the Republican Party. I (and numerous family members) have owned guns all my life but the need to stock up on war-zone levels of ammo  has eluded me. But then, I somehow forgot the potential joys of mass murder.

 

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As the United States withdraws from speaking out for human rights and democracy, the Chinese dictatorship moves in with piles of money. That money is already having sad effects.

 

Consider that Greece has vetoed a European Union statement denouncing Chinese human-rights abuses in the wake of Greece recently getting billions of dollars in infrastructure investments from Beijing. Croatia and Hungary (the latter run by a semi-fascist president), also the beneficiary of massive Chinese spending, have also blocked E.U. statements on Chinese actions, including China’s attempt to take over the entire South China Sea. Each E.U. nation has veto power over statements meant to be the official E.U. position.

 

Here at home we have the Confucius Institute problem. The Institute is affiliated with China’s Education Ministry and has  the official aim to promote Chinese language and culture.  But it is really a propaganda and intelligence office, a handy base for industrial and other espionage  and a sturdy platform for the increasingly aggressive and expansionist dictatorship to keep in line Chinese students studying abroad.  Their very presence tends to constrain intellectual freedom regarding things Chinese.

 

Some U.S. colleges and universities, such as Rhode Island’s Bryant University, have partnered with the Institute  satellites for the money and business connections they provide after they set up shop on American campuses. These Confucius Institute operations provide free (to the colleges) teachers and textbooks and cover operating costs.   Some administrators and faculty members like them because they help bring in full-tuition-paying Chinese students and provide free  and luxurious junkets to China to some administrators and faculty members.  Such operations are inappropriate on American college campuses.

 

Rachelle Peterson, director of research at the National Association of Scholars, a conservative group, has accurately complained: “Confucius Institutes export the fear of speaking freely around the world. They permit a foreign government to have intimate influence over college classrooms. It’s time to kick them off campus.’’ Ms. Peterson quoted former Chinese Communist Party propaganda chief Li Changchun as calling the on-campus Confucius Institute satellites “an important part of China’s overseas propaganda efforts.’’

 

 

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Amazon’s plan to buy Whole Foods has elicited a lot of heavy breathing and assertions that Amazon will wipe out a lot of grocery stores. I think  that these forecasts are exaggerated. Groceries – stuff that can rot – are not the same things as books and clothes.  The distribution challenges are very different.

 

Most people will continue to drive or walk to a regular (not high-end, expensive “organic”) supermarket or small grocery store for the foreseeable future. Inflation-adjusted wages have been falling for most people. The market for expensive (and some would say pretentious) food is unlikely to  vastly expand. For all its alleged glamour, most people don’t shop at the expensive likes of Whole Foods – and never will.

 

An Amazon-Whole Foods mating might work very well in densely populated affluent areas with a close enough proximity to warehouses to ensure that the stuff can be delivered unspoiled to Amazon-Whole Foods supermarkets or to your home. But it wouldn’t work well in thinly populated areas.

 

Finally, even in this plutocratic age,  it’s possible that the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Justice Department will awake from their all-too-frequent torpor and press monopoly charges against the company if it tries to take over a big hunk of the grocery business.

 

Anyway, I’m more worried about the effects on employment and wages of the automation of cashier and other jobs now underway in many kinds of stores than about Amazon specifically (I always use cashiers, not those machines, in a tiny effort to help preserve jobs.) And I worry about the effects on local tax revenue and jobs from so many stores of all kinds closing because of the online revolution.

 

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Scott Avedisian
I have enjoyed the spectacle of the very gentlemanly and politically fluid Warwick Mayor for Life Scott Avedisian reveling in the additional  airlines now using T.F. Green Airport, including some finally offering service to Europe. This comes after he had spent so many years hurting the airport and the state’s economy by siding with a small group of homeowners determined to keep the state from extending a runway at the airport and/or forcing the state to pay them  exorbitant amounts to make way for the longer runway.  The airport, incidentally, has been there since 1928. Area residents presumably got a discount on their house purchase prices because of its presence. Airports are noisy.

 

Perhaps luckily for him, Americans’ historical memory has dwindled to nanoseconds.

 

Probably the really big expansion at Green will take place next year after the outrageously delayed runway extension is completed, allowing direct flights to California and more flights to Europe, including Eastern Europe.

 

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Bronnie Ware, an Australian nurse and counselor who has spent much time with dying people, has written a book called The Top Five Regrets of the Dying –A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing.

 

The regrets are (somewhat paraphrased):

 

“I wish I had pursued my dreams and aspirations, and not the life others expected of me.’’
“I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.’’
“I wish I had had the courage to express my feelings and speak my mind.’’
“I wish I had stayed in touch with my friends.’’
“I wish I had let myself be happier.’’


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