Robert Whitcomb: Pay Councilors More? Anti-Vaxers Spawn Measles Epidemic

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Robert Whitcomb: Pay Councilors More? Anti-Vaxers Spawn Measles Epidemic

Photo by Bill Gallery (billgallery.com)
Whiff of a Smoke Machine and Treason; Pay Councilors More? Anti-Vaxers Spawn Measles Epidemic; Better for the Fish
 

‘’Long stormy springtime, wet contentious  April, winter chilling the lap of very May; but at length the season of summer does come.’’


-- Thomas Carlyle

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“U.S. senators probing possible links between Russia and the Trump team have been told to ‘follow the dead bodies’ as they hunt for evidence of the Kremlin’s involvement in last year’s presidential election.

‘’Appearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee, national security expert {and former FBI special agent} Clint Watts said several Russians linked to the investigation into Kremlin disinformation activities have been killed in the past three months.

‘’The alleged murders were carried out not only in Russia, but in Western countries as well, Mr. Watts said.

‘’He also accused Donald Trump of using the same techniques employed by Russian operatives against his own political opponents.

‘’Asked by Republican Sen. James Lankford (R.-Okla.) why Vladimir Putin’s supposed tactics of attempting to influence the U.S. election were ‘much more engaging this time in our election,’ Mr Watts replied: ‘I think this answer is very simple and is what no one is really saying in this room.

“’The reason active measures have worked in this U.S. election is because the commander-in-chief has used Russian active measures at times against his opponents.”’

-- From The Independent newspaper, London

Hit this link to listen to Mr. Watts

 

Hit this link to read The Independent’s article:

 

“There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.’’

 

 

“Public virtue cannot exist in a Nation without private Virtue, and public Virtue is the only Foundation of Republics.” 
 

-- John Adams, a Founding Father and the second U.S. president.

 

 

“So when I got in the cart with Eric {Trump},” {golf writer) James Dodson says, “as we were setting off, I said, ‘Eric, who’s funding {Trump golf courses}? I know no banks—because of the recession, the Great Recession—have touched a golf course. You know, no one’s funding any kind of golf construction. It’s dead in the water the last four or five years.’ And this is what he said. He said, ‘Well, we don’t rely on American banks. We have all the funding we need out of Russia.’ I said, ‘Really?’ And he said, ‘Oh, yeah. We’ve got some guys that really, really love golf, and they’re really invested in our programs. We just go there all the time.’ Now that was three years ago {in 2014}, so it was pretty interesting.”

 

From a new article in Vanity Fair.  

 

James Comey, Former head of the FBI
Uber-con man Donald Trump’s smoke machine has been going nonstop since he fired FBI Director James Comey. He tried to obfuscate what he was doing by citing Mr. Comey’s handling of the Hillary Clinton e-mail controversy. That controversy revealed sloppiness, mismanagement and arrogance by Mrs. Clinton and her associates. But Trump’s profound and  virtually lifelong corruption is far, far worse.

 

If our mendacious president had really wanted to fire Mr. Comey about the Clinton campaign e-mails he could have done it on Jan. 20, when the president, sadly for America, took office.

 

No, it is obvious when you cut through the red herrings and brazen lies that have long characterized this most corrupt president in American history, that Trump wanted to sabotage or at least slow the FBI’s investigation into the close links between the Trump team  (including the president) and Vladimir Putin’s murderous and kleptocratic dictatorship.  The FBI has focused on the collaboration of Trump people and Moscow to sabotage Mrs. Clinton’s campaign, mostly through cyber-warfare, ably assisted by Putin’s helpers in WikiLeaks. A main aim, besides getting their boy Trump elected, was to weaken Americans’ confidence in their political system.

 

James Comey’s leadership of the FBI might have been doomed in any event, but the timing of his firing might be explained by the fact that he recently asked the Justice Department for a significant increase in resources for the bureau’s investigation into Russia’s interference in the presidential election.

 

 

Readers will note that Mr. Comey, a Republican by background, was the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York from January 2002 to December 2003, and subsequently the U.S. deputy attorney general from December 2003 to August 2005. He was named to both jobs by President George W. Bush. As deputy attorney general, Mr. Comey directed the Justice Department’s day-to-day operations. He was named to run the FBI for the usual 10-year term by President Obama, in part as a sign of bipartisanship and because of what had been Mr. Comey’s stellar career.

 

His firing reinforces the corruption of the Trump cabal, perhaps including out-and-out treason. It’s obvious at this point that only a special prosecutor of unimpeachable integrity and independence can satisfy the longing of Americans for a thorough investigation of the ongoing Russian attack on our democracy, aided by Trump (who publicly egged on the Kremlin to attack Mrs. Clinton), Trump’s sleazy and avaricious family (I’m only talking about its adult members) and his sycophantic and well-paid retainers. (Yes, the Clintons have some people like that too.)

 

The actions of the president and his associates have scarier implications than Watergate because they involve a foreign power.

 

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Luis Aponte
And so another Providence City Council member has been indicted. This time it’s Council President Luis Aponte, for alleged campaign-finance corruption and embezzlement. He follows now ousted (by a recall election) Kevin Jackson, also charged with alleged embezzlement and campaign-finance offenses.

 

What could reduce corruption on the City Council?  Well, perhaps raising their salaries. (Mr. Aponte’s is about $16,000; Mr. Jackson’s was about $14,000.) Members of the council tend to be poor.

 

Also good would be a true two-party system on the council. It’s been all-Democratic for a long time. The estimable Malcolm Farmer III was the last Republican to be elected to the body, in 1986. Having two parties represented on the council would encourage stronger monitoring of potential unethical behavior and make members more anxious about engaging in sleazy behavior.

 

At least we can take some satisfaction that Mayor Jorge Elorza’s administration has so far been scandal-free.  His biggest problem may be that not enough people working for the city fear him. Providence has a strong-mayor system (as opposed to a strong council system) but the gentlemanly, low-key Elorza is not yet considered strong.

 

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Superman Building
Downtown Providence’s Industrial Trust Building, with its stepped-back upper stories and decayed limestone façade, would be a very expensive nightmare to rehab. It would make much more sense to tear down most of the building, keeping the bottom of it with its gorgeous and grand space and decoration, and put a glass tower on top of it, maybe with tinted glass mimicking the shape of its predecessor. Keep the green light at the top. (Scott Fitzgerald: “…the green light, the orgastic future…’’)

 

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As the healthcare debate continues, with occasional time out for the Trump/Russia scandal, I hope, again, that the GOP and the Democrats consider interim moves that could get support from both sides. One is lowering the age of Medicare to 50 from 65. This would make the risk pools for those in Medicaid and private insurance (with or without Affordable Care Act-related private insurance) economically healthier, by increasing the percentage of young healthy people in them. This would lower the premiums for younger people.

 

 Of course letting anyone 50 or over get into Medicare would cost the taxpayers, but they’d more than make it up in lower insurance premiums for most people. And, for that matter, Medicare is much more cost-effective than private insurance. Its administrative costs are about 2 percent compared to over 20 percent for private insurance: Gotta pay for all those marketing costs and multimillion-dollar insurance-executive salaries!

 

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Science-free lies by anti-vaccine campaigners have led to an increase in measles epidemics. Among the most notable ones now are in Minnesota, Italy and Rumania. The refusal of some parents to vaccinate their children is putting the public at risk. Science ignoramuses such as Donald Trump and the emotionally disturbed crank Robert F. Kennedy Jr., with their idiotic negative remarks about vaccines, are making things worse.

 

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Former Rhode Island State Rep. and Providence City Councilor David Segal shared an idea worth considering on GoLocal on May 10. Calling called Rhode Island’s corporate-tax-break strategy a "race to the bottom,’’  he suggested that Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut sign a compact to agree “to stop poaching companies from one another’’ in this small region.

 

"States across the county are trying to poach businesses from one another instead of engaging in actual economic development that makes sense, that tries and leverages the great things about those communities and existing workforce.’’ He’s more right than wrong although the reality is that sometimes incentives make long-term sense.

 

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As officials in Rhode Island and some other states continue to push for expanded programs to get young people to go to college, comes a story by Vermont Public Radio about a very serious labor shortage of trades  in the Rutland area that’s mirrored over most of America. 

 

The story evokes a 2016 survey by the Associated General Contractors of America, which showed that two-thirds of the construction firms it surveyed reported having a hard time filling hourly craft positions that represent the bulk of the construction workforce. This means  electricians, carpenters, plumbers, excavators, utility line people and others.

 

There’s a nationwide shortage of  these people, which economists warn could hurt economic growth more and more.

 

Of course construction is cyclical but think of all the electricians, plumbers, carpenters, masons, etc., who prosper even in deep recessions. Most everyone will eventually need their services!

 

Robbie Stubbins, who has an electrical-contracting business in Rutland, and others in the trades cite the increased effort over the last 20 to 30 years “to funnel more high school students into college,’’ reported VPR.

 

“Don’t get me wrong. College can be great for some people. But I’m seeing a lot of twenty-somethings in this part of Vermont who feel stuck in low-paying food- service or tourism jobs struggling to pay off college loans.” Sounds familiar.

 

A big push to lure more people into skilled trades would be good for the economy and provide far more people with well-paying jobs that are better protected from automation and globalization than most college graduates’ jobs. And unlike for most college graduates, who must go deep into debt to get their degrees, the trades offer paid apprentice programs to prepare them for  permanent skilled-trade positions. These jobs mostly pay better than what new college graduates get (and for many of the latter more than they’ll ever get).

This “everyone  must go to college’’ cliché needs a swift kick.

 

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President Trump wants to at least delay the implementation of President Obama’s executive order creating the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Monument, which covers nearly 5,000 square miles way off Cape Cod. After a transition period of several years, the area would be closed to commercial fishing. And it would be immediately shut to oil and natural gas exploration and drilling when and if the order is implemented.

 

The monument is along the edge of the Continental Shelf and provides a home for a very rich mix of animal and plant life.

 

The president has shown little interest in environmental/ecological matters and his instinct is to let fishermen and fossil-fuel people grab everything that’s there. And most fishing groups have shown little interest in protecting the area. They want to take as many fish as they can as fast as they can.

 

But they might bear in mind that such ecologically rich areas play large roles in maintaining the eco-systems over unprotected adjacent areas. (Note in the accompanying map how small the designed protected area is.) That means that protecting this relatively small area will help maintain fish populations around it. Protecting it could improve commercial fishing off southeastern New England.

 

It’s unclear whether Trump even has the authority to undo the Obama action, and the whole thing could well play out in the courts. But then the president has such a short attention span, he may forget all about it.

 

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Meanwhile, in what would be a nonpolluting use of offshore waters,  Avangrid Renewables,  a U.S. unit of the Spanish company Iberdrola Group, and Vineyard Wind have formed a partnership to jointly develop a large wind-energy project about 15 miles  south of Martha’s Vineyard. Avangrid is acquiring a 50 percent ownership interest in Vineyard Wind, an offshore wind-energy developer that’s part of the Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners portfolio.

 

The sea south of New England has some of the most reliable offshore wind in the world.

 

The project follows last summer’s enactment of a Massachusetts law requiring utilities to obtain 1,600 megawatts (MW) of offshore wind energy within the next decade. The 1,600 MW would mean homegrown energy to power the equivalent of more than 750,000 Massachusetts homes (with a total of over 2 million people) every year.

 

Three companies to date have acquired lease rights to build projects off the coast, including Vineyard Wind.

 

Vineyard Wind plans to begin building its project in early 2020.

 

It’s possible that renewable energy could provide southern New England with all its electricity needs within a couple of decades, in a huge boon for its economy and environment.

 

The area eyed for development is presumably far enough offshore to avoid the sort of opposition by rich summer people that blocked the Cape Wind project in Nantucket Sound. However siting it so far offshore will also make it cost a lot more than Cape Wind would have cost.

 

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Historian Niall Ferguson wrote a good piece for The Boston Globe recently headlined “Is social democracy shattered?” 

 

The most interesting part came toward the end:

 

“As the British journalist David Goodhart shrewdly observed 13 years ago, the {long-term} project of a redistributive welfare state is only viable in an ethnically homogeneous society. He was vilified for saying it. He has been vindicated by events.

 

Hillary Clinton
“Hillary Clinton says she is writing another book. Please, no. Instead, she should go home to Illinois — where she came from — and read one. I recommend Goodhart’s The Road to Somewhere."

 

As an illustration of Mr. Goodhart’s point, many Trump voters, most of whom are white, don’t want to see more tax money for social programs go to darker folks in our very ethnically heterogeneous nation. So the Trump voters often vote against their own economic interests. (After all, that money would help poor and middle-class whites, too).

 

In, say, Scandinavia, with quite homogeneous populations, it’s a lot easier to have high taxes to pay for social programs that most citizens see  as benefitting everyone.. Of course with Muslim immigration that might change.

 

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After a certain age, walking the streets is walking amidst ghosts.


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