Robert Whitcomb's Digital Diary: RI Jobs, Breitbart News and the Supreme Court

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Robert Whitcomb's Digital Diary: RI Jobs, Breitbart News and the Supreme Court

Robert Whitcomb
It’s All in the Lighting; Rattling Away the Litterers; Chaotic Orders; Conservative Principles? Road Trip

 

The now little read but once famous naturalist Joseph Wood Krutch wrote (once famously), in a book called  The Twelve Seasons: “The most serious charge which can be brought against New England is not Puritanism but February. It is true that before we are finished with it the days are unmistakably longer than they were in December or January, and true that there are periods when the daylight is brighter, as well as longer. But these brief interludes are too infrequent to be counted on, and the relapses are so complete that the interludes do not seem even promises.’’

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I disagree. Even early in February,  each sunny day is noticeably brighter than those just a few weeks earlier and on a mild day you can see the buds swelling. (My friend Josh Fitzhugh, cited below, says the sap was running in his maple trees near Montpelier, Vt., at a good clip last week. Perhaps he’ll wrap up his syrup production early this year.) The best way to experience this gradual light improvement is  a walk at about 7 a.m. in a quiet neighborhood. But then, to me, it’s always been more about light than temperature (to a point).

 

Mr. Krutch’s reference to “Puritanism’’ is long outdated. New England is probably the most tolerant part of the United States, besides, perhaps, New York and parts of California.  It’s been a longtime since “Banned in Boston’’ was a common phrase for censorship of a “salacious’’ book or play. And his whining about New England’s Februaries bespeaks a certain wimpiness: He lived in Connecticut, in the tropics of our region.

 

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There’s been a bit of a rumpus about a proposal by Massachusetts conservation officials to introduce the endangered Timber Rattlesnake on Mount Zion Island in the Quabbin Reservoir. The island is closed to public access.

 

This is an animal native to the Bay State, in which there are only five surviving populations, spread out from the New York border in the southern Berkshires, east to the Blue Hills, just south of Boston. This species has had the greatest modern decline of any native reptile in the Bay State and is a high conservation priority species for the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife).

 

The Quabbin Reservoir is also the site of MassWildlife's nationally known and successful American Bald Eagle restoration project.

 

Mankind keeps destroying species. But all life is inter-connected. We destroy species to our long-term peril.  Housing the rattlers on Mount Zion seems a responsible way of helping to save this species, which is beautiful in its way. And the presence of the rattlers on the island would definitely discourage humans from landing there and littering it. A slight whiff of terror would be good for the preservation of the wildlife of the island (the vast majority of which would not be bitten by the rattlers) and indeed the whole Quabbin eco-system.

 

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You never know for sure what a Supreme Court justice will do in the life tenancy of the job.  Look at Eisenhower appointee Earl Warren! Still, I predict that the very able and smooth Neil Gorsuch,  who, like most people named to big federal posts, is a child of privilege, will tend to comfort the powerful and economically comfortable and afflict the the unpowerful in his new job. He calls himself an “Originalist’’ who will purportedly strive to follow what the Founding Fathers had in mind in writing the Constitution. But how the hell would he know with any precision what these intellectuals had in mind in the late 18th Century or what they would think now?

 

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President Donald Trump
The furor over President Trump’s clumsy executive order on immigration from some Muslim nations has been a little extreme but understandable given how many times our new and demagogic leader has thrown bombs into the public square. See lawyer Josh Fitzhugh’s cooling take on this:

 

Was the order legal? Probably.  And a few terror-inclined people will always try to enter the United States, although there’s more reason to fear  violent and increasingly heavily armed Americans.

 

There should be more concern than has been expressed so far about how the new president sent forth the order – chaotically and, amazingly, without consulting with such  key figures as Defense Secretary James Mattis, Secretary of State-designate Rex Tillerson and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly. They should have been deeply involved in the planning of the order, which should not have been so irresponsibly rushed in order to please Mr. Trump’s red-meat followers.

 

Many citizens have noted that the Muslim nations not on Mr. Trump’s list include three nations --- Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the United Emirates – where the president has done a lot of business and where there have been plenty of members of the terrorist community. Indeed, Saudi Arabia is the primary seedbed of Islamic terrorism – and whence came 18 of the 19 murderers who inflicted 9/11 on us! Afghanistan and Pakistan are also not on the list!

 

Is this the sort of conflict-of-interest corruption that many have feared from a man who has shown himself so corrupt over the years? Who knows? But if he’d release his tax returns, we’d probably have a better idea.

 

Already there’s a pattern in the Trump administration of the volatile president working with a very small group of advisers, retainers and ruthless political operatives, most notably Steve Bannon,  the former Breitbart News CEO (“News’’ is a bit misleading; it’s actually a right-wing and nativist propaganda organ spewing out lots of fake news among some real stuff); former Trump campaign czarina and liar-extraordinaire Kellyanne Conway, and the volatile former Army Gen. Michael Flynn, the national security adviser.

 

One can only hope that Mr. Trump makes more use of such calm and experienced executives as Messrs. Mattis, Kelly and Tillerson (who is, however, up to his neck in conflicts of interest)  as time goes by. The new president cannot hope to run a successful administration as he ran the Trump Organization as a cult of personality operation with a certain Mafia-like tone and organizational structure.

 

Meanwhile, the agitated foes of Mr. Trump’s order hope that the televised scenes of the mass protests might get the president to change his mind. Dream on! Donald Trump won the Electoral College by drawing massive crowds of angry populists, who, so far anyway, continue to see him as their man on horseback to solve many of their problems, real, perceived and/or self-inflicted. The president, as an extreme narcissist, is always energized by the yells of support from these people, who believe that he will reverse the tide of foreigners coming into America to pursue what the immigrant ancestors of Trump supporters sought: “The American Dream’’. (One of the more interesting aspects of the anti-immigration uproar, by the way, is that it’s loudest in  places with the fewest immigrants.)

 

Mr. Trump, who used to be a Democrat when it was very convenient for him to be so, was elected by anti-immigration folks, and whether or not he himself believes that it’s good policy, he’ll probably keep his policy as long as the cheers of his core supporters reverberate.

 

Another interesting thing to watch will be the extent to which the GOP leadership in Congress will, to suck up to a ruthless, erratic and often ignorant president, continue to ignore the  traditional Republican affection for free trade, NATO and a firm  stance toward Russia as well as traditional GOP dislike of drug-price controls, jaw-boning companies about jobs and other attacks on “the free market’’. And we can assume that they will continue to ignore the president’s libertine private life, which is about 180 degrees away from the straight-backed rectitude that traditional conservatives espouse. (His relatively new opposition to abortion makes some speculate about, well, never mind ….)

 

So far, anyway, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have displayed few if any principles when it comes to interacting with Donald Trump.  But in the end, it’s not about principles but power. Soon after Barack Obama became president, Mr. McConnell, then the Senate minority leader, said:

 

“The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.’’ So they blocked him at every turn to make him look unsuccessful so they could get back into power, aided by the sloth of so many Democrats who are too lazy to spend 20 minutes to vote. The GOP base, on the other hand, fueled by what often seems a free-floating anger,  generally votes at much higher rates than do Democrats, except in occasional presidential elections.

 

 

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RI Tea Party
I’ve felt for a long time that the success of Trump and the Tea Party also has something to do with the anxiety that many people – especially older ones --- feel  in the face of too much change  and too much information coming too fast. Everything seems to change faster and faster – computer systems, social mores (transgendered bathrooms!), world events and so on. With Donald Trump in the White House look for things to get even faster and more confusing. But many people desperate for stability and predictability rest their hopes in strongman government. They now have it with a mini-Mussolini.

 

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One of worst acts by Barack Obama, which came at the end of his term, was to commute the transgendered traitor Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning’s 35-year sentence to about seven years. Manning was jailed for leaking classified information to Russia-linked Wikileaks while in the Army, thus  jeopardizing American security. In the old days, he/she would have been executed for such an offense. Mr. Obama apparently felt sorry for this troubled person. But what a bad precedent! We can hope that the much worse traitor Edward Snowden will face the full penalty of the law if  and when he leaves his protector Vladimir Putin in Moscow and returns to America.

 

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I was reading an article the other day about Connecticut’s ‘’bottle bill,’’  which mandates that when you buy a container of soda, water and beer, etc., you are charged 5 cents on top of the price of the container – a nickel that you get back when you return the container to a redemption center to be recycled.  That’s a very effective law (which Rhode Island should have) because it helps reduces litter.

 

In the Nutmeg State, the bottle bill has become a  bonanza for the state because there are so many too-busy or too-lazy people who just toss their containers in the trash or a recycling bin and don’t claim the nickel at redemption centers.

 

See this story from WNPR: 

 

If you toss a can into your trash or recycling bin, instead of redeeming it for the 5- cent deposit -- your unclaimed nickel goes to the state with nothing to the private redemption centers that are charged with collecting the stuff in return for a slice of the nickel. That’s  been happening more and more. Tough for these small businesses.

 

I have long wondered about the full environmental efficacy of recycling. How much of the value of recycling plastic, metal and plastic is offset by the  energy and water (often hot) used to clean it up a bit before it goes into the recycling bin and to transport and process it? Still, again, recycling and bottle bills, discourage littering. Besides its  demoralizing effects on the public, litter, especially the plastic stuff, kills some wildlife.

 

So bless bottle bills and recycling.

 

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People often denounce Rhode Island’s governors and other officials for the fact that the state’s jobless rate often exceeds that of other Northeast states. But the main reason it does is that it’s a tiny jurisdiction whose economy was based for many years on manufacturing that is no more. Things are getting much more diversified and thus better, but the size and economic history of the state will probably continue to skew upward the unemployment figures for some years to come.

Also, voters tend to blame or praise a governor and president for the health of the economy when in fact there are far too many variables in the economy for a single political leader to have much effect.

 

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I went skiing last week for the first time in years, at Sugarbush, in Warren, Vt. I was struck again by how expensive skiing has become ($100 on a Friday, not including equipment rental), how high-tech it is now and the slickness of  its marketing.  I wish they’d bring back the rope tows run by Ford truck engines that you could use for $10 a day!

 

And, being force-marched into a chairlift to the top of the mountain by my fierce companions, who are both good skiiers (unlike me!) and physicians (thank God!), I was moved yet again by the gentle beauty of the Green Mountain. The icy trails, however, were not nearly gentle enough for me.

 

Increasingly, I find what I most like about such outings is the surprises along the way. For example, the little time-share ski house we stayed in at a complex called The Eagles, in Waitsfield, had the most efficient and attractive design of a small house I’d ever been in. Privacy and yet a sort of paradoxical spaciousness. It’s built with a Swedish design and materials. Then there was the most charming, comfortable and quirky movie theater I’ve ever been in – also in Waitsfield – called “The Big Picture Café & Theater: A Local Gathering Place With a Global Dimension.’’ We saw two tough, even traumatic, but brilliantly acted films – Fences and Lion.

 

Then, on my way back  to Providence, I discovered the Everyday Café, in downtown Contoocook, N.H., with  a delicious high-cholesterol breakfast washed down by Bloody Mary mix (they didn’t have tomato juice) and a friendly and ironical staff. It’s good to get off the Interstates and wander a bit.

 

The Contoocook side trip reminded me of driving to Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N.H., before the completion of Interstate 89 through one little Robert Frostian or Grace Metaliousian (author of  the once scandalous but now tame Peyton Place) town after another on narrow, two-way roads. When it was icy, drivers would sometimes  skid and plow right into the front parlors of old houses along these byways. I always wondered why they put these houses so close to the edge of the roads.

 

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It’s been out of print for a while but I recommend the late John Houseman’s riveting and elegant memoir, Run-Through: A Memoir.

 

Mr. Houseman was the Rumanian-born British-American producer, writer and actor who had famous collaborations with Orson Welles, Raymond Chandler and many, many other luminaries. But he started off as an international grain trader. You might remember him as the fearsome Harvard Law School professor Charles W. Kingsfield in the movie Paper Chase. Mr. Houseman’s psychologically insightful and sometimes self-lacerating book about his  adventurous, risky, sometimes hilarious and sometimes scary life is one of the great 20th Century memoirs.


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