Whitcomb: A Union Attacks Democracy; Retire, Mr. Brady! Casino Business Always Corrupt

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: A Union Attacks Democracy; Retire, Mr. Brady! Casino Business Always Corrupt

Bob Whitcomb, GoLocal columnist
“The day and time itself: late afternoon in early February, was there a moment of the year better suited for despair?” 

 

-- Alice McDermott, in her novel The Ninth Hour

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 “Statesmen should remember that they have been elected to persuade and to lead, and not just to accept as fixed the momentary moods and pernicious prejudices of the public.’’

 

--  Historian Stanley Hoffman, as quoted in The Wall Street Journal

 

Protest by Providence Teachers
The Providence Teachers Union showed itself as anti-democratic last Tuesday as they disrupted Mayor Jorge Elorza’s State of the City speech. They should have let him speak and then criticized him. Perhaps some members of the public should go to a big Teachers Union meeting and shout down their speakers?

A healthy democracy lets political leaders and all other citizens have their say. Shouting them down is thuggery.

 

 

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“I'm always a flop at a top-notch affair,
But I've still got my health, so what do I care?
My best ring, alas, is a glass solitaire,
But I still got my health, so what do I care?

 

….The hip that I shake doesn't make people stare,
But I got such health, what do I care?
The sight of my props never stops a thoroughfare,
But I still got my health, so what do I care’’

 

-- From “I’ve Still Got My Health,’’ by Cole Porter

 

Will Rob Gronkowski may retire
Everyone wants to leave as a winner. And so it’s easy to understand why the New England Patriots’ mega-star quarterback Tom Brady would indicate that he wants to play again in the next season, when he’ll be 41, after the underdog Eagles defeated the Pats in the Super Bowl. But the effects of being hit repeatedly in the head can be insidious, with visible symptoms all of a sudden appearing catastrophically. It would be very sad to see the very smart Brady gaga in five years. He should retire now.
 

Patriots tight end Ron Gronkowski, who is only 28, who has suffered concussions, as has Brady, sounds more realistic: He’s leaving open the possibility of retiring this year, presumably not wanting to tempt the fates.

 

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Casino problems
There’s something intrinsically corrupt and corrupting about the casino business because it’s based on the dream of getting rich quickly and provides a quick and addictive adrenaline rush. The industry preys on human weakness. It’s not surprising that another quick-pleasure racket, prostitution, is so associated with it.

Then there’s the necessity of, er, persuading public officials to allow these businesses to operate in their jurisdictions.

Be it Sheldon Adelson, Donald Trump or any number of past or present casino operators – they’re sleazy in varying degrees, however they try to shine up this sort of “economic development,’’ including by using the euphemism “gaming.’’

And now the Massachusetts Gaming (ick!) Commission must decide what to do after Wynn Resorts’ CEO, the creepy Steve Wynn, has had to resign from the company after years of sexual misconduct were revealed.

In 2014, Wynn Resorts won the lone eastern Massachusetts state casino license, and is building a $2.4 billion casino resort in the gritty city of Everett. The casino will not improve the state’s overall economy, though it will add to state government revenues, at least for a while.  In any event, legal gambling is proliferating (will Internet sports betting be next?) and the industry faces increasing cannibalization of their suckers’ dollars. Whatever, the industry will remain corrupt.

 

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Eduardo Porter, a New York Times columnist, in a column headlined “Where are the Start-Ups? Loss of Dynamism Is Impeding Growth,’’ suggests that the slow growth in the U.S. economy in recent years has a lot to do with the rise of huge, market-controlling companies that suppress the creation of the small new business that drive new-job creation and that boost productivity. Mr. Porter notes that the rate of company creation is about half what it was 40 years ago.

 

A big problem is the failure, by Republican and Democratic administrations, to enforce antitrust laws against such enterprises as Google,  Facebook and other huge companies, including big banks, that have vast marketing, pricing and other power.  They enthusiastically engage in legally dubious anti-competitive activities. Washington has become increasingly in the thrall of lobbyists working for these giants. It recalls the heyday of the Standard Oil Trust and other monopolies at the turn of the 20th Century.

 

Mr. Porter cites a study by the Hamilton Project, at the Brookings Institution, by Jay Shambaugh, Ryan Nunn and Patrick Liu, in which they explore possible causes of the American economy’s inertia.

 

To read the report, please hit this link:

 

Mr. Porter writes:

 

“The evidence paints a distinct picture of decline: Fewer start-ups mean fewer new ideas and fewer young, productive businesses to replace older, less productive ones.’’

  

There’s little indication that this will change as long as Washington favors the biggest lobbyists and campaign contributors. Of course, we have always had a few monopolies, such as the old American Telephone & Telegraph, that were regulated in varying degrees.

 

To read his article, please hit this link:

 

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Deepwater Wind - a success
Could southeastern New England become to offshore wind power what Houston has been for oil and natural gas? Maybe, but gradually. New Bedford’s Marine Commerce Port Terminal would probably be its center; it’s the first dock in the U.S. that’s strong enough to handle those very heavy offshore wind-turbine parts, and the Whaling City is all in about becoming a renewable-energy center.

 

Despite the Trump administration’s affiliation with the fossil-fuel industry, interest in the offshore wind may be as intense as ever. The Boston Globe reported that an offshore-wind supply-chain conference held last year in Newton, Mass., attracted nearly 150 companies. And unions love this industry, which employs highly paid, highly skilled workers in the “blue-collar elite.’’

It’s too early to know what the impact of the Trump administration’s anti-green energy might be. U.S. solar-energy companies,  for their part, have expressed concern that they’ll be hurt by the administration’s tough tariff policy on imports of solar panels from China.

 

Recently, survey ships for proposed projects south of Martha’s Vineyard have set forth from the Whaling City to study seabed conditions and plan transmission routes.  Indeed, all the current developers for Massachusetts’ first wind projects have agreed to deploy from New Bedford. (Wouldn’t it be nice if Quonset could get some of that business?)

 

Another very promising port for offshore wind-turbine operations would be the recently decommissioned Brayton Point coal-fired plant, in Somerset.

 

New Bedford,  Fall River, Quonset, Brayton Point and other places in southeastern New England could also become sites for other new renewable-energy projects that might develop, such as tidal and wave power. Meanwhile, the Trump administration would like to allow oil and gas drilling off New England near famous fishing areas….

 

New Bedford was an energy capital in the 19th Century because of the whale oil used for lighting; it was considered “clean’’ energy for the time.  It was said to burn brightly and cleanly.

 

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Thank you,  Canton, Mass.-based Dunkin’ Donuts, for deciding to phase out your polluting and nonrecylable foam cups by 2020. I hope that other fast-food operators do the same thing. These cups leave a mess: They last in the environment for many years. And the chemicals used to make them are dangerous. The main ingredient, styrene, may cause cancer in humans.

 

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Cape Town, South Africa, is expected to run out of water in May, as extended drought, population growth and insatiable agricultural use drain aquifers. Some have linked the drought to man-made climate change.

 

The crisis in Cape Town recalls the sort of crisis that other basically dry places, such as Southern California, may soon face. Note that that drought continues to worsen across much of the West and South.  But many places will eventually need detailed long-term and emergency measures to address climate change. In New England the biggest climate challenge will be coastal flooding; Boston had a foretaste of that last month during a big Northeaster.

 

New England’s, er, vigorous climate poses challenges but at least we have lots of fresh water – even more valuable than, say, oil.

 

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It was nice to see U.S. Senate leaders last Wednesday coming together at all on a budget deal. But the deal would boost spending on both defense and domestic programs by hundreds of billions of dollars over current limits for the next two years, even as the new $1.5 trillion tax cut is in effect. There’s  spending of uncertain utility on both the domestic  (including disaster relief –- a fertile field for fraud) and military side. And there‘s no sign that anyone wants to seriously take on entitlement reform. Medicare and other entitlement spending threatens to devour the federal budget.

 

“This spending bill is a debt junkie’s dream,” Rep. Mo Brooks (R.-Ala.) told The Washington Post, warning of trillion-dollar-a-year deficits. Indeed. But he voted for the tax cut….

 

This gives the bond market even more cause for concern about the exploding federal debt. Look for more “volatility’’ on Wall Street. The pols are irresponsible, but then so are the voters, most of whom demand more services and low taxes.

 

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A deeper look in tot he age
A DNA analysis of the remains of the bones of an early Briton who lived 10,000 years ago determined that he had dark to black skin, curly dark hair and blue eyes. He or his ancestors come to England on the land bridge that then linked Britain and the European mainland at the end of the last Ice Age. They are ancestors of many of today’s Britons.


Thomas Booth, an archaeologist at the Natural History Museum in London who worked on the project, told The Guardian: “It really shows up that these imaginary racial categories that we have are really very modern constructions, or very recent constructions, that really are not applicable to the past at all.”

 

Thus it appears that the genes for lighter skin became widespread in European populations far later than originally thought – and, in The Guardian’s  words, that “skin color was not always a proxy for geographic origin in the way it is often seen to be today.’’

 

Scientists have long agreed that people living in Europe became lighter-skinned through genetic changes over the years caused by the fact that pale skin absorbs more sunlight, which is required to produce enough vitamin D for health.  That’s obviously needed in northern climes, which get less sunlight than places closer to the equator. A new theory suggests that pale skin may have emerged later than expected, perhaps when the advent of farming meant that people weren’t getting adequate amount of the vitamin D that they had previously been getting as hunter-gathers from such sources as fish oil.

 

It’s another reason to be skeptical about the whole idea of “race.’’ And of course, humanity continues to evolve in response to the environment. Who knows what humans might look like in 10,000 years – if our species still exists.

 

To read The Guardian’s story on this, please hit this link:

 

 

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President Trump’s plan to stage a huge military parade in Washington, perhaps next Veterans Day, is classic Trump: It’s all about him – photos ops of him reviewing what he calls “my’’ troops. Yet again, the taxpayers would be paying millions of dollars to feed his ego.

 

(And maybe in this case stuffing more money into his Mafia-like organization’s bank accounts. See Washington, D.C.’s Trump International Hotel, which, like the private club Mar-a-Logo in Palm Beach and assorted other Trump-banded properties, has profited from having the Don, in both senses of the word, in the White House. A parade would help fill the hotel for a few days.)

 

The sort of parade that Trump has in mind is normally seen in dictatorships such as Russia, China and North Korea (where tyrants could care less about such issues as tanks tearing up the asphalt). Yes, France (where I used to live) has its big annual Bastille Day (July 14) but the tone is quite different from our Great Leader has in mind. For one thing,  troops of friendly nations often march in the parade, which commemorates the French Revolution.

 

President Donald Trump
Of course, we’ve had (rarely) big military parades sort of like what Trump envisions, such as after victories in wars, the most notable recent one after the Gulf War, in 1991. (That war no longer looks like a great victory considering what followed it.). But we don’t have them to show off our military without a very specific reason.

 

“People are going to compare it more with Kim Jong Un than with the Champs-Elysees,” Nicholas Dungan, a France-based senior fellow with the Atlantic Council, told The Washington Post. “If (a parade is organized due to a) personal desire of Trump, because he sat at the Champs-Elysees {to watch last year’s Bastille Day Parade}, then it becomes political. In France, the parade isn't political, though. It's part of this nation.”

 

What a waste of money a Trump parade would be. 

 

Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said that "{President} Eisenhower said absolutely no {to the idea of a Russian-style military parade}, we are the preeminent power on Earth," Beschloss told NPR, recalling Eisenhower's response. "For us to try to imitate what the Soviets are doing in Red Square would make us look weak."

While the U.S. puts on various annual July 4 and Veterans Day parades, as The Associated Press notes, those typically do not include the "gaudy displays of military hardware" that Trump wants.

Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling, now a military-issues commentator for CNN, said of the president’s plan:

 

“It is not in the culture of the United States military. He noted that America historically has never had a military class and he called such parades the stuff of “tinhorn”  {dictatorship} regimes.

 

“There shouldn’t be in my view a whole lot of chest-thumping and these overt means of showing how tough you are.’’ There are far more effective ways of displaying U.S. might than mimicking parades that honor dictators, present or would-be. Of course, such parades are also aimed at scaring the subservient subjects of tyrants.

 

Retired Major Gen. Paul Eaton, who served during Operation Iraqi Freedom, says Trump's idea is "not about the military."

"This is about assuaging a fragile ego that we've got with this commander in chief," Eaton said on WBUR’s Here & Now.

Dealing with Trump’s narcissism and greed is costing the taxpayers one hell of a lot of money. And I’m not including the relentless commutes to Palm Beach and the astronomical cost of security there and at other glitzy, pretentious places where he and his high-roller relatives hang out.

 

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Elon Musk
Bless Elon Musk for making entrepreneurial invention, risk and drama so exciting again. He’s a throwback of sorts to Edison. That his projects are not about computer software or new financial gimmicks to enrich investment bankers but very physical things – electric cars, rockets and so on – make his flamboyance (including flinging a Tesla roadster into space!) all the more engaging.

 

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James Atlas, a biographer of the great novelist Saul Bellow and of the poet Delmore Schwartz, as well as novelist and editor, has written a terrific insider’s memoir of the art of writing biography – its satisfactions, its crises and the immense work and patience required to do it right. The book is The Shadow in the Garden: A Biographer’s Tale.  (You can guess what the “shadow’’  refers to.)

 

It’s also a “profound meditation on the maddening (and ultimately impossible) business of understanding another human being,’’ as Blake Bailey, author of  {John} Cheever: A Life, says, and on what Atlas calls “the merciless pruning of mortality’’ that causes once celebrated figures to disappear from a culture’s remembrance remarkably fast. Most of us non-celebrities are lucky to be remembered by our grandchildren. After that, darkness.


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