Whitcomb: Down Into the Dark; Fane Tower ‘Residents’; Banana Republics; Mosaics of Protected Land

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Whitcomb: Down Into the Dark; Fane Tower ‘Residents’; Banana Republics; Mosaics of Protected Land

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
“When dusk is fallen

Children join hands

And circle round me

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Singing ghost songs

And love to the harvest moon;

I am a jack-o'-lantern

With terrible teeth

And the children know

I am fooling.’’

 

--From “Theme in Yellow” (1916), by Carl Sandburg, promiscuously corny.

 

I wonder about a nation where Halloween has become a major “holiday’’. But then, in our Fantasyland of wishful thinking, Halloween might be the perfect national holiday!

 

My memories of Halloween are of anarchy. In the small town I lived in, children as young as six were allowed to wander around by themselves in our neighborhood working on their diabetes by collecting and quickly consuming vast quantities of candy. There seemed to be little rationing. The parents mostly stayed home, some knocking back the drinks.

 

When the kids got a little older, say by age nine, many began the prank phase. This included egging, sticking needles in doorbells, throwing rolls of toilet paper in trees and placing dog poop in bad places, such as on the hood of the police chief’s car. Reprehensible, but the town seemed willing to tolerate it one night a year.
 

The other thing that strikes me now is how little concern there was about child molesters and kidnappers back then. There must have been a few molesters out there in our town but I don’t remember hearing concern about them.  Now, of course, parents are much more fearful and more likely to walk around with their kids on dank Halloween.

 

Later on, I had a math teacher at a boarding school, who turned out to be an infamous molester of boys. Most of us had no inkling of it, and he was an excellent teacher. And we certainly didn’t talk about such things.

 

Meanwhile, The Washington Post reports:

 

“Contrary to the widespread urban myth, there’s no evidence that children are more likely to be targeted by sexual predators on Halloween than on any other night of the year.

 

“But that hasn’t stopped one Georgia mayor from announcing plans to round up all paroled sex offenders in town and hold them at city hall while kids are trick-or-treating.

“Gary E. Jones, the mayor of Grovetown, Ga., announced Monday that sex offenders who are on probation — approximately 25 to 30 individuals — would be housed in the city council chambers for three hours on Halloween night.’’ That’ll scare them!

To read the whole story, please hit this link:

 

A good political move, I guess. Presumably, child molesters are not a significant voting block.

 

As I got older I found that the scariest thing about October is that it leads into the most depressing months of the year – November and December. Darkening days; brown oak leaves blowing around; cold rain; the tedium of Thanksgiving, and the cacophony of Christmas.

 

 

Fane Tower
A Tall Squiggly Question Mark

 

With some hesitation, I support developer Jason Fane’s proposal to build a squiggly 46-story skyscraper in Providence’s Route 195 relocation district. I realize that some architecture experts hate it, and others like it. But in any case, it would bring new structural excitement to the city, which the city could use. A much better place for the tower would be in a vacant lot in the middle of the Financial District but Mr. Fane says that won’t work for him.

 

Not surprisingly, some local real estate agents and landlords are fighting hard against the project. The tower would presumably employ its own rental and sales agents. And people who now live in other, lower buildings nearby would love to move into what would be called Hope Point Tower for the impressive views. I think that it would be seen as a very desirable place to live.

 

It’s sort of a cliché to say this, but the Eiffel Tower was hated by many Parisiens when it went up, in 1889, as were the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center when they went up in the early ‘70s. But well before Saudi terrorists destroyed them, in 2001, they, like the Eiffel Tower, had become symbols of their cities, beloved by millions. (I worked across the street from the Twin Towers and always hated them.)

 

There are some intriguing questions – e.g., Mr. Fane says that the building, which would be an as yet undisclosed mix of rental and owned units, would have about 800 residents. But how many would actually be in residence much of the time? Would some of the “residents’’ be flight capitalists from Russia, China and other corrupt dictatorships buying units to store and/or launder their money and rarely if ever be there – which has happened a lot in such very rich cities as New York, Boston and San Francisco. Or, I could imagine, given the many very rich families represented by the student bodies of Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design, would a lot be occupied by rich kids only in the academic year and/or (only occasionally) by parents flying in from around the world to visit them? What sort of commitment to the city would they have?
 

Meanwhile, those interest rates are rising and that we may be heading into recession next year may doom the project, even if officials finally give it the go-ahead after the very long delay up to this point.

 

Hit this link to see an article on the opening of the Industrial Trust Building (aka “Superman Building’’) in 1928, a much more boosterish time in Rhode Island:

 

Patching Together Countryside

One of the lethal challenges facing other animals as humans relentlessly develop land and destroy natural habitat is that there are smaller and smaller parcels for wild creatures to roam in. But local conservationists are working hard to try to address this as best they can.


For example, in Petersham, Mass., a $7 million federal Forest Legacy grant and a $1.2 million Massachusetts Landscape Partnership grant are helping to fund the protection of Chimney Hill Farm -- 760 acres of forest and fields -- as part of the Quabbin Heritage Landscape Partnership. The ambitious partnership seeks to ensure that there are long stretches of contiguous countryside in north-central Massachusetts.

 

Open space - Colt State Park was preserved under the Green Acres program
The aim has been to create “a vast, interconnected 130,000-acre quilt of conservation land made up of different but adjacent protected lands that include state parks and wildlife management areas, working farms, wildlife sanctuaries and privately owned woodlands, a remarkable result for one of the most densely populated states in the country,” Jay Rasku, stewardship and engagement director of the Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust, one of the partners, told The Worcester Telegram.

 

More animal species will go extinct without many more efforts like these.  Some opportunistic animals, such as raccoons, coyotes and deer, have learned how to survive in small tracts, in part by eating food planted by or left by humans. But others, such as (usually!) bears, wildcats and many bird species, need spacious protected countryside away from humans.

 

There are also such obvious benefits (for humans and other animals) of interconnecting these tracts as protecting watersheds.

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

Amazon warehouse
Winner Take Most
 

The New York Times ran an article Oct. 23 that reminded me of how much corporate governance has changed with the acceptance of extreme selfishness as corporate policy. The piece, “When Sears Flourished, So Did Workers. At Amazon, It’s more complicated,’’ details the comparative generosity over many years of Sears Roebuck before the Internet and bad leadership in recent years drove it to recently file for protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Act.

 

Sears had a generous profit-sharing program and pension plan. Indeed, the retailer set aside “10 percent of pretax earnings for a retirement plan for full-time employees and by the 1950s, the workers owned a quarter of Sears.’’ This was enlightened self-interest. Sears wanted to nurture workers’ long-term commitment to the company.

 

That was then! The Times reported that just one man, founder Jeff Bezos, owns 16 percent of gigantic Amazon.

 

Amazon has stopped giving stock to hundreds of thousands of employees, even as it lifted its minimum hourly wage to $15. “While the raise garnered headlines, the move to curb stock awards may ultimately be more significant,’’ The Times noted.

 

Increasingly, lower-paid employees of publicly owned companies across America have been locked out of profit-sharing and stock grants -- widening income inequality.

 

"What's happened is that shareholders' interests have squeezed out other stakeholders," Arthur Martinez, who successfully ran Sears during the 1990s, told The Times.  "The mantra is shareholders above all else." That especially means senior executives, much of whose compensation is in company stock, as well as institutional investors and some very rich individuals.

 

“While the typical Amazon employee receives $680 {a year} from the company in a 401(k) {contributions}, the average Sears worker got the present-day equivalent of $2,744. Dividends on accumulated stock could add thousands annually,’’ The Times reported. Sears folks also had regular pensions, which continue to disappear, except, of course, for senior executives.

 

The effect of all this is to further concentrate wealth and reduce the purchasing power of low-and-middle-income people, which cannot be good for the long-term prosperity and stability of companies and the country. That corporate executives get such vast compensation (even when they do a lousy job) is in part because what might have been considered shameful 50 years ago is now acceptable because “shareholder value’’ (i.e., the highest possible stock price) trumps all else – one of the nastier ideas to have come out of the Harvard Business School.

 

Looking after employees and even the communities they work in would seem good long-term policy for companies but many, perhaps most corporate execs just want to take the money and run. The movie Wall Street’s Gordon Gekko (“greed is good’’) is their divinity. Of course, for PR reasons a CEO and/or his company might make a big donation or two to a local charity that’s a small percentage of the CEO’s annual compensation.

 

Immigration
Demagogues’ Delight

On the immigration “crisis’’ approaching our southern border, some context: As Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times noted the other day:

 

“More than 1.4 million foreigners emigrate to the United States each year. If, say, half the caravan {around 5,000 people} reaches the border, and half of those people actually enter the U.S., they would represent less than one-tenth of 1 percent of this year’s immigrants.’’

 

Despite Trump’s tough-guy approach, unauthorized crossings of our southern border are up slightly this year from last and the number of families crossing together as a unit hit a monthly record last month: more than 16,500 people. That’s how bad things are in much of Central America. (Still, U.S. has about 328 million people.)

 

The pictures of the desperate marchers are of course dramatic, and being heavily used by the orange man in the Oval Office and his propaganda arm – Fox “News’’.

The Democrats, not being “reality TV’’ experts, are slow on the uptake on the caravan. No, they don’t favor “open borders’’. But mostly because they don’t have the presidency, they lack the opportunity to present a clear position that the public will listen to.

Of course, they should clearly ask the marchers to go back home, but perhaps with the hope for some of them that the U.S. government, which has been controlled by the Republican Party for the majority of time since 2001, might finally come up with a coherent, pragmatic and fair immigration policy that would let them legally enter the country.

Congress, meanwhile, should block Trump threats to cut off aid to Central America, a cutoff that would only increase the lawlessness and poverty that drives these desperate-people north. And they should remind Americans that we are indirectly the cause of much of the trouble. Consider our insatiable demand for drugs, which in turns spawns corruption and gangs in Central America, and that much of the illegal-alien problem can be blamed on U.S. business’s love of cheap labor. A lot of Republican businessmen have loved having low-paid illegal-alien workers.

Also note that many of Central America’s woes can be traced back to the socio-economic-environmental damage done by their past status as heavily exploited economic colonies of the United States. For years such American companies as the old Boston-based United Fruit Co. basically ran these little nations, protected by the U.S. government.

American companies profited from very stratified social classes, a very large impoverished working class and a plutocracy, composed of the business, political and military elites, with whom U.S. firms and government officials worked closely. The dictatorships pushed, in return for kickbacks,  the exploitation of large-scale plantation agriculture, especially of course bananas.  Thus, “Banana Republics.’’

In any event, the Democrats (and Republicans) should emphasize that the marchers must go through the ordinary orderly process demanded of asylum seekers at our borders. Given the numbers in the current caravan, this will require additional personnel at the southern border, probably including military.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer ought to jointly and repeatedly affirm the above.

Blow Her Up?

“Make the lie big, keep it simple, keep saying it and eventually they will believe it”.

 

-- Attributed to Adolf Hitler and his propaganda minister, Josef Goebbels, and excellent guidance for a successful MAGA meeting!

 

 

“The cardinal fact always is the loss of contact with objective information. Public as well as private reason depends upon it. Not what somebody says, not what somebody wishes were true, but what is so beyond all our opining, constitutes the touchstone of our sanity. And a society which lives at second-hand will commit incredible follies and countenance inconceivable brutalities if that contact is intermittent and untrustworthy.’’

 

-- Walter Lippman, in the November 1919 Atlantic

 

Regarding the bombs sent to former President Obama, the Clintons, Joe Biden, CNN, philanthropist George Soros and others last week: There are nut cases all around but consider  that Trump, in his neo-fascist hate-and-lie-filled rallies, orchestrates calls to “lock her up’’ (referring to Hillary Clinton, who hasn’t been convicted of anything despite years of GOP persecution) and lauds physical attacks on journalists and others he sees as foes. He praises murderous foreign dictators and embraces an angry gun culture. This creature bears prime responsibility for the current lethal political climate.

xxx

 

Trump and the Crown Prince
Hilarious: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has promised “to bring to justice those who are responsible for this heinous crime,’’ in which people working for the young dictator tortured and murdered journalist and (gentle) Salman critic Jamal Khashoggi. The prince’s remarks brought to mind O.J. Simpson’s promise to “find the real murderers’’ of Simpson’s wife and boyfriend.

 

You’ll now see some sad premature disappearances of people in the know about Khashoggi murder.


 

Wind energy
Clean-energy training

New Englanders might want to read an interview in the New England News Collaborative with Philip Warburg, who used to run the Conservation Law Foundation, authored Harvest the Sun: America’s Quest for a Solar-Powered Future and recently wrote an article headlined “What Red State Kansas Can Teach Blue State Massachusetts about Renewable Energy’’.

 

He cites a “wind technology training program {in a rural county in Kansas} at the community college. It started in about 2007 with some 5 students, today it’s got 150 students. And they find jobs immediately on graduating from their 2-year certificate program. In fact, they’ve expanded now to include solar technology, so it’s been renamed a renewable energy technology program. Again, not something you would necessarily expect at a community college in the middle of Kansas farm country, but in fact, it provides local employment for a lot of people … and it’s really seen as a huge economic boon.’’

 

Of course, densely populated and wooded southern New England doesn’t have the wide-open spaces of Kansas but it does have a treasure in offshore wind and more than adequate solar energy (we’re at the latitude of Portugal) to justify major education programs for people going into the wind and solar industries. Let them do their part to weaken the likes of Saudi Arabia.

 

On wind power in New England, he writes:

 

“I think we have to think in a more expansive way about what it means to integrate renewables into our landscape. So, it might mean more wind turbines, for example, in the Berkshire Mountains or in the White Mountains or in parts of Maine. And I think we can also learn from Kansas in looking off of our shore and saying well actually we can develop wind power on a very large, you could say industrial, scale without creating the kind of reactions we got from vacationers on the Cape … to the Cape Wind project.’’
 

 

He may be too hopeful about affluent New Englanders’ tolerance of changes to their “viewsheds.’’ And yet:

“If we took a longer historical view of the New England landscape … we might be more forgiving of the introduction of technologies like wind and solar. If you look at New England’s landscape during the 19th century, it was largely a farmed landscape. We now have reforested New England because farming just doesn’t make that much economic sense on a large scale in New England…. So we’re very attached to thinking of New England as pristine forests, when in fact they’re not pristine forests.’’

 

To read the whole interview, please hit this link:

 

 

Yale University
Ivied Walls of Investments

 

“A growing endowment generates wealth. A small part of that wealth is invested to bolster an administration tasked with generating prestige, and, as students rush to take out federal loans, raising tuition and fees.’’

 

-- From article in Pacific Standard magazine headlined “To understand the high cost of {American} colleges, think of them as investment banks’’.
 

That’s certainly true for New England’s old and famously rich private colleges, most notably Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth and Brown, MIT and some of the elite small colleges such as Williams, Wellesley and Bowdoin. Wouldn’t it be nice if more rich people gave money to less-endowed institutions that  mostly serve far less affluent students than “elite schools.’’

 

To read the piece, please hit this link:
 

 

RIP: Francis Mancini

 

Frank Mancini, who served on The Providence Journal’s editorial board from 1986 to his retirement, in 2002, died Oct. 8. Before joining The Journal, he’d been a highly respected political science professor at Roger Williams College (now University). He was politically a conservative, of the old-fashioned Burkean kind. I would have loved to hear what he thought of the Trump regime.

 

He was a delightful colleague of mine from the time I joined the editorial board, in 1989. He could write with verve and economy on virtually every subject and in different forms. When I asked him to write on a certain theme, he’d often ask with a grin, “Do you want it square or do you want it round?” Frank was very funny, extremely well read and a fast writer.

 

An example: On the morning of Aug. 19, 1991, as Hurricane Bob was approaching New England and Governor Sundlun said he would soon close the bridges,  Frank churned out a superbly coherent and accurate editorial – despite rapidly changing information -- on the attempt that day to overthrow then-Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.

 

Then he calmly returned to his beloved Bristol, arriving before Bob did its worst. A Boston native, Frank loved Bristol, and must have enjoyed his long retirement there. But he did make affectionate fun of some of his far-from-urbane neighbors, noting how extraordinary they found the fact that he traveled “all the way to Providence’’ to work.

 

Frank had many friends, especially in Bristol, and certainly no need to see former colleagues. But as with other former colleagues and even personal friends who have died since we all reached “a certain age,’’ I regret that I didn’t make far more of an effort to keep in touch. I hadn’t seen Frank for years. “The days dwindle down to a precious few….’’
 

On the Road

 

For a vivid view of an increasingly volatile, corrupt, feudal and, well, deteriorating America, you’d do well to read the latest novel by Gary Shteyngart (Quick! Try spelling his name right after closing this page!) called Lake Success.  It’s about an amiable,  borderline-amoral and intensely materialistic, but not evil, hedge funder and the mess he makes of his life even as the nation’s increasingly selfish elites make a mess of the country. It’s a sort of mix of Bonfire of the Vanities and On the Road and by turns funny and sad.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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