Whitcomb: Memorial Hospital Refugees Flood ERs; No Open Borders; Protect the Corpse Removers

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Memorial Hospital Refugees Flood ERs; No Open Borders; Protect the Corpse Removers

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
A sense of the numinous, or at least of other possible realities than what’s in front of our noses, that many of us carry around with us:

“These things—the beauty, the memory of our own past—are good images of what we really desire; but if they are mistaken for the thing itself they turn into dumb idols, breaking the hearts of their worshipers. For they are not the thing itself; they are only the scent of a flower we have not found, the echo of a tune we have not heard, news from a country we have never yet visited.”

-- C.S. Lewis

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“Kids today want to buy vinyl records. So you’ll have hipster kids wanting to see paper soon. I don’t think touching paper and reading will actually go away. There will be need for leisurely reading and the tactile feel.’’

-- Patrick Soon-Shiong, M.D., the biotech billionaire who recently bought the Los Angeles Times.

 

Well to a point…

 

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Closed at the end of 2017 by Care New England
Memorial Hospital, in Pawtucket, may have been too uneconomic to remain open as a full community hospital,  but state officials and others could have done a better job anticipating that closing Memorial, with its disproportionately sick and low-income clientele, would overwhelm the emergency rooms of the Miriam Hospital and Rhode Island Hospital. One reason is that America has about the most fragmented (and expensive) healthcare  “system’’ in the Developed World, which leads all too many patients – especially low-income ones --  to use hospital emergency rooms as their main source of health care. That’s a notably inefficient and expensive way of getting care!

 

Presumably the proliferation of free-standing emergency departments and drugstore- chain clinics will eventually reduce the severe crowding in hospital emergency rooms in coming years. So would public-education campaigns to discourage people from using hospital ERs for such routine ailments as pink eye and bad colds

 

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Trump supporter at rally in Worcester in 2015
The Trumpists, who never let the facts get in the way of a good story, are spreading the lie that Democratic politicians want to eliminate the U.S. Border Patrol and open wide the border with Mexico. Not true! Some Democrats – far from all – simply want to reform Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), created in the post 9/11 hysteria, to make it work more efficiently and fairly.  Their calls came in the controversy aroused with the separation of illegal-alien children from their parents at the border in the past few weeks.

           

Despite President Trump’s repeated lies, Democrats do not advocate open borders.

 

The small minority of congressional Democrats calling for the end of ICE say that they want its functions redistributed to existing government agencies. None have called for abandoning border enforcement.
 

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Instead of setting aside more parking places in old downtowns like Providence’s, the city would do better to reserve more space for housing there, boost public transportation and encourage walking and bike-riding so that fewer people need cars (or require Uber and Lyft, which are jamming too many center-city streets).  Setting aside so many spaces for parking in American cities (space taken from potential new housing, etc.) is bad for the cities’ economies and environment.

 

The scarcity of new housing, caused in part by antiquated zoning and in part by expensive “prevailing-wage’’ and other laws that can make it very difficult to build housing, obviously raises housing costs. 

 

Donald Shoup, who’s an internationally known expert on the economics and sociology of urban parking, suggests that employers give workers the choice of taking the cash value of employer-provided parking rather than parking spaces themselves to encourage them to use public transportation or bikes.

 

To read an interview with Mr. Shoup, please hit this link:

 

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This being summer in Vermont, my thoughts turn to the Hippies’ attempts at communal life in Vermont in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, during part of which time I was a college student in Hanover, N.H., just across the Connecticut River from the Green Mountain State.

 

I just read Peter Simon’s amusing if sometimes melancholic article in The Boston Globe’s  July 22 magazine headlined “The beginning (and bittersweet end) of two hippie communes in Vermont’’. Because of its beauty, (then) cheap real estate and (exaggerated) reputation for tolerance for counter-culture types, the Green Mountain State was a magnet for hippies – real or just playing at it. For a few years, from about 1967 to about 1974, there were communes all over the state. Most of these young people were college students, dropouts or recent graduates.In the end, these communes were doomed by their chaotic social and work systems, internal feuds and at some, lack of indoor plumbing. They were often a mess. Such quasi-communism doesn’t work well, perhaps especially so for the middle-class and well-off kids experimenting with group living. They’re used to lots of personal space and creature comforts.

 

Mr. Simon writes:


“Within 2½ years, the dream was over. The hard realities of life on the farm, the menial labor, and our dwindling levels of tolerance for one another proved to be too much for this naive group of city dwellers.’’

 

Still, the experience seems central in their lives. 75 now mostly elderly people showed up at a 50th reunion of the residents of one of the communes – “Total Loss Farm,’’ in Guilford. The other commune was the nearby “Tree Frog Farm,’’ where life was more comfortable than at Total Loss because the rich Mr. Simon (his father was a New York book-publishing executive) and a partner paid the bills.  In any case, tight bonds of friendship were forged in those long-ago days at the two communes.

 

On my visits to a couple of such Vermont farm communes in the summers, I found that residents were generally sweet-natured (some simply because they were stoned), if grimy. I’d be invited to stay for the night but an air-conditioned motel room was more alluring.  Still, the vegetables produced in the short growing seasons were delicious.

 

I look back fondly at the ridiculous exuberance of that time, and the lush greenery.

 

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President's Press Secretary
One of Trump’s predictable qualities is his narcissistic pettiness. Thus, it is with his threat to remove the security clearances of a bunch of distinguished former officials because they criticized him. One of the funniest rationales was presented by Trump’s pathetic stand-in for Joseph Goebbels, Sarah Huckabee Sanders (a child of religion-racket con man and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee):

 

“The president is exploring the mechanisms to remove security clearances because they politicized and, in some cases monetized their public service and security clearances” in their “baseless” accusations about Trump’s connections with Russia.

 

Of course, Trump himself has been relentlessly “monetizing” the presidency to make a killing for himself and his Mafia-like family, especially by steering business (and forcing federal officials) to use his resorts and other properties and indirectly using his position to obtain loans for his over-leveraged real-estate empire.

 

He also seems in clear violation of the U.S. Constitution’s Emoluments Clause, which bars elected officials from accepting gifts from foreign officials. The White House steers foreign visitors to spend money at Trump properties.

 

So far as the “baseless’’ accusations about Trump’s connections with Russia (which go back to 1987 and have included hundreds of millions of dollars in loans from  Russian oligarchs), Sanders is a very bad liar.  Meanwhile, we await the brave and patriotic Americans able and willing to release Trump’s tax returns.

 

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CNN's Kaitlan Collins
In other Trump attempts to restrict real or perceived criticism, we have the White House excluding a CNN correspondent, Kaitlan Collins, from an open event because Ms. Collins had the gall to ask questions of the president at an earlier event regarding Trump’s taped discussions with his former lawyer/fixer Michael Cohen. The two talked about suppressing news about Trump’s alleged affair with former Playboy model Karen McDougal.

 

Ms. Collins asked Trump a question about the Cohen tape during a photo-op in the Oval Office after Trump met with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, who was in Washington to discuss trade. (Trump made grandiose claims about the outcome of the talks.)

 

Now, I wish reporters could find other venues than televised meetings with foreign dignitaries at which to ask such tough questions.  National dignity takes a hit! The problem is that Trump has few press conferences and he and his communications people lie non-stop. So, reporters seize any rare opportunity they can to ask Trump, without warning, about the scandal du jour – although they know he will lie.

 

It’s embarrassing for the country that such questions about Trump’s squalid behavior are asked when a foreign official is sitting by our leader. But then no American president has been as embarrassing as Trump.

 

The New York Times’s Peter Baker accurately called the Collins case “outrageous. A strong leader does not fear questions. A strong democracy does not shield its leader from those who question authority.” 

 

Our democracy seems to be weakening by the day.

 

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Sabin Lomac and Jim Tselikis are two cousins from Maine who have created a national company with restaurants and food trucks under the name Cousins Maine Lobster whose main fare is, of course, Maine lobster. I wonder if someone from Rhode Island and/or southeastern Massachusetts could do the same thing with quahogs and oysters?

 

To read about the cousins’ success, please hit this link:

 

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Good news?
There might be some good news for old-fashioned brick-and-mortar retail outlets, reports Bloomberg:

 

In some places where retail vacancies have increased, and thus property values fallen, some property owners are offering cheaper rents to retailers.
 

Google and Facebook ads are expensive.  So instead of retailers relying entirely on such online ads and sales, they have incentive to focus on well-designed storefronts and signage on busy streets.   Further, hipping costs for online purchases are rising. That’s a reason that Amazon just jacked up the cost of its Amazon Prime membership by 20 percent.

 

And Bloomberg reports that profit margins on e-commerce sales are lower than those of brick and mortar stores to begin with.

 

All of this is happening when e-commerce is only around 10 percent of total retail sales.

 

Physical stores will be around for a long time.

 

To read more, please hit this link:
 

 

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The official Rhode Island state insect is the American burying beetle, which the anti-environmentalist Trump administration tried to remove from Feds’ list of endangered species in order to facilitate more fossil-fuel development Out West.  The administration ultimately backed off after a surprising amount of protest.

 

The brief controversy may have instigated some giggles. After all, some might ask, who cares about a beetle?

 

But citizens should remember that all life is connected and each species performs functions in the eco-system. The beetle, which now can only be found on the East Coast on Block Island and Nantucket, plays a grimly important role: Its larvae feed on the bodies of dead mammals, turning this dead biomass into nutrients for plant life as it removes corpses from the countryside.

 

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As business people, states and localities rush to get into the marijuana bonanza, everyone would do well to look at a nationally representative online survey of 16,280 U.S. adults that found that “many ascribe health benefits to marijuana that haven’t been proven,  report researchers in Annals of Internal Medicine.’’

 

“The American public has a much more favorable point of view than is warranted by the evidence,” the study’s lead author, Dr. Salomeh Keyhani, of the University of California at San Francisco, told the news service. “Perhaps most concerning is that they think that it prevents health problems.”

 

Reuters reported: “While studies have shown that cannabis can help quiet seizures in children with hard to treat epilepsy, quell the nausea and vomiting that can accompany chemotherapy and soothe nerve pain, there’s no evidence that it can help with the vast majority of other medical conditions, Keyhani said. And yet, people think of it as a cure-all, she added.’’

 

Recalling Big Tobacco in the ‘50s and ’60s, the marijuana industry is relentlessly marketing its products, with what I think will end up being very nasty public-health results. But meanwhile, we may see pot stores pop up in most strip malls.

 

To read the Annals of Medicine report, please hit this link:

 

 To read a Reuters article on the study, please hit this link:
 

 

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Tiny house
Tiny homes redux. South Portland, Maine, City Councilor Sue Henderson, pushing for zoning changes to allow “tiny homes’’ – generally described as smaller than 400 square feet -- said that “Suburbia {with its big expensive houses and sprawl) is dead,’’ The Portland Press Herald reported. They’re as cheap as $45,000 and environmentally friendly. With an aging population, with young adults having fewer children and with wages of most people flat or declining on an inflation-adjusted basis, they’re going to look increasingly attractive.

 

And they’re great guesthouses.

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

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The view from the Newport Bridge is spectacular but toll bridges can be problematical. The other week I and many other drivers were stuck behind a commercial truck with Connecticut plates at a toll booth. When, after 15-20 minutes of waiting in line, I drove up to the toll tacker and asked him what happened, he said bitterly “That sack of xxxx. He said he didn’t have any money.’’  Approaching Newport from the east, not from the west, is often advisable….

 

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“Given the state of the nation’s infrastructure, one would imagine that there might be projects with higher priority for taxpayer dollars {than sports stadiums}. Bridges are collapsing, tunnels are on the verge of failure, highways are not being properly maintained, rail lines are obsolete, the electrical grid is an antiquated patchwork and our ports are still vulnerable to terrorist attacks. This is before we even consider making our transportation system smart and capable of handling self-driving cars — or even just more efficient at traffic management.

“Anyone who thinks the taxpayer should be paying for building new stadiums should spend a little more time studying the state of America the rest of us deal with. Build all the stadiums all you want. But pay for them yourself.’’

 

From a piece by Bloomberg columnist Barry Ritholtz in Bloomberg News. He was chief executive and director of equity research at FusionIQ, a quantitative research firm. He is the author of Bailout Nation.
 

 

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First Person Rural, by the late Greenville, Miss., newspaper editor and publisher Hodding Carter, provides a clear-eyed view into the minds of white Southerners in the early ’60s – and a lot of those views don’t seem to have changed that much since then.

 

The book, although it was published way back in 1963, gives an inkling of, among other things, why so many people in the old Confederacy would help vote a New York con man/demagogue into the Oval Office.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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