Whitcomb: RI’s Cross-Addictions; Hire a Possum; Buddy’s Brief New Fame; Hypocrisy Roundup

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: RI’s Cross-Addictions; Hire a Possum; Buddy’s Brief New Fame; Hypocrisy Roundup

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
‘“Air out the linens, unlatch the shutters on the eastern side,

and maybe find that deck of Bicycle cards

lost near the sofa. Or maybe walk around

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and look out the back windows first.

I hear the view's magnificent: old silent pines

leading down to the lakeside, layer upon layer

of magnificent light….’’

 

-- From “If You Get There {Vermont} Before I Do,’’ by Dick Allen (1939-2017), who served as Connecticut’s poet laureate in 2010-2015

 

"Overhead hung a summer sky furrowed with the rush of rockets; and from the east a late moon, pushing up beyond the lofty bend of the coast, sent across the bay a shaft of brightness which paled to ashes in the red glitter of the illuminated boats."

―From The House of Mirth, by Edith Wharton (1862-1937), who was a Newport summer resident for a decade starting in 1893.

 

“It is human nature to think wisely and act foolishly.’’

 

-- Anatole France (1844-1924), French writer         

 

 

RI General Assembly is poised to expand the "compassion centers"
Addiction promotion

As they did with gambling, states, including Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut, are jumping into the marijuana business. Massachusetts (along with Maine and Vermont) has fully legalized pot use and Rhode Island and Connecticut have decriminalized its “recreational’’ use. Meanwhile, it’s full speed ahead for “medical marijuana,’’ which some truly sick people use, along with others who just want to get stoned.

 

For the states, it’s all about trying to find new ways of increasing government revenue without raising broad-based taxes, which is usually political poison. It’s a regressive way of doing it since those wanting to gamble and smoke pot tend to be in lower socio-economic levels. Some old-fashioned types might even call this addiction promotion immoral.

 

Pot promoters, for their part, have long asserted that it’s not a “gateway drug’’ – an assertion that has always struck me as dubious. Perhaps they should read a new paper, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, in which researchers looking at states that enacted medical marijuana laws saw a 23 percent increase in opioid-overdose deaths. There are lots of people with addictive tendencies. And the use of one drug leads, in many people, to a desire for stronger ones.

 

Other studies have shown a high incidence among opiate addicts of the use and abuse of other drugs, be they amphetamines, alcohol,  nicotine or others.

 

To read the study, please hit this link:

 

 

Promote Possums

Southern New England is, of course, prime country for the deer ticks that give us Lyme disease, with summer the most dangerous time. (The disease is named after Lyme, Conn.) As it turns out, perhaps the best way to reduce their numbers is to import more of those creepy marsupials called opposums. They love to eat ticks, especially off themselves and others in the grooming process. By one estimate each possum can eat up to 5,000 ticks a week.

 

Vincent "Buddy" Cianci
Buddy’s Brief New Fame

It’s too bad that the owners of the Providence Graduate Hotel, the new name of the Providence Biltmore, put pictures of the late Mayor Vincent (“Buddy”) Cianci in just about every room for a few days. Yes, Buddy (whom I knew pretty well) was often entertaining and got the state, the Feds and some businesses to pay for some impressive projects. But Cianci was also deeply corrupt, sometimes violent and often irresponsible, most notably in giving away the store in public-employee pensions to keep the unions’ support. That has left the city on the edge of bankruptcy.

 

Not the sort of symbol of Providence that you really want visitors to dwell on.

 

Anyway, the hotel honchos, after a backlash, perhaps following belated historical research,  wisely decided to remove the pictures.

 

The Aesthetics of Wind

Our region, especially the coast, is one of the windiest parts of America. That and the fact that our densely populated area lacks fossil fuel and wants to “go green’’ are prime reasons why the wind-power industry seeks to install big wind farms off our coast.  We’re in a wind wonderland. So visit the show (through Sept. 12) at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth’s gallery, in New Bedford, called “Summer Winds 2019,’’ which consists of four projects connected to the theme of wind.

 

Drawn to the Hub

Although United Technologies, now based in Farmington, Conn., is buying Waltham-based Raytheon, the headquarters of the newly merged enterprise will be in Greater Boston, maybe in Boston itself. That Greater Boston has been a technological capital going back two centuries presumably has something to do with that. But that Boston has become an exciting world city in the past few decades,  especially because of its globalist universities and medical complex, probably also played a part in the plan to move from a suburb of poor old Hartford. The execs want some big city excitement and maybe they think that post-Bloomberg New York is on a decline.

 

Dwindling attendance
The Long Goodbye at McCoy

I took my brother (from Michigan and a baseball expert) and a sister (from California and with little knowledge of the sport but a new zoological curiosity about it) to McCoy Stadium, in Pawtucket, on June 8 to see the PawSox lose to the Rochester Red Wings. To my surprise, there was a big crowd – the place was perhaps two-thirds filled. I was surprised because I had guessed more people would have stopped going because the team is being moved to Worcester, with the new Polar Stadium set to open in 2021. It seemed strange to watch the game and associated semi-circus amusements with the knowledge it would all be gone soon.  But then it was a beautiful gold, green and blue day to be outside as I carried on a somewhat oblique conversation, much of it about things that happened a half-century ago, with siblings I rarely see, as two mildly drunk-on-beer gents behind us reeled off statistics.

 

The Providence Place Village

Providence officials worry a lot about how much the decline in big chain stores will hurt the big Providence Place shopping center, especially with the recent exit of the upscale Nordstrom’s (to be replaced by a perfectly respectable Boscov’s store, part of a Pennsylvania-based chain). It’s pleasant to hope that the future of Providence Place might include a larger number of locally based smaller stores, some one-offs, whose number and quality might offset some of the departing big national outlets. And maybe part of Providence Place will eventually include residential space too, along with public-and-private-sector offices, creating a sort of village.

 

Bishop Thomas Tobin
Then Leave

If you don’t like the stand of Catholic leaders such as Diocese of Providence Bishop Thomas Tobin on homosexuality, abortion and other issues then don’t be a Catholic. You can’t expect the theological positions of ancient institutions to meekly follow changing social and political opinions.
 

Meanwhile, we’re in “Pride Month.’’ I’ve never understood why one should be “proud’’ simply about being gay, straight or having brown eyes.

 

But Vermont Is Doing Okay Already

Vermont is doing what some other states with slow or nonexistent population growth, including Rhode Island, have talked about – bribing people to move there. In the Vermont plan, The Boston Globe reports, those who qualify get up to $10,000 over a two-year period to pay for their “moving and home-office costs, and in return, the state gets additional taxpayers to help fund schools and roads and social services.’’

 

Joan Goldstein, Vermont’s economic development commissioner, told The Globe: “The population needs to grow in order for the economy to grow.’’ It’s the mantra that everything must always grow.

 

Vermont, generally a very congenial state and one with an astonishingly low 2.3 percent jobless rate, would seem to already be doing quite well. I think that Ms. Goldstein is repeating the mantra that economic growth per se is the be-all and end-all of public policy. But economic growth per se doesn’t necessarily mean a higher quality of life.

 

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

 

 

Watching Border Numbers

How will Trump’s understandably popular effort to stem the flow of immigrant families into the U.S. from Central America by pressuring Mexico with threats of big tariffs pan out? Since we still don’t know precisely what the Mexicans are willing to do, and Trump relentlessly fabricates stories,  it’s too early to tell.


Neither the Mexicans nor the Trump administration has said how they’ll measure progress. But watch the monthly report on migrants apprehended after crossing our southern border, a number that has surged since January but typically falls in summer because of the lethal heat in the desert along the border.

 

Or maybe we’ll have to wait until fall to get a solid sense of success or failure. Meanwhile, remember that many of the migrants feel that they’re fleeing for their lives.

 

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
Hypocrisy Roundup

The then-GOP run U.S. House conducted eight congressional probes over two years of the Obama administration after Libyan militants attacked the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi and murdered four Americans, including the ambassador, J. Christopher Stevens, on Sept. 11-12, 2012. Despite the frenzied attempt to find evidence of evil, or at least wrongdoing, by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her associates, they failed, except in intensifying the Tea Partiers’ hatred of Mrs. Clinton and the “Kenyan Communist ‘’ Obama. The Republicans waved the bloody flag of Benghazi relentlessly in the 2014 and 2016 elections.
 

Compare that with the fact that the Republican-run House opened no investigations of what happened in Niger on Oct. 4, 2017, when four U.S. soldiers were ambushed and killed by Islamic militants. And now, with Trump in the Oval Office, the Defense Department has completely shut down its own investigation.

 

But then, as the Democrats keep learning, the Republicans are almost always more ruthless than the Democrats.
 

Consider Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. McConnell is an amoral pol who, with his wife, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, seem to only be interested in power and the self-enrichment that has gone with it.

 

Anyway, as some readers may remember, back in 2016, McConnell refused to let the Senate consider Obama’s nomination of moderate federal appeals court Judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court because, McConnell said, to fill such a vacancy in an election year would somehow violate a “tradition’’.

 

But asked a couple of weeks ago if the still GOP-controlled Senate would confirm a Trump nominee in 2020 if a vacancy opened up, he said: “Oh, we’d fill it.’’

 

For a look at the McConnell-Chao partnership, please hit this link:

 

 

Former Vice President Joe Biden
Overrated Joe

Then there’s the usually overrated Joe Biden. He’s very friendly, accessible, glib and suffused with intense self-love. (I covered him for a few months in 1975 when I worked for a newspaper in Delaware.)

 

Consider that the other week, a day after he reaffirmed his support for the Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding of most abortions, he reversed himself under pressure from the abortion-rights activists who wield great influence in his party.

 

Biden, a Catholic, has written that he’s “personally opposed to abortion’’. But he’s even more opposed to losing his current front-runner status in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

 

Meanwhile, as I’ve written, it has long struck me that the best presidential candidates tend to be people like former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper,  Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Montana Gov.  Steve Bullock – people who have already run complex government organizations, and not politicians like Biden who haven’t.

 

And if the thoughtful, pragmatic center-right had not been pretty much forced out of contention in Republican presidential politics with the rise of the “populism’’ of the Tea Party and Donald Trump, one could have held out the hope that the likes of two very successful, competent and (in their states  popular)  Republican governors, Massachusetts’s Charlie Baker and Maryland’s Larry Hogan, would be contenders. But it’s the Trump Party for the indefinite future.

 

 

More Springtime for Tyranny

Two of the Trump administration’s favorite tyrannies – Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates – are enthusiastically supporting the generals of the Sudanese junta who are putting down pro-democracy demonstrations by shooting down hundreds of people in the streets.

 

The ultimate leaders of the crackdown are Lt. Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, known as Hemeti. They’re running the Transitional Military Council, which replaced the previous thug-in-chief, Omar Hassan al-Bashir. General Hamdan leads the paramilitary force created by rebranding the Janjaweed militias that conducted the genocide in Darfur.

 

Good strong managers, we can do business with!

 

 

Trade and Fed Overblown

Trade wars, especially under a showman like Trump, are theatrical and so they get lots of attention, as does the suspense about the Fed’s interest-rate policies. But the publicity around them tends to obscure other more basic challenges facing the U.S. economy, such as rapidly swelling corporate and federal debt, poor public education, inadequate labor-force retraining and a disinclination to pay to fix our rapidly eroding infrastructure. Unless seriously addressed, they’ll gravely jeopardize our competitiveness, productivity and general prosperity.

 

There are limits to how much the Fed and trade deals can keep prosperity going; indeed, the latter can quickly make things worse.  And the Fed has been wearing out its tools. For now, let’s party as if it’s 2006, or the summer of 1929.
 

 

Slow Progress Against Plastic Pollution

As evidence continues to mount of how much damage disposable plastic stuff – bags, containers, straws and so on -- is doing, especially to life in the sea, it was gratifying to learn that two coastal states -- Maine and Maryland – have banned Styrofoam containers. An estimated 18 billion pounds a year of plastic stuff ends up in oceans, where it kills much life.  Plastic objects also befoul streams and lakes and are helping to overwhelm landfills because they degrade so slowly. I hope that sooner rather than later, all one-use plastic stuff is banned.

 

Yes, this stuff is convenient but not worth poisoning the world with. We can all adapt to using reusable or degradable (paper) products. Indeed, that’s what everyone used to use.

 

GoLocal News Editor and Robert Whitcomb

 

The Original Idea Behind the Electoral College

Maine legislators have been debating whether to join an interstate compact that would have made the state give all its Electoral College votes to the winner of the national popular vote.
 

I’m not happy when the Electoral College and the popular vote go in opposite directions, as in 2000 and especially in 2016, when the Russians gave the election to Trump, who they thought would be far friendlier than Hillary Clinton. Still, by making presidential candidates campaign all over the country and not just in densely populated states, the Electoral College supports federalism.
 

The Electoral College was originally meant to be a group of wise men who would use their individual judgments in choosing a president and act to block corrupt demagogues from the office. Now they vote almost always on a party-line basis.

 

Here’s Alexander Hamilton’s understanding, as expressed in Federalist Paper #68, of what Electoral College members would be and expected to:

 

They would be...”men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station and acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice.’’

 

Members would be "most likely to have the information and discernment" to stop the election of anyone "not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications."

 

He warned that an election could be corrupted by the desire of "foreign powers to gain an improper ascendant in our councils." Hmm….

 

He wrote: “Talents for low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity, may alone suffice to elevate a man to the first honors in a single State; but it will require other talents, and a different kind of merit, to establish him in the esteem and confidence of the whole Union, or of so considerable a portion of it as would be necessary to make him a successful candidate for the distinguished office of President of the United States.’’

 

What happened?

 

Incomplete Hospitality

I am disappointed that Rear Admiral Jeffrey Harley, the now reassigned president of the U.S. Naval War College, did not offer me a cool one from the margarita machine that he apparently had in his office when I interviewed him last year for GoLocal, although the fresh-brewed coffee was fine.

 

An Almost Great Man

Our Man, George Packer’s biography of Richard Holbrooke (1941-1910), the U.S. diplomat known for his brilliance, abrasiveness, gargantuan ego, physical courage and occasional charm, serves as an almost novelistic  history of American foreign policy, and the characters who made it,  from Vietnam in the early ‘60s to the time of his death, when he was working on trying to calm down Afghanistan.

Holbrooke, most famous for crafting “The Dayton Peace Accords,’’ in 1995, that ended the Bosnian war, was a major figure in America’s relations with the world off and on for decades, though never reaching his goal of secretary of state, largely because he was seen as too pushy. He liked to see himself as the sort of statesman – especially Dean Acheson, George Kennan and George Marshall – who helped create the international institutions that ensured relative global stability, and American leadership of the Free World, until we overreached in Iraq and Afghanistan, leadership fatigue set in and American prestige and power declined.

 

Packer’s narrative  (if sometimes in purple prose) of Holbrooke’s bravery,  ingenuity and vision as a  U.S. government official in Vietnam during the American war there and his grinding humanitarian and diplomatic work in the Balkan war zones in the ‘90s is riveting.

 

A quote from the book:

 

“But ambition is not a pretty thing up close. It’s wild and crass, and mortifying in the details. It brings a noticeable smell into the room. It’s a man cajoling a bereaved widow to include him among her late husband’s eulogists, then rearranging name cards so that he can chat up the right dinner guest after the service….he {Holbrooke) lets us ogle ambition in the nude.’’


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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