Whitcomb: Taxing Your Enemies; Planting Trees Together; Thanks for No Thanksgiving

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Whitcomb: Taxing Your Enemies; Planting Trees Together; Thanks for No Thanksgiving

Robert Whitcomb
“Thanksgiving dinners take 18 hours to prepare. They are consumed in 12 minutes. Half-times take 12 minutes. This is not coincidence.’’

 

--The late Erma Bombeck
 

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The Trump regime and its allies in Congress are trying to use the powers of the federal government to attack groups that they see as political enemies. There are numerous examples in the House and Senate tax bills, both of which measures are excessively aimed at further expanding the wealth of the very rich and their families and descendants as the current Gilded Age rolls on.

 

One of particular interest to New Englanders is a plan by congressional Republicans to impose a 1.4 percent tax on the annual income spun off by the endowments of the about 60 schools whose endowments exceed $250,000 per student. This has put pressure on some of our region’s famous private institutions – as The Boston Globe has noted, “including Harvard, Dartmouth and a dozen other New England schools.’’

 

Harvard's endowment $37.1 Billion at of Sept. 1, 2017
Now, I have long complained that some of these “not-for-profit’’ schools have long been run in ways that raise eyebrows, especially with the astronomical salaries and perks that they pay too many of their administrators.  And one wonders why so much money is spent for luxury frills such as climbing walls, gourmet food, and spas.

 

Still, most of their endowment income is spent to pay for such traditional college functions as teaching, research, financial aid and building maintenance. And many of these institutions have international reputations that draw the brightest students, teachers, and researchers, who help strengthen the U.S. economy and wider society, especially through innovation. New England, with its renowned collection of celebrated colleges and universities, has especially benefited from this sector. It bears noting that the bigger the endowment, the more money for scholarships and other forms of financial aid.

 

The Trump regime and some Republicans in Congress are trying to use the byzantine tax code to weaken institutions associated with the highly educated voters who often oppose the current demagogic version of the Republican Party and who believe in such things as science. Pushback.

 

Meanwhile, Harvard Business School Prof. Clayon Christensen predicts: "50 percent of the 4,000 colleges and universities in the U.S. will be bankrupt in 10 to 15 years." Please hit this link to read more: 

 

He’s right. There are too many colleges.

 

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Providence shooting
It may take a while to sort out exactly what happened in the wild chase and shooting in Providence on Nov. 9 that left one man dead and a woman gravely wounded. But three observations: We need to know more about the coordination between the Providence Police and the Rhode Island State Police in this sequence of events; the ravaged, often drug-addicted people pursued in this case evoke the growing underbelly of America, and the whole thing recalls what I’ve noticed for years in the various cities I’ve worked in: Police hate their guns or their vehicles being stolen!

 

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I hope that Rhode Island House Republican leader and gubernatorial candidate Patricia Morgan will spell out very precisely how she would pay to fix the state’s worst-in-the-nation highway and bridge infrastructure if not through Gov. Gina Raimondo’s truck tolls. (Trucks do most of the damage to roads and bridges.)

 

House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan
Ms. Morgan might drive down the Northeast Corridor and note that every state has a highway toll system except Rhode Island and Connecticut,  and the Nutmeg State may well soon restore tolls on Route 95 there (what used to be called the Connecticut Turnpike). The Ocean State now levies tolls only on the Newport/Pell Bridge.

 

Not coincidentally all these states have better transportation infrastructures than Rhode Island.

 

There’s a magical-thinking wing of the GOP  that calls for lower taxes and better infrastructure. (And don’t cut my Medicare!)

 

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The Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo’s administration must have been very pleased by Lisa Prevost’s Nov. 7 article in The New York Times headlined “Building a Buzzy Hive of Invention and Collaboration.’’ It’s about the “innovation district’’ being built in the Route 195 relocation area, in downtown Providence.

 

The story is very good publicity for Providence in showing the promise of public-private partnerships to boost local economies.

 

Ms. Prevost wrote:

 

Lisa Prevost piece in the the NYT on Providence
“It’s the sort of collaboration that academic, business and government officials here {in Providence} hope to emulate and build on as they, like many other community leaders around the country, seek to promote a fledgling innovation district. Such networking, experts say, is a key component of the success of established innovation districts elsewhere in the country. Those already flourishing in cities such as Pittsburgh, St. Louis and Cambridge, Mass., are bustling hives of invention and collaboration, usually huddled around major research universities or tech companies, and often with dense infusions of retail, restaurants and housing.’’

 

If this project turns out to be as successful as I think it will be,  in part because of its proximity to Boston/Cambridge, it will presumably help dilute some of Rhode Islanders’ sometimes paralyzing cynicism.

 

 

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Some other happy news about public-private partnerships came in Nicholas Boke’s charming Nov. 8 EcoRI News article headlined “Community Togetherness: Planting an Urban Forest’’.

 

It’s about the highly successful Providence Neighborhood Planting Program (PNPP), which is charged with maintaining and expanding the city’s “urban forest.’’ My family has fond memories of the tree planting in a related program in front of our house 25 years ago. The sapling then was about 5 feet high. Now it’s over 20 feet high and has turned into a very popular and lush abode for various bird species.

 

The PNPP is a joint venture of the private Mary Elizabeth Sharpe Providence Neighborhood Planting Program Fund, the city’s Parks Department and local residents, who get lessons from the program in how to plant and nurture the trees. It’s enlightened self-interest: Trees help clean the air, reduce heating bills in the winter and air-conditioning bills in the summer and their beauty raises real-estate values.

 

City Forester Doug Still told Mr. Boke that the program plants a total of about 500 trees a year in 25 neighborhoods while the city directly plants another 200. For more information, please hit this link for information about the program:

 

To read the ecoRI news piece, please hit this link:

 

 

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The steep rise of China as a commercial and military power in recent years is leading to a steep rise in appeasement of that police state, which is becoming ever more Orwellian under its current dictator, Xi Jinping. We saw the spectacle of the fool Donald Trump sucking up to Xi on Trump’s recent tour of East Asia.  At the same time, we have the spreading self-censorship in the West of anything that might offend Beijing.

 

Consider that the Australian publisher Allen & Unwin has changed its mind and decided not to publish Clive Hamilton’s book Silent Invasion: How China Is Turning Australia Into a Puppet State. The publisher’s CEO, Robert Gorman, said, in a Sydney Morning Herald story:

 

“We have no doubt that Silent Invasion is an extremely significant book,’’ but he’s concerned about “potential threats to the book and the company from possible action by Beijing’’.

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

Then we have the American Bar Association rescinding the offer to publish Teng Biao’s book about his decade working for human rights in China. The ABA did not want to anger the Chinese dictatorship because it would cut into the ABA’s operations in China. Mr. Teng wrote about this in a Washington Post column last year.

 

The ABA first said:

 

 “There is concern that we run the risk of upsetting the Chinese government by publishing your book, and because we have ABA commissions working in China there is fear that we would put them and their work at risk.”

 

Later, the ABA, presumably embarrassed, amended its explanation, saying  that the cancellation was “made for purely economic reasons.”  Right.  Mr. Teng wonders if “purely economic reasons’’ should be the “driving logic’’ of an association of lawyers.

 

There is, it is true, lots of money to be made in China. To read Mr. Teng’s column, please hit this link:

 

Then closer to home, at Bryant University, in Smithfield, R.I., and at some other  U.S. campuses we have the continued presence of the Confucius Institute, a Chinese government front whose activities include surveillance and espionage. But some American college officials are more than happy to have this outfit because it gives them access to the huge Chinese market and provides instructors in the Chinese language.

 

Some institutions have thrown out their Confucius Institute. For example, the University of Chicago closed its one after more than 100 faculty members signed a petition that cited concerns that the hiring and training of the institute teachers “subjects the university’s academic program to the political constraints on free speech and belief that are specific to the People’s Republic of China.’’

 

On a brighter note, British Prime Minister Theresa May pushed back  the other day against Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s relentless efforts to weaken the West, saying:

 

“It {the Kremlin} is seeking to weaponize information. Deploying its state-run media organizations to plant fake stories and photo-shopped images in an attempt to sow discord in the West and undermine our institutions."

"We know what you are doing. And you will not succeed. Because you underestimate the resilience of our democracies, the enduring attraction of free and open societies, and the commitment of Western nations to the alliances that bind us.’’

That is if what used to be the leader of the West and its values – America – can withstand the dictator-loving activities of the Trumps and their retainers.

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The Zimbabwean army has apparently removed dictator Robert Mugabe from power after 37 years. But prepare for another kleptocratic tyrant to continue the asset-stripping of that nation, which with honest government could be very prosperous. Clearly the British colonial rulers’attempts to nurture the ideals of democracy and a government of laws, not strongmen, didn't take in Africa.

To get a sense of how most of Africa works (and I have worked there a little myself), I present this paragraph from the New York Times:

“Mr. Mugabe’s sons, who are in their 20s, have added to the anger among Zimbabweans by regularly posting pictures of their lavish lifestyle and partying on social media sites. Last week, a video emerged showing Mr. Mugabe’s younger son, Bellarmine Chatunga, pouring Champagne over an expensive watch on his wrist. On his Instagram feed, he wrote:  ‘$60 000 on the wrist when your daddy run the whole country ya know!!!’’’ Fairly standard in much of Africa.

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

 

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It's hard for anyone honest to work for an operation as sleazy as Fox “News.’’ But kudos to  Fox anchor Shepard Smith for bravely debunking, fact by fact, the alleged Hillary Clinton  “uranium scandal.’’ To read his comments, please hit this link:

 

 

 

I suppose that he’ll soon follow conservative columnist George Will and others and climb out of the  Fox cesspool. Or simply be fired at the order of Rupert Murdoch and Donald Trump.

 

Meanwhile, I suspect that many, perhaps most Americans would be happy if the Clintons went away quietly.

 

 

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A lot of people on the New England coast will be watching the coming tests of tidal-power turbines to be conducted at the western end of the Cape Cod Canal by the Renewable Energy Collaborative. To learn more, please hit this link to a Cape Cod Times article:

 

 

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In one other piece of “green news,’’  I read that students at the Landing School, in Arundel, Maine,  are working on developing  trimaran “green lobster boats’’  meant to burn considerably less fuel than current lobster boats. “It’s like a skiff on top of a canoe, with two small canoes at the back of the skiff,” Richard Schuhmann, the president of the school, told the Portland Press Herald. “It looks like a Batmobile in a way.”

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

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Also worth reading is the Cape Cod Second Homeowners report from the Cape Cod Commission and the University of Massachusetts’s Donahue Institute. In information useful to other jurisdictions with many second homes, such as the Rhode Island and Connecticut coastlines (and especially Block Island), the  report, says the Cape Cod Times, “was commissioned to determine how second homes are being used, whether owners planned to eventually convert them to a primary year-round residence and how these property owners contribute to the local economy, according to Leslie Richardson, chief economic officer of the Cape Cod Commission.’’

 

To read more, please hit this link:

 

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Fairly early on, I started to dislike Thanksgiving. For one thing, it happens in a depressing, lowering time of the year. (Please, New England, join  Canada’s Maritime Provinces in Atlantic  Time so we can have light longer in the afternoon!) For another, the feast segment usually takes place in the afternoon, leaving participants heavy and groggy for the rest of the day. And making the meal requires hours of work by increasingly irascible cooks, servers and cleanup staff. That most Thanksgiving meals contribute to heart disease is a minor matter.

 

Anyway, when I was about 10 my family, or fragments of it anyway, gave up on Thanksgiving at home, and would journey to the Daniel Webster Inn, in Sandwich on Cape Cod, where my white-haired, very dignified and laconic paternal grandfather, looking like a cross between the poets Robert Frost and Wallace Stevens, would preside with what was probably forced congeniality over the three to five children and four or five other adults. The whole damn thing would take at most two hours, and with the inevitable rationing of food portions at a for-profit establishment, be healthier than what we’d consume at home.

 

The dinner always included the assertion that we were related to the statesman, orator and, to a certain extent, crook, Daniel Webster.  That’s because a great-great grandfather of my siblings and me was named Daniel Webster Butler.  He was born in Falmouth, the one on Cape Cod, in 1838. The assertion of the Webster kinship was never challenged or researched by anyone in the family until a few years ago, when I discovered it was baloney.

 

In fact, no one else in the family had the Webster name. Clearly Dan Butler got his middle name because “Black Dan’’ Webster was among the most famous men in America in 1838. And the use of middle surnames  was starting to be very popular, especially in New England.  Maybe a touch of Anglophilia or an effort to suggest genealogical grandeur, however fraudulently. Sort of like someone being named Franklin Roosevelt Jones a century later. But every family has its myths, and some need them….

 

After the dinner, my grandfather, a widower, would happily drive back alone to his house on West Falmouth Harbor, light up a Parliament, work on a crossword puzzle in a desultory way and occasionally stare at  the lights on freighters in Buzzards Bay, on the other side of the breakwater and, presumably ruminate on the transience of everything, including families.

 

 

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Two charming new – and very different  -- books by physicians have just come out. One is another in the memoir series of Ed Iannuccilli, M.D. (whose medical career has included having been president of Rhode Island Hospital). This one is called My Story Continues: from Neighborhood to Junior High School and follows his Growing Up Italian: Grandfather’s Fig Tree and Other Stories and Whatever Happened to Sunday Dinner?

 

As the blurb on the back of his latest volume says:

 

“He shares his {Providence} neighborhood with us through his exploits of ‘Capturing the Flag’ in the sand banks, getting a rah-rah and playing the pinball machine. He writes of his elementary school adventures, singing debut and favorite teachers.

 

“You will laugh out loud as he moves to junior high school with stories of going for pizza, playing the drums in the band concert and more. He ends with those wonderful summer days when his parents rented a beach house {on Narragansett Bay}.’’

 

Many people have enjoyed Dr. Iannuccilli’s newpaper columns over the years in The Providence Journal and elsewhere. They’ll like this book too.

 

You can find this book on Amazon and at Barrington Books, in Cranston and Barrington, R.I. , and at Twice Told Tales, in Cranston.

 

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William (“Willit’’ ) Mason, M.D., has written has a delightful  – and very handy --book rich with photos and colorful anecdotes,  called Guidebook to Historic Houses and Gardens in New England: 71 Sites from the Hudson Valley East (iUniverse, 240 pages. Paperback. $22.95). Oddly,  given the cultural and historical richness of New England and the Hudson Valley, no one else has done a book quite like this before.

 

The blurb on the back of the book neatly summarizes his story.

 

“When Willit Mason retired in the summer of 2015, he and his wife decided to celebrate with a grand tour of the Berkshires and the Hudson Valley of New York.

 

While they intended to enjoy the area’s natural beauty, they also wanted to visit the numerous historic estates and gardens that lie along the Hudson River and the hills of the Berkshires.

 

But Mason could not find a guidebook highlighting the region’s houses and gardens, including their geographic context, strengths, and weaknesses. He had no way of knowing if one location offered a terrific horticultural experience with less historical value or vice versa.

 

Mason wrote this comprehensive guide of 71 historic New England houses and gardens to provide an overview of each site. Organized by region, it makes it easy to see as many historic houses and gardens in a limited time.

 

Filled with family histories, information on the architectural development of properties and overviews of gardens and their surroundings, this is a must-have guide for any New England traveler.’’

 

Dr. Mason noted of his tours: “Each visit has captured me in different ways, whether it be the scenic views, architecture of the houses, gardens and landscape architecture or collections of art. As we have learned from Downton Abbey, every house has its own personal story. And most of the original owners of the houses I visited in preparing the book have made significant contributions to American history.’’

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Sound familiar?

 

 “Forbes is confident it has found the answer {to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross’s erroneous assertions he was a multibillionaire}: That money never existed. It seems clear that Ross lied to us, the latest in an apparent sequence of fibs, exaggerations, omissions, fabrications and whoppers that have been going on with Forbes since 2004. In addition to just padding his ego, Ross’ machinations helped bolster his standing in a way that translated into business opportunities. And based on our interviews with ten former employees at Ross’ private equity firm, WL Ross & Co., who all confirmed parts of the same storyline, his penchant for misleading extended to colleagues and investors, resulting in millions of dollars in fines, tens of millions refunded to backers and numerous lawsuits.”


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