Whitcomb: Wacky Watergate Weeks; Pricey, Pretty Pedestrian Bridge; Disingenuous in Warwick; Buddy!

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Wacky Watergate Weeks; Pricey, Pretty Pedestrian Bridge; Disingenuous in Warwick; Buddy!

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
“Poor March. It is the homeliest month of the year. Most of it is mud.

Every imaginable form of  mud, and what isn't mud in March is ugly late-season snow falling onto the ground in filthy muddy heaps that look like piles of dirty laundry.’’

-- Vivian Swift, in When Wanderers Cease to Roam: A Traveler’s Journal of Staying Put

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“Facts are generally over-esteemed. For most practical purposes, a thing is what men think it is. When they judged the world flat, it was flat. As long as men thought slavery tolerable, tolerable it was. We live down here among shadows, shadows among shadows.’’

From the play Buchanan Dying, by John Updike. The Buchanan referred to is President James Buchanan, whose unsuccessful administration preceded the Civil War.

 

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 “The freshman {Democratic} congresswoman {Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez} representing Queens and the Bronx was called out by the New York Post over the weekend for ‘tripping over her own giant carbon footprint.’ The Post detailed her use of rental cars and ride-hailing services while promoting the Green New Deal, her much-discussed package of environmental reforms. The piece also reviews her congressional campaign’s spending on transportation and finds nearly $30,000 spent on vehicle trips, ‘even though her Queens HQ was a one-minute walk to the 7  {subway} train.”’

-- From citylab.com

 

Hypocrisy gets you around.

 

Watergate Revels

The early and mid ‘70s were the time of Watergate, which of course led to President Nixon’s decision to avoid impeachment for assorted “high crimes and misdemeanors’’ by quitting on Aug. 8, 1974. Now we might be heading in the same direction with a far more corrupt and dangerous president – Donald J. Trump.

 

The Trump scandals have been a bit of a trip down Memory Lane for me. During Watergate, I’d occasionally have to write the Page One World-Wide column in The Wall Street Journal when I worked, mostly as a copy editor, for that esteemed publication in Lower Manhattan. From 1972 to the summer of ’74 I often had to create very concise descriptions/explanations as updates on the scandal came in from investigators, journalists, judges and ousted Nixon administration officials, among other characters in the sprawling mess. While The Washington Post and The New York Times led the way, the WSJ managed to grab some elements of the burgeoning scandal.

 

During the course of Watergate I noticed that it took a long time for many of Nixon’s fans to withdraw their support, even as documentation against him piled up. While Nixon’s followers were not nearly the extreme cultists that you see at Trump’s neo-fascist MAGA rallies, their first reaction was to circle the wagons against a somewhat vaguely defined tribe along the lines of “The Elitist Liberals Who Were Always Out to Get Dick Nixon.’’

 

 

In any event, it’s human to put off as long as you can admitting that a crooked business leader or politician has conned you, taking full advantage of your wishful thinking. (Kurt Andersen’s newish book, Fantasyland, is an American history book that takes a sometimes hilarious, sometimes mortifying look at our propensity to be suckered.)

 

Finally, in the summer of 1974, the proverbial “smoking gun’’ was enough to send a delegation of Republican congressional leaders (who were then in the minority) to the White House to warn Nixon to resign or be impeached by the House, and then convicted by the Senate, by overwhelming bipartisan votes. So on the fetid evening of Aug. 7, I found myself staring at an early edition of the Aug. 8 New York Times in a Brooklyn subway station newsstand that shouted in huge (for the staid Times) block type “Nixon Resigns’’. The GOP congressional party had a higher percentage back then of honest, well-informed, thoughtful and patriotic members than does the current GOP congressional party. (The current Republican governors are generally far more responsible, and less ideologically driven,  than their Capitol Hill brethren; they have to actually govern. America needs a new and responsible conservative party!

 

Besides the mounting signs of ethical and legal squalor in the Nixon White House, there was the political problem that the U.S. was falling into recession, after several years of pseudo-boom engineered in part by Arthur Burns, a Nixon ally who was chairing the Federal Reserve Board. Among other things, the economy was whacked by the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo against the U.S.

 

The current U.S. economic expansion, which began in 2009, under President Obama, and has continued uninterrupted since then, might by June be the longest in history. There are too many variables to predict with any assurance the timing of the next recession (though I’m still guessing it will come next year). Low interest rates and cheap oil have kept things humming. It will be amusing to see how much the Trump base would erode in the face of a recession in an economy for whose successes he has taken full credit.

 

Removing a president from office, by impeachment or the looming threat thereof, has to be a political process, however well based it may be in constitutional and criminal law. With a U.S. Senate narrowly controlled by Republicans terrified of offending Trump’s cultist base, and led by the supremely cynical and amoral Mitch McConnell, it would take a political earthquake of world-historical proportions to get the Senate, by the necessary 60 votes, to convict Trump after the House impeached him.

 

To me, it’s more likely that Trump, like Nixon, will resign before being impeached as investigations of the Trump family press in from various directions, federal and state.

 

While the news came in fast in those Watergate days, it was calm and civilized compared to today’s frantic and often grossly inaccurate and Internet-dominated news media. And of course, we had to pound out the news on typewriters, which tended to make you write in a slower and more considered way than on a computer. The meatiest Watergate stuff appeared in newspapers, with which many readers would spend up to an hour a day. In spite of, or because of, the lack of anything like the Internet, citizens were generally better informed than they are now.

 

Visiting Washington, where the WSJ had a big bureau, in that period was more exciting than usual; and this being pre-9/11, there was much less security and so it was much easier to get into the offices of government officials to talk about Watergate or the weather. Oddly, I enjoyed being in DC in the very hot and humid summer; there was something pleasantly decadent about it. I particularly liked meeting people in the rooftop bar of The Washingtonian Hotel. Everyone would be soaked in sweat but having a fine old time, whatever the constitutional crisis created by the emotionally ill if brilliant Richard Nixon. In those days, there were plenty of liquid lunches.

 

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Little ironies of policy: The big GOP/Trump tax-cut bill has at least for a time put more money in the pockets of most Americans. But they have been using part of that to step up buying of foreign stuff, which has helped lead to a big widening of the U.S. trade deficit. Trump has long promised to cut the trade deficit.

 

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The administration’s handling of the crisis caused by the actions of Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro has, so far, been admirable.

 

Watch GoLocal News Editor Kate Nagle and columnist Bob Whitcomb

 

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New Massachusetts Democratic Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley is pushing a measure that would lower the voting age in federal elections to 16 from 18. Great idea! Let’s lower even further the median level of civic knowledge of voters so it more accurately reflects our fantastical hopes and dreams. I’m looking forward to many more big campaign rallies in smelly high school gyms.

 

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Former Governor Hickenlooper
John Hickenlooper, the former two-term governor of Colorado as well as a former Denver mayor, a highly successful businessman and a geologist, might be the strongest Democratic presidential candidate. He had a pragmatic, creative and successful record in office, showing that it’s possible to get things done in a purple state by working across the aisle on many big issues. Former governors, who have actually run something big, tend to be better presidents than people from Congress. Mr. Hickenlooper also has a winning personality. I’m glad he’s in the race.  We’ll see how well he fares in the washer-drier of presidential politics. But perhaps he needs to change his name? And he’s 67. I wish he were a tad younger.
 

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Build Those Walls!

 

“Before I built a wall I'd ask to know

What I was walling in or walling out,

And to whom I was like to give offense.’’

 

-- From “Mending Wall,’’ by Robert Frost

 

Readers of this column may recall that I have denounced so-called open offices, where employees work together in big rooms, based on the idea that such openness spurs creativity and cooperation. But studies have found that these spaces are more likely to lead to distraction, inefficiency, irritation and even paranoia. People need privacy.

Likewise at home, where, The Boston Globe reports, people are souring on open floor plans. Like people in an office, family members need their own space, especially these days.  Walls! To read The Globe’s story, please hit this link:
 

 

Providence's new pedestrian bridge was first proposed to cost $3M and now $21.9M

Bridge of Sighs

The new pedestrian bridge to go over the Providence River, with its opening scheduled for later this year, is indeed expensive. GoLocal reports, for example, that the project is now estimated to cost $1,470 a square foot – 145 percent more, for example, than the estimated per-square-foot cost to replace the Henderson Bridge (aka “Red Bridge’’), linking Providence’s East Side and East Providence!

But the pedestrian bridge, in downtown Providence (“The Creative Capital’’?), will have aesthetic features (including custom-fabricated steel and a wooden (love it!) decking system) befitting its location (essentially on the campus of the Rhode Island School of Design, perhaps America’s most famous art school). It will not only be a pleasant way to travel between downtown and the East Side/College Hill/Fox Point; it will also be a destination point, where many people will linger on nice days. Sort of a mini-park. It should even lure some tourists (and their restaurant, etc., dollars) to the city. So special attention and added costs seem reasonable.
 

To read the GoLocal piece, please hit this link:

 

 

Warwick's Mayor Solomon
“I Am Shocked, Shocked!’
 

Warwick’s newish mayor, Joseph Solomon, has won a gold medal in the disingenuousness Olympics by telling the public that he had no idea that the city was in such dire fiscal straits, upon, The Providence Journal reports, news of an up-to $18.6 million deficit in the fiscal year starting July 1. Further, reports The Journal’s Mark Reynolds, “the city’s liability for post-retirement employee benefits previously understood to be about $141 million is $352 million.’’

 

In fact, Mr. Solomon used to be president of the Warwick City Council, on which body he served for (18 years!) presumably during at least some of which he wasn’t in a coma. The council is charged with closely studying, revising and approving or rejecting the mayor’s budget proposals.  Mr. Solomon was on the council during the lengthy tenure (2000-2018) of the affable Scott “Apres Moi Le Deluge’’ Avedisian, who has always very much wanted to be liked by powerful constituencies, such as public-employee unions.

 

Perhaps sensing that events would soon transpire that would reduce considerably his well-known popularity in his city, Mr. Avedisian resigned as mayor last year to seek political asylum as CEO of the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority.

 

 

College Closings Hit Small Communities

The number of small nonelite New England private colleges that are closing because of dwindling finances and enrollments continue to grow. The latest is Green Mountain College, in tiny Poultney, Vt., and the College of St. Joseph, in the small Vermont city of Rutland.

 

This is sad because some of these colleges have very usefully served to help educate those whose academic backgrounds and family issues may have blocked them from getting into richer and/or more prestigious institutions. But these closings can also be a heavy economic blow to the small towns and cities so many are situated.

 

Can online courses take the place of most of these little colleges? How important is in-person teaching? To me, very.

 

 

Bobwhite Country No More

I remember as a kid often hearing the distinctive call of the Northern Bobwhite – “Bob White! Bob White!’’ But I haven’t it much in recent decades, and have wondered why.

 

Robert Tougias has explained the disappearance in a charming essay in The (New London) Day, headlined “Recalling when bobwhites flourished here’’ {in Connecticut and by implication across southern New England}: Bobwhites like pastureland and brushland and, Mr. Tougias wrote, “nested within overgrown weedy fencerows and sapling-covered waysides {a lovely word}’’. That explains why I often heard these birds when I was a kid in the ‘50s: There was a working farm across the road from our house and three or four others not far away in what was then a small, semi-rural town. No more. McMansions now loom in some of those former fields, surrounded by second-growth woods.

 

The exit of the Northern Bobwhites is yet another example of how endlessly humans change nature around them.
 

As farms have disappeared in New England and their pastures and other fields with them, to be replaced by woods and housing, the numbers of this species in the region have sharply declined, though, Mr. Tougias wrote, you can still find them on Cape Cod “within the pitch pine woodland edges.’’
 

To read his essay, please hit this link:

 

Anti-Vaxers vs. Public Health

I wish that Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, M.D., and other defenders of the right of parents (some misinformed by cranks and conspiracy peddlers on the Internet) to keep their kids from being vaccinated because of the glories of “freedom’’ gave more consideration to the public’s right to freedom from the diseases, and their epidemics, that vaccinations block.

 

The anti-vaxers threaten public health. Already more children and adults are coming down with diseases, such as measles, that massive vaccination programs had almost eliminated.

 

Buddy Cianci is back -- in a play at Trinity Rep. PHOTO: Richard McCaffrey
Buddy Is Back

Oh, no! The late Providence Mayor and cologne-drenched, wisecracking crook Vincent A. “Buddy’’ Cianci is back again, this time in the form of a play based on Mike Stanton’s fine book The Prince of Providence. I wonder how close the play will stick to reality, as opposed to such myths as that Cianci was the genius who almost singlehandedly created “The Providence Renaissance.’’

 

I suppose it will take another generation or so for Buddy to disappear into the mists of history.



Wonderful Welty

The book {Eudora} Welty: Stories, Essays & Memoir is a terrific introduction to the work of the late, great Mississippi writer, who, as the book promoters accurately noted, blended “the storytelling tradition of the South with a modernist sensibility attuned to the mysteries and ambiguities of experience.’’  Her work is grounded in place but her themes are universal.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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