Whitcomb: Walk of Life; the Fox ‘News’ Farce; Dark Facebook; Show the Amazon Bid; Party as in 2006

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Walk of Life; the Fox ‘News’ Farce; Dark Facebook; Show the Amazon Bid; Party as in 2006

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
Amidst all the “crisis chatter’’ (the late novelist Saul Bellow’s phrase) about the news, we’d do well to read Robert Frost’s great haunting late poem “Directive,’’ about a walk in upland New England that turns into a reflection on eons of the natural world,  humanity’s experience and, by implication, the poet’s  own ordeals and transitory joys. It ends with a quasi-Christian statement. It puts life, especially a long one, into an ambiguous but still vivid perspective.

The poem is too long to run all of here, but here are some fragments:

 

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Back out of all this now too much for us,
Back in a time made simple by the loss

Of detail, burned, dissolved, and broken off
Like graveyard marble sculpture in the weather,
There is a house that is no more a house
Upon a farm that is no more a farm
And in a town that is no more a town.

 

….


The height of the adventure is the height
Of country where two village cultures faded
Into each other. Both of them are lost.
And if you're lost enough to find yourself
By now, pull in your ladder road behind you
And put a sign up CLOSED to all but me.

 

First there's the children's house of make-believe,
Some shattered dishes underneath a pine,
The playthings in the playhouse of the children.
Weep for what little things could make them glad.

 

But the end of the poem:

Here are your waters and your watering place.
Drink and be whole again beyond confusion.

 

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President Donald Trump
Ralph Peters, a strategic analyst and retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who was a notable critic of President Obama, has quit his long-time post as a Fox News expert commentator and denounced the network for its slobbering coverage of President Trump.

 

“In my view, Fox has degenerated from providing a legitimate and much-needed outlet for conservative voices to a mere propaganda machine for a destructive and ethically ruinous {Trump} administration.’’

 

He said in his farewell note that Fox News’s prime-time anchors “dismiss facts and empirical reality to launch profoundly dishonest assaults on the FBI, the Justice Department, the courts, the intelligence community (in which I served) and, not least, a model public servant and genuine war hero such as Robert Mueller.”

 

“Fox News is assaulting our constitutional order and the rule of law, while fostering corrosive and unjustified paranoia among viewers.’’

 

Fox News hosts “advance Putin’s agenda” and “we have an American president who is terrified of his counterpart in Moscow,” Colonel Peters said.
 

One wonders when the fans of Fox News will finally reject its defense of such a sleazy crew, tinctured by treason.

 

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Steve Bannon
And yes, social media need to be investigated and regulated as the greedy public utilities they are and, yes, the Trump crowd, especially the president’s fellow sociopath Steve Bannon, in league with Russia’s dictator, manipulated these media in the 2016 campaign to help elect Trump.  Bannon has been a sidekick of Robert Mercer, the secretive billionaire far-right computer scientist and hedge funder who, with his also fanatically right-wing daughter Rebekah, invested in Cambridge Analytica and has used it in various ways to promote the further enrichment and political power of an oligarchy that is increasingly shoving aside democracy.

 

Meanwhile, it would be nice if more people in the national Republican Party showed some courage and put more distance between themselves and the most corrupt White House in American history. It’s not a “conservative’’ regime. It’s a kleptocracy with neofascist elements.

 

As for Facebook and its most recent data scandal, many of us (including me) use it for promotional purposes while knowing that it has been a civic disaster for America, however cute the baby pictures and messages from long-lost cousins.  The Social Network, the movie about Mark Zuckerberg and some pals inventing Facebook at Harvard, was dark. It always seemed to be night in Cambridge. Quite prescient.

 

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Governor Gina Raimondo's administration won't release Amazon HQ2 bid
The Providence Journal is to be applauded for suing to make the administration of Gov. Gina Raimondo disclose what it offered Amazon in the state’s failed bid to get the retail behemoth to set up its much-hyped “second headquarters’’ in the state. There would have been a lot of incentives in the offer that citizens deserve to know about. And details of the proposal would presumably suggest the broad outlines of the administration’s economic-development policy going forward. That’s particularly important information to know as the governor seeks re-election. This information should be available for the public to weigh. And, as the old line goes, “Sunlight is the best disinfectant.’’

 

 

Whitcomb on GoLocal LIVE

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The March 20 Providence Journal story “R.I. ‘stole’ millions, says FCC official’’ was probably hyperbolic. A Trump appointee to the Federal Communications Commission, Michael O’Rielly, denounced the decades-long (under Republican and Democratic governors) practice of the state “diverting’’ 60 percent of the fees it had collected for 911 and spending it on other budget items. Maybe citizens can send some examples of slow service that might have resulted from this diversion. The recent storms and flu epidemic presumably provided plenty of opportunities.

 

Mr. O’Rielly said: “Beyond the enormous deception being perpetrated it’s highly likely that the public safety systems are not receiving the funding that they need to operate or mitigate the Next Generation or NG911 systems.” I hope some experts can speak to this.

 

Monthly, Rhode Islanders pay $1 for each landline and $1.26 for each cell phone in 911 fees – amounts so small that I suspect that most folks didn’t even know there were such fees. This “scandal’’ was uncovered by WJAR TV, which is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, which is closely linked to Trump. Indeed, stations owned by Sinclair have been ordered to run pro-Trump propaganda.

 

The Raimondo administration, for its part, has asserted that Rhode Island’s 911 call response time “is faster than national standards recommended by the National Emergency Numbers Association,’’ and that “more than 95 percent of calls are answered in 10 seconds or less.’’ I’ve had to call 911 a few times and that’s been my experience. Are there really a lot of problems with the Ocean State’s 911 system?

 

Of course, state and local governments legally move money around all the time to address urgent issues. Governments at all levels try to function as best they can in a country where citizens demand more and better services and lower taxes. (See below.)

 

Mr. O’Rielly, an avid fan of Donald Trump, may have come to Rhode Island, at the invitation of Republican state Sen. Robert Lancia, mostly to undermine Gov. Gina Raimondo, a Democrat who, some think, has national political ambitions.

 

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Here we go again. When I was a business editor during much of the ‘70s and ‘80s the cliché was that it would take about a generation – 25 years – for most people to forget the lessons of the last economic crisis. But in the cable TV and Internet Age it seems to only take about a decade.

 

Consider the falling household savings rate. The rate had been rising after the Crash of 2008, as people realized how fragile their jobs were and how swiftly things could fall apart. But starting in 2015, wishful thinking again took over. So now household debt is at about 80 percent of household income – compared to only 60-70 percent before the Great Bubble before the crash, which was caused by extreme over-borrowing and some fraud by big banks. And saving as a percentage of disposable income has plunged from about 11 percent in 2013 to about 2.5 percent now  – where it was right before the crash.  That’s in part because Trump and other boosters of what Alan Greenspan famously called “irrational exuberance’’ have been asserting that we’re on the road to a long, long boom.

 

This makes a lot of people very vulnerable to such challenges as higher interest rates, which are inevitable in large part because of the federal government’s swelling deficits caused by the GOP tax cuts and continued sky-high government spending, the latter supported by both parties. As always, as I noted above, Americans demand lower taxes and more services. And, no, contrary to the rich folks working for Trump and grateful for the huge tax cuts he gave them, tax-cut-spawned economic growth won’t cover the vast cost in lost federal revenues from the tax cuts.

 

At the current speed of government/political wishful thinking and irresponsibility, the U.S. will be in the position of a bankrupt nation like Greece within a decade. And how long will the Chinese and other foreigners be willing to buy the debt of our increasingly dysfunctional country?

 

We see such ominous developments as a Massachusetts quasi-public agency, MassHousing, letting some first-time home buyers borrow 100 percent of the money they need to buy a home – the sort of transaction helped lead to the crash. What happens when rates rise and/or the borrowers lose their jobs and can no longer pay for the loans? Vicious circle alert!

 

Shawn Tully, writing in Fortune, summarized the problem well:

 

“Trump’s heady economic potion … is masking misguided policies that could leave those same businesses {now touting the economy} with a severe hangover from today’s celebration. The U.S. government’s huge and growing budget deficits have become gargantuan enough to threaten the great American growth machine. And Trump’s policies to date—a combination of deep tax cuts and sharp spending increases—are shortening the fuse on that fiscal time bomb, by dramatically widening the already unsustainable gap between revenues and outlays. On our current course, we’re headed for a morass of punitive taxes {to deal with the deficit}, puny growth, and stagnant incomes for workers—a future that’s the precise opposite of what Trump champions.’’

 

To read Mr. Tully’s whole essay, please hit this lin

 

Partying as if it’s 2006…

 

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Twin River
The owners of Twin River Management Group are looking forward to a bonanza as Rhode Island moves toward legalizing sports betting, with the aim of increasing state government revenues. But the net economic effect on the state of legalized sports betting will be negative, as much of the bettors’ money goes to Twin River’s out-of-state owners. Sports betting will be an overall economic drain on the state. But no politician wants to raise taxes. And few politicians seem to worry about getting even more people hooked on gambling, with the social ills that follow from that.

 

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Trump is quite right to threaten China with stiff tariffs; China has been cheating us right and left on trade, especially in its relentless theft of U.S. intellectual property. We have to finally get tough to protect our long-term economic interests. But, American consumers better prepare themselves to pay higher prices as a price for this protection.

 

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Southeastern New England cranberry growers could soon get whomped by a 25 percent tariff on exports to Europe, the industry’s biggest export market, as the Europeans retaliate against Trump’s tariffs on European aluminum and steel being imported into America. Cranberries are Massachusetts’s most valuable food crop.

 

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Trump said in a New Hampshire speech that he wants drug dealers to get the death penalty. But in fact, laws already allow the death penalty for these people in certain circumstances. Far more effective in our “War on Drugs’’ redux would be, for example, going after physicians who over-prescribe opiates and punishing such despicable drug companies as Purdue Pharma, controlled by the social-climbing Sackler family,  that obscured the perils of such prescription opiates as OxyContin. And Trump could take strong action to persuade Chinese dictator Xi Jinping to stop Chinese labs from mailing the hyper-dangerous synthetic opiate fentanyl to America.
 

Obviously much more treatment is needed, too. Trump was in New Hampshire in part because the Granite State has long had among the highest rates of drug use in the country. It also, according to a study done at Dartmouth, “has the lowest -per-capita spending for drug treatment in New England and the second-lowest in the nation.’’

 

Would Trump’s wall on our Mexican border help? Maybe a little, but not much. Drugs, like money, are very fungible, and dispirited, anxious  Americans have an insatiable thirst for them.

 

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NRA and guns
The Second Amendment:

“A well-regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.’’

 

The NRA helped President Franklin D. Roosevelt draft the first federal gun controls: 1934’s National Firearms Act and 1938’s Gun Control Act.

 

The NRA president then, Karl T. Frederick, praised the new gun controls in Congress. “I have never believed in the general practice of carrying weapons. I do not believe in the general promiscuous toting of guns. I think it should be sharply restricted and only under licenses.”

 

That was decades before extreme anti-government paranoia and the prospect of vast new revenues for gun companies turned NRA policies upside down, with the assistance of an increasingly right-wing Republican Party and the justices they put on the Supreme Court.

 

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Many people demanded that self-driving vehicles be banned in the wake of the recent death of an Arizona woman who was struck by a driverless Uber car. The car’s computer may have lacked the ability to recognize the woman because she was walking outside the boundaries of a crosswalk, and apparently the Uber human emergency driver didn’t override the computer.

 

Obviously, there are still problems with driverless vehicles that need to be addressed. But that shouldn’t obscure the fact that human drivers, in all their cellphone-distracted, fatigued and drug- and booze-addled glory are far more dangerous and kill on average 100 Americans a day, and the numbers are increasing.

 

I’m more worried about human malfunctions than computer or mechanical ones.

 

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There’s an entertainingly ironic not-in-my-backyard battle underway in Nahant, Mass., on the northern side of Boston Harbor.  The town, once perhaps best known for summer places of Boston Brahmins, has hosted, apparently without controversy, Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center since 1967.

 

Nahant, of course, is one of those coastal towns that faces the threat posed by rising sea levels and stronger storms caused by global warming.

 

But now Northeastern wants to build a 60,000-square-foot addition to the center in order to turn it into an internationally respected coastal sustainability institute. The structure would be built in a way to minimize its visual impact. The Boston Globe reports that two stories and a basement would go into the side and top of a concrete bunker that housed two anti-submarine guns in World War II.  To read The Globe’s story, please hit this link:

 

But many Nahanters complain that the facility would damage their vistas and lure too many visitors. They want the benefits of the work to be done at the institute but none of the inconveniences.

 

So officials from the poorer and nearby communities of Lynn and Salem have expressed interest in getting what would seem likely to become a prestigious institute. As we saw in the long and successful battle by Bill Koch to keep wind turbines out of the Nantucket Sound horizon as seen from his summer mansion in Osterville, Mass., selfishness by the wealthy often trumps the public interest. Or, in the words of the late Louisiana Sen. Russell Long:

 

“Don’t Tax You. Don’t Tax Me. Tax That Fellow Behind the Tree’’

 

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Americans tend to be greedier than most people, and that includes the health-care sector, whose physicians, hospital executives and other leaders are among the highest paid in the world, a major factor in America’s highest-in-the-world health costs. Sadly, those costs are accompanied by among the worst health indices in the Developed World.

 

However, Canadians who have a mostly socialized health-care-payment system, tend to have a considerably higher sense of mutual obligation. One recent example: Around 740 physicians and medical students in Quebec have been demanding that the province not fulfill promises to increase their pay.

 

Ian Austen wrote in The New York Times that “the doctors want the province to take money that would have been used to increase their incomes and give it to nurses and other healthcare workers who are dealing with issues like pay cuts and crushing workloads.’’  To read The Times’s story, please hit this link:

 

(Political conflicts of interest? the Quebec premier, Philippe Couillard, a neurosurgeon and the health minister, Gaetan Barrette, a radiologist,  have expended considerable energy in boosting pay for specialists.)

 

The 740 is a tiny percentage of Quebec’s physicians; there are said to be over 20,000 physicians in the province. Still, the action would be almost impossible to happen in the U.S.

 

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CT is still mighty wealthy
Connecticut has suffered some big blows to its reputation as a good place to do business in the last few years. So the decision by Infosys, the big Indian information technology and consulting firm, to establish a $21 million center in nearly bankrupt Hartford to develop digital and other technologies for the insurance and health-care industries and manufacturing, and hire 1,000 people over the next four years to staff  it, was a powerful shot in the

 

The company will get $14 million in state grants to help do it. With all its problems, Connecticut remains one of the richest states.


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