Whitcomb: Brainy Brown; Stoned with Second-Hand Smoke; Boston & D.C. Most Likely Amazon HQ2 Winners

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Brainy Brown; Stoned with Second-Hand Smoke; Boston & D.C. Most Likely Amazon HQ2 Winners

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
“Poets in other climes may rhapsodize about the vagaries of April weather, its laughter and tears, but in New England the month has inspired few local bards to lyric praise of the region’s early spring weather.’

 

-- David Ludlum, in his New England Weather Book

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Well, at least a drought seems unlikely anytime soon….

 

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Best wishes to Rhode Island Public Radio on its 20th birthday!  The station, along with other relatively new media such as GoLocal24, have filled some of the gaps left by the decline of “legacy media’’ in general and newspapers in particular. But I sure miss the thick newspapers of 30 years ago. Ah, the poor newspapers, now dealing with higher tariffs on newsprint as well as the ravages of social media. More good news for the Trump administration!
 

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President Trump seems vulnerable to getting rolled by dictators, of which he would like to be one himself. If we’re to go by his remarks about how his real or imagined political adversaries should be treated (lock up her or him!), not for him that old Anglo-American principle described by John Adams:

 

“For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free countries the law ought to be king; and there ought to be no other." He put this principle in the Massachusetts Constitution by seeking to establish "a government of laws and not of men."

 

Anyway, we now have Trump falling into a predictable trap set by North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un. In sending CIA Director and Secretary of State-designate Mike Pompeo to pay court to Kim in Pyongyang with the aim of setting up a summit meeting between Trump and the mass-murderer Kim, Trump has helped pump up the dictator. Kim seeks to cultivate our president’s vanity and desperate desire for a PR win so that Kim can get sanctions lightened, and more time in which to expand his nuclear arsenal, which he will not give up; at the most, he’ll just hide some of this weaponry.

 

Trump’s outreach to Kim will soften the resolve of our East Asian allies to push back against the regime while encouraging North Korean allies Russia and China to strengthen it in order to further undermine American power in East Asia. It will also tend to encourage South Korea to accede to Kim’s demands to kick out U.S. forces. Remember that Kim Jong-un’s two biggest goals are to preserve his regime and to eventually unify the Korea Peninsula under the Kim family’s Communist dynasty.

 

He may make nice with Trump at a summit meeting but his goals won’t change. But at least we might get an exciting photo op of what might be the two most interesting hair-dos of current national leaders.

 

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Then there are the missile attacks ordered by our president, in collaboration with the British and French, in response to the latest of Syrian dictator/mass murderer Bashar Assad’s poison-gas attacks on places with rebels.   The attacks were briefly psychologically satisfying but probably won’t have any substantive effect. Assad had plenty of warning, including from the Russians, so he could move stuff out of the poison-gas-related facilities that we attacked, and he’ll have little trouble finding new chemical-warfare supplies, including from Vlad Putin. Indeed, the missile attacks had something fake about them….

 

It still grates that President Obama and his remarkably weak second-term secretary of state, John Kerry, accepted the 2013  deal that let Assad skate away from real punishment for using poison gas (which of course he denied ever using).  Obama and Kerry understandably wanted to stay out of the hell-on-earth that is Syria. But we know how the appeasement worked out – a huge increase in refugees flooding into Europe, which helped lead to right-wing populist or neo-fascist governments in Europe as well as Brexit.

 

Meanwhile, Trump has backtracked on the additional sanctions against Russia -- for its chemical-weapons assistance to Assad -- that U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and Republicans leaders had promised. Yet again, Trump has shown anxiety about displeasing Putin.

 

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Brown President Paxson
Congratulations to Brown University, and to the region, on the $100 million gift from alumnus Robert J. Carney and his wife, Nancy D. Carney, to advance brain science and help find cures for such fearsome diseases as Alzheimer’s disease and ALS.

 

Brown (and thus Providence) has been becoming a major center for brain research, much of it happening at Butler Hospital, a Brown-affiliated institution. The Carney gift will give this a big push. Brain science takes on an ever-larger importance as the population ages, with the associated challenges of dementia and other brain dysfunctions.

 

The gift will be good for regional businesses, too, especially those in pharmaceutical, medical device and other health-related fields. Indeed, it may well spawn some startups around here.

 

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It was pleasant to learn that the Nature Conservancy has paid $2 million for the development rights to about two-thirds (or 82 acres) of the exclusive Agawam Hunt’s grounds, in East Providence. The organization could also buy development rights, for $980,000, on the golf club’s remaining about 40 acres, The Providence Journal reported on April 16 (“Grounds for Optimism’’). The Conservancy cited the area’s importance for migratory birds, including waterfowl, near the urban core of metro Providence.

 

The purchase has helped pull the Agawan out of bankruptcy. I have noticed over the years that the Conservancy’s actions sometimes serve to protect land enjoyed by affluent people, often via its takeover of a lot of land next to rich people’s estates. The Agawam presents an interesting case.

 

Apparently, as many as 101 houses could have been built on the Agawam land. Rhode Island has severe eviction and affordable-housing challenges in large part because there’s just not enough housing available. Among other things, more of those old mills should be renovated for residential use and the state urgently needs more multi-family houses. Time to bring back the triple-deckers?

 

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Pot faces many challenges due to federal law
As Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and some other states (if not the Feds) loosen laws against marijuana cultivation and use, pot smokers are becoming increasingly noxious neighbors in apartment and condo buildings. I have noticed the rich aroma of the stuff in some buildings and certainly on many sidewalks.

 

Reminder: Marijuana cultivation, sale, and use are still prohibited under federal law, which presents considerable confusion in states that allow sale and use of the stuff anyway. The Feds have long looked the other way on this, fearing that the federal law is just too difficult to enforce, considering some states’ policies and that millions of people regularly smoke pot.

 

Non-pot smokers are being forced to inhale this psychotropic smoke, which, to say the least, is unhealthy. Of course, breathing second-hand tobacco smoke is bad for you, too, but it doesn’t affect your clarity of mind as marijuana smoke does. In some places, you can become involuntarily intoxicated.

 

Pot has become such a big business and tax-revenue supplier that, barring rigorous enforcement of federal laws still on the books, the problem of second-hand smoke can only get worse. And I laugh at the argument that states’ effective legalization of the weed primarily serves as a way to alleviate physical pain. Most people smoking pot just want to get mildly or very stoned for the pleasure of it, and there’s much profit and tax money to be made from the stuff.

 

To read an entertaining Boston Globe story on second-hand pot smoke, please hit this link:

 

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U.S. Supreme Court
I hope that the U.S. Supreme Court reverses itself and decides that retailers on the Internet can be made to collect state and local sales taxes in states where they have no physical presence. If somebody in a state buys something at a physical store in that state and has to pay its sales tax, it’s only fair that someone residing in the same state pay sales tax in buying the same product online.

 

The problem goes back to a 1992 Supreme Court ruling that spurred Internet shopping. That ruling, Quill Corporation v. North Dakota, said that the U.S. Constitution bars states from collecting sales taxes from enterprises that don’t have a physical presence in a state. But in these surreal times, more and more of us don’t seem to have a physical presence anywhere.

 

Internet retailers complain that collecting the taxes will be too complicated. But in a world where, for instance, social-media companies can micro-target customers with great precision, I’m sure ways can be found to efficiently manage the tax collection.

 

It has long struck me as bad public policy that physical stores (whose owners pay local property taxes and otherwise contribute to the local economy and civic life) must collect sales taxes from local consumers patronizing these establishments while businesses living on computers far away don’t have to. Unfair advantage.

 

This inequity has deprived states of billions of dollars in tax revenue to pay for essential services and transportation and other physical infrastructure.

 

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Are the public tax incentives to lure film and TV show makers to Rhode Island (and other states) worth it? A study by Rhode Island’s state Office of Revenue Assessment suggests no. It says that the state gets back only 27 cents for each dollar spent on the program and that the program’s net tax-revenue loss is estimated at more than $1.8 million a year.

 

Well, I’m leery of many incentive programs meant to get businesses to move to states and cities. Broad improvements, such as better schools and well-maintained transportation and other public infrastructure, are the best way to lure and keep businesses in Rhode Island, along with state economic-development people, as well as local for-profit and nonprofit organizations, relentlessly publicizing  (without specifically being paid to do so!) its other attractions, such as its beautiful coastline, colleges, historical buildings, cuisine and, perhaps most importantly, its superb location between Boston and New York.

 

Still, there are intangible benefits from subsidizing movie and TV projects in publicizing a state and in raising the pride and morale of its citizens. The long-term value of many public programs is impossible to quantify because much of it is psychological.

 

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For a brilliant overview of the fiscal horrors produced by states’ grotesquely badly structured public-employee pension systems, hit this link:

 

Pension costs are devouring states’ resources at a frightening rate, ravaging crucial public programs, including education and law enforcement. Rhode Islanders should give Gov. Gina Raimondo some credit for trying to address this slow-motion catastrophe, decades in the making and saturated with wishful thinking.

 

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For years, some scientists have expressed concern that cellphone use may cause brain cancer. That concern is increasing as more studies roll in.  And cellphone and wireless companies seem to be trying to play down the dangers, as tobacco companies did with smoking and lung cancer and the fossil-fuel companies with their products and global warming.

 

In any event, to be safer, use earbuds rather than having the phone right up against your ears.

 

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Boston may be home of HQ2
The Boston Business Journal reports:

 

“The Boston and Washington, D.C., metro areas are the “most likely candidates” to win Amazon.com Inc.’s second headquarters, a study from New York-based The Conference Board concludes, based on real-time labor demand and advertised online job vacancies among the 20 markets vying to land HQ2.

 

“The e-commerce giant's HQ2 campus could house 50,000 high-paying jobs in an 8 million-square-foot campus and generate $5 billion in investment.’’

 

To read the full article, please hit this link:

 

If Boston does get the much hyped headquarters, Rhode Island and southern New Hampshire will probably benefit a lot. The Ocean State’s nationally known design community might be the biggest beneficiary.

 

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Some California cities are justifiably pushing back against state laws there meant to undermine federal immigration statutes. The communities are right to challenge measures aimed at expanding protections for illegal aliens. Federal law always supersedes the states’. The place to fix federal immigration laws, which should have been redone years ago, is Washington, D.C.  Illegals always deserve humane treatment but states and cities shouldn’t be encouraging law-breaking.

 

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I was at a breakfast meeting in Boston’s Back Bay last Wednesday with a bunch of civic leaders, including developers, a police official and  Red Sox officials. I was struck by just how well the city seems to work, and of how upbeat everyone seemed about the city, of course ably assisted by the long tech and financial-services boom in Greater Boston. That the sun made a rare appearance helped, too.

 

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The Dream Colony: A Life in Art, by the late Walter Hopps, is a very entertaining memoir of the post-World War II American art world by a hugely creative and iconoclastic curator. He was a wonderful describer of artists and art.

 

 


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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