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Saturday, March 21, 2026

‘One Person Cannot Tear Our Movement Down,’ Farmworkers Say of César Chávez Revelations

The danger of revering heroes

Jessica Corbett for Common Dreams

“Our collective power is what defines us and is our movement, and one person cannot tear our movement down,” Alianza Nacional De Campesinas said in the wake of The New York Times reporting Wednesday on multiple sexual abuse allegations against late Mexican-American labor leader César Chávez.

“As a farmworker women’s organization, many of us have experienced or witnessed the sexual abuse and silence women endure in many aspects of our lives,” the group continued, adding that “we are deeply troubled and devastated” to learn about the reporting, and “we stand with Dolores Huerta, Ana Murguía, and Debra Rojas, who have bravely shared their painful stories.”

Huerta, cofounded with Chávez a group that went on to become the labor union United Farm Workers (UFW). In her comments to the Times and a separate statement, the 95-year-old described two separate encounters with Chávez that led to pregnancies: “The first time I was manipulated and pressured into having sex with him... The second time I was forced, against my will, and in an environment where I felt trapped.”

Murguía told the Times that Chávez molested her for four years, beginning when she was 13. Rojas said she was 12 when Chávez first groped her breasts in the same office where abused Murguía. When Rojas was 15, the newspaper reported, “he arranged to have her stay at a motel during a weekslong march through California, she said, and had sexual intercourse with her—rape, under state law, because she was not old enough to consent.”

The reporting has sparked a wave of responses from labor groups, elected officials, and others who have expressed support for survivors and stressed, as Guardian US columnist Moira Donegan wrote Friday, that “the rightness of the movement for the dignity of workers, for the rights and respect of Latinos, and for a future in which there is more freedom and possibility for poor people... cannot be tarnished by Chávez’s behavior.”

UFW Foundation said this week that “as a women-led organization that exists to empower communities, the allegations about abusive behavior by César Chávez go against everything that we stand for.”

Describing the alleged abuse as “shocking, indefensible and something we are taking seriously,” the UFW Foundation also announced that it “has cancelled all César Chávez Day activities this month.”

EDITOR'S NOTE: I spent a day with Cesar Chavez when he visited Providence in May 1972. I was a young organizer of 23 and was picked to be part of a contingent who essentially served as human shields. Cesar had gotten many death threats. I was mostly within an arm's length of him and liked and admired him at the time, but much less so now. - Will Collette

What are they dying for?

If you have any prohibited items in your luggage, they'll shoot you in the face

 

Thank you for your attention to this very important message from the President of the United States. Sigh.


Sen. Valverde, Rep. Speakman introduce bill allowing portable solar

Small systems would provide Rhode Islanders less-expensive, easier entry into electricity generation 

Sen. Bridget Valverde and Rep. June S. Speakman have introduced legislation to enable Rhode Islanders — even renters and those without rooftop access — to reduce their electric bills and generate green energy through small solar arrays that can be plugged into an ordinary outlet.

Plug-in solar (also called “balcony solar”) typically consists of one to four portable solar panels and is designed for simple self-installation by renters and homeowners alike. Plug-in solar panels can be placed on a balcony or patio or in a yard, then safely plugged into a standard wall outlet. 

Once plugged in, the solar energy immediately flows through the home to power appliances and lights, reducing the electricity that home must draw from the electric grid and saving money on household electric bills. Systems typically cost between $500 and $1,200.

The legislation (2026-S 23592026-H 7269) defines portable solar devices and exempts them from permitting and utility-agreement processes that are intended to regulate much larger systems.

Scientists Say Conquering Age-Related Diseases Could Dramatically Extend Human Life

A new perspective on how to slow aging

By Genomic Press

Phenotypic Changes Across Levels of Biological Complexity
Multidimensional nature of aging: phenotypic changes across levels of biological complexity. The figure illustrates time-dependent phenotypic change across molecular, cellular, tissue, and organismal scales in multiple species. Credit: Dan Ehninger

The analysis, published in Genomic Psychiatry, calls on researchers to rethink how biological aging is measured and interpreted. Dr. Dan Ehninger, who leads the Translational Biogerontology Laboratory at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, and Dr. Maryam Keshavarz conducted a systematic review examining widely used indicators of aging.

Their work argues that common measures such as lifespan extension, epigenetic clocks, frailty indices, and even the widely cited hallmarks of aging framework may blur the line between true changes in aging and general physiological effects that occur regardless of age.

One of the most surprising insights comes from comparing causes of death across species. In humans, cardiovascular disease is responsible for roughly 35 to 70 percent of deaths among older adults. Autopsy studies prove that even centenarians who appeared healthy shortly before death almost always died from identifiable medical conditions rather than from old age alone.

Research on people between 97 and 106 years old further supports this pattern, with vascular diseases remaining the leading cause of death. These findings highlight that even exceptional longevity usually ends with a specific disease.

George Washington was a huge vaccine supporter and even used the smallpox vaccine to help beat the British

Washington MANDATED that American troops be vaccinated against smallpox

By Matt Kaplan

It was June of 1775 and the British army was in control of Boston. George Washington had only recently become the commander of the colonial army and, while he had not fought at Bunker Hill, he arrived there shortly thereafter. He and his soldiers hid in the woodlands around the city watching and waiting for an opportunity to take Boston back. There were several problems with that plan, though.

First, Washington did not have the weapons on hand for a siege. Second, even if the weapons had been available, they wouldn’t have done him much good since he didn’t have enough troops to actually lay siege. Yet both of these problems paled in comparison to the third. There was a smallpox outbreak in the city.

The accompanying excerpt is adapted from “I Told You So!: Scientists Who Were Ridiculed, Exiled, and Imprisoned for Being Right,” by Matt Kaplan. (St. Martin’s, 288 pages.) Copyright © 2026 by the author and reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Publishing Group.

You can say what you like about Covid-19, but when you compare it to the great many diseases that have infected human beings throughout history, it is not as bad as most of them. I am not trying to make light of a pandemic that killed millions, but it is important to put it in perspective. Even at the very beginning, when there were no vaccines and no known treatments, Covid-19 rendered roughly 15 percent of those who caught it in North America and Europe seriously ill. Many of these sufferers ended up in the hospital. Some developed complications. Some of those with complications died. In short, for those who were identified as carrying Covid-19, the chance of dying from the disease in 2020 was around 1 to 3 percent. Now let’s take a look at smallpox.

Early stages of smallpox were not much different from Covid-19 and influenza. People would get a fever, they’d have aches and pains, they’d feel tired, and often develop nausea. Then the real horror of the virus emerged. Little pimples started to appear on the patient’s forehead.

These multiplied rapidly, covering the face and the inside of the mouth. They then spread pretty much everywhere else on the body. Over the next few days, these pimples filled with fluid. They transformed into the dreaded pustules (pox) that smallpox is known for. These were horrible round, hard, and raised structures that looked like Rice Krispies that had been inserted under the skin.

Patients were often covered with them from head to toe. The infectious liquid inside these pustules then slowly started leaking until, a couple weeks after the disease appeared, the pustules dried out, broke off the skin, and left behind permanent disfiguring scars. This was the “ordinary” version of smallpox, and conservative records indicate that it killed 30 percent of those who caught it. There were more deadly versions of the disease (aptly named the malignant and hemorrhagic variants). They killed just about everyone who caught them.

Friday, March 20, 2026

South County Health’s Mystery Partner

What the Community Deserves to Know

By Dr. Chris Van hemelrijck 

In mid-November 2025, South County Health (SCH) CEO Aaron Robinson and Board Chair Joseph Matthews announced they had signed a letter of intent with one of the “top 10” health systems in the country. A 120-day due diligence period followed. That period is now closing — and the community still knows remarkably little about what has actually been agreed to. 

SCH leadership has described the arrangement as “transformational” and “non-traditional” — a clinical and digital partnership that would bring an Epic electronic medical records (EMR) system, artificial intelligence tools, and world-class clinical expertise to South County. 

We are told that existing and future funds raised locally will remain with SCH and that local governance will not change. These are reassuring words. But words are not a governance structure, and reassurances are not contractual protections. 

The unnamed partner is just one of several unknowns. Robinson has referenced “multiple partners” — strategic, AI, digital, and clinical — but has not identified the AI company involved, the clinical partner providing second opinions, or how any of these relationships would be structured. 

Each of these entities may have its own financial interests and contractual claims. The public deserves to know who they are. 

Understanding why SCH is pursuing this deal requires looking at the finances honestly. Three consecutive years of net losses — $4.6 million in 2022, $6.5 million in 2023, and $534,000 in 2024 — against total revenue of roughly $239 million tells a difficult story. Current net assets stand at approximately $72 million. 

Today's civics class

Relief in cat-dom

Bike and walking trails lose hundreds of millions under Trump

Why Trump cut the funding is unclear.

By Shalina Chatlani, Rhode Island Current

Cities and states are filing lawsuits and scrambling for alternative sources of money as the Trump administration seeks to shut off the federal funding spigot for biking and walking trails.

Since the early 1990s, there has been fairly consistent — and largely bipartisan — federal support for bicycle and pedestrian projects. Federal funding for such projects reached new heights during the Biden administration, as major spending measures in 2021 and 2022 included billions in new money for them.

But in his efforts to eliminate what he perceives as diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives — and to roll back anything associated with his predecessor — Donald Trump has targeted hundreds of millions in federal grants for biking and pedestrian projects. And further cuts could be coming.

The broad tax and spending measure Trump signed last summer rescinded $2.4 billion from the Biden administration’s Neighborhood Access and Equity Program, money included in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act to address long-standing safety issues stemming from past infrastructure projects, including interstate highways that split minority communities.

Of that total, at least $750 million was specifically earmarked for trails, walking paths and bike lane projects, according to data on grant recipients collected by Rails to Trails Conservancy, a nonprofit that advocates for trails and the construction of multiuse paths in abandoned railroad corridors.

Hitting the beach again to improve public access for Rhode Islanders

Sen. Gu, Rep. Cortvriend introduce legislation to strengthen shoreline access

Photo by Will Collette
Rep. Terri Cortvriend and Sen. Victoria Gu have introduced a trio of bills to protect Rhode Islanders’ access to the shoreline.

“Our coasts, rivers, ponds and lakes are precious resources that make Rhode Island special,” said Senator Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestown, South Kingstown). “These bills provide the tools necessary to preserve historic foot paths and rights of ways so that every Rhode Islander can enjoy them.”

The three bills would make it easier for both the Coastal Resources Management Council and municipalities to preserve traditional footpaths and shoreline rights of way and to educate tenants of shoreline properties about public shoreline access rights.

Rhode Island is suing Trump again, this time over fair housing

Attorney General coalition challenges the Trump Administration’s attack on fair housing laws

Steve Ahlquist

In 1973, Trump and his father Fred were busted by HUD for racial
discrimination in housing under the FHA. Gutting the FHA is
another example of Trump's vengeance over past grievances

From a press release:

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha joined a coalition of 16 attorneys general filing a lawsuit challenging unlawful actions by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), including threats to withhold funding from state and local fair housing enforcement agencies for abiding by state laws and threats to impose illegal conditions on HUD funding. 

These actions threaten to weaken America’s fair housing enforcement system and undermine states’ ability to ensure equal access to housing.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Number of new CRMC members to come this year: 7. Number of nominees picked by McKee: Zero

Doing nothing is not a solution

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

From SteveAhlquist.news
Heather Low’s application to serve on the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) opens with a letter crediting her grandfather, a retired Navy veteran and avid boater, and childhood summers spent along the Kickemuit River in Warren, for her lifelong love for fishing and conservation.

Low, 51, of Coventry, has a bachelor’s degree in environmental science. She’s active in the Rhode Island Saltwater Anglers Association, and, since May 2025, has also served on the CRMC’s Fishermen’s Advisory Board, representing recreational anglers in the agency’s negotiations with offshore wind project developers.

Low wants to join the politically appointed full council to share her perspective as a conservationist and angler.

She sent in her application the day before Thanksgiving. Since then?

“I’ve heard nothing,” Low said in an interview Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the March 1 deadline for Gov. Dan McKee to name seven new members for the state coastal resources panel passed without any appointments or even public mention of prospective candidates. 

The flags of MAGA