Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Friday, May 29, 2026
Study Finds No Significant Health Effects from Wind Turbine Exposure
King Donald is wrong again
By Bioengineer
In a groundbreaking study published in the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) on May 19, 2026, researchers have shed light on a subject of mounting public interest and controversy: the health impacts of living near wind turbines.Wind energy is heralded globally as a pivotal element in the
transition from fossil fuels toward sustainable energy systems. However,
despite the environmental benefits, there remains a persistent public
apprehension regarding the potential health effects of turbines, with claims
ranging from sleep disturbances and headaches to heightened depression and even
increased suicide rates. These assertions have often led to local opposition
against turbine installations, complicating the advancement of wind energy
projects.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Sen. DiMario, Rep. Fogarty introduce legislation to address loopholes in campaign finance law
Bills need action before General Assembly session ends
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| Here is a prime example of the kind of election abuse this legislation is designed to fight. From the League of Rhode Island Businesses (LORIB) which set up 40 PACs and is running candidates against nearly every Democratic woman legislator in South County. |
“As elected officials, our constituents expect us to represent their best interests and not the best interests of wealthy donors,” said Senator DiMario (D-Dist. 36, Narragansett, North Kingstown, New Shoreham).
“Furthermore, our state constitution charges the General Assembly with setting
limits on political donations and ensuring that campaign donations and
expenditures are clearly and publicly reported. But as with many laws that we
pass, we have to keep an eye on them so that they work as intended. This bill
seeks to close the gaps between intention and practice in campaign finance by
closing loopholes that have become apparent over the years. It’s time for the
letter of the law to reflect the spirit of open, fair and transparent
campaigning set down in our constitution.”
The bill (2026-S 2720, 2026-H 7450) would strengthen Rhode Island’s campaign
finance laws in a variety of ways, including closing a loophole that
allows campaigns to receive unlimited donations from vendors if those vendors
agree to allow an outstanding invoice for their services to remain unpaid for
an indefinite period of time. The bill would set a time limit for unpaid
invoices before they must be classified as donations.
“This is critical legislation that closes loopholes
surrounding election donations and campaign expenditures,” said Representative
Fogarty (D-Dist. 35, South Kingstown). “Our laws are clearly intended to place
reasonable limits on the role of money in politics and make sure its influence
is transparently reported. But we’ve been falling behind upholding these
ideals as donors, candidates and political action committees have found and
exploited loopholes since our laws were last updated. By addressing areas where
our laws are coming up short, this bill will increase transparency and boost
public confidence in the electoral process.”
The bill would also prohibit using multiple political action
committees under the control of the same person or group of people to evade the
annual $2,000 limit on contributions to a political candidate — a practice
already outlawed in federal elections — and strengthen the penalties for
illegal straw donations that are similarly used to subvert contribution limits.
It would also clarify the definition of an in-kind
contribution, require campaigns to itemize payments to vendors, tighten rules
for political action committees to stop them from scamming donors by spending
the bulk of their funds on overhead and close a loophole that could allow
corporations that are banned from donating to candidates in Rhode Island to
evade the ban by donating paid personal services.
Senator DiMario and Representative Fogarty’s legislation was
supported in committee by the Rhode Island Board of Elections, the Campaign
Legal Center and Common Cause Rhode Island, the latter of which wrote “together
these changes will make our campaign finance limits and reporting more
effective and reduce the role of money in our politics.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: LORIB has targeted Charlestown state Rep. Tina Spears as well as our state Senator Victoria Gu. The authors of the legislation, Rep. Kathy Fogarty and Sen. Alana DiMario are also targets, as are Rep. Teresa Tanzi, Rep. Carol McEntee, and Sen. Bridgette ValVerde. Many of these challenges take the form of putting up a DINO (Democrat in name only) candidate up against a real Democrat in the September 9 Democratic Primary. That's the case in Charlestown where a pro-gun lawyer specializing in defending clients charged with sex crimes is up against our hard-working state Rep. Tina Spears. - Will Collette
Leave the babies alone!
Respect Wildlife - Don't Touch!
The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) asks the public to give baby wildlife some space, especially fawns – the tiny spotted deer that are often mistakenly thought to be “abandoned” when they’re right where Mom left them.“In nature, it’s normal for a fawn to be hidden in grass or
brush for the first week after birth, as it can’t yet follow its mother,” said
Dylan Ferreira, a wildlife biologist in DEM's Division of Fish and Wildlife (DFW).
“Sometimes well-intentioned people wrongly assume that a fawn is abandoned and
take it home and try to rescue it, but the mother is usually nearby and returns
to feed it. If you see a fawn alone, please leave it alone – it does not need
help and should not be handled.”
Childhood junk food may rewire the brain for life
Bites back later in life
University College Cork
Children who regularly eat high-fat, high-sugar foods may
experience lasting changes in the brain that continue long after their diets
improve, according to a new study from University College Cork (UCC).
Researchers also found that beneficial gut bacteria and prebiotic fibers could
help reduce some of these long-term effects and support healthier eating
behaviors later in life.
Scientists at APC Microbiome, a leading research center
based at UCC, discovered that unhealthy diets during early life can alter how
the brain controls appetite and feeding. These changes persisted even after the
unhealthy diet ended and body weight returned to normal.
Today's children are surrounded by highly processed foods
that are heavily marketed and easy to access. Sugary and fatty foods have
become common at birthday parties, school events, sports activities, and even
as rewards for good behavior. Researchers say this constant exposure may shape
food preferences from an early age and encourage eating habits that continue
into adulthood.
Childhood Diets and Long-Term Brain Changes
The study, published in Nature Communications,
found that early exposure to calorie-dense, nutrient-poor foods can leave
lasting effects on feeding behavior. Researchers used a preclinical mouse model
and found that animals exposed to a high-fat, high-sugar diet early in life
showed persistent changes in eating behavior as adults.
The team linked these behavioral effects to disruptions in
the hypothalamus, a brain region responsible for regulating appetite and energy
balance.
The research also explored whether targeting the gut
microbiome could help counter these effects. Scientists tested a beneficial
bacterial strain (Bifidobacterium longum APC1472) along with
prebiotic fibers (fructo-oligosaccharides (FOS) and galacto-oligosaccharides
(GOS), naturally present in foods such as onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus and
bananas, and widely available in fortified foods and prebiotic supplements).
According to the findings, both approaches showed potential
benefits when given throughout life.
Gut Bacteria May Help Restore Healthy Eating Patterns
"Our findings show that what we eat early in life
really matters." said Dr. Cristina Cuesta-MartÃ, first author of the
study. "Early dietary exposure may leave hidden, long-term effects on
feeding behavior that are not immediately visible through weight alone."
Researchers found that unhealthy diets early in life
disrupted brain pathways linked to feeding behavior, with effects continuing
into adulthood. The findings suggest this could raise the risk of obesity later
in life.
Importantly, scientists found that modifying the gut
microbiota helped reduce these long-term effects. The probiotic strain Bifidobacterium
longum APC1472 significantly improved feeding behavior while causing
only minor changes to the overall microbiome, suggesting a highly targeted
effect. Meanwhile, the prebiotic combination (FOS+GOS) produced broader changes
across the gut microbiome.
Microbiome Research Opens New Possibilities
"Crucially, our findings show that targeting the gut
microbiota can mitigate the long-term effects of an unhealthy early-life diet
on later feeding behavior. Supporting the gut microbiota from birth helps
maintain healthier food-related behaviors into later life." said Dr.
Harriet Schellekens, lead investigator of the study.
Professor John F. Cryan, Vice President for Research &
Innovation at UCC and collaborator on the project, said: "Studies like
this exemplify how fundamental research can lead to potential innovative
solutions for major societal challenges. By revealing how early-life diet
shapes brain pathways involved in the regulation of feeding, this work opens
new opportunities for microbiota-based interventions."
The UCC-led study involved collaborators from the University
of Seville (Spain), University of Gothenburg (Sweden), and Teagasc Food
Research Centre (Fermoy, Ireland). Funding came from Research Ireland, a
Government of Ireland Postgraduate Scholarship, and a research award from the
Biostime Institute for Nutrition & Care.
Journal Reference:
- Cristina
Cuesta-Marti, Eduardo Ponce-España, Friederike Uhlig, Iris Stoltenborg,
Luiza A. Wasiewska, Lamiah Kareem, Dara Hedayatpour, Loreto
OlavarrÃa-RamÃrez, Cristina Rosell-Cardona, Thomaz. F. S. Bastiaanssen,
Gabriel. S. S. Tofani, Benjamin Valderrama, Klara Vlckova, Suzanne L.
Dickson, Aonghus Lavelle, Catherine Stanton, R. Paul Ross, John F. Cryan,
Timothy G. Dinan, Gerard Clarke, Siobhain M. O’Mahony, Harriët
Schellekens. Bifidobacterium longum and prebiotic interventions
restore early-life high-fat/high-sugar diet-induced alterations in feeding
behavior in adult mice. Nature Communications, 2026; 17
(1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-68968-2
Retirees Are Worried About the Cost of Healthcare – and Who Can Blame Them?
Rising premiums, deductibles, co-pays, supplemental coverage and out of pocket costs hurt
The 10-percent increase in Medicare Part B premiums for 2026 has reignited concerns about how much Social Security and total income people will have after they cover their out-of-pocket (OOP) health spending. Fortunately, my colleague Matt Rutledge has updated earlier research to answer precisely that question.
Even though retirees ages 65+ have Medicare, they still face considerable costs. In the case of Medicare Part A, which covers inpatient hospital care and is financed primarily by payroll taxes, beneficiaries face cost-sharing. Medicare Part B, which covers physician and outpatient hospital services, and Part D, which covers prescription drugs, are partly financed by premiums and include further cost-sharing.
Because Medicare’s OOP costs are
often substantial, many enrollees buy supplemental coverage, which may include
additional premiums. Finally, many services, such as dental, vision, and
hearing, are not covered by Medicare.
To identify total out-of-pocket healthcare costs, Matt used
the 2018, 2020, and 2022 Health and Retirement Study (HRS). The
sample included respondents who were ages 65+ and were receiving both Social
Security and Medicare. In terms of expenditures, the HRS captures prescription
drugs, special facilities, surgery, and medical visits to doctors, hospitals,
and dentists. It also includes self-reported premiums paid for Medicare Part D,
Medicare Advantage, and private supplemental plans. Medicare Part B
income-related premiums were estimated based on the individual’s income.
The central finding was the percentage of Social Security
left after paying out-of-pocket health costs and how those results changed over
the three surveys. As shown in Figure 1, the median percentage remaining in
2022 after medical OOP spending was 71 percent for Social Security benefits and
88 percent for total income. And these percentages were virtually unchanged
over the three surveys.
In other words, OOP takes a big chuck of retirees’ resources, and the 10-percent increase in Medicare Part B premium suggests no relief on the horizon.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Corruptonomics
A memo to Democratic candidates on connecting Trump’s lousy economy to his corrupt regime.
Friends,
Here’s a memo to Democrats as they begin campaigning in
earnest for control of the House and Senate in the midterm elections. (Please
send to any candidates you care about.)
***
TO: Democratic candidates in the 2026 midterm elections
RE: Connect Trump’s lousy economy to his corrupt regime.
The purpose of this memo is to help you shape your midterm
message around the crisis of affordability and Trump Republican corruption. I
urge you to present these two issues as aspects of the same underlying problem:
The economy is lousy for most Americans because Trump Republicans are enabling
super-rich oligarchs to siphon off most of its gains while exerting increasing
control over it. Their — and Trump’s — self-dealing is undermining trust and
confidence in the U.S. economic system.
1. Republicans in the House and Senate have put oligarchs
in charge of America.
House and Senate Republicans have allowed Trump’s war and his tariffs to drive up prices and Trump’s corruption to undermine faith in the economy. They’ve allowed Trump to gild his White House in gold leaf, plan a giant Arc de Trump, throw lavish parties, and build a Billionaire’s Ballroom — at a time when most Americans can’t afford gas or groceries.
They raided Medicaid to pay for Trump’s giant tax cut, whose
benefits are going mostly to the rich. Legislative efforts advanced by House
Republicans and signed into law have targeted up to $2
trillion in federal health care cuts, forcing millions of Americans
off Medicaid rolls to pay for these tax reductions.
They refused to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies.
This is causing average premiums to more than double and has
already pushed 1.2
million people off coverage because they can’t afford it. Coverage
losses are mounting as many who initially selected a plan or who were
automatically reenrolled have to drop coverage.
Big Tech oligarchs — centi-billionaires Bezos,
Musk, Zuckerberg, Ellison, and other robber barons — paid for Trump’s 2024
election, his inauguration, and his ballroom and are major donors to Senate and
House Republicans. They’ve shown up at Trump’s inauguration, White House
dinners, and official visits to China.
In return, these oligarchs have been allowed to monopolize
and drive up the prices we pay and silence Trump critics. Bezos’s
Amazon, for example, won’t allow any seller on the site to post lower prices on
any other site, and Bezos won’t allow his Washington Post editorial
page to criticize Trump. Larry and David Ellison have bought CBS
and sanitized “60 Minutes” of Trump criticism and effectively canceled Stephen
Colbert. After buying X (formerly Twitter), Musk turned it into a pro-Trump
voice box.
The AI oligarchs have bribed Trump and congressional Republicans to allow unfettered and unregulated growth of AI and its data centers, threatening millions of jobs and posing potential dangers to human life itself.
The crypto oligarchs have bribed Trump and
congressional Republicans to allow them to create the world’s largest Ponzi
scheme — which is enriching Trump and his family while providing a means for
criminals to hide insider trades, child trafficking, and drug deals.
The Big Oil and aerospace oligarchs have bribed
congressional Republicans to allow Trump to go to war in Iran, resulting in
massive profits for Big Oil — while the rest of us pay $1.50 more per gallon of
gas — and giant profits for giant military contractors.
This war spending has also contributed to higher
inflation, which the rest of us pay for in higher mortgage rates and
higher rates on car loans and education loans. The average 30-year fixed
mortgage rate has surged to over 6.6
percent, reaching its highest level in nearly nine months, driven by
rising Treasury yields, higher oil prices, and broader economic inflation
concerns stemming from the war in Iran. The major beneficiaries of these higher
rates — who pocket the higher payments we have to make — are the biggest banks
and super-rich who make the loans.
Oligarchs have also bribed Trump and congressional
Republicans to (1) get no-bid contracts, (2) deregulate Wall Street,
(3) roll back environmental safeguards and worker safety, and (4) get massive
subsidies for their corporations — all of which have made them even richer
while making life for the rest of us more dangerous and more costly.
The brain's night shift: How sleep, waste clearance and dementia may be linked
Maybe it's a bad idea to spend all night shit-posting on social media
By University of Rochester Medical Center
Edited by Sadie Harley,
reviewed by Robert
Egan
The article presents a new way of thinking about sleep, not
simply as a period of rest, but as a highly organized biological state that
coordinates brain chemistry, blood vessel movement, and cerebrospinal fluid
flow to support the brain's nightly cleaning process.
The piece also points to a potential biomarker, heart rate
variability, which can already be tracked with consumer wearables, as a simple,
noninvasive way to assess sleep-related brain health and identify people at
increased risk for cognitive decline.
Scientists uncover cancer-causing chemicals hidden in everyday foods
Moderate your cooking style
Seoul National University of Science & Technology
More people are paying close attention to what they eat, often tracking calories, exercising daily, and filling their plates with foods that seem naturally healthy, including fruits and vegetables.Among the compounds of concern are polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs (hydrophobic organic compounds comprising multiple fused aromatic rings).
Some PAHs are known for their cancer causing potential, which
makes reliable food testing an important part of protecting public health.
EPA Claims ‘Overwhelming Rejection’ of EVs as It Moves to Loosen Air Pollution Rules
Based on false premise, EPA moves to create more smog
By Anika Jane Beamer
This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, non-partisan news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. Sign up for their newsletter here.
After eliminating the electric vehicle tax credit, rolling back fuel economy standards and blocking California’s stringent vehicle emissions rules, the Trump administration is now citing slowed electric vehicle growth as its rationale for loosening automobile air pollution standards.
In a rulemaking proposal released Friday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to delay the adoption of Biden-era Tier 4 air pollution standards for passenger cars and trucks and, going forward, to reconsider them.
The agency said that the proposed change is in response to “the overwhelming rejection of Electric Vehicles (EVs) by the American people and manufacturers shifting away from them.” It comes amid debate over environmental regulation and the influence of industry interests in the Trump administration.
Established in April 2024, the Tier 4 Criteria Pollutant Standards represent the most recent batch of vehicle emissions standards adopted under the Clean Air Act. The standards would have required manufacturers to meet fleet-average limits on smog-producing volatile organic compounds, oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and particulate matter tailpipe emissions, with phase-in beginning in 2027.
When the standards were first adopted in 2024, electric vehicles accounted for 8 percent of new light-duty vehicles (cars, vans and trucks weighing less than 8,500 pounds) sold in the United States.
EV growth was projected to continue. But soon after President Donald Trump took office for his second term in January 2025, he initiated a series of deregulatory actions that stunted EV market growth.













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