The Return of the Invisible Hand
By Tom Tomorrow
Click here to see the marvels of the market.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Corporate Privacy is Alive and Well
Don’t
Ask, Don’t Tell
By
Phil Mattera in the Dirt Diggers Digest
Recent
revelations about the electronic surveillance programs of the federal
government, which are being carried out with the cooperation of large
telecommunications and internet companies, show that personal privacy rights
are in serious peril.
Much
is being said and written about the discrepancy between the seemingly
invincible status of the Second Amendment and the disintegrating Fourth
Amendment. Yet the more significant contrast may be between individuals and
corporations with regard to privacy and protection from government intrusion.
Cleaner Power from Innovation
Creative Approaches to Renewable Energy
BY RICHARD MATTHEWS
· From Global Warming is
Real
Innovation
is the key to the future and central to the expansion of renewable sources of
energy. There are a number of innovations that could radically transform the
clean energy equation.
Although
renewable energy is growing exponentially around the world these sources of
power have a number of shortcoming that make it difficult to scale-up so that
they can replace dirty energy sources like fossil fuels.
However,
those who doubt that renewable energy will be able to replace fossil fuels lack
imagination. We need to get outside the box to envision a future powered
entirely by clean energy.
Renewable
sources of power are our only hope for the future as we cannot continue to rely
on fossil fuels. Professor Lesley Hughes explains, “In order to achieve that
goal of stabilizing the climate at two degrees or less, we simply
have to leave about 80 percent of the world’s fossil fuel reserves in the
ground, We cannot afford to burn them and still have a stable and safe
climate.”
Progressive Charlestown hits another big milestone
Three-quarters
of a million individual page views
By
Will Collette
The
Progressive Charlestown odometer registered another big number: 750,000 page
views. That happened sometime early Sunday morning.
As
Charlestown’s most notorious blog, we draw a lot of readers interested in our
mix of local news, political scandals, things to do, jokes and cartoons,
recipes, environmental coverage, health tips and whatever else that interests
us, and might interest you.
“Page
views” is a way of counting readership that is very different than “hits.” For
a page view to get counted, a visitor to Progressive Charlestown has to
actually click on an article to read it. A “hit” simply means somebody visited
our website and may or may not have read anything. As a rule of thumb, it takes
about ten hits to produce one page view – yes, I know, TMI.
Catching Monsanto’s Drift
Frankenwheat crops are sprouting
like weeds in Oregon.
Bob
Dylan once sent a two-word lyric to Ben Harper, a talented songwriter he
admired. “Well well,” was the lyric, and Dylan challenged Harper to make a song
of it.
He
did! By adding another “well” to the title, Harper wrote “Well, well, well” — a stinging lament about America’s
clean-water well going dry due to waste and greed.
I
thought of his song when I heard that a wheat farmer in Eastern Oregon had
gotten an unpleasant surprise in May: Some of Monsanto’s unapproved, genetically manipulated wheat suddenly cropped up in his field. He’d
never planted any of these Frankenseeds, which have a foreign DNA spliced into
them by Monsanto’s bio-tamperers.
Legislation by local legislators to become law
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org
News Staff, with added notes from Will Collette
Donna Walsh measure helps to save family farms |
PROVIDENCE—Environmental
bills moved quickly through the House of Representatives during a rare Friday
session. Here are the actions taken on environmental legislation during the
General Assembly’s Thursday and Friday sessions.
Tax break for
farmers
The passage of the
2014 budget in the Senate means that farmers receive a welcome tax break that
helps prevent farmland from becoming housing developments. The new inheritance
tax will value the farm as agricultural land rather than the “full and fair”
value it could bring if developed. The goal is to preserve farmland for
agriculture instead of selling it to developers to pay estate taxes. This measure started out as legislation
introduced by Rep. Donna Walsh. Reps. Teresa Tanzi and Larry Valencia were
her co-sponsors.
Mattress
recycling
The House passed the
mattress recycling bill (H5799), making the new producer responsibility
program all but official. The fee-based mattress recycling through retailers
and recycling centers gets underway in about two years. The Senate passed
the bill June 19. Rhode Island will have the
second such program in the nation. In May, Connecticut became the first state
in the country to sign a mattress-recycling program into law. Reps. Donna Walsh and Teresa Tanzi
co-sponsored H5799.
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Toxic chemicals in local fish
By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI.org
News staff
BRISTOL — The federal
government advises women who are or may become pregnant, nursing mothers and
young children not to gorge on several marine species, namely swordfish,
albacore tuna, shark, king mackerel and tilefish, because of the concentration
in the tissue of these fish of methylmercury, a highly toxic organic compound
of mercury.
But what about fish that are more commonly caught in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island Sound and Block Island Sound, especially by recreational anglers? Since 2005, Roger Williams University marine biologist David Taylor has been studying the methylmercury content in the tissue of bluefish, striped bass, black sea bass, tautog, and winter and summer flounder.
But what about fish that are more commonly caught in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island Sound and Block Island Sound, especially by recreational anglers? Since 2005, Roger Williams University marine biologist David Taylor has been studying the methylmercury content in the tissue of bluefish, striped bass, black sea bass, tautog, and winter and summer flounder.
Governor and DEM push local agriculture
Farm Fresh Rhode Island boosts
sales for more than 60 Rhode Island producers
PROVIDENCE - Governor Lincoln Chafee, Department of Environmental Management Director Janet Coit, and DEM agriculture chief Ken Ayars joined USDA Rural Development Acting Under Secretary Doug O'Brien and others at Farm Fresh Rhode Island to highlight a recent public-private partnership to increase local food distribution across New England.
Farm Fresh Rhode Island operates as a food hub by offering aggregation, storage, marketing and distribution services to over 60 producers in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut and connecting them with additional regional buyers. It is one of 220 food hubs around the country.
Farm Fresh Rhode Island operates as a food hub by offering aggregation, storage, marketing and distribution services to over 60 producers in Rhode Island, Massachusetts and Connecticut and connecting them with additional regional buyers. It is one of 220 food hubs around the country.
Valencia vows to bring Voter ID legislation back to table next year
Will try to roll back voter ID before the 2014 election
STATE HOUSE – Changes to the state’s voter identification
law may be off the table for the 2013 legislative session, but Rep. Larry
Valencia (D-Dist. 39, Richmond, Exeter, Hopkinton) hopes to come back with an improved
version of his bill to quell the concerns of citizens who still believe the ID
requirement disenfranchises elderly, disabled and low-income individuals.
Under current law, Rhode Islanders will have to show photo
identification at the polls beginning next year. Representative Valencia’s
original bill, which the House Judiciary Committee heard in March and held for
further study, called for a full repeal of the voter ID law.
The amended
version of his legislation (2013-H
5776A) proposed freezing the requirements in place for the current year,
which allows voters to show a birth certificate, a social security card or a
government-issued medical card if he or she does not have a photo ID.
DEM sez only use local wood
Don’t
spread invaders around
Asian Long-horned beetle |
There are many species of insects and diseases that can be spread through the movement of firewood including Asian Longhorned Beetle, emerald ash borer, and Sirex woodwasps, none of which are currently found in Rhode Island. Emerald ash borer, first detected in North America near Detroit in 2002, has since killed more than 25 million ash trees in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and West Virginia. More than 75 percent of emerald ash borer infestation sites with known origins resulted from firewood movement.
Town Democrats ask Gov. Chafee to veto land use bills
Charlestown Democratic Town Committee condemns recent state legislation
By Will Collette
Governor Chafee at last year's Economic Development forum at the General Stanton Inn in Charlestown |
At its June 10th meeting, the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee decided to formally ask Governor Lincoln Chafee, a newly minted "D," to veto two pieces of pro-business land use legislation that are deeply unpopular in Charlestown and many other rural and suburban Rhode Island municipalities.
Commonly called the "Slopes" and the "Setback" bills, these bills share the common theme of restricting the authority of local government to regulate land uses to fit special local environmental conditions.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Star Forming Region NGC
3582
What's happening in the
NGC 3582 nebula? Bright stars and interesting molecules are forming. The complex nebula resides in the star forming region called
RCW 57.
Visible in this image are dense knots of dark interstellar dust, bright stars that have formed in the past few
million years, fields of glowing hydrogen gas ionized by these stars, and great loops of gas expelled by dying stars.
A detailed study of NGC 3582, also known as NGC 3584 and NGC 3576, uncovered at least 33 massive stars in the end
stages of formation, and the clear presence of the complex carbon molecules
known as polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs).
PAHs are thought to be
created in the cooling gas of star forming regions, and their development in the Sun's formation nebula five billion years ago may have been an
important step in the development of life on Earth.
OMGPD
Driving to
Endanger
When one of your first statements to an
officer is that you are “drinking drive” instead of “drunk driving,” you’re
going to have a bad time. Police pulled over Warwick man who was allegedly
driving 105 mph on Route 37 in Cranston.
Though his speech was reportedly slurred and he was lethargic,
officers were able to decipher that the man was repeatedly apologizing and said
it was his first time “drinking drive.”
After blowing a .187 on a preliminary Breathalyzer, he was
brought to the police station in Cranston. En route, he continued his
apologies. His wife will also be happy to know that he professed his love for
her to the officers.
Wal-Mart Hit and Run
Car Tech 2013
Self-Parking Cars, Green Dealerships, and Robot-Auto-Talk
Photo of MyFord Touch by Randy Stern |
by Frank Wood
Imagine your car being able to drive itself. Companies like Google are already starting to make this a reality, among other groundbreaking technologies. Some future trends for cars might end up being as common as air conditioning, while others will taper off into obscurity. Either way, half the fun is speculation. From the evolution of green vehicles to technological advancements, the future of cars is quickly becoming the present.
Casting a Spotlight on Frankenfoods
A legislative victory in Connecticut is the first for
American consumers who are demanding the right to know if our food is
genetically engineered.
Do you have a right to
know how your food is produced?
Look at any label on
something made for human consumption. Whether it’s a bite-sized candy bar, a
box of cereal, or a gallon of pickles, you’ll see lots of information: a list
of ingredients, allergen warnings, calorie counts, vitamins, and even whether
that item contains trans-fats.
What won’t you see?
Whether your food was genetically engineered.
But this might change
in the near future. Consumers across the nation are demanding that information.
Connecticut recently became the first state to pass a law requiring the
labeling of genetically engineered foods.
More Charlestown shorts
DiLibero vies
for new gig; Dems want your stuff; preparing for the next storm; WCCDC wants
board members; Gentz and Tremblay get mad
Bill DiLibero in happier times |
By
Will Collette
Bill DiLibero
vying for a new job!
Charlestown’s
poorly treated former Town Administrator Bill DiLibero is vying for a new gig as interim Town Manager for East Greenwich.
As Progressive Charlestown readers will remember, DiLibero was the target of one of Charlestown’s most outrageous hatchet jobs when the CCA Party – who had
praised, honored and given raises to Bill – decided to use him as a scapegoat
to divert attention from their mismanagement of Charlestown government and
their “Y-Gate Scam.” Bill was ousted
after the CCA Party’s “Kill Bill” campaign made his position in Charlestown
untenable. Best wishes that you get the new gig!
Some prime goods from last year's sale |
Dems want your
stuff!
The
annual Charlestown Democratic Town Committee yard sale is coming up on July 6.
CDTC’s top fund-raiser Frank Glista is still looking for salable goods that
will bring in some cash, so please contact Frank by e-mail or
at (401) 364-3723.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
The trick to better ZZZZs
Quality of Waking
Hours Determines Ease of Falling Sleep
From
ScienceDaily.com
The
quality of wakefulness affects how quickly a mammal falls asleep, UT
Southwestern Medical Center researchers report in a study that identifies two
proteins never before linked to alertness and sleep-wake balance.
"This
study supports the idea that subjective sleepiness is influenced by the quality
of experiences right before bedtime. Are you reluctantly awake or excited to be
awake?" said Dr. Masashi Yanagisawa, professor of molecular genetics and a
Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at UT Southwestern. He is
principal author of the study published online in May in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
A More Sustainable Future for Us All
The Sierra Club strongly supports a pathway to citizenship
for undocumented immigrants.
John Muir at Yosemite |
Like many great
Americans, Sierra Club founder John Muir was an immigrant. It’s only because
the Scottish-born environmentalist visionary, who arrived in the United States at the age
of 11 after a six-week sea voyage from Glasgow, was able to take advantage of
the opportunities in his adopted country that the Sierra Club exists at all.
Today, however, the
nation’s immigration system is broken. Nearly 165 years after Muir’s arrival on
our shores, we’re forcing approximately 11 million people to live in the
shadows.
Many of these
undocumented people work in the fields, mop floors, care for other people’s
children, and take low-wage jobs to support their families. Many suffer from
workplace exposure to dangerous chemicals and pesticides, and many more live in
areas with perilous levels of toxic air and water pollution.
Extreme weather caused $110 billion in damage in 2012
Second costliest year on record for severe weather, with 11
separate billion-dollar disasters, NOAA reports.
Daily Climate staff report
Severe weather cost
the nation $110 billion in damages in 2012, the second-costliest in history,
according to disaster information released June 13 by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
All told the United
States saw 11 weather and climate disasters last year with losses exceeding $1
billion in damages.
Eat Real
Too many diets are about hype, not health.
Is it just my friends,
or is nearly everyone on an absurd diet these days?
One friend says she’s
on a “primal” diet. She’s trying to eat like cavemen and will devour wild game
when she can get it. Another goes on a month-long “detox” fast each year.
Somehow, he survives on nothing but lemonade spiked
with maple syrup and cayenne pepper.
And I wish I could
convince another buddy that he doesn’t have to eat high-fiber cereal that
appears to be made from heavily sweetened sawdust.
Wind Turbines vs. almost everyone, round 4
The Zoning Board of Review holds their fourth meeting on the Whalerock wind turbine project.
By Tom
Ferrio
When Will announced that he reached his limit sitting on the metal chairs at the
elementary school, I decided that I should volunteer to attend the next
meeting and write it up for Progressive Charlestown.
I have news for you Will; the seating was not a problem at all. I sat through the entire meeting with hardly a hint of pain!
Click past the break to read my report on the meeting.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Metadata Mining Is Mega Awful
There's no
shortage of complaints about the nation's massive surveillance dragnet now that
We the People know about it.
For more from Matt Bors, click here. |
It’s good to know that
our friendly, über-secret National Security Agency is out there every day,
protecting our freedom. By violating it.
A whistleblower has
blown the lid off the NSA’s super-snoop program of rummaging electronically
through about a billion phone calls made every day by us average Americans.
This revelation prompted Al Gore to tweet: “Is it just me, or is secret blanket
surveillance obscenely outrageous?”
Disaster Relief Grants Available for Historic Properties Impacted by Hurricane Sandy
Preliminary applications for relief grants should be submitted
to the RI Historical Preservation & Heritage Commission by August 1, 2013.
From the Narragansett-South
Kingstown Patch
In late October 2012, Hurricane Sandy churned up the
Atlantic coast. Twenty-four states from Maine to Florida and west across the
Appalachian Mountains to Wisconsin felt the impact of the largest recorded
Atlantic hurricane and the second costliest in United States history.
In Rhode Island, the storm surge peaked at high tide around 8:30
p.m. on Monday, October 29 with winds of up to 86 mph in Westerly and gusts
over 50 mph in most parts of the state. While there were reports of damage
across the state, Block Island, Westerly, and many of the communities on the
Atlantic coast bore the brunt of the hurricane.
Assembly approves Biodiesel Heating Oil Act of 2013
Big win for the environment and for local Democratic sponsors
Tanzi, Sosnowski and Walsh pull off another win for the environment |
STATE
HOUSE – With the Senate’s passage of a House bill, the General Assembly
approved legislation yesterday that could position Rhode Island as a leader in
an emerging biofuels market.
The
legislation (2013-H
5802Aaa), sponsored by Rep. Arthur Handy (D-Dist. 18, Cranston), would
require all No. 2 distillate heating oil sold in the state to contain a
specified percentage of a bio-based product.
The Senate companion bill (2013-S
0816A), sponsored by Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown,
New Shoreham), has been placed on the House calendar for today.
“The
General Assembly’s top priority has been job creation this year, and this
legislation definitely has that in mind,” Senator Sosnowski said.
New Saltwater fishing guide is out
Publication Available at Numerous Venues throughout RI Including
Bait and Tackle Shops, Marine Supply Stores, Town Halls, Chambers of Commerce
PROVIDENCE
- The Department of Environmental Management announces the publication of the
first annual Rhode Island Recreational Saltwater Fishing Guide, which is now
available at bait and tackle shops, marine supply stores, town halls, chambers
of commerce, and other locations throughout the state.
"This new guide is designed to help make the already great experience of saltwater fishing in Rhode Island even better," said DEM Director Janet Coit. "It's a guide designed to serve the interests of all saltwater fishermen – newcomers to the sport as well as seasoned anglers."
Langevin applauds Supreme Court on Marriage Equality
Landmark
decision affirms equal protection under the law
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Congressman Jim Langevin (D-RI) is
calling today’s Supreme Court decisions on the Defense of Marriage Act and
Proposition 8 enormous victories for equal rights. Less than two months after
legislation was signed to legalize same-sex marriage in Rhode Island, these
rulings build momentum for supporters of marriage equality nationwide.
“Today’s decision to strike down DOMA will go down in
history alongside other groundbreaking civil rights cases such as Brown v.
Board of Education. There is simply no place for discrimination in our law or
our society,” Langevin said.
Gordon Fox - head DINO
Gordon Fox's leadership strategy |
Progressives have
always had a complicated relationship with House Speaker Gordon Fox.
Though deeply concerned that Fox’s very conservative economic policies are
destroying our state, we have always supported the House leadership team
because Fox’s likely successors, Helio Melo and Nick Mattiello, are even more
conservative than he is.
When Speaker Fox faced
the progressive voters of the East Side in November, they were angry—angry at
the bevy of red-state legislation Fox had actively pushed for. Fox promised
to change.
He promised to sunset
the ALEC-backed voter ID law he supported, a law he passed even though the
chairwoman of the national Democratic Party called him to beg him to
reconsider. He promised to consider not bailing out Wall Street on the 38
Studios deal he helped orchestrate.
Unshackle patients
Put
an end to unnecessary restraints
Students with disabilities are disproportionately restrained or secluded in school settings. Restraint is a nation-wide problem that often causes injuries, some of them deadly.
By
Dr. Joanne Eichinger via Cheryl Dowdell
The
Rhode Island legislature is currently considering a bill, H-6088,
that would curtail a serious problem for the disabled by regulating the use of
restraints and curb their misuse. Local state Representative Larry Valencia (D) is the lead co-sponsor of the bill.
The bill is currently being held in the House
Judiciary Committee.
With
only a little time left, we urge you to contact your state representatives and
senators to ask them to pass this bill before this session of the General
Assembly ends.
Students with disabilities are disproportionately restrained or secluded in school settings. Restraint is a nation-wide problem that often causes injuries, some of them deadly.
Five
months ago, Ethan Saylor, a 26-year-old man with Down syndrome, died while
being restrained by mall security officers. Ethan had attended a movie at a
local theater in Maryland. When Ethan verbally refused to leave the theater
after the movie ended, and while his support staff had gone to get their car,
mall security was called, and Ethan was restrained face-down, resulting in
death (http://www.ndsccenter.org).
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Uncle Sam’s Vast Dragnet
We have a right to be left alone unless the government can give us a very good reason to the contrary.
For more from P.S. Mueller, click here |
In 1929, Secretary of State Henry Stimson dismantled the department charged with breaking codes and learning other nations’ secrets. Asked why, he said:
“Gentlemen don’t read other gentlemen’s mail.” Some sources quote him less elegantly as saying “each other’s mail,” but you get the gist. And boy, have we ever come a long way.
We still pay lip service to our “right to privacy,” but in reality we don’t have one. When you make a phone call, send email, buy something online, or arrange for an automatic withdrawal from your bank, you open up your life to people who would seek to mine it for their own purposes, good and evil.
Privacy? That’s so 20th century.
Scientists Confirm Tsunami Hit Narragansett Bay
A small tidal wave hit the Rhode Island coast on June 13.
A small tsunami hit the Narragansett Bay earlier this month,
causing sea levels in the bay to rise and fall several feet within 20 minutes.
A straight line thunderstorms - called a derecho - apparently
triggered a tidal wave on June 13, a University of Rhode
Island scientist told The Providence Journal . A derecho is a
straight line of thunderstorms that sweeps across the country in an eastward
direction and can cause hurricane-force winds.
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