Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Senate OKs Sen. Gu bill to expand online database of affordable housing
Senator Gu thinks people have the right to more affordable housing information
The Senate voted today to approve legislation sponsored by Sen. Victoria Gu to expand the searchable online database of low- and moderate-income housing to better serve Rhode Islanders searching for a home.“A few years ago, the General Assembly tasked RIHousing with creating and maintaining a searchable online database of low-income housing developments to inform the public of low-income housing opportunities,” said Senator Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestown, South Kingstown).
“But that law
only narrowly applied to the limited number of rental units funded by
RIHousing, leaving large gaps that made it difficult for Rhode Islanders
searching for affordable housing to find an available unit. This bill expands that
database to all low- and moderate-income housing units — including
homeownership units — to create a comprehensive one-stop location for Rhode
Islanders searching for housing.”
The legislation (2026-S 2690) would expand the database to include all
residential developments that meet the definition of low- or moderate-income
housing, including homeownership units. Currently, the database is limited to
rentals in specific low-income housing developments and subsidized housing
developments.
Scientists discover why Alzheimer’s risk hits women so much harder
By the numbers
University of California - San Diego
![]() |
| Why are women more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease? - Harvard Health |
Scientists at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine analyzed data from more than 17,000 middle aged and older adults and found that certain modifiable dementia risk factors appear to have a greater impact on women's cognitive function than men's.
The findings were
published May 19, 2026, in Biology of Sex Differences.
Remind Me. Why Cuba?
I’ve Lost the Rationale for Why We’re Doing What We’re Doing
By Tom Cantlon

Oppressed people? That’s also true in countries all over the world that we don’t seem to care about. Even further, Viktor Orban in Hungary was transitioning the country to an oppressive authoritarian system and we supported him. Is it because Cuba is in our Western hemisphere? So is Peru where President Bukele is leading a harsh authoritarian rule, but we’re making deals with him to take the immigration rejects (to put it in terms that fit Trump’s attitude) that Trump wants to get rid of.
And much of what the Cuban people suffer is simple poverty which the
U.S. has played a big role in creating. We’ve had embargoes of varying degrees
imposed on them since 1960, and of course much worse now since Trump has almost
cut off their ability to import oil.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
The Supreme Court’s Whites-First Reasoning on Gerrymandering
It’s Always Been About Race
Will the Supreme Court’s evident desire to assist the G.O.P. before the midterms override a decision by three Republican-appointed judges to spare Black majority districts in Alabama from being gerrymandered out of existence?
This is the question posed by possible Supreme Court review
of the finding by an Alabama judicial panel that Alabama could not use a
congressional district map that deliberately discriminated against Black
voters.
Two of the three judges on the panel which found race-based
discrimination had been appointed to the bench by President Trump; one, by
President Reagan. The issue now is whether the conservative justices of the
Supreme Court will upend the panel’s racial discrimination finding,
notwithstanding that the Alabama judges had followed legal standards set in the
Supreme Court’s recent decision in Louisiana v.
Callais.
If they allow the Alabama decision stand, it will be a rare
exception to the flood of Supreme-Court-encouraged gerrymandering prompted by
the Callais decision. Those Republican gerrymanders are likely
to purge
one-third of African -Americans representatives from Congress by
destroying the Black majority districts that elected them.
Nonetheless, the six justices of the Supreme Court who
caused this political bloodbath along racial lines claim that Republican
gerrymandering does not violate the voting rights of African-Americans. The
purge is lawful under the Voting Rights Act, say the justices, because the
G.O.P. has partisan reasons to eliminate the Black districts
that cannot be “disentangled” from racial motives.
Meet and support our great state Rep Tina Spears
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The surprising reason you’re so productive one day and not the next
Be sharp
University of Toronto
A study from the University of Toronto Scarborough suggests that feeling mentally sharp can significantly boost how much you accomplish in a day.
Researchers found that when people are thinking clearly and efficiently,
the effect can equal roughly 40 extra minutes of productive work.
Published in Science Advances, the research tracked participants over 12 weeks to better understand why people sometimes struggle to follow through on their plans.
The findings point to daily shifts in mental sharpness as a key factor.
On days when participants felt more
mentally alert, they were more likely to set goals and complete them, whether
tackling schoolwork or everyday tasks like making dinner.
"Some days everything just clicks, and on other days it
feels like you're pushing through fog," says Cendri Hutcherson, associate
professor in the Department of Psychology at U of T Scarborough and lead author
of the study.
"What we wanted to understand was why that happens, and
how much those mental ups and downs actually matter."




















