Heat and bad air can kill. So can wildfires. Be careful out there.
Charlestown cooling centers:
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Americans are not as well off as people in peer nations
As the United States celebrates the 250th anniversary of its Declaration of Independence, the global data we collect and analyze shows that the country is failing to “promote the general Welfare,” as the Constitution’s framers promised a little more than a decade later.
We are scholars of human rights. Alongside the Human Rights Measurement Initiative, a nonprofit that tracks how well more than 200 countries and territories are meeting the human rights commitments their governments have made, we annually update scores measuring whether people can actually get the basics of a decent life, such as healthcare, adequate food and a quality education.
The latest data our team has amassed shows that the U.S. is falling short compared with what it could achieve, given its US$32 trillion economy. This is not a one-year blip – the U.S. has been underperforming for the past 25 years.
They don't even try to hide it anymore
Robert Reich in Inequality Media
The real way to read the immigration decisions the Supreme Court issued on Thursday is not to see them solely as losses for immigrants to the United States or the rights of immigrants. They are much larger losses.Markwayne Mullin vs. Al Otro Lado concerns a
1917 law that requires immigration officers to inspect noncitizens who arrive
at ports of entry to determine whether they may enter the United States.
Congress amended the law in the Refugee Act of 1980 to allow noncitizens
fleeing persecution in their home country to apply for asylum as part of this
inspection process.
The act lays out a required set of procedures to guide this
process. It says that a noncitizen who seeks admission to the United States
“may apply for asylum.” If the noncitizen lacks valid travel documents, the
officer “shall order [her] removed” unless she conveys an
intention to apply for asylum or a fear of persecution, which in turn requires the
officer to “refer” her for further processing of her asylum application.
This system is designed to ensure that the US government
considers the application of each person seeking to come into the United States
to determine who should be let in, who should be turned away, and who should be
allowed to apply for asylum.
This must be seen for what it really is—a systemic effort by the six Republican appointees on the court to shrink congressional authority and enlarge the authority of the executive branch.
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Tanzi and DiMario get it done
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| Sen. DiMario (left) and Rep. Teresa Tanzi (right) with Charlestown's state Rep. Tina Spears. All three are being targeted by the MAGA PAC, League of Rhode Island Businesses |
The bill was part of the Senate’s 17-bill package of healthcare legislation.
“Mobile crisis response is an essential component of our
state’s healthcare system, and providing insurance coverage for youth mobile
crisis response last year was an important step toward ensuring the
sustainability of these essential services,” said Senator DiMario (D-Dist. 36,
Narragansett, North Kingstown, New Shoreham), who works as a licensed mental
health counselor in private practice. “But without sustainable rates, the
nonprofits that provide these essential prevention and diversion programs cannot
continue, whether their services are covered or not. This bill gives providers
across Rhode Island the consistency and financial stability they need by
ensuring that they receive at least the state Medicaid rate for the services
they provide.”
Youth mobile crisis response and stabilization services
(MRSS) provide trained behavioral health clinicians in response to behavioral
health crisis calls, who are better able than local emergency medical services
to deescalate crises and provide the crisis counseling and follow-up needed to
keep youth out of emergency rooms. This provides better patient outcomes for
youth in crisis and reduces the strain on overburdened emergency departments.
Heat stroke warning signs to watch for
Millions of Americans are under heat advisories ahead of the July Fourth holiday as a major heat wave spreads across large parts of the central and eastern United States.
For many people, this is the time of year for cookouts, beach trips and other outdoor activities. Soccer fans are packing into stadiums for World Cup matches. But summer also brings the risk of dangerously high temperatures and humidity in many parts of America.
In the U.S., hundreds of people succumb to heat-related illnesses each year. Older adults and people in areas that historically haven’t needed air conditioning tend to see the highest rates of illnesses during heat waves, as Chicago saw in 1995 when at least 700 people died in a heat wave.
I study health risks in a warming climate as a professor of public health, and I’ve seen heat become a growing concern. Here are some of the key warning signs to watch for when temperatures rise – and ways to keep cool when the heat and humidity get too high.
Gina's going to save us from AI, so she says
News release from RAISE US
| She's always been a corporatist |
“I believe AI will create new jobs and industries over time, but the transition could be disruptive, and it’s already underway. We shouldn’t fearmonger, but we can’t pretend our training and worker support systems are ready either.”
They're making him even more erratic and dangerous
Nothing makes Trump angrier than being humiliated. Humiliation involves public shame, which Trump’s malignant narcissism cannot abide.But Trump is facing humiliation after humiliation. They’re
causing him to lose his mind even faster than before.
The Iranian regime knows this, which is why it’s publicly
humiliating Trump by contradicting everything he says about making progress on
the peace talks.
Yesterday, Iran went further. It refuted Trump’s claim that
Iran did not control the Strait of Hormuz, and that the strait was again open
to shipping, by striking a container ship passing through the strait. Oil
prices immediately jumped.
Performing artists are humiliating him by pulling out of his
so-called “Great American State Fair” on the National Mall because they don’t
want any part in what’s become a Trump rally.
Congressional Republicans are humiliating him by rejecting
his demands that they enact the “SAVE” Act (which would make it harder for
millions of people to vote), pass his next reconciliation package, and blow up
the Senate filibuster.
Their support
delivered a bipartisan rebuke to Trump’s handling of the war. (After lobbying
by Trump, the Senate reversed its stance and rejected the resolution in a
late-night vote.)
Turning 80 is itself a humiliation for Trump. Even if the media weren’t harping on it, his body is continuously reminding him that he’s the oldest president ever elected.
Not to mention increasing calls from
Democrats to invoke the 25th Amendment in light of Trump’s erratic
behavior — including his feud with the pope, his doomsday threats on Truth
Social, and his posting of an AI photo of himself as Jesus.
But the very worst type of humiliation for Trump is ridicule
— as first became apparent in 2011 when Obama skewered him at the White House
Correspondents’ Association Dinner by producing his birth certificate and
saying Trump could “now get back to focusing on important issues like did we
fake the moon landing?”
The audience roared. Trump fumed.
Trump can’t take ridicule — which is why he tried to get ABC to fire Jimmy Kimmel and gloated when CBS got rid of Stephen Colbert.
Yet late-night comedians are now having a field day with Trump’s algae-infested Reflecting Pool. Some are calling it the Strait of Warm Ooze.
The pile-up of humiliations is causing Trump to lash out at
anyone and everyone, including his recent explosion at NBC correspondent
Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press” and Wednesday’s reported shouting
match with Republican Senator Bill Cassidy during a closed-door lunch at the
Capitol. The lunch came just after Trump dropped a bombshell by canceling plans
to sign a
bipartisan landmark housing affordability bill until he gets his way
on the SAVE Act.
I’m tempted to enjoy the Trump humiliations. But I think it
also important to note that as they mount, Trump is becoming even more erratic
and dangerous. So beware.
License to kill
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.
A Supreme Court ruling issued Thursday limits Americans’ ability to sue pesticide makers over alleged health harms from their products.
The 7-2 decision overturned a 2023 Missouri circuit court ruling that required agrochemical company Monsanto to pay John Durnell of St. Louis $1.25 million in compensatory damages for failing to warn customers of the cancer-causing potential of its popular weedkiller, Roundup.
Durnell said he used the glyphosate-based herbicide for twenty years before developing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
Glyphosate-based weedkillers make up the bulk of all agricultural pesticide use in the U.S., with farmers and ranchers spraying over 250 million pounds of the chemical across farmland each year. An extensive body of research suggests improper glyphosate use could be linked to endocrine disruption, metabolic disorders, neurological effects and several cancers. Even after application, the chemical may leach into waterways or drift over residential areas.
And it’s not just glyphosate. Nearly all conventional weedkillers, derived from fossil fuels and petroleum byproducts, are believed to present multiple health hazards.
The highly anticipated ruling not only overturns the lower court’s decision, it also sets a legal precedent that all but seals the fate of hundreds of similar lawsuits being fought in courtrooms across the country.
The decision also represents a huge victory and financial windfall for Monsanto and its parent chemical company, Bayer, which has spent billions of dollars fighting legal claims linking Roundup to cancer since acquiring Monsanto in 2018.
In a majority opinion delivered by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, the court wrote that the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) prohibits states from imposing labeling requirements “in addition to or different from” the labels required by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Thank you, Megan!
The legislation (2026-S 2342B, 2026-H 7290A) requires grocery stores with self-checkouts
to have a minimum of one staffed checkout for every three self-checkouts
operating, with at least one of the self-checkout stations meeting the
accessibility standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
It also requires that grocery store employees be relieved of
all other duties, including operating a manual checkout station, while
monitoring self-checkout stations.
President Lawson and Representative Cotter said they
introduced the bill out of concern for those who work as cashiers, and for
customers who struggle with frustrating self-checkout experiences, particularly
elderly customers.