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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Learn about Taylor Swift’s ‘genius’ at March 26 URI humanities festival

In person lecture also will be live-streamed on YouTube

James Bessette 

In a little more than two decades, Taylor Swift rose from being an aspiring young artist to becoming an influential pop culture icon who has made a mark on society well beyond her sold-out live performances. 

Stephanie Burt, a Harvard University professor and poetry expert—and a “Swiftie”—has examined in her course “Taylor Swift and Her World” the award-winning singer’s unique, joyful genius as an artist who has mastered her craft. Burt will further discuss Swift’s artistry and celebrity during the University of Rhode Island’s Humanities and Popular Culture/Counterculture lecture series.

Burt’s talk, titled “The Genius of Taylor Swift: A Crash Course on the Pop Superstar,” will be held Thursday, March 26, at 4 p.m. in the Hope Room of the Robert J. Higgins Welcome Center, 45 Upper College Road on the Kingston Campus.

The yearlong lecture series, hosted by the URI Center for the Humanities, is focusing on topics ranging from women’s basketball to Shakespeare to music and social justice. The series is co-sponsored by the URI College of Arts and Sciences, Division of Research and Economic Development, Department of Gender and Women’s Studies and the Affirming Multivocal Humanities Mellon Grant, and Department of Philosophy.

Burt’s presentation, part of URI’s annual Spring Humanities Festival, will also be livestreamed through the Center for the Humanities’ YouTube channel, and people who register will receive a link. At the March 26 talk, Burt will analyze Swift, her body of work and the community that her art has fostered.

White House autism briefing linked to swift shifts in prescribing patterns, study finds

Misinformation leads to bad medical choices

By Juan Siliezar, Associate Director of Media Relations and Leadership Communications, School of Public Health, Brown University

A White House briefing in September 2025 that raised concerns about acetaminophen use during pregnancy and promoted the drug leucovorin as a potential autism treatment was followed by sharp changes in how doctors prescribed those medications nationwide, according to a new study.

The study shows that after the Sept. 22, 2025, briefing, acetaminophen orders for pregnant women in emergency rooms fell markedly while prescriptions for leucovorin for children dramatically increased.

The study was authored by researchers from Brown University’s School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School and published in the Lancet.

According to the authors, the usage changes for both drugs are notable because they were specific to the drugs mentioned in the announcement and because they occurred despite no new clinical trial data or formal guideline revisions during that period.

R.I. Must Encourage Responsible Housing Development That Protects Drinking Water Supplies

Building consensus for responsible development

By Scott Millar / Land use planner

Here are the Irish "Principles of Sustainable Development"
Rhode Island needs more housing, and I support that goal. But how we get there matters. Growth has limits, and development must respect constraints, especially when it comes to preserving clean drinking water.

The failure to adequately plan a long-term, safe, steady supply of drinking water for new housing can have catastrophic impacts. Watersheds for public surface water and groundwater drinking water supplies are not appropriate for high-density development. Once drinking water is contaminated or overdrawn, it can’t easily be restored and must be protected for both current and future generations.

For these reasons, I strongly support legislation to amend the Rhode Island Low and Moderate Income (LMI) Housing Act. This legislation would eliminate the existing state-mandated housing densities in lands that are used for drinking water supplies. 

Moreover, the current law only requires developers to cite that public water or sewer systems are available. The legislation adds language that the capacity of public water or sewer be documented to support the proposed increase in residential density before a development proposal can be approved. 

The intent of the amendments is to ensure that housing densities for LMI do not exceed the availability of onsite drinking water supplies; do not introduce pollution that would make drinking water unsuitable for use; and stay within the limits of any public water or sewer system.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Charlestown's share of Chariho costs to increase 5.02%

Chariho School Committee votes down proposed budget, then reverses course and passes it

Steve Ahlquist

Pass the budget or violate the law.
Committee decides to flip-flop
In the end, it took a warning from their legal counsel to convince the Chariho School Committee to pass a Fiscal Year ‘27 budget for voter approval.

You can watch the meeting here: 2026-03-10 School Committee Meeting

The budget, as presented and ultimately passed, will require, upon voter approval, each of the three communities that make up the Chariho School District to increase its financial contributions to the schools. Committee Chair Louise Dinsmore opposed the budget because of the increases and, in fact, voted against it - twice. 

“I have said publicly that I will not support passing this Fiscal Year ‘27 budget, especially because Richmond has a significant increase in front of them.” 

Richmond’s increase was 7.82%, Charlestown’s was 5.02%, and Hopkinton’s was 2.1%.

The war room

Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor says Rhode Islanders SHOULD NOT get refunds for Trump's illegal tariffs

 Yeah, no refunds for you. Here's Loughlin in his own words:

Revolution Wind begins delivering electricity to Rhode Island and the regional grid

We’ve got the power 

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Rhode Island’s electric grid now includes some power from its first utility-scale offshore wind project, Revolution Wind, project developers announced Friday night.

The initial power delivery is not the final achievement: The 65-turbine project is 93% complete and not expected to hit its full 704-megawatt nameplate capacity until the second half of the year. However, the initial test of connection to the region’s electric grid marks an important benchmark, especially after two attempts by the Trump administration to block the project’s completion.

The initial power delivery appears on schedule with the prior timeline, despite two separate pauses forced by the Trump administration. The project was first put on hold in August 2025, with federal energy regulators unexpectedly demanding a review for national security concerns, despite having already completed a comprehensive review of project impacts nearly two years earlier. The stop work order was overturned by a federal judge in D.C. in September in response to one of two lawsuits filed by developers and state attorneys general.

Bobby Jr.'s crazy anti-vax campaign monkey-wrenched

Federal judge blocks Kennedy’s changes to childhood vaccine policy

Chris Dall, MA

A federal judge in Boston has temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s changes to the US childhood immunization schedule.

In a ruling issued this afternoon, Judge Brian E. Murphy said the changes made by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to the childhood immunization schedule likely violated the Administrative Procedure Act, as did Kennedy’s reconstitution of a federal advisory board that makes recommendations on clinical use of vaccines.

The preliminary injunction comes in response to a lawsuit filed by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and other leading medical groups against HHS in July 2025 over Kennedy’s unilateral changes to COVID vaccine recommendations for children and pregnant women. The suit was amended in January after HHS overhauled recommendations for childhood vaccines, reducing the number of recommended vaccines from 17 to 11. 

The lawsuit argued that these moves, along with Kennedy’s appointment of vaccine skeptics to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) after firing 17 previously appointed members, bypassed the scientific process and didn’t follow proper administrative procedures.

Murphy said in his ruling that there is a method to how decisions about vaccine recommendations have historically been made, “a method scientific in nature and codified into law through procedural requirements.”

“Unfortunately, the government has disregarded those methods and thereby undermined the integrity of its actions,” he wrote.

Kristi Noem all but killed FEMA.

Will her departure save it?

Jake Bittle, Staff Writer

"This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist's weekly newsletter here."

During the year she spent leading the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, or DHS, Kristi Noem faced a torrent of criticism. Lawmakers from both parties assailed her for lying about the shooting of protestors in Minneapolis and spending millions of dollars on television commercials. Government audits concluded that she “systematically obstructed” investigations and created security risks at airports.

Now she has become the first cabinet-level official fired by President Donald Trump during his second term. After a combative hearing this week, during which Noem seemed to mislead Congress about whether Trump approved her ad spending, the president fired her.

As DHS secretary, Noem also raised eyebrows for an unprecedented degree of control over staffing and spending at the Federal Emergency Management Agency. She paused most FEMA payments, leading to extensive delays for disaster recovery, and sought to slash the agency’s on-call workforce by thousands of employees. She also expressed a desire to downsize or eliminate the agency entirely, shifting the burden of disaster relief onto the states.

A growing number of critics and experts believe that Noem’s interference with FEMA may well have been illegal. This week, two Senate Democrats released a report alleging that Noem’s blanket freeze on FEMA payments violated federal law. At the same time, lawyers for a federal workers’ union argued to a federal judge in California that Noem’s workforce cuts also violated the law. In both cases, critics pointed to legislation passed after Hurricane Katrina, which prohibits DHS from interfering with FEMA.

Monday, March 16, 2026

I’ve studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade, and this is what I see in Hegseth’s boasts, action‑movie one‑liners and gloating over dominance

How much before Americans say "enough!"

Casey Ryan Kelly, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

When Secretary of Defense James Mattis addressed the intensification of U.S. combat operations against the Islamic State group in 2017, he assured the American public of his commitment to “get the strategy right” while maintaining “the rules of engagement” to “protect the innocent.”

Mattis’ professional tone was a stark contrast to Secretary Pete Hegseth’s remarks following the first days of the joint U.S.-Israeli combat operations in Iran.

On March 2, 2026, after bragging about the awe-inspiring lethality of U.S. “B-2s, fighters, drones, missiles,” Hegseth casually brushed aside concerns about long-term geopolitical strategy, declaring “no stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars. We fight to win.”

Admonishing the press for anything less than total assent, he commanded, “to the media outlets and political left screaming ‘endless wars:’ Stop. This is not Iraq.”

Two days later, Hegseth gloated about “dominance” and “control,” while asserting that the preoccupation of the “fake news media” with casualties was motivated by liberal media bias and hatred of President Trump.

“Tragic things happen; the press only wants to make the president look bad,” he said. He dismissed concerns about the rules of engagement, declaring that “this was never meant to be a fair fight. We are punching them while they are down, as it should be.”

Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon press conference, at which he asserted the Iran war would have no ‘No stupid rules of engagement, no nation building quagmire, no democracy-building exercise.’

I’m a communication scholar who has studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade. I have observed how Hegseth and other officials in the second Trump administration refuse to abide by what recurring rhetorical situations – urgent public matters that compel speech to audiences capable of being influenced – typically demand of public officials.

The theme of this administration is that no one is going to tell it what to say or how to say it. It will be encumbered neither by norms nor the exigencies that compel speech in a democratic society.

The big man

When the U.S. goes to war, the public expects the president and the defense secretary to convince them of the appropriateness of the action. They do this by detailing the justification for military action, but also by addressing the public in a manner that conveys the seriousness and competence required for such a grave task as waging war.

But during the first week of the Iran war, Hegseth’s press briefings deviated from the measured tone expected from high-ranking military officials.

Hegseth flippantly employed villainous colloquialism – “they are toast and they know it,” “we play for keeps,” and “President Trump got the last laugh” – delivered with a combative tone that communicated masculine self-assurance.

Many observers were taken aback by his haughty tone, hypermasculine preoccupation with domination, giddiness about violence and casual attitude toward death.

During Trump’s first term, this penchant for rule-breaking was by and large isolated to the president, whose transgressions were part of his populist appeal.

Although Trump’s first cabinet members agreed on most political objectives, they attempted to rein in what they saw as the president’s more dangerous whims.

But with loyalty as the new bona fide qualification for administration officials, Trump’s second cabinet is populated with a large contingent of right and far-right media personalities like Hegseth, including Kash Patel, Sean Duffy and Mehmet Oz.

No problem

 


OK, here's one where I absolutely agree with Trump

So I guess never mind

Why some people keep making the same bad decisions

For some people, everyday cues keep pulling the brain toward the same bad decisions.

Society for Neuroscience

People constantly take in information from their surroundings, including visual details and background sounds. Over time, the brain learns to connect these cues with what usually happens next. 

For example, a familiar sign, sound, or setting can signal whether a choice is likely to lead to a reward or a negative outcome. This process is known as associative learning, which simply means learning through repeated connections between cues and results. 

In everyday life, this kind of learning helps people make faster and often better decisions.

However, this system does not work the same way for everyone. For people with compulsive disorders, addictions, or anxiety, these learned associations can become overly powerful. Instead of serving as helpful guides, cues may start to dominate decision making. Individuals may feel pulled toward certain sights or sounds or strongly driven to avoid them, even when doing so leads to poor outcomes.

Study of 30,000 Shoppers Reveals Hidden Environmental Cost of Treat Foods

Junk food is bad for you AND the environment

By University of Helsinki

A significant portion of the environmental footprint linked to food purchases in Finland comes from discretionary items that are often low in nutritional value. At the same time, households appear to allocate similar amounts of money to their main protein sources relative to the total energy content of their purchases, even when those protein sources differ widely.

According to a recent study, nearly 20 percent of all food spending in Finland goes toward discretionary products. This group includes candy, sweet pastries, desserts, savory snacks, sugar and other sweeteners, soft drinks, both sweetened and unsweetened, juices, alcoholic beverages, cocoa, coffee, and tea.

Researchers from the University of Helsinki, Tampere University, and the Natural Resources Institute Finland analyzed grocery purchases from almost 30,000 members of the Finnish S Group retail cooperative who agreed to take part. The team compared households based on their preferred protein sources, such as red meat, poultry, fish, or plant-based proteins, to assess differences in spending patterns, nutritional quality, and environmental effects.