Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Saturday, June 20, 2026
The scent of supper
Can mosquitoes learn to love DEET?
When it comes to keeping mosquitos from biting, DEET has long been considered the gold standard. Sprayed on before hikes and picnics and while traveling to mosquito-dense corners of the globe, the world’s most widely used insect repellent comes with the expectation that its smell will send mosquitoes zipping off in the opposite direction.
But research published
yesterday in the Journal of Experimental Biology suggests that
mosquitoes may learn to associate the smell of DEET with dinner—and start
gravitating toward it instead of away from it. The findings challenge long-held
assumptions about how DEET works and what mosquitoes may be capable of
learning.
Training changed how mosquitoes react to DEET
For the study, researchers from the University of Tours in
France and Virginia Tech examined whether female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes,
the species that spreads dengue, Zika, yellow fever, and chikungunya, could
learn to associate DEET with a food reward.
The team used a form of Pavlovian conditioning in which
mosquitoes feed on warm blood through an artificial membrane. Twenty seconds
into their meal, the researchers released DEET into the feeding enclosure—a
process they repeated three more times before exposing the mosquitos to DEET
but no food reward.
When the trained mosquitos caught a whiff of DEET alone, more than 60% of them tried to feed again, displaying what researchers termed a “biting attempt response” (BAR). That’s compared with roughly 20% of untrained mosquitoes who performed BAR when exposed to DEET alone.
In another experiment, mosquitoes were given a choice
between two human hands. One hand was treated with DEET, and one was untreated.
All of the untrained mosquitoes avoided the DEET-treated hand. Trained
mosquitoes, however, were significantly more likely to orient toward the
treated hand.
McKee signs charter school moratorium bills, reversing his career-long commitment
Gov flip-flops on what used to be his signature issue
By Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current
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| Photo by Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current |
“The circumstances have changed,” McKee told reporters Thursday.
Back in 2021, McKee suggested he’d veto a similar, albeit unsuccessful, piece of legislation. Part of the bedrock in the governor’s political brand had been his push for the creation of mayoral academies — a special kind of public charter school — during his time as the mayor of Cumberland in the late 2000s.
The governor had received the moratorium bill on his desk Tuesday and under the state constitution, still had until Tuesday, June 23, to sign or veto the bill. McKee strode out the Providence County Courthouse Thursday to explain to reporters why he had signed the charter school ban bill with five days to spare.“I haven’t backed off, like, say, ‘Oh, let’s put charters out of business.’ I haven’t said that,” McKee told reporters after an unrelated afternoon appearance at a Law Day essay contest award ceremony for high schoolers at Rhode Island Supreme Court. “I said, ‘Let’s support the charters.’ And I’ve done that more than once.”
But much has changed in the five years since McKee took office, he told reporters.
BREAKING NEWS from Ted Nesi, WPRI:
NO endorsement for McKee from RI Democratic
Party. Highly unusual for an incumbent.
Those circumstances include enrollment declines in public schools — about 10,000 students in all, in the time he’s been governor, McKee said — and a pressing need to reassess how the state funds education via a formula for determining state aid to local school districts.
Trump finds new way to hurt immigrants and their families
The ICE-ification of Financial Regulation: steal their savings, especially the money they planned to send to their families at home
by Philip
Mattera, director of the Corporate
Research Project of Good Jobs First for the
Now the Trump Administration is starting to enlist banks in
a more questionable form of information gathering involving the immigration
status of their customers. For months, there have been reports that the
administration is planning to require banks to determine whether customers are
U.S. citizens.
That has not yet happened, but a recent executive
order from the White House takes a step in that direction by advising
banks to “be attentive to the credit risks posed by the extension of mortgage
and auto loans, credit cards, and other consumer credit to the inadmissible and
removable alien population.” The order calls on the Treasury Department
and financial regulators such as the Fed and the FDIC to develop changes to the
Bank Secrecy Act to address this supposed risk.
This sounds like a prelude to more explicit rules that would
bar banks from doing business with undocumented immigrants.
Friday, June 19, 2026
A masterclass in incompetence at home and abroad
Stupid at all levels in all things great or small
My neighbors’ mail. Note the date.
Last week my neighbors brought me an envelope with a “MAGA priorities survey” enclosed. A solicitation for money disguised as a survey, it opened with a four-page cover letter from Trump.
The survey drills down on ‘Biden’s sky-high mortgage rates,’ and ‘reckless spending binge’ even though we’re now 1.5 years into Trump 2.0.
It blames Biden for ‘today’s affordability squeeze,’ despite Trump’s economically
unhinged tariffs and $94
billion war in Iran. Trump, who still thinks exporters
pay tariffs, single handedly turbo-charged the
price of energy, and tanked consumer confidence at the same time, all while
demanding that Americans disbelieve their lyin’ eyes.
Trump’s cover letter begins, “Dear America First Patriot, I
put THREE LIVE POSTAGE STAMPS (all caps) on the enclosed Rush Return Envelope
because I had to get your immediate attention… And because I need you to
respond to me right away!” Four pages later, Trump urges True Patriots to make
a True Patriotic donation of $2,026…. Or even just $47, by rushing back
the MAGA survey using the enclosed TRIPLE-STAMPED Rush Return Envelope TODAY. (Combining
all caps with bold, a triple-dog-dare-you maneuver
that conveys urgency.)
The kicker is that the “triple stamped rush envelope” was
the pre-marked, pre-paid, “No postage necessary if mailed in the United States”
kind. Adding extra postage stamps to a prepaid postage envelope, according to
the USPS, means
Trump just wasted money (USPS bold, not mine). Trump, in one
mailing, spent extra on an agency he accuses of waste,
demonstrated his fiscal illiteracy, and declared his donors stupid. Another
masterclass in Trump’s trifecta
of incompetence.
Monday Charlestown Town Council meeting loaded with big issues
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Coal pollution is cutting solar power output, study finds
Will Trump look for ways to use coal to kill wind turbines?
University of Oxford
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| Trump's 2-for-1 obsession: promote coal, kill green energy |
The new study mapped and assessed more than 140,000 solar PV installations worldwide using satellite data.
By combining this with atmospheric data on air pollution, the researchers calculated how much sunlight is lost and how this reduces electricity generation. They found that aerosols - tiny particles suspended in the air - reduced global solar electricity output by 5.8% in 2023. This is equivalent to 111 terawatt-hours (TWh) of lost energy – the amount generated by 18 medium-sized coal-fired power plants.
Crucially, these losses represent a significant and often overlooked constraint on the clean energy transition.
MAHA’s Treatments for Autism: Camel’s Milk, Stem Cell Injections — And Spelling Therapy
Kennedy turning health science inside out
By Arthur Allen
Elizabeth Bonker is a silent woman with a loud mission. She wants government agencies to cover the costs of training people with autism in a form of communication called assisted spelling. One problem: Leading professional organizations don’t believe it works.
“All nonspeakers above the age of 5 should be given the opportunity,” typed Bonker, who is 28 and cannot talk. Her mother, Virginia Breen, held a wireless keyboard for her. They sat on a hotel patio before an April 27 meeting with a senior aide to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“We are misunderstood and underestimated,” Bonker typed, occasionally humming or lightly groaning as she considered where to place a slender forefinger on the keyboard.
Assisted spelling is used to help nonverbal people communicate by pointing to letters on boards or using keyboards with physical help from another person.
Supporters say assisted spelling has improved the lives of thousands of people with autism, such as Bonker, and they have powerful allies. Kennedy appointed Bonker and another autistic “speller,” as they call themselves, to a 20-member autism panel made up largely of parents with children whose autism they attribute to vaccinations.
At the reconfigured panel’s first public session on April 28, three other members said their nonspeaking adult children were learning to communicate through spelling. The panel issued a resolution with language from Bonker stating that “robust” communications programs are essential for autistic people. Bonker has urged the Department of Health and Human Services to support training in assisted spelling for those who want it.
But leading professional groups for autism science, as well as those representing psychologists and speech pathologists, point to research showing that these methods — premised on the idea that people with autism have the normal range of cognitive powers but are imprisoned in malfunctioning bodies — are flawed or fraudulent.
Trump issues rules for sick people on Medicaid
"Throw down your crutches and go pick cotton"
By Sam Whitehead
The Trump administration has issued final rules on how states should ensure that millions of Medicaid enrollees prove they’re working or completing other activities, such as job training, volunteering, or being enrolled in an educational program.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released the rules on June 1. That deadline was set last year in the GOP tax-and-spending law known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which established a work requirement for certain people enrolled in Medicaid, the state-federal health insurance program for people with low incomes or disabilities.
Medicaid agencies are scrambling to rework IT systems and make sure they have staff to effectively enforce the rules, while also keeping enrollees from losing coverage for administrative reasons, such as difficulty navigating state eligibility portals.
The newly announced regulations offer a clearer picture of what roughly 18.5 million Medicaid enrollees will have to do to prove they qualify for benefits.
Jim Torres, who helps people enroll in health coverage at the Samuel U. Rodgers Health Center in Kansas City, Missouri, said a “very small percentage” of his clients have heard of the changes coming to Medicaid.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Sen. Victoria Gu gives her review on the recently ended General Assembly session
Highlights from a productive session
By Victoria Gu
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‘AI gravity’ is pulling you toward dependency.
Here’s how to push back
By Beth Stackpole, MIT Sloan School of Management
As businesses pull out all the stops to integrate artificial intelligence tools into mainstream workflows and business practices, they may be overlooking the longer-term implications of widespread AI use on institutional knowledge and critical thinking.
Top of Form
Eric So, a professor of global economics and behavioral science at the MIT Sloan School of Management, believes that AI is changing the way people’s brains operate, creating a trap where users become overly dependent on the technology, with potentially serious ramifications for business.
“We are increasingly deferring tasks that our brains are
meant to handle to AI systems that think for us, write for us, and create on
our behalf,” said So, presenting recently as part of the MIT Sloan speaker
series, “AI + X: How AI Is Changing Management Practice.”
“Each time we engage in this sort of cognitive outsourcing,
we’re participating in dramatic societal change” — one that shouldn’t be taken
lightly, said So, who addresses those changes in depth in his forthcoming book,
“The Collision:
What AI Does to Us.”
“We need to do as much as we can to preserve our
capabilities, to recognize when these tools are wrong, to understand when they
are missing something, and to be able to take action when these systems fail,”
he said.



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