Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
How to Stay Informed Without Overload
Constant exposure to headlines can take a psychological toll
Beginning the day with digital news consumption often subjects individuals to a barrage of negative information—including environmental crises, political volatility, and health advisories—before the workday has even begun. For many people, this has become the quiet, unremarkable texture of daily life.
And for many of those same people, it has become exhausting as well. That exhaustion has a name: news fatigue—the state of emotional and cognitive overwhelm that results from sustained exposure to news, leaving people feeling drained, anxious, or simply numb. It has become more prevalent over the last decade, driven by a structurally limitless media environment. Where previous generations received news in finite, bounded packages—an evening broadcast, or the morning newspaper—today’s always-on information landscape makes it harder than ever to know when enough is enough.
The psychological
costs of this shift are real and well-documented. One recent survey
performed by the American Psychological Association found that 73
percent of Americans reported being overwhelmed by the number of
crises facing the world. Research consistently links heavy news consumption to
elevated anxiety, disrupted sleep, and a diminished sense of personal agency.
For many, the stress creates a desire to tune out the noise entirely. And yet,
as psychologists are quick to point out, disengagement carries its own costs.
When news fatigue evolves into news avoidance, people cut themselves off from
information essential to their health, community, and political participation.
This is the
central tension at the heart of news fatigue: the pull between two legitimate
and competing needs—staying informed and staying sane. This article examines what news fatigue is,
why the modern media environment makes it so difficult to escape, and what
researchers and mental health professionals recommend for those who want to
remain engaged with the world without sacrificing their well-being.
URI Farmland to Be Transformed Into Hybrid of Forest and Pasture
The word for today is "Silvopasture"
By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff
Driving past Peckham Farm on Route 148, you’ll see a 20-acre parcel that looks like any other agricultural parcel.
The farm, just outside the University of Rhode Island’s main campus, is owned and operated by the university for research, teaching, and extension programs. It is actively farmed. Eighteen acres of the property are used for pasturing cattle, sheep, and other animals.
Bottom of Form
But if a new project planned for 54 acres that were recently
made available to farm goes well, Peckham Farm may look more like a forest than
it does bare fields in the next decade.
In recent years, URI natural resources professor Laura
Meyerson and Peckham Farm manager Coleman Replogle have been teaming up to
bring a new kind of pasture to the farm, one that combines forestland with
pasture into a hybrid called silvopasture.
“It’s a bit like the savanna,” explained Meyerson to ecoRI
News on a recent Zoom call. “You are integrating trees into a grazing pasture,
but also creating a forested edge, just this continuum of forest.”
Silvopasture is an agroforestry practice that integrates trees, forage, and other vegetation with livestock into a single farming and habitat system. Traditional pasture, such as the 18 acres already extant on Peckham Farm, usually just consists of grasses and other herbage for farm animals like cattle to feed on.
The practice is rooted in traditional ecological knowledge from the Indigenous tribes of the Americas, according to Myerson. It’s still used in the southeastern United States and South America.
Farms such as Wild Harmony Farm in Exeter practice silvopasturing,
but Meyerson said the Peckham Farm project is the first to study the practice
as a method of ecological restoration.
Under silvopasture, grassland is peppered with trees and
other foliage to provide ecological benefits and new, traditional habitats for
species such as birds and bats, while still providing a nutritious, varied
grazing diet for cattle.
Who do you think would win in a physical fight between you and Donald Trump?
Terri Rupar, Editorial DirectorThis story was originally reported by Terri Rupar of The 19th. Meet Terri and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.
Who do you think would win in a physical fight between you and Donald Trump?
The question, asked by YouGov, was sparked by a Tuesday event in the Oval Office, when the president revived the Presidential Physical Fitness Award. “Are you a strong person?” Trump, 79, asked a child in attendance. “You think you could take me in a fight?”
Overall, 55 percent of Americans said they could take Trump in a fight; 19 percent said Trump would win.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Medical experts declare Trump is too unstable to remain in office
Can't be trusted with unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons
The following press release has just been issued:Washington, DC—On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared.
The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered their statement into the
Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76.
While they did not offer diagnoses, the experts were informed by voluminous evidence from the historical record of the president’s bizarre and impulsive behavior, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, and his deeply impaired judgment.
Since we circulated our concerns among medical colleagues, Mr. Trump has exhibited more signs of grandiosity, e.g., posting images of himself on social media shaking hands with God, acting like Jesus, and dressing as a Pope. And he has continued nocturnal bingeing on social media posts that are filled with accusations of multiple conspiracies against him, as often as 150 times a night.
Most worrisome are his
outbursts of extreme, seemingly uncontrollable rage, such as his threat to
destroy Iran, saying, “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be
brought back again.”
Current nuclear policy permits a president, and the
president alone, to choose the time and target of a nuclear launch, without his
orders being subject to review. The U.S. has a policy that permits a first use
of nuclear weapons. These policies, combined with an emotionally unstable
leader is a formula for unspeakable tragedy waiting to happen. For this reason
above all others, the group of medical experts urged that lawful steps be taken
to remove the president from office.
How much should politics influence science, and vice versa?
National Science Board’s ousting resurrects an existential debate
“On behalf of President Donald J. Trump,” read 22 emails sent from the White House Presidential Personnel Office on Friday afternoon, April 24, 2026, “I am writing to inform you that your position as a member of the National Science Board is terminated, effective immediately.”
The email was signed “Thank you for your service.”
The distinguished scientists and engineers who made up the National Science Board did not know the firings were coming. Several had been reappointed by Trump himself during his first term. The board was scheduled to meet the following week to finalize a report on the state of American science.
When asked why the entire board was removed, a White House spokesperson cited the Supreme Court’s 2021 decision in United States v. Arthrex, Inc., stating that the case raised constitutional questions about the National Science Board, its independence and its role in the agency it oversees, the National Science Foundation. Specifically, whether non-Senate confirmed appointees can exercise the authorities that Congress gave the board when it authorized the NSF in 1950.
We have been studying and doing science policy. One of us (Wagner) has worked closely with the National Science Board several times and regularly uses their database on scientific and engineering progress. The other of us (Olds) led the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Biological Sciences from 2014 to 2018 and has previously called for reform of the board.
We argue that the dismissal is not just a political act dressed in constitutional language; it is the resurfacing of an argument almost as old as the National Science Foundation itself — one that nearly killed the agency in its cradle.
Brown researchers find bad traffic can make you crazy
No kidding
Brown University
While research has shown a link between traffic-related exposures such as air pollution and noise and adverse mental health outcomes, few studies have looked at the role of road infrastructure itself in isolating communities and breaking down their social fabric, and how that might affect the mental health of people who live there.According to a new federally funded study focusing
on New York City, researchers found that communities that were very isolated by
roadways and traffic patterns tended to have more schizophrenia-related
hospital visits, and this effect was independent from traffic-caused air
pollution.
“Imagine an environment where cars are present, but do not
dominate, and that also has robust pedestrian traffic and walkable routes to
neighbors’ homes, and where you can see kids playing outside and neighbors
congregating to talk,” said study author Jaime Benavides, an investigator in
epidemiology in the Brown University School of Public Health. “We wanted to
home in on the road infrastructure that prevents people from interacting and
learn how that influences their mental health.”
In the study, which was published in Environmental
Epidemiology, the research team conducted ZIP code-level analyses to
investigate the association between mental health hospital visits and community
isolation in New York, using annual New York State Department of Health counts
of hospital visits related to mood, anxiety, adjustment and schizophrenia
disorders.
Trump Tariffs Ruled Illegal—Again—as Data Shows Promised Manufacturing Boom Is Nonexistent
Trump treats court opinions as "advisory"
Jake Johnson for Common Dreams
A panel of federal judges ruled Thursday that US President Donald Trump’s sweeping 10% tariffs on most imports are unlawful, another major legal blow to the centerpiece of the Republican president’s economic agenda—which has failed to produce the manufacturing boom he repeatedly promised on the campaign trail.The Court of International Trade (CIT) found in a 2-to-1 ruling that Trump violated the law when he unilaterally enacted the 10% import taxes following a February decision by the US Supreme Court, which struck down tariffs the president imposed using emergency powers.
But the CIT’s ruling, which the Trump
administration is expected to appeal, only barred collection of the
tariffs from some of the plaintiffs in the case—including a pair of businesses
and Washington state—limiting
the ruling’s immediate impact.
Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.), a member of the House Trade
Subcommittee, applauded the new ruling in a statement, saying that “Trump must
comply with the law by ending his illegal tax on the American people and
getting families and small businesses the refunds they are owed.”
Monday, May 11, 2026
Triggered Trump is dangerous
His ego cannot accept two giant pending defeats
Friends,
We are witnessing what happens to a person who is consumed
with the need to dominate but cannot.
Iran is unlikely to give in. It can withstand the economic pressure of a blockade better than Trump can withstand the political pressure that comes with rising gas prices (now nearly $4.50 a gallon, on average), soon followed by rising food prices.
His looming failure in Iran is not just a serious
geopolitical defeat for the United States; it’s a personal crisis for Trump.
Those rising prices coupled with an increasingly unpopular
war have increased the likelihood that Democrats will take back control of the
House and even possibly the Senate in the upcoming midterms.
Here again, not just a political defeat for the Republican
Party but a personal crisis for Trump.
His ego cannot accept a humiliating loss, as we saw after
the 2020 election. His need to bully, dominate, and gain submission is so
hardwired inside his insecure head that the defeats he’s now facing — to Iran
and to Democrats — are already setting off explosions.
He’s posting more wildly than ever — attacking, insulting,
ridiculing, threatening.
On Sunday, Trump posted that Democrats had “RIGGED the 2020 Presidential Election. GET TOUGH REPUBLICANS—THEY’RE COMING, AND THEY’RE COMING FAST! They’re no good for our Country, they almost destroyed it, and we don’t want to let that happen again!” He demanded that Republicans “approve all of the necessary Safeguards we need for Elections to protect the American Public during the upcoming Midterms.”
More of his posts are bizarre AI-generated paeans to himself, his godlike powers, his wished-for physique, and his self-image of omnipotence.
On Friday night, he posted an AI-image of himself, JD Vance, Marco Rubio, and Doug Burgum, all shirtless and with young physiques, standing in the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial, along with an unidentifiable woman in a bikini. 👉
Minutes later he posted an image of House Minority Leader
Hakeem Jeffries holding a baseball bat, with a caption calling Jeffries “low
IQ,” “a THUG,” and “a danger to our Country.” On Tuesday, he posted AI-images
of Joe Biden on one knee with the caption “COWARDS KNEEL,” Barack Obama with
the caption “TRAITORS BOW,” and himself with his fist raised and the caption
“LEADERS LEAD.”
His mouth — never in control — is now in diarrheic mode.
He’s even back to attacking the pope, accusing him of “endangering a lot of
Catholics and a lot of people,” adding, “but I guess if it’s up to the pope, he
thinks it’s just fine for Iran to have a nuclear weapon.”
His thin-skinned vindictiveness is beyond anything we’ve
seen before, which is saying a lot. Last week, after German chancellor
Friedrich Merz said the U.S. was “being humiliated by the Iranian leadership,”
Trump repeatedly attacked and ridiculed Merz. The Defense Department then said
it was pulling 5,000 troops out of Germany, and Trump said he was increasing
tariffs on European cars and trucks to 25 percent (from 15 percent).
He’s becoming ever more obsessed with monuments to himself — his ballroom, his arch, his so-called “garden of heroes,” his Trump-embossed passports, his image on 24-karat gold commemorative coins, and his name plastered or etched all over Washington. His plans for self-monuments are becoming larger by the day, more grotesque, more grandiose, and more expensive. Senate Republicans just proposed $1 billion more for Trump’s ballroom, which, recall, was supposed to “cost taxpayers nothing.”
He has even directed the Treasury to announce that his own
signature — yes, the same one that appears in a book of birthday greetings for
Jeffrey Epstein — will replace the Treasurer’s on all new U.S. paper currency.
This will be the first time in American history that a sitting president’s name
will appear on circulating cash money.
His thirst for vengeance is exploding, too. Last week the
Department of Justice launched another criminal case against former director of
the FBI James Comey (whose earlier indictment was quashed by the courts) for
posting a picture of seashells spelling out “86 47” on Instagram a year ago.
Trump is also insisting that the Justice Department restart its criminal
investigation of Jerome Powell and double-down against former Joint Chiefs of
Staff Chair Mark Milley and others he considers “enemies.”
Facing the two monumental failures of Iran and control over
Congress, Trump is fanatically seeking other ways to assert dominance. On
Tuesday, his Education Department announced a civil rights investigation into
Smith College over enrolling transgender students. Expect more of this.
Regardless of what happens in Iran, he’ll claim victory.
That will be difficult to do convincingly when gas prices remain over $4 a
gallon, but he’ll undoubtedly try.
What if Democrats win control of one or both chambers of
Congress in the midterms and he claims they lost or cheated? The nation barely
survived the last time Trump’s fragile ego faced a major loss.
We’ll also have to cope with Trump as a lame-duck president
who can no longer dominate and gain submission as he did before. Will he try to
remain president beyond his second term to avoid this?
The man is unwell. Seriously unwell. Lame-duck presidents
fade away, but injured dictators can be dangerous.
Rep. Megan Cotter sponsors bills to bolster regional school districts
Cotter fights for Chariho
Rep. Megan L. Cotter is sponsoring several bills to help school districts with finances, particularly the regional districts she represents.
Two of the bills address transportation costs and two
address state aid for regional districts.
“Regionalization creates an economy of scale and allows
schools to offer greater opportunities to students than they would have if
their towns’ schools were separate and smaller. In theory, regionalization is
encouraged by the state because it’s economical, but in practice,
regionalization is complicated, and the funding mechanisms don’t address all
its wrinkles. My bills are aimed at smoothing some wrinkles that are currently
adversely affecting our regional districts,” said Representative Cotter (D-Dist.
39, Exeter, Richmond, Hopkinton), whose district spans parts of the Exeter-West
Greenwich and Chariho regional school districts.

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