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Saturday, June 14, 2025

Our cats know what's what

How Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill will raise household energy costs

Green energy saves money AND the planet

Energy policy analysts are in broad agreement about one consequence of major legislation that Republicans are currently pushing through Congress: It will raise energy prices for the average American household by hundreds of dollars, once all is said and done.

That’s because the legislation, which Donald Trump has dubbed the One Big, Beautiful Bill, will repeal the vast majority of clean energy provisions contained in the Inflation Reduction Act, or IRA, which a Democrat-controlled Congress passed in 2022. That earlier law provided a wide array of financial incentives for the deployment of electricity sources like solar, wind, battery storage, and nuclear power, as well as support for consumers looking to buy zero- and low-emissions products like electric vehicles. 

Choking off support for those measures not only hobbles U.S. efforts to fight climate change — the IRA, if left intact, could single-handedly reduce the country’s carbon emissions by 40 percent — but it also means there are fewer new sources of energy for a country that has started to need more and more of it. And reduced supply coupled with increased demand means higher prices.

That’s the virtually unanimous conclusion of the academics and policy experts who have been trying to understand the likely effects of the rollback for the past few months, though each group of experts used different assumptions about the full extent of IRA repeal, given that the legislation is still being revised by the Senate. Part of the reason for this unanimity is that, once constructed, many newer energy sources like wind and solar don’t have substantial operating costs compared to traditional power plants that must be continuously supplied with fuel.

What happens when you eat plastic

Plastic is NOT one of the four basic food groups

By American Society for Nutrition

A new animal study suggests that tiny plastic particles found in food and drinks may disrupt glucose metabolism and damage organs like the liver. These findings raise concerns about potential health risks in humans and highlight the need for further research.

As plastic breaks down, it creates microplastics (smaller than 5 millimeters) and nanoplastics (smaller than 100 nanometers), which can enter the food chain and accumulate in seafood and other commonly consumed foods. Estimates suggest that people may ingest between 40,000 and 50,000 microplastic particles each year, with some projections reaching up to 10 million particles annually.

Studying the health effects of polystyrene nanoparticles

“With the growing concern around micro- and nanoplastic exposure, we wanted to evaluate the impact of this exposure on health,” said Amy Parkhurst, a doctoral candidate in the laboratory of Fawaz George Haj, PhD, at the University of California, Davis. “Our observations that oral ingestion of polystyrene nanoplastics contributes to glucose intolerance and signs of liver injury, confirm and extend what has been recently reported on the effects of nanoplastics in animal models.”

New mRNA vaccine is more effective and less costly to develop

Source of life-saving COVID vaccine could do more...if Republicans don't ban it

University of Pittsburgh

A new type of mRNA vaccine is more scalable and adaptable to continuously evolving viruses such as SARS-CoV-2 and H5N1, according to a study by researchers at University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and the Pennsylvania State University. The study was published today in npj Vaccines.

Though highly effective at inducing an immune response, current mRNA vaccines, such as those used to prevent COVID-19, present two significant challenges: the high amount of mRNA needed to produce them and the constantly evolving nature of the pathogen.

"The virus changes, moving the goal post, and updating the vaccine takes some time," said senior author Suresh Kuchipudi, Ph.D., chair of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology at Pitt Public Health.

To address these challenges, the researchers created a proof-of-concept COVID-19 vaccine using what's known as a "trans-amplifying" mRNA platform. EDITOR'S NOTE: Could this be the reason why MAGAs hate mRNA vaccines?  - W. Collette

Friday, June 13, 2025

Trump’s justifications for the latest travel ban aren’t supported by the data on immigration and terrorism

It's not about national security - it's racism

Charles Kurzman, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Trump says "Stay out!"
The Trump administration on June 4, 2025, announced travel restrictions targeting 19 countries in Africa and Asia, including many of the world’s poorest nations. All travel is banned from 12 of these countries, with partial restrictions on travel from the rest.

The presidential proclamation, entitled “Restricting the Entry of Foreign Nationals to Protect the United States from Foreign Terrorists and Other National Security and Public Safety Threats,” is aimed at “countries throughout the world for which vetting and screening information is so deficient as to warrant a full or partial suspension on the entry or admission of nationals from those countries.”

Trump says "Come on in"
In a video that accompanied the proclamation, Donald Trump said: “The recent terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, has underscored the extreme dangers posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted.”

The latest travel ban reimposes restrictions on many of the countries that were included on travel bans in Trump’s first term, along with several new countries.

But this travel ban, like the earlier ones, will not significantly improve national security and public safety in the United States. That’s because migrants account for a minuscule portion of violence in the U.S. And migrants from the latest travel ban countries account for an even smaller portion, according to data that I have collected. The suspect in Colorado, for example, is from Egypt, which is not on the travel ban list.

As a scholar of political sociology, I don’t believe Trump’s latest travel ban is about national security. Rather, I’d argue, it’s primarily about using national security as an excuse to deny visas to nonwhite applicants.

Better than Stormy Daniels

Yeah, way worse under Kamala

The rise and fall – and rise again – of white-tailed deer

Beautiful creatures!

Elic Weitzel, Smithsonian Institution

Photo by Will Collette
Given their abundance in American backyards, gardens and highway corridors these days, it may be surprising to learn that white-tailed deer were nearly extinct about a century ago. While they currently number somewhere in the range of 30 million to 35 million, at the turn of the 20th century, there were as few as 300,000 whitetails across the entire continent: just 1% of the current population.

This near-disappearance of deer was much discussed at the time. In 1854, Henry David Thoreau had written that no deer had been hunted near Concord, Massachusetts, for a generation. In his famous “Walden,” he reported that:

“One man still preserves the horns of the last deer that was killed in this vicinity, and another has told me the particulars of the hunt in which his uncle was engaged. The hunters were formerly a numerous and merry crew here.”

But what happened to white-tailed deer? What drove them nearly to extinction, and then what brought them back from the brink?

As a historical ecologist and environmental archaeologist, I have made it my job to answer these questions. Over the past decade, I’ve studied white-tailed deer bones from archaeological sites across the eastern United States, as well as historical records and ecological data, to help piece together the story of this species.

‘Devastating.’ NIH cancels future funding plans for HIV vaccine consortia

Another senseless attack on public health from RFK Jr. and his "Make America Healthy Again" campaign

By Jon Cohen

In a move that could bring future research on HIV vaccines to a near halt, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) notified researchers today that it will not renew funding next year for two major consortia in the beleaguered field, Science has learned. NIAID also recently stopped funding three research groups that evaluate experimental vaccines in monkeys.

The notification, which was communicated verbally by NIAID program officers, “couldn't have happened at a worse time, because the recent clinical trial results [for candidate HIV vaccines] are very promising,” says Dennis Burton of Scripps Research, who heads one of the two Consortia for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Development (CHAVD).

Although researchers in the field acknowledge a vaccine for the AIDS-causing virus remains far off, the new leads have brought a fresh sense of optimism, and many scientists say they demand vigorous follow up. “This sets us back at a pivotal moment,” says Mitchell Warren, executive director of AVAC, a nonprofit that advocates for HIV prevention. The consortia “really have been pioneers in vaccine discovery,” says Warren, who is not involved in their work.

The consortia, initially formed in 2005, have more than a dozen institutional partners between them. They have moved what are widely considered the most cutting-edge, experimental HIV vaccines into clinical trials. In 2019, NIAID awarded 7-year grants worth $129 million each to two consortia leaders: Scripps Research and Duke University. Today’s notification means that they will not have a chance to renew the funding when those grants end in June 2026.

Burton said he was told NIAID was directed to do this, but it's unclear whether the decision to stop funding the consortia was made by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) or the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which oversees NIAID. When asked specifically about this, HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon did not answer the question but instead emphasized that the department will continue to fund “critical” HIV/AIDS work. “We must end this wasteful and inefficient model of health programming in favor of strategic, coordinated approaches,” Nixon wrote.

Trump Justices rule the DOGE kids can have access to your Social Security files

"This action by six far-right justices is an affront to every principle of government transparency and the rule of law."

Jon Queally for Common Dreams

Photo by Steven Chan
Defenders of Social Security are responding with critical anger to a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday that side with the Trump administration in a legal battle over access to sensitive data of tens of millions of Americans by the Department of Government Efficiency, the government-eviscerating agency first spearheaded by right-wing libertarian and mega-billionaire Elon Musk.

The unsigned emergency order from the court came in response to an emergency application from the Trump administration defending DOGE's ability to have access to Social Security databases that two labor unions, alongside the Alliance for Retired Americans, had file a legal suit to protect. By its ruling, the Supreme Court stayed a lower federal court's ruling that said DOGE must "disgorge" and "delete" any of the data it accessed or downloaded from the agency files.

While the underlying case plays out, DOGE is now authorized to retain the data and access to the information, which critics say cannot be entrusted to the newly-created department and unvetted personnel who control it.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

A felon in the White House is making crime legal

Who could have foreseen putting a convicted felon in the White House would turn out like this?

David R. Lurie

After the Supreme Court declared Donald Trump largely immune from prosecution for turning the office of the presidency into a criminal enterprise, and the nation’s voters then chose to reinstall the freshly convicted felon in the White House, who could have predicted he would use his office to punish the law abiding and protect the corrupt?

In fact, both the scale and audaciousness of Trump’s corruption, and of his regime’s assault on the criminal justice system, was eminently predictable.

As House Speaker Mike Johnson recently pointed out, Trump’s corruption is “out in the open.” The same is true of his use of criminal justice system and other levers of government as weapons against his ever-growing list of enemies.

But even the most cynical have been surprised by the Trumpist effort to portray the provision of healthcare to children, veterans, and the elderly as “waste” and “fraud,” as well as Trump’s effort to render those who follow the laws into criminals.

The most vulnerable among us, including immigrants and the sick, are currently among Trump’s primary victims. But the entire nation will soon pay a heavy price for his systematic assault on the rule of law in service of his bottomless desire for corrupt wealth and self-aggrandizement.

Retroactive criminalization

During the campaign, Trump and his cronies declared they would deport the allegedly massive numbers of “criminal aliens.” When Trump came into office, however, he faced a problem: The vast majority of undocumented immigrants are law abiding.

Trumpists, however, came up with an answer: Create fake crimes and thereby turn the law abiding into criminals.

Trump announced the US is “under invasion” by a foreign power in order to invoke the rarely used Alien Enemies Act and justify the summary deportation of supposed gang members to foreign prisons, this despite a US intelligence report concluding there is no such invasion. Then, when courts caught the administration deporting migrants who are not gang members, or in violation of existing immigration laws, Trumpists have prevaricated and outright lied, transforming their purported law enforcement initiative into a fraud.

The administration has also attacked judges and elected officials who have the temerity to question their illegal conduct.

Alina Habba (the parking garage lawyer Trump installed as New Jersey’s acting US attorney) ordered the arrest of Ras Baraka, the Mayor of Newark, on bogus charges arising from his participation in a protest at a private DHS jail, leading to what a federal magistrate judge called an “embarrassing retraction.” After that gambit failed, Habba brought equally flimsy charges against a member of Congress who accompanied Baraka at the protest, asserting that she “assaulted” armed ICE thugs.

Similarly, last month in New York City, an ICE gangster terrorized and handcuffed a crying staffer of Rep. Jerry Nadler after armed agents invaded his office without a warrant.

Trumpists have resorted to inventing new offenses so as to transform law-abiding immigrants into criminals. For example, Trump has declared slivers of land along the border to be “military zones” for the sole purpose of charging migrants with trespassing. The administration has also declared that undocumented immigrants have an obligation to “register” with the government so they can be indicted for failing to do so. They’re jailing immigrants who legally entered the United States under a Biden-era asylum law by retroactively declaring the program to be “illegal.”

Most tellingly, and insidiously, ICE agents desperate to meet the increasing quotas the White House has set for deporting “illegals” have taken to targeting the most vulnerable immigrants: Those intent on following the law and engaging in productive work.

As Sen. Markwayne Mullin put it on CNN yesterday, “regardless of what they may be doing right now” — including whether they are abiding by the law and are gainfully employed — undocumented persons “are illegal and they are criminals.”

It’s become routine for gangs of ICE goons to gather at immigration courts and arrest immigrants who are following the law by showing up for hearings. Immigration judges, cowed into facilitating Trump’s mass deportation schemes, have been dutifully dismissing cases so as to allow the immigrants to be immediately jailed as “illegals.” 

In one recent case, armed thugs dragged into an elevator an immigrant who had fainted after they had swooped in to grab her while her attorney was in the restroom.

State courts have also become favored hunting zones for ICE. Judges who have the temerity to point out that this tactic discourages immigrants from complying with court orders, and thus the law, are being threatened. Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan, for example, was jailed and indicted on the flimsiest of criminal charges for allegedly helping a man evade ICE. Her indictment has been decried by other jurists as a "threat [to] public trust in the judicial system and the ability of the public to avail themselves of courthouses without fear of reprisal.”

ICE gangs are also now routinely assembling in restaurants and other places of work, often bearing submachine guns, cuffing everyone in sight, and jailing some, simply on suspicion of being “illegals.” Recently, a gang of armed and masked ICE officers terrified patrons and workers in a San Diego restaurant, and even cuffed the manager. The rifle-toting “law enforcement” officers retreated from the scene by shooting flash bang grenades into a crowd of citizens distressed by their misconduct. (They only managed to arrest two “illegals.”)

Despite the fact that Trump has had to resort to fabricating new crimes to turn law-abiding immigrants into targets for deportation, the GOP is now about to make ICE the largest federal law enforcement agency. Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” includes over $150 billion for immigration enforcement and seeks to make ICE the most highly funded law enforcement agency in the United States.

And as Trump’s threats about a military invasion of Los Angeles County, which appeared to be commencing through the use of federalized National Guard units as this piece was being prepared for publication Sunday evening, demonstrate that his administration is intent on using its growing immigration “law enforcement” apparatus to wreak havoc in America’s cities, and to threaten to make peaceful protest a crime.

Redefining fraud

During his last presidential campaign, Trump repeatedly pledged he would not allow Congress to cut Medicaid or Medicare, a promise that has been echoed by Speaker Johnson and his other stooges.

But as it turned out, Republicans felt the need to make a pretense of attacking the “deficit” even as they pursued a budget-busting package of tax cuts weighed overwhelmingly in favor of the wealthiest Americans. So of course, Trump and the party he controls decided to harm the most vulnerable Americans — including children, the elderly, veterans, and the working poor — by targeting Medicaid for cuts.

Trump’s solemn “pledge” to protect Medicaid proved to be no barrier at all, given his ever-flexible definition of “crime.” Trump declared that 10 million or more Americans Republicans will be leaving without healthcare — resulting in tens of thousands of avoidable deaths a year — are engaged in “fraud”, “waste,” or “abuse.” Johnson, meanwhile, falsely announced that the people Republicans will be cutting off from live saving care are “illegals,” despite the fact that undocumented immigrants don’t receive federal dollars for coverage.

Trumpists have become so comfortable with their inverted definition of “fraud” that they are turning it into the subject of morbid humor. During a town hall, Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst replied to a question about the many people who will die prematurely as a result of the GOP’s massive Medicaid cuts by declaring with a smirk that “we are all going to die.”

After Ernst was widely criticized for her callousness, she taped a video in a cemetery in which she offered a sarcastic “apology” and urged those facing premature death due to her cruelty to find faith in Jesus.

Predictably, Republican senators have indicated they are planning to add Medicare to the targets of their “cost cutting” efforts by defining seniors’ need for healthcare to be a “fraud.”

Even as they have redefined the poor, sick and elderly as “fraudsters,” Trumpers have embarked on a campaign to make actual fraud and other financial crimes legal.

The administration is systematically dismantling the Department of Justice’s mechanisms for preventing, investigating, and prosecuting securities and other actual crimes. The DOJ has, to date, terminated over $800 million in grants, including for programs that combat human trafficking and gun violence and provide support to local police. The DOJ has also shut down, or crippled, its enforcement of whole categories of the most serious federal crimes, including those involving the cryptocurrencies Trump is brazenly using to enrich himself and his family.

Meanwhile, under the dysfunctional leadership of Kash Patel, the FBI has been engaged in wholesale firing of career agents, including as many as 4,000 personnel charged with investigating terrorism threats inside and outside the United States. Patel appears determined to place Trump’s goals of rooting out “disloyal” law enforcement personnel — and targeting immigrants — far above the agency’s statutory mandate to investigate serious crimes.

And Trump’s first major law enforcement action was to terminate the strong public corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams — who has been assiduously stooging for Trump and his immigration “crackdown” — thereby loudly declaring that the DOJ will be adjusting its historical focus on combatting public corruption to excuse corruption among those favored by the Leader.

‘When the president does it, that means it is not illegal"

When Richard Nixon uttered those words in 1977 three years after being driven out of the White House for his crimes, he was mocked and repudiated. But now Trump, with the cover of the Supreme Court’s immunity ruling, has set out to make Nixon’s declaration a reality.

It is not mere happenstance that Trump’s DOJ and SEC have set out to effectively legalize whole categories of financial fraud and corruption. Trump himself has, very publicly, turned the presidency into what amounts to a criminal financial enterprise, enriching himself and his family by billions of dollars through various “business” deals (many of them transparently corrupt).

Trump’s most lucrative “deals” have — surprise, surprise — included cryptocurrency transactions in which he and his own children (as well as the offspring of cronies including Steve Witkoff and Howard Lutnick) have yielded massive profits for themselves while causing huge losses for others. 

His inner circle is not just leaping headfirst into the crypto “business,” but are doing so with many of the sleaziest participants in the market, some of whom have been the subjects of investigations and SEC enforcement proceedings. Trump has even welcomed some of these ripoff artists into the White House, where it is now a matter of near public record that a large payoff can get nearly anyone an audience with him regardless of their criminal background.

Trump has also regularized the sale of pardons that began during his first term, with Trump hangers-on reportedly charging millions to get wealthy criminals out of jail. Paying third parties is rapidly becoming an outmoded way of currying favor with Trump, given that there are now many ways to line his pockets directly for favors. Nonetheless, Trump recently pardoned a tax cheat after his mother donated large sums to his campaign.

In a fashion familiar to observers of systemically corrupt regimes, Trump (sheltered by the Supreme Court’s assurance that he can freely engage in corruption) has made bribe solicitation an integral element of governance. For example, the FCC, headed by a notorious Trump stooge, has made it plain that Paramount’s planned merger transaction will not be approved until that company pays a huge bribe to Trump, in the form of a “settlement” payment for a bogus lawsuit Trump brought against 60 Minutes over the editing of a segment about Kamala Harris.

Despite what Mike Johnson claims, the fact that Trump’s undermining of the rule of law is being done openly and brazenly does not make it any less corrosive. In fact, the opposite is true.

There has been much (accurate) discussion of how Trump’s systemic attacks on the rule of law are destroying our democracy. But the destruction will not end there. The United States’ longstanding status as a nation of laws is also a foundation of our economic success. Investors in and outside the US have long felt confident placing their wealth in this country because, unlike so many other places in the world, laws are usually enforced predictably, not according to the wishes of a despotic or authoritarian leader.

Trump’s scheme to upend the rule of law in this country — and install himself as a quasi-dictator, who gets a “taste” of whatever business he chooses — is going to induce many investors to look elsewhere to make their investments. A nation where investors must pay bribes and possibly risk later being charged with crimes as a routine “cost of doing business” cannot remain the thriving financial center of the world for long. The question is whether the United States can rid itself of this budding despotism before even more grave and irreparable damage is done.

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Jine 14: South County Pride Festival in Wakefield

Pretty but dangerous

URI invasives expert studies a problematic plant

Kristen Curry

While fires can be caused for a variety of reasons, manmade
and natural, invasive phragmites, like these in Charlestown,
sometimes pose an overlooked risk. (URI Photos / Laura Meyerson)
Laura Meyerson was stepping through a marsh on the Housatonic River in Connecticut on a picture-perfect day as a young graduate student, when an offhand remark changed her whole outlook on the landscape in front of her.

Meyerson was observing a beautiful scenic outlook overlooking cattails. Then her professor made a comment that stopped her in her tracks. He pointed out that the scene was pretty, but that the nearby invasive reeds were going to wipe out the native muskrats. The day became a turning point in her career.

“I knew then I wanted to study this plant species,” Meyerson recalls.

Meyerson, today a professor of natural resources science at the University of Rhode Island, would like to see other New Englanders recognize the ubiquitous plant known as Phragmites australis growing by roadways and ponds for what it is.

Meyerson’s research on invasive species is global in nature, taking her to Iceland this fall. After getting her Ph.D., Meyerson worked in biosecurity for the Environmental Protection Agency and consulted with Homeland Security on pathogens that could cripple the U.S. food supply. She has served on the U.S. National Invasive Species Council Advisory Committee, is co-editor for the journal Biological Invasions, and has conducted research on invasive species at the Smithsonian Institution.

Meyerson finds many reasons to be concerned about invasive species. The fire risk posed by phragmites is just one. She says that while local fire departments are aware of the plant’s risk, those living or working near large stands of the plants may not be.

This is real: Trump regime celebrates today as "Russia National Day"

Here is the official State Department statement from Secretary Marco Rubio:



Kennedy is not a doctor or a scientist, but he got the job as America’s top public health officer. Now he’s making the wrong choices for all of us.

RFK Jr.’s Deadly War on Science

Steven Harper for Common Dreams

During an NBC interview on November 6, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was cleaning up his lifelong anti-vaccination act as he lobbied to become Health and Human Services secretary in the Trump administration.

“If vaccines are working for somebody, I’m not going to take them away,” he said. “People ought to have choice…”

Kennedy is not a doctor or a scientist, but he got the job as America’s top public health officer. Now he’s making the wrong choices for all of us.

What Happened

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) report to Kennedy. As with flu shots, the agencies have approved and recommended Covid-19 vaccines as they have been adjusted annually to deal with the evolving virus.

On May 20, FDA Commissioner Marty Makary and Vinay Prasad, director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, announced a new obstacle to FDA approval of any Covid-19 vaccine. For healthy Americans under 65, it must be subjected to large scale and time-consuming clinical trials. That data will replace the prior requirement of evidence showing only an immune response, which was the basis for approving the initial “Project Warp Speed” vaccines and all subsequent boosters.

Makary and Prasad asserted that they’re merely requiring “gold-standard data on persons at low risk.” But by not requiring such randomized, placebo-controlled trials for the elderly and other high-risk groups, they’re conceding that the vaccine prevents infection.

Even trying to follow the new requirement poses problems. It’s unethical to perform a clinical study that would give some people a worthless placebo instead of a vaccine, according to Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the University of Pennsylvania:

[W]e have a vaccine that works, given that we know that SARS-CoV2 continues to circulate and cause hospitalizations and death, and there’s no group that has no risk.

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Using the military as police is a high-risk strategy

Troops are not trained for urban policing

Brian VanDeMark, United States Naval Academy

Responding to street protests in Los Angeles against federal immigration enforcement raids, Donald Trump ordered 2,000 soldiers from the California National Guard into the city on June 7, 2025, to protect agents carrying out the raids. Trump also authorized the Pentagon to dispatch regular U.S. troops “as necessary” to support the California National Guard.

Trump’s orders did not specify rules of engagement about when and how force could be used. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who did not request the National Guard and asserted it was not needed, criticized the president’s decision as “inflammatory” and warned it “will only escalate tensions.”

I am a historian who has written several books about the Vietnam War, one of the most divisive episodes in our nation’s past. My recent book, “Kent State: An American Tragedy,” examines a historic clash on May 4, 1970, between anti-war protesters and National Guard troops at Kent State University in Ohio.

The confrontation escalated into violence: troops opened fire on the demonstrators, killing four students and wounding nine others, including one who was paralyzed for life.

In my view, dispatching California National Guard troops against civilian protesters in Los Angeles chillingly echoes decisions and actions that led to the tragic Kent State shooting. Some active-duty units, as well as National Guard troops, are better prepared today than in 1970 to respond to riots and violent protests – but the vast majority of their training and their primary mission remains to fight, to kill, and to win wars.

Protests in Los Angeles began after federal agencies conducted immigration raids across the city on June 6, 2025. Local police responded with pepper spray, rubber bullets and tear gas.

"I'm from Washington and I'm here to help"


 

No Kings! Protest at Dunn's Corner, June 14

URI Master Gardeners open their gardens to visitors for statewide garden tour this July 19-20

Buy tickets now

Kristen Curry 

Eighteen private and public gardens tended by URI Master Gardener
volunteers will open their gates for the 12th Gardening with
the Masters Tour this July 19-20. Tickets are on sale now.
 (URI Photo / Alice LaBelle)

Gardens are constantly evolving, but the state’s most dedicated gardeners will pause their planting, weeding, and dividing to open their gardens across the state to the public this summer. 

Eighteen private and public gardens tended by University of Rhode Island Master Gardener volunteers will open their gates for the 12th Gardening with the Masters Tour, a biennial event.

This year’s garden tour takes place Saturday and Sunday, July 19 and July 20, rain or shine, from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

The two-day event lets ticket holders visit some of the state’s most beautiful public and private gardens tended by certified URI Master Gardener volunteers. Environmentally-friendly garden practices on display include composting, native plant pollinator gardens, hugelkultur, low-input vegetable growing, small-space and container gardening, and more.

URI Master Gardeners will greet visitors in all gardens, ready to answer questions and share science-based horticultural information about best gardening practices. This year’s tours include gardens from Chepachet to Charlestown, and in nearby North Stonington, Connecticut.

There’s even a castle.

Bobby Junior fires entire vaccine advisory board

Kennedy removes all ACIP members, eyes replacements

Lisa Schnirring

Taylor Jones, politicalcartoons.com
In a stunning move, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced plans to reconstitute the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), firing 17 current members and replacing them with people under current consideration.

The move comes just ahead of ACIP’s next regularly scheduled meeting from June 25 to June 27, during which the group is slated to take up COVID-19 vaccine matters, as well as those for several other vaccines. Also, the announcement comes in the wake of a recent top-down decision about COVID vaccine recommendations, which deemphasized recommended use in children, pregnant women, and other groups.

Typically, ACIP makes vaccine recommendations following robust public deliberations. HHS did not detail the scientific basis of its new recommendations.

Why Would Trump Gut FEMA and NOAA?

Because he can

By Robert Kuttner 

Resident Anne Schneider, right, hugs her friend Eddy Sampson as they survey damage caused by Hurricane Helene, October 1, 2024, in Marshall, North Carolina.

June 1 marked the beginning of hurricane season, a period whose existence was news to Trump’s head of FEMA, David Richardson, who had no prior experience managing disaster relief. Richardson was appointed to replace FEMA acting chief Cameron Hamilton, who was fired summarily after telling a congressional subcommittee that he didn’t think FEMA should be shut down.

Trump’s attack on FEMA goes beyond even the Project 2025 design, which proposed to cut FEMA and turn some of its functions over to the states. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in March that she wanted FEMA shut down entirely (she later backpedaled and spoke of shrinking and reforming it). But most states have nothing like FEMA’s capacity or experience, and don’t want FEMA reduced or closed.

Due to actions early in Trump’s term, FEMA has lost an estimated 2,000 employees out of about 6,100, according to The Wall Street Journal. Many of these were nominally probationary employees, but due to the agency’s need to quickly staff up in an emergency, these tended to be experienced staffers who work for FEMA part of every year.

More damage is coming in the Big Beautiful Budget Bill. Trump’s budget request called for cutting FEMA by $646 million.

This is occurring as FEMA’s much-depleted sister agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), is predicting as many as 19 hurricanes this summer and fall, including three to five major ones likely to cause massive damage. 

To add injury to insult, Trump has rejected bipartisan requests to continue the Biden policy of covering 100 percent of the costs of relief and recovery operations after major disasters. The usual split is 75 percent federal, matched by 25 percent state.

In April, FEMA refused to declare a major disaster in Washington state to provide funding for recovery from a bomb cyclone in November 2024; and denied North Carolina more funding for cleanup after Hurricane Helene. In September 2024, Helene caused massive damage in six Southeastern states. The agency was generally praised for its response, including by North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis, but its resources were spread very thin. This season, they will be even thinner.

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

DOGE efficiently dismantled veterans' health care

DOGE Developed Error-Prone AI Tool to “Munch” Veterans Affairs Contracts

By Brandon Roberts, Vernal Coleman and Eric Umansky for ProPublica

As the Trump administration prepared to cancel contracts at the Department of Veteran Affairs this year, officials turned to a software engineer with no health care or government experience to guide them.

The engineer, working for the Department of Government Efficiency, quickly built an artificial intelligence tool to identify which services from private companies were not essential. He labeled those contracts “MUNCHABLE.”

The code, using outdated and inexpensive AI models, produced results with glaring mistakes. For instance, it hallucinated the size of contracts, frequently misreading them and inflating their value. It concluded more than a thousand were each worth $34 million, when in fact some were for as little as $35,000.

The DOGE AI tool flagged more than 2,000 contracts for “munching.” It’s unclear how many have been or are on track to be canceled — the Trump administration’s decisions on VA contracts have largely been a black box. The VA uses contractors for many reasons, including to support hospitals, research and other services aimed at caring for ailing veterans.

VA officials have said they’ve killed nearly 600 contracts overall. Congressional Democrats have been pressing VA leaders for specific details of what’s been canceled without success.

We identified at least two dozen on the DOGE list that have been canceled so far. Among the canceled contracts was one to maintain a gene sequencing device used to develop better cancer treatments. Another was for blood sample analysis in support of a VA research project. Another was to provide additional tools to measure and improve the care nurses provide.

ProPublica obtained the code and the contracts it flagged from a source and shared them with a half dozen AI and procurement experts. All said the script was flawed. Many criticized the concept of using AI to guide budgetary cuts at the VA, with one calling it “deeply problematic.”

Working it out

Lunacy!

 Trump plans to distribute kits to convert military-style assault weapons into machine guns

Big protest against hospital hardball at Butler

Hundreds gather for a candlelight vigil in support of striking Butler Hospital workers

Steve Ahlquist

Last night, hundreds of Butler Hospital union workers, family members, fellow union members, clergy, and community allies gathered for a candlelight vigil to reaffirm the value of the care and dedicated frontline staff as they provide essential mental health services every day. 

In response to Care New England’s recently announced plans to permanently replace longtime staff, speakers described the irreplaceable impact of the care provided by the longtime staff at Butler for their family members. They were joined by local faith leaders, including Rabbi Barry Dolinger, Reverend Gabrielle SclafaniMark Sutherland from St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, and Rabbi Preston Neimeiser from Temple Beth-El.

Established in 1844, Butler Hospital is considered the oldest hospital in Rhode Island and was founded to treat psychiatric illnesses. Today, it continues to play a vital role as the region’s leading facility for mental health and substance abuse support, a need that has grown significantly since the pandemic. Since the hospital’s inception, Butler’s frontline staff have provided life-saving care and support to patients from diverse backgrounds.

Here’s the video: We are Irreplaceable Hundreds of Butler Workers and Supporters to Hold Candlelight Vigil

Cuts to school lunch and food bank funding mean less fresh produce for children and families

In one fell swoop, Trump screws families, farmers and kids to fund tax cuts for the rich

Marlene B. Schwartz, University of Connecticut

The U.S. government recently cut more than US$1 billion in funding to two long-running programs that helped schools and food banks feed children and families in need. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says the reductions are a “return to long-term, fiscally responsible initiatives.” But advocacy groups say the cuts will hurt millions of Americans.

The reductions came just days before the release of the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again report, an analysis of the factors causing chronic disease in children. One of those factors, the report says, is poor diet.

Dr. Marlene Schwartz, a professor of human development and family sciences and director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Health at the University of Connecticut, discusses why cutting the Local Food for Schools and the Local Food Purchase Assistance programs means less fresh food will be available to children and families – and could hurt local farmers and ranchers too.

Dr. Marlene Schwartz discusses why these programs were cut.

The Conversation has collaborated with SciLine to bring you highlights from the discussion, edited here for brevity and clarity.

Could you explain the two programs that were cut?

Marlene Schwartz: Most schools were eligible for Local Food for Schools, a $660 million program, which has now been cut. The funds for Local Food for Schools were on top of the reimbursement that schools get for meals and would have allowed them to buy more local, fresh food.

The Local Food Purchase Assistance program was designed primarily for food banks. Again, the idea was to provide federal money, about $500 million, so food banks could buy from local farmers and support local agriculture. But that too was cut.

How will these cuts affect families and schoolchildren?

Schwartz: Many children eat two of their meals, five days a week, at school. During the 2022-2023 school year, about 28 million kids ate lunch at school. More than 14 million had breakfast there.

Having fresh, local produce in the school cafeteria provides the opportunity to introduce children to more fruits and vegetables and teach them about the food grown in their own communities. Think about how powerful a lesson about nutrition and local agriculture can be when you not only hear and read about it but can taste it too.

How will these cuts affect farmers and ranchers?

Schwartz: When the funding was there, the farmers and ranchers knew they had guaranteed buyers for their products. So the loss of these funds, especially so quickly, will have a very negative effect on them. Suddenly, the buyers they counted on don’t have the money to buy from them.

“The Intern in Charge”: Meet the 22-Year-Old Trump’s Team Picked to Lead Terrorism Prevention

Well, this shows how seriously King Don is about stopping domestic terrorism

By Hannah Allam for ProPublica

Hope he's getting good acne meds
When Thomas Fugate graduated from college last year with a degree in politics, he celebrated in a social media post about the exciting opportunities that lay beyond campus life in Texas. “Onward and upward!” he wrote, with an emoji of a rocket shooting into space.

His career blastoff came quickly. A year after graduation, the 22-year-old with no apparent national security expertise is now a Department of Homeland Security official overseeing the government’s main hub for terrorism prevention, including an $18 million grant program intended to help communities combat violent extremism.

The White House appointed Fugate, a former Trump campaign worker who interned at the hard-right Heritage Foundation, to a Homeland Security role that was expanded to include the Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships. Known as CP3, the office has led nationwide efforts to prevent hate-fueled attacks, school shootings and other forms of targeted violence.

Fugate’s appointment is the latest shock for an office that has been decimated since Donald Trump returned to the White House and began remaking national security to give it a laser focus on immigration.

News of the appointment has trickled out in recent weeks, raising alarm among counterterrorism researchers and nonprofit groups funded by CP3. Several said they turned to LinkedIn for intel on Fugate — an unknown in their field — and were stunned to see a photo of “a college kid” with a flag pin on his lapel posing with a sharply arched eyebrow. No threat prevention experience is listed in his employment history.

Typically, people familiar with CP3 say, a candidate that green wouldn’t have gotten an interview for a junior position, much less be hired to run operations. According to LinkedIn, the bulk of Fugate’s leadership experience comes from having served as secretary general of a Model United Nations club.

Monday, June 9, 2025

Trump wants America to be ignorant because ignorance is the handmaiden of tyranny

Trump’s Vicious Attack on the American Mind

Robert Reich


This is Donald Trump's new official portrait. Really.
Meet the new Big Brother. White House photo.
Why is Trump trying to cancel “Sesame Street,” which has helped children learn to read and count for over half a century?

Why is he seeking to destroy Harvard University?

Why is he trying to deter the world’s most brilliant scientists from coming to the United States?

Because he is trying to destroy American education — and with it, the American mind.

Throughout history, tyrants have understood that their major enemy is an educated public. Slaveholders prohibited enslaved people from learning to read. The Third Reich burned books. The Khmer Rouge banned music. Stalin and Pinochet censored the media.

And Trump, like past authoritarians, wants to control not just what we do, but also how and what we think.

He has embraced one of the mottos from George Orwell’s 1984“Ignorance is strength.” He knows that an uninformed public is easier to divide and conquer.

There are five facets to Trump’s authoritarian attack on the American mind:

1. Rewrite history

The protagonist of 1984 works in the so-called Ministry of Truth, where he’s made to literally rewrite history because Big Brother knows that he “who controls the past controls the future.”

That’s chilling in a dystopian novel. It’s far scarier in real life, where Trump and his MAGA cronies are making schools whitewash slavery and segregation, cover up the genocide of Native Americans, and erase the LGBTQ+ rights movement.

Authoritarians know that if they can convince us our country has never been wrong, they can make us believe our ruler is always right.

If they can make us forget how brave activists fought for change in the past, they can stop us from seeking change in the future.

Trump wants us to forget (or never know) that he lost the 2020 election and then instigated a coup against the United States.

He even claimed last weekend that former President Joseph R. Biden was “executed in 2020” and replaced by a robotic clone.

2. Gut education

As Trump tries to abolish the Department of Education, he’s also proposing to cut funding for K-12 public schools and to force universities to let him influence student admissions, faculty hiring, and what is taught.

As a professor, I know firsthand how education empowers young people’s minds. We can’t have a functioning democracy if people cannot deliberate critically about it. That’s why authoritarians replace education with indoctrination.

But the Trump regime doesn’t want a functioning democracy.

Instead of teaching students to think for themselves, authoritarians seek to instill blind allegiance and suppress dissent. As Trump adviser Stephen Miller said: “Children will be taught to love America. Children will be taught to be patriots.”

This is why the Italian and German fascists of the 20th century immediately turned their countries’ educational systems into instruments of the party.

3. Dismantle science

By freezing university research grants and attacking the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and USAID, Trump is stifling medical and scientific research.

And his cuts to the Centers For Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration put all of us at risk.

He’s also abducting and deporting international scientists who disagree with his administration. Can you imagine a crueler way to rob America of the global intellectual capital that has helped us become the world leader in scientific research?

He is now revoking visas of some Chinese college students. Some 277,000 students from China attended school in the United States last year, second only to the number of students from India. The United States employs tremendous numbers of scientific and technological experts originally from China. We need this continued pipeline of intellect and skill.

How can medical research and disease prevention be political? How can scientific research in general become political? Why is Trump afraid of science?

Because science acknowledges objective facts. Authoritarians insist that the ruler is more powerful than the facts. Trump wants to control the facts.

As George Orwell wrote, “it means a loyal willingness to say that black is white when Party discipline demands this.”

4. Suppress the media

From suing ABC and CBS over their news coverage to threatening to strip network broadcast licenses to defunding PBS and NPR, Trump is trying to silence America’s sources of news.

As Trump repeatedly says: “I call it the fake news media.”

He wants control over what information Americans can (or cannot) get.

His regime is even going through social media accounts of people seeking visas to the United States.

A free press exists to question authority and help the public question it as well. But authoritarians insist that they must never be questioned.

Authoritarians want to consolidate state power over what the public can know.

5. Attack the arts

The arts exist to provoke us, challenge our thinking, and help us see beyond ourselves.

They arts are an important and independent aspect of an educated society, which is why authoritarians have historically attacked them.

So it’s no surprise that Trump is canceling grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, is dictating what’s displayed at the Smithsonian, and has installed himself as the chair of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

To limit art is to limit free speech and expression. It’s a crucial step that authoritarians use to silence anyone who dissents through creativity.

***

Added up, these five facets of Trump’s attack on the American mind render us less informed, less inspired, and easier to control.

They empower him to divide us with hatred and fear.

And they prevent us from discovering that we have more in common with one another than with the authoritarians who try to rule us.

This attack on our minds reduces our capacity for self-government because ignorance is the handmaiden of tyranny.

What you can do: Please share this essay, and help spread the truth.